Monday 14 December 2015

Meall Dearg, the red hill, white hill more like!


The chance to do two walks in a weekend could not be missed and the weather looked perfect for it, a nice crisp clear morning and an 08:30 pickup meant we had a great view of the dawn!   There are loads of pictures to follow, just because it was such a stunning day



The target was Meall Dearg which is just west of the road from Amulree to Aberfeldy.  SOTA GM/SS076,  WAB NN84 and Trig point TP0671.



As we parked up just short of the bridge across the Cochill Burn, the weather was just a wee bit parky


The hill looked quite snowy from the roadside but the plan was to zig zag straight up the direct route behind me


this very rapidly proved to be a very bad idea.  There is nothing worse than a bog with deep heather all covered up with snow,  so we backtracked and headed down the road to pick up General Wades military road (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_military_roads_of_Scotland).

It was pretty frosty!



With ice hanging down into the streams


and nice contours on frozen pools


But even so, felt pleasant enough in the wintery sunshine for me to shed my fleece, hat and gloves!

In no small part due to the absolutely windless day, evidenced by the completely stationary turbines over the valley, not something we experience often!

All too soon though, we found the old road reaching its highest point and dipping downwards again.  No chance were we losing height, time to head upwards cross country, this proved to be a bit of a mistake!  As you can see in the following sequence, the depth of snow increased rapidly with increasing altitude, much more so than it looked from below!










 


This coupled with the increasingly rough and rocky terrain made life very difficult, it may be safe to follow this route when it's clear but there's a huge danger of putting your leg in a hole.  What we did find is that the rabbits and hares had also had this problem, but were in fact quite good at route finding, there had been so many that they'd made a trail for us






We realised that this was going to be a slow job when we crested a false summit to see the real one

Was this even doable?   Thankfully, before too much further we came across an unmapped track that traversed the hill, it climbed heading south and we took it. There was no way we could head any further going straight up to the summit!
That didn't mean it was easy though

and the scenery became increasingly bleak

Eventually for the second time this walk we crested a rise on a track to see it descending as it went on.   Now was the moment of truth.   We stopped and had a debate "was it even physically possible for us to battle across this wasteland, and get to the summit"?   The camera flattens the hill, the reality was far more daunting


Thankfully we spotted that someone had been here before us (no sign now, wolves got em?) but it meant we had some foot prints to put ours in and more to the point, saw where not to step (drifts that went past knee level).  As we approached the final bit, the going got a bit easier, and the views got even more stunning







Then it was the next decision point.  Was it possible to get up there,  we spent a few minutes planning a route,  the camera flattens it, you can see the trig on top.


Yes, we could see a safe way up, and happily no one died.



This was a welcome sight!





And so, we got the radio setup.  The fleece, hat and gloves went back on PDQ!


How did the radio go?  A difficult start, I normally check all is well before committing myself, but this time just dived into the WAB net on 7161,  things were clearly wrong,  people weren't hearing me well,  less than 2 watts out with a high SWR.   I called for a halt and brought the aerial back down, nothing wrong.. puzzled..  It seemed that the SWR went down as I tuned higher up the band so I extended one leg of the dipole about 9 inches.   The SWR came down to a level where the radio would give 4 watts, I've no idea why the antenna went resonant very HF of 40m, maybe something to do with the hump on the summit and the snow?  It had been fine the day before also over snow covered ground.  Anyway, back to the fray with more success, curse the lost time, but I eventually managed 13 WABers in their very disciplined net, thanks guys!.    A QSY down to 7093 and a spot on both sotawatch and the new WAB chat (it was cold and I was now in a hurry) brought EA2CKX as the first qso, how does Pedro manage to be there on 40m so regularly when you wouldnt expect propagation?   Then followed 13 others in 8 minutes including regular, Mick, M0MDA,  Mike, 2E0YYY (is that the first?) and Robert SP8RHP for another surprise one at that time of day.  Time was running on and temperature, running out, a quick qsy to 20m brought 13 qsos in just 5 minutes including regulars DL3HXX, OK1SDE, and HB9AGH, plus SP8RHP again for 2 band slots, finishing off with an S2S with DL/HB9DQM/P on DM/BW176.   By this time we were hitting 45 minutes operating and I was getting very unpleasantly cold.  The sun seemed to have gone and it was time for a rapid exit.  We stripped everything down with me jumping around as much as possible to try and get some warmth back.

To get down, there was no way we were trying the route we'd come up, it was far too steep,  we took the more easterly side of the summit where there was deeper snow but a shallower track.

