Monday, 5 April 2010

March 2010 : Cold Spring

Harter Fell, Kentmere

Black Combe Fell Race
Somehow a Buzzard finds a thermal on which to hitch a ride above Silecroft village.  Up on the ridge, in the exceptional visibility of the cold air, we can see Snaefell amoung the hills of Manx across the Irish Sea.   Black Combe Fell Runners lull you around the ridge on a horseshoe of three fells.  Before their usual soup though, they brutally tip you down into Whitecombe Beck and, with a shocking sting-in-the-tail, force you to re-climb back up to Black Combe's plateau.
 
The Sun powered by a gas bottle
Once upon a time a Roman soldier marked time on a knoll that is Beaumont green. Or maybe not: out here west of Carlisle, a turf bank would be enough to display the Emperor's boundary down behind the Solway Firth. Whatever the legion patrolled, the present day inhabitants living amongst, suspiciously ancient, red stones in their buildings appeared to enjoy half hour of flaming Calor gas and sixty seconds of hand held flares. A pulse of light passed through Station 38 to be extinguished along the lane and down at the shore of the estuary at station 41.

Small Water, Mardale
After such an easy day, it's back training.  A pleasurable ride past croci and budding daffodils turns distinctly unfriendly.  Inside a torture chamber of toe-freezing, deep, melting snow above Small Water, it takes an age of suffering to traverse all the way up and down, to and from the Roman road across High Street.

A couple of Hewitts remaining to be bagged in the Dales provide an excuse to climb up through the terraces of Pen-y-ghent before a run out and back to Plover Hill.  A cold but sunny day with folks cycling up and down the lanes between limestone walls evokes images of North Riding a century ago.

Back to The Howgills 
From Fell Head along the railway towards next month's Welsh Border country
A newly discovered bike route sees plenty of hard ups and downs with a fast fell run from Kentdale.
'We're still here'

Sunday, 28 February 2010

February 2010 in low light

 
I can melt the snow off the roof of a Welsh Bothy

Two weeks into February: hardly picturesque
Kentmere over the perfect peak of Ill Bell, after a slog through the snow onto the long top of High Street and the descent over the lump of  Mardale Ill Bell the afternoon had to be cut short because time was running out.  Cutting short is not a decision that bodes well for the coming fell running season.  Back down the dale through the freezing fog from Staveley to the home of tobacco and snuff was enough to bring on hypothermea in a brass monkey.

A week later, and Coniston Old Man becomes another casualty having to be abandoned a hundred feet under the summit in the dark.  Sirius and Mars assist the headlamp on the descent.  Must re-commission that ice axe from behind the trainers.


On the second Sunday: What are these/ So wither'd and so wild in their attire

Crashed into the Winter League racing over Fell Head in the  Howgills regretting not having entered.


A cold but peaceful bike ride up Longsleddale, past sleeping sheep, had to be cut short, yet again.


 
No sheep has suffered in this picture
  
Three days in the mountains Wale - or Cymru 
 
Into Snowdonia via Mynydd y Cwm
Easy enough start, on  the outskirts of Snowdonia, with heavy snow forecast for 'mid-day'.  Okay, since when can we forecast Western Britain to the hour?


 Typical Wales, Mynydd Rhyd Ddu
After an officious Landrover driver checked out the intruder to the summit on Mynydd Rhyd Ddu, I rescued our car and a delivery van from an ice covered 25% gradient using that ice axe to get to some tarmac and turf.
 
End of a winter's day in Snowdonia, Moel y Dynlewyd
Leaving Llyn Dinas' dark surface an hour before dark, according to my forecast, an anxious ascent of Moel y Dynlewyd preceded by a jog down wearing a silly smirk on my face.  The smirk was wiped off when an expensive headlamp failed an the way to the bothy.

  
Sustainable heat source at a Welsh Bothy

Another Day another van



Five kilometres of deepening snow all the way up to Carnedd Wen

Day two starts easily enough but was kicked into touch after an energy sapping furrow ploughed up and down Carnedd Wan which would be a doddle in Spring, Summer or Autumn.  Just about to set off for the bothy when a delivery van stops and asks the whereabouts of an address.  Not to be seen on the 1:50 000, he drives off to find a phone signal.

Exit through Shropshire and the Mynds (and the third van)
Easy hills sit in the land of A Shropshire Lad where the sounds of clanking farm machinery replace the mewing buzzard.  Today, it's a builder's van, leaning precariously and smelling of a burning clutch, that I provide directions for: back down the hill to a farm that is on the map.  It's a good feeling to put something back into this hill wandering.  Mind you, driving up nearly to Pole Bank on Long Mynd  leaves a guilty feeling: should have cycled this lot in the Spring.

Last weekend in The Howgills

 
Snow clouds crawling over Wild Boar Fell 
Having rolled up for a Winter League race, the course is three times around a circuit.  Not for some of us.  Off up to the Calf in winter conditions than can just about cancel out the automatic camera flash.
 
Wild Boar Fell under the cloud from Calders

Back with the ravens and tracing steps because the ice axe is under the stack of trainers.




