Sunday 28 October 2018

Ben Tirran - Would we make it this time?


Scotland in Autumn!  "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness"


Last time we attempted Ben Tirran (February 2016) (GM/ES-016  WAB NO37 TP6385) we had to give up at around the 650m mark when we were hitting waist deep snow.  Despite a severe weather warning from 8PM on Friday to 11AM on Saturday it surely could not be anything like that.   It is October for goodness sake.  I'd woken in the night to hear strong winds and the forecast was for moderation throughout the day on Saturday.  We'd decided to make a decision when Ian came to pick me up in the morning and as it seemed to be following to forecast it was a goer.

So the plan was:


Start from Clova Hotel, up the tourist path to Loch Brandy, take the right fork up Green Hill, along the ridge to White Hill, and up to the trig on The Goet.  From there a descent to Loch Wharral, skirt the south edge and follow a traverse to pick up the path down at Loch Brandy.   Beer in the Clova Hotel.  Simples.

From South of Forfar we could see that the hills had more than a patchy dusting of snow and by the time we were on the B road to Clova there were places where there was quite a good dusting on the road too.



As soon as we got walking, it became clear that things were a bit more snowy than  expected























We started to hit some very deep patches of snow




even to the point that my pole vanished to the handle at some points - I hadn't expected to need the baskets!




Still, it wasn't as bad as last time and the weather was still quite pleasant


Even if there were a few sporty moments (bear in mind we were only at the 600m level at this stage)


We got to Loch Brandy and it wasn't even completely frozen over (like last time)










But it was only really windblown snow and was still quite bright and the forecast was for improvement
















So the decision was to continue up














It was hard going against the wind but finally we made it onto the ridge








And mostly, it wasn't too bad, a bit breezy perhaps, but visibility was coming and going, but mostly coming
















Some of the local inhabitants were a bit incredulous to see us there



But eventually about an hour late we made it to the summit




And it was bloody grim.

But we were here and despite a temptation to say "lets just leg it" I put an aerial up...  At about 10ft agl which is all it would stand




I normally make myself comfortable on a bag, out of the wind, but comfort was not a thing that was going to be had here.  So I just hunkered down and attempted to hear the radio.  Tricky in the howling gale.  And there was no way I was taking off my wooly hat nor hood to help.






There was no mobile signal at all on the summit.  Ian managed to get a bit of signal down the side of the hill a bit and sent a couple of pictures to the Messenger group to let them know we were there.   I just had to dive in on 7.160.  Thank God for the WAB net who let me gate crash.  I think Ken G0FEX picked up on the note of desperation in my voice and conducted things for me and I made 7 qsos in the next 7 minutes.  It was really hard to hear the radio even turned up full! Even simple tasks like logging were a nightmare - holding a pen in the "full-on" winter gloves is hard - no way were they coming off!   Peter PDM was asking if I would be coming on 80 so we decided to stick the coils on and try.   Even in those few minutes the wind had picked up, it was becoming increasingly difficult to walk the length of the dipole to get back to the rig!   Straight away Peter MM3PDM/P was there, followed by Angus MM3BCA who prescribed a quick exit and a dram - wise words!  But I really wanted to catch Esther GI0AZA and knew she was looking for us - I managed to get a signal on the mobile a bit away from the trig and alert here we were there.   And then bingo - despite the best efforts of a contester to sabotage us we made it!!   Time for a sharp exit, there was no chance of doing the usual SOTA thing or doing 20M.

We realised things had changed even in only the 30 minutes we'd been on the summit.  That wasn't wind blown snow - it was now snowing - bullets.  It was horrendous trying to get packed up in that wind - even walking poles were blowing away!

We reviewed the plan and decided that this was getting bad to the level of dangerous and we would have to modify the route to get off as quickly as possible.   By now we were in a total whiteout with zero visibility.  The route down to Loch Wharral heading west was way too dangerous.  It was not only steep, we knew there were some crags to fall off.  The safest route would be to head to the Ben Tirran Cairn and then do a descending traverse to pick up the track down to Adielinn plantation and the road.  This would mean a road walk back but preferable to the possibility of dying  (Actually this is  a reasonably safe hill as any descent south or south westwards will always take you to the road, there are some hills we walk where a minor error could put you in the wrong valley with no exit to civilisation).   Even with this plan,  we had to take an initial compass bearing (243 degrees!) to get to the cairn.  Which thankfully materialised to plan.  So far so good.  By now the weather was starting to get really sporty.   We noticed that Ian's water bottle had frozen.