(not that shallow!)


The deep snow was easier going down than it would have been going up even if we did occasionally sink in below knee level

There were some very tricky patches


and some stunning views




We were please to get on the track again, but decided the route we'd used to get up would be deadly in these conditions to descend on, so we just continued on the track all the way north until it met up with General Wades road, just at the forest.




We seemed not to be the only users of the track, it looked as though it had been a rabbit/hare motorway, with two sets of tracks one on either side , I wonder whether rabbits are left or right hand drive?




 At last we made it back down to the car where it was a balmy -1C dropping to -3C on the way to Dunkeld where the trees were all still frosted


And so for the best pint ever!


It was supposed to be a nice easy walk, but ended up at 11.5 kms and 360m ascent in some of the most difficult walking conditions.  Brilliant!

Saturday 12 December 2015

A little hill with no bad weather or perishing cold (well, just a little bit)



I had a little bit of time on Saturday, I had to go out to the shops anyway so went via a hill, like you do.  Just north west of Kirriemuir is little Mile Hill, which only being 409m ASL is a full P150 summit.   Vital statistics:  GM/ES-076  WAB:NO35  no trig point.



The route in from the south looked fairly easy, but there seemed quite a few walkhighland reports who'd had issues that way. Parking is tricky on the B951 so I reckoned the best was to go round to Knowhead of AuldAllan and park at the old Balintore castle gatehouse like I did for Cat Law.



There is a fairly easy track that heads to the house marked Hilton,  it was clearly fairly crispy with the ground heading towards frozen.  I became grateful for this later when hitting some of the boggy bits.  There was a wee pond just before hilton which was just on the verge of getting fully frozen.


Just after Hilton I cut off cross country and headed towards the summit, getting crispier!


As I got to the saddle I disturbed a couple of pairs of deer,  which headed of in opposite directions.  See if you can spot one of them.



Clearly I hadn't disturbed them all

There had been a light snow falling all the way up but just as I started up the main summit there was an apparition



 The snow didn't stop of course.   On the way up, the summit had seemed lightly dusted,  when you actually got there it seemed a bit more than dusted!

From the top there was a nice view of Cat Law which had been the target just a couple of weeks ago

The view from the shack was quite pretty,looking towards the Perthshire hills



But the sun seemed to get very low very quickly! But then sunset is 15:30 here now!



So how did the radio go?



I only realised when I got back that my attempt to post on the SOTA facebook page before I went was actually to my own timeline.   Just as well that Andrew,M0MYA, had just yesterday created the group messenger page and I posted on that!   It got me my first QSO on 40m with Karl M3FEH who was coming up here from Cornwall with a very respectable signal for low power.   Then started a small run of 12 QSOs from SOTA chasers over 15 minutes.  Including Don G0RQL who features on a very high percentage of activations, and EA2CKX who always surprises me by making the trip on 40m at that time of day.  A lot of usual culprits were also there, including Mick M0MDA and Mike G6TUH.  A qsy to the WAB net on 7160 (+ 1and a bit today) netted another 13 in 9 minutes.

An aerial change for 20m and 14285 seemed to have another sitting tenant.  14305 seemed OK and Michael, DB7MM/P came straight back!  Not on a summit but at  castle (did I nick your frequency Michael <blush>).   A run of 19 QSOs in 15 minutes then took place, including, as always, Manuel, EA2DT  plus a few of the other regulars, dj5av for two bands, ok1sde, dl3hxx, dd5lp, ea2lu.  I had my first SOTA Canadian with VE1WT in Nova Scotia who gave me 57, not bad with 4watts, plus AC2KL in NY state.

I suddenly realised it was 1500, perilously close to sunset, plus I was starting to feel quite cold.  I started sorting the rucksack ready to quickly pack when there was a quiet call on the frequency I'd vacated.   Then ensued an S2S with S57MS/P on S5/BI087!  Saved by the bell.   I then quickly packed and started heading down.


I headed further round the hill to the North, noting the rather steep aspect it offers, I'd bottled out of going straight down


That's a nice view of Cat Law in the fading light.  Looking North west towards Glenshee, there was a cracking view of the summits in the alpine glow


As I got down to the pond by Hilton, it was clear it was a lot more frozen than when I'd last passed by!






As I drew near the car it was getting quite darkish with Balintore Castle picking up the last of the light on its windows, someone is restoring it, good luck!   A nice wee walk with a bit of radio,  only about 6kms, but with a total ascent of about 280m (you have to go down at the start),  a nice way to spend a Saturday afternoon.