 

Sunday, 31 January 2010

Glorious January 2010



Scaffells from Bowfell 


New Years Day: Nine Standards Fell Race

An early morning blizzard threatened access to Kikby Stephen and the New Years Day race itself.  Nonetheless, at three and a half below, seventy runners warmed up in the snow laying around the The Cloisters.  A comedy ensued in the second part of the field when we followed a pilot out of the market square over the ice on and over the footbridge where the race would begin: a number of us were unsure whether or not we were now competing  The organisers, whom you'll be hard pressed to find on the net, lined the route up to Nine Standards Rigg with flags through the mist and spindrift.  The final words concluded prize-giving with:  "we shall always run Nine Standards"

First weekend: in the Southern Fells

Crinkle Crags and Bowfell

Sundays only, bus takes me from Kendal to Dungeon Ghyll at the beginning of the day, just like Wainwright once set off for the fells.  A feeble squall of snow falling on Ambleside roofs evaporates with the first light opening up a Langdale cloaked in a white blanket under a blue sky.  No sooner on The Band, than your feet froze.  From Bowfell, over Crinkle Crags and Cold fell to Pike o'Blisco turns into a winter adventure swinging the ice axe.  Returning to the even colder air in the shade of Langdale valley, a roaring fire in Old Dungeon Ghyll's hearth beckons out of the early winter dusk before the return of the pair of lights on the Kendal bus.

Second Weekend: in the Eastern Fells
 
 Fairfield above Grisedale Tarn
Any day of the week a Kendal bus will carry you to Thirlspot where, thigh deep in loose snow, in the refrigerator of the north-western slopes as a sun crawls across a concealed south-western horizon, only an idiot attempts to climb Helvellyn via Raise. A few thousand calories expended and it's a cutting easterly that greets you but also assists up to the summit for, in a lull in the gale, a view of the world.  Borne along by wind, clanking the axe and a bottle of frozen water, Dollywagon Pike tips you down around a frozen Grisedale Tarn (the old King of Dunmail's crown's around here somewhere)  and up onto the northern cakewalk of The Fairfield Horseshoe.  Those bus lights come around the Rydal bend to carry you out of here through failing light and freezing air.

 
Catstycam from Nethermost Pike, Helvellyn

Third week: the meltdown


Redacre Gill during the Thaw

Harrison Stickle takes on a sad, dejected aspect, streaked in snow like tears down the crags.  Pike o'Blisco's in the clag.  Surely, the going, through this ice bucket of slush will improve at the top of Redacre Gill.  But no, it's an ordeal all the way up to the summit and down, out of the fog onto a desolate Wrynose Pass.  The climb back up into the world of wild and wet Great Carrs and slopping through wind and wet snow following a compass brings a forsaken summit on Swirl How.  A couple of black ravens relieve the grey and turn down with a croak of contempt.



Still inaccessible during a thaw: The Three Shire Stone

Levers Water melting


Fourth Weekend: The remains of 'The Big Freeze'

 
Bob Hughes, Ochil Hill Runner, on Skiddaw

Lisa sticks to the Skiddaw track while Bob and I leave blue sky behind and enter the cloud fighting with the lank heather on Great Calva. Predictably, in the mist Lisa navigates to our agreed meeting place while us two miss it by a hundred metres.  Nonetheless, Skidda's more our scene after falling through old snow descending off Calva, simple but hard climbing over frozen ground and solid snow.   Neanderthal shapes resolve along the summit as we enter back into the world of the living before descending to The Lake District under a canopy of cloud.



Borrowdale under afternoon cloud from Skiddaw

Fifth weekend: back to the usual weather a glorious finale:

  
With a blue sky and frozen ground, dropping the bike in Longsleddale proves impossible. 
 


 
Galeforth Gill, the head of Longsleddale

From the summit of Mosedale Pass after Gatescarth, the run up over anvil-solid drifts to Brandstree, a return descent, a drink out of the bottle, and up to Tarn Crag take less time than in the summer time: under a blue sky and over frozen bogs.
 
From Tarn Crag on a winter day, 'You can see the world'*

 
Kentmere Pike from Tarn Crag

Some kind soul left the stove smouldering in Mosedale Bothy providing an unexpected warm interlude and warm toes.

Predictable, but only by somebody capable of interpreting a map, the high ground over Seat Robert to Wet Sleddale consists mostly of ice and turns to one long ordeal nearly impossible to cycle.  Under a sun turning crimson as it sinks out of a blue sky, in true winter conditions, you just don't care less.
The end of the day, Seat Robert above Wet Sleddale: through to Shap and the road the Auld Grey Town

Bye, Bye January 2010.  Thanks for the memories: cold fingers, cold toes yet an anorak that was dry for for thirty one days.  I'll remember you for those winter days under blue skies.
* 'You can see the world from Benson Knott' The late Dave Bayliss, Kendal

Tuesday, 29 December 2009

December 2009

Dow Crag from Coniston Old Man

Coniston Old Man in the dark and alone is much like Ben Lomond from Ptarmigan Ridge, you need to watch where your feet land on the initially, craggy descent in the first snow.