And the squalls started to get, really quite interesting




From now on until the bottom there are no more photographs or video.

It got to the point where when a squall hit we couldn't walk and just had to hunker down and wait it out, we were using our walking poles to dig in and stop being blown over.  We were frequently in snow over knee deep and a twisting fall caused by the wind might have interesting rearrangements to joints. 

I decided to cheer Ian up by telling him "These are the kind of conditions people die in".

"But only if you cock up" - which we had no intention of doing.  We knew exactly where we were and exactly where we were going.  But still,   no mobile signal eh?

And of course, the track popped up just where it was supposed to, despite us not having visibility of anything at all since leaving the summit.  It was a bit of tedious exit route but safe and predictable.  There were even some sheep who would have made a very pretty Christmas card


So, an interesting walk.  Ben Tirran can be a bugger of a hill...

Sunday 21 October 2018

Kerloch GM/ES-059 (again) because no-one else loves it



The forecast was for fog, and overwhelming dreichness...  But,  if you were to go far enough east you might just be ok.

So it had to be GM/ES-059, Kerloch in far away (well, an hour) Aberdeenshire.  Kerloch is a nice little (534m) hill due south of Banchory, due west of Stonehaven, with stunning views of the North East of Scotland from Aberdeen right around. And, for some reason, no-one loves it.  I've provided the last 3 activations of a total of 7 this millennium.

The walk requires a drive over Cairn O'Mount and a start from the North walking south on easy tracks - at least at the start.  Once you reach the dogleg in the forest the pitch is quite steep and the track becomes very very rough and is like (aka is) walking in a river bed.




The drive got very very murky, in fact Cairn O'Mount was down to about 20m vis and required fog lights



Once we started the walk it was OK on this side of the hill but still clagged over on top



The land here is very very fertile, self seeded trees are all over the path, and it was good to see that there had been considerable support from the European Economic Community for Scotland's forestry infrastructure



As we approached the summit the weather from the north was clearing rapidly






But the summit was still covered














But as we approached the summit the rapidly clearing weather opened up brilliant views









We'd gone there to do a bit of radio as well as enjoy the brilliant views (secondary motivation only)







And how did it go!   Well very well.  We started out on 40m and things were definitely buzzing.  Karl M3FEH was there for us as usual with a great 58 signal at 1048Z and by 1107 we'd worked 24 including 4 summit to summit qsos to Italy and Switzerland and Czech republic.  Dave G4IAR was a cracking 59+ as was Ken G0FEX, the first time I've heard 40m this good to middle England for some time.  Quite a few of the regulars are in the log including of course Don G0RQL, Pedro EA2CKX, Danny ON4VT, Bill G0WSB and many more.

When 40m dried up I saw a spot for Nick G4OOE/P on G/TW-004 on 80m so put the coils on for another S2S on that band.  3 more qsos on 80m resulted with MM0XPZ, G4IAR and M3FEH.  Time to try 20m which seemed a bit slower than usual although I hear conditions at this part of the sunspot cycle have been very bad.  However never mind the quantity, see the quality.  An S2S with SV2RUJ/p in Greece was followed by N4EX in North Carolina and a few minutes later W1OW in Mass.

Changing conditions on 40m made for another visit there for even shorter skip contacts including Phil G4OBK in Yorkshire.

All in all, very productive for my 4 watts out from an FT817 and link dipole for 20/40 (the 80m coils go in at that link) with a peak qso rate of 4 per minute at two separate points!

The views are completely stunning from this summit.  From my perch I was looking out North to Banchory and North East to Aberdeen












But all around the views were so stunning I couldn't decide which photographs to leave out.  So I didn't.  Here follows a completely self indulgent select of views from the top of Kerloch:






















And finally with a gentle smokey haze drifting in from the west (heather burning)






It was time to wave goodbye and head down



Via the slightly disturbing depth gauge just outside Strachan



To a well deserved pint in one of Banchory's 6 CAMRA listed pubs!



Oh,  and Aberdeenshire made special mention in the next days weather forecast 
for having been up to 20C!
It proved to have been a very good choice!



THE END