Potter Fell in the evening in the company of a club, on the other hand, equates to Dumyat from Mentrie: the local runners navigate you around the abusive and violent farmer in his Frosty Hole.

Thornthwaite Beacon from a mile away in December








Thornthwaite
Beacon from a mile away in August


Kentmere Horseshoe, that's Ill Bell, High Street, Kentmere Pike, is the closest training round to Kendal. So managed just one in a month.


Away in a Manger in Snowdonia
(when you don't make the bothy)

Yr Elen in between soakings
No self-respecting Scot wants to admit to running away south. No face lost, though, running away from Cumbria down to The Land of Somebody's Father's. Nevertheless, like anywhere else up the west coast of Britain, you get hit in the face with rain.

Back home in the festive season, Ambleside organise a chance to run off a pound or two dashing up and down Wansfell. Ploughing through every type of snow: half melted, firm crust, crust that lets you fall through unpredictably like a slap on the back of the head, ice, deep drifts to save you over the crags on the descent, at least it didn't snow.

Salute

Best of luck to Dave Eiser as the new Ochil's club captain. It's great when the seniors take over from the vets.

Sunday, 29 November 2009

November 2009


November persisted windy, wet and wild for three weeks. The single frost leading to a blue sky turned up, like Murphy of Murphy's Law, on a weekday morning. No change there then, from the Ochils down to the Cumbrian Fells. On the other hand, by fortunate coincidence, the compass stayed in the bumbag on the first three Sundays. You could navigate unaided flooded bogs and becks and volatile rivers behaving badly.

From Kendal, just like you do in Stirling, you can play the probability game and try for better weather over eastern hills. Chancers get wet on the Yorkshire Dales. A mighty sight from the motorway through Lancashire, Ingleborough's an easy enough run by itself. Take heed though, just like up the southern side of Dumyat at the end of our Ochils 2000's race or on Trahena at the end of Two Breweries, Ingleborough's littered with cramp victims (those who haven't trained hard enough) on the final climb running the Three Peaks Race.


Dunnerdale Fell Race by Black Combe Fell Runners

You might not notice Black Combe runners, even Wainwright missed out their eponymous fell that defines the skyline from across Morecambe Bay. Nonetheless, the club organises four races and can manage 273 meat pies and infinite tea in the kitchen of a village hall. http://www.bcrunners.org.uk/fell_races.htm

"Fell" races have become popular: you park two miles away, 273 runners enter and we all start too fast. That just about beat Dumyat "Hill" Race on the edge of the Ochils, (the university car park's choc-a-block, 255 runners enter and most of us are dragged out of the gates by the track runners). Two decades ago fifty folk ambled around Dunnerdale performing an end of season swansong.

On the brighter side, while vets and even older dominate, a junior, Tom Addison of Helm Hill Runners, pushed one of them into second place:
http://www.thewestmorlandgazette.co.ukhttp://www.thewestmorlandgazette.co.uk/news/4740078.Kendal_athlete_wins_Dunnerdale_fell_race/.
And, one in five runners is female http://www.bcrunners.org.uk/results/dunnerdale_2009_results.htm.

After Dark

Low cloud, gales and black nights follow for a week. At the month's darkest, on the new moon, four Kendal headlamps got beaten about by the wind on Fell Head in the Howgills. Unlike summer across the other side of the Lune valley, you don't get your hair singed by a Tornado on a dark windy night.

The fells saturated, then it rained

That was the first three weeks of November. Then, the rain fell. Cumbrians call this 'watter'. There was a lot of watter already oozing out of the peat on the fells. This lot set off over the top of standing watter and down the re-entrants before morning . Back in October The Ochil Hill Runners witnessed a burn borne on the wind above the Glen Scaddle. On November the 21st Kendal witnessed "dry"-stone walls spouting becks horizontally from the highest stones: across paddocks, into farm yards and, opposite our future residence, over the wall caps: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9R26W3Y0ZYM&NR=1.

The final Saturday: Kirkbymoor Fell Race

That's a Black Combe organised race again: infinite tea in the village hall.


This is more like it, just 72 runners, a blue sky and snow on the higher Coniston fells. Nevertheless, for the third time this year, out of a total of three "Fell" races, over seventies overtake folk on the final descent: http://www.bcrunners.org.uk/results/kirkby_moor_results_2009.htm. I was on his heels though, until he dropped the competition in the final lanes and Helm Hill showed the way home. Training starts tomorrow.

Next Day

Back to windy, wet and wild . All training's off. Maybe, it's time to start a blog.
Don't knock the weather. If it didn't change once in a while,
nine out of ten people couldn't start a conversation.
Kin Hubbard
(1868 - 1930)
Salute

Congratulations to the Ochils Club Captain, Dave Scott, picking up a gong for the second British, over 50 champion http://www.fellrunner.org.uk/results/champs09/bri/BrtOpenMens50.htm