Stuc a' Chroin and Ben Vorich

Stuc a' Chroin and Ben Vorich

Monday, 24 June 2024

20 June 2024 - Carn Gorm : a Summer Solstice Munro.


It was with more than a tinge of sadness that a friend reflecting on two rounds of the Munros, plus Tops on his first round, observed, ‘Time flips by.’ Indeed it does as a quick check of the date of our first ascent of Carn Gorm, Glen Lyon brought home. It was the 3rd of October 1982 and although we saw no sign of stalking in progress, I’m  surprised we weren’t challenged in this notoriously unfriendly place. Today, even with the Land Reform Act 2003, the hostility towards walkers still exists. Perhaps even more so.

The group comprising the Munros Carn Gorm, Meall Garbh, Carn Mairg and Meall na Aighean lie on the Chesthill Estate and this notice greets you at the start.

 


I’ll leave you draw your own conclusions but obviously it’s not a privilege to be here, at least not in the way they mean. It’s a right under the Land Reform Act. Also, it’s absurd to require that the circuit be done clockwise. Do it any way you like. Not on the notice but on the estate website is the instruction to be off the hill by 7pm, a blatant attempt to stop wild camping. Again a contravention of the LRA. The carpark at Invervar is permanently closed. 

The path through woodland gave a pleasant start and lead to a rough track which we followed to a bouncy bridge by a small dam, then up by the forest edge to the open hillside. Once on the grassy ridge the path makes the going easy to the summit cairn. The toppled trig point to the north-west is not the summit but gives views to Loch Rannoch. We had lunch there.

The route is waymarked, surely a new low for the Munros, but it’s just a cynical attempt to keep walkers out of the corries which during stalking is fine, but at other times not. Waymarked or not, it’s the most natural way up Carn Gorm but lacks any interest.

It wasn’t a great day for photography:




The old trig point is not the summit




Down to Glen Lyon

Loch Rannoch from old trig point


 We only met four other walkers as we descended this popular Munro. A girl with two collies was setting off late for the full round of the four Munros not expecting to finish until 8 or 9 pm. Now, that’s what I like to see.

Looking west to Glen Coe

Friday, 14 June 2024

Wednesday 12 June - 2024 Schiehallion

On 27 August 1977 we stood on Schiehallion's summit with our one year old rescued Border collie, Morag. It was one of our earliest Munros and her first. On Wednesday we again climbed Schiehallion, had the summit to ourselves and remembered the wonderful 13 years we had with her, on and off the hill.



It was a cold morning so we didn’t hang around and made quick progress over the moor to gain the stony ridge.




At a large cairn we met the two people ahead of us, the male of the duo announcing that fifty years of smoking wasn’t helping his second ascent. His wife was carrying a full pack while he had cleverly lightened his load by not carrying anything. We left them resting at the cairn and were soon crossing the quartzite boulder field leading to the summit. 



It was hard to believe that it was 47 years since we last stood here.


We didn’t linger long on the top and descended in improving weather. Late starters were met lower down most saying ‘hello’, some passing by grim-faced or head down. Some appeared to think I was their ‘pal’… 

We eventually found a decent spot away from the busy track, had tea and rolls in the sun then dropped off the ridge and so back to the car. An enjoyable day with happy memories of times past.

Note: Our 1977 ascent was by Gleann Mor starting from Glengoulandie Farm on a reasonable path, followed by some heather bashing to reach the start of the east ridge. These days, most will start from the attractively located carpark at Braes of Foss as we did today. £3 a day with free, clean toilets. The awful Beauly to Denny transmission line has industrialised and degraded the landscape here. 










Monday, 10 June 2024

Monday June 10th - A wet start

Off on our travels again but the weather isn’t settled enough to entice us very far north, so we’ve stopped off at our usual spot near Loch Tay for the time being. Apparently, snow has fallen on the hills on seven consecutive days but not here as far as I can tell. Not yet!





Thursday, 23 May 2024

22 May - A saunter above Loch Tay

The weather forecast was for thundery showers and heavy rain later. The cloud was well down on the hills so parking in Kenmore we walked to Remony and up to Balmacnaughton where we were delighted to see swallows and swifts in large numbers. A short distance further on is the little bridge over the Allt Mhucaidh, built in 1996 by 78 Regiment Engineers, where we diverted to make the short ascent to the Acharn stone circle. We  never tire of these simple walks though as the hills cleared there were the usual pangs of regret at not being on our way to a summit. It would certainly have been a lot less humid higher up. 




Retracing our steps, we took the track towards Acharn (of waterfall fame) and spent 20 minutes watching two  brown hares chasing each other and generally frolicking around. Descending to Acharn would have meant additional road walking back to Kenmore, so returning to Balmacnaughton we followed the RRW to join the steep twisting road down to Kenmore. The heavy rain didn’t arrive until later which meant I couldn’t test my 7 year old Rab Kinetic’s waterproofness. Fellow blogger alanrayneroutdoors.blogspot.com had reported some folks finding the jacket leaked like a sieve while others, including me, found it was fine for summer days on the hills in wet weather. 


Back in Kenmore we were struck by how quiet it was - except for the noise of heavy construction vehicles everywhere.The £300 million plus redevelopment of Taymouth Castle by its new US owners, a ‘playground for millionaires’,  is in full swing but otherwise Kenmore is ‘closed’, a ghost village. The beach and holiday properties have been bought by the developers. The lovely Paper Boat cafe sadly closed a few years ago. Houses in the village have been sold to the developers. Kenmore Hotel is closed for refurbishment as part of the redevelopment. The locals for the most part support the development, but why they think those coming to this luxury resort with clubhouse etc will spend money in the village is beyond me. Time will tell, but those staying at the luxury Fife Arms, Braemar, really don’t have breakfast or coffee at The Bothy! The Courtyard is, thankfully, still open for coffee etc and has a good deli, gift shop etc.

At the lovely Paper Boat in 2019




Tuesday, 21 May 2024

20 May - Dunan Bothy

Claggan and Loch Tay

 A misty start to the morning so we drove to Kenmore then along the south side of Loch Tay to Ardtalnaig and up to near Claggan. We’ve been on the hills both sides of the glen so had no incentive to go high and wander in the mist - we’ve had plenty of that recently. The tops did clear around mid-day but we were happy enough to stay low on what is now the Ardtalnaig to Aberfeldy section of the Rob Roy Way. 

Shee of Ardtalnaig (Summit Ciste Buide a’ Claidheimh)

Oyster catchers, a roe deer racing up the slopes of the Shee of Ardtalnaig, a brown and a mountain hare (spotted by Lynne) added interest and pleasure. A gin trap on a log bridging the Allt a’ Chilleine, not so much.


It’s an understatement to describe Dunan as a ‘locked bothy’ so no shelter here in an emergency. That said, when a few feet away you see the remains of an open fire  perhaps you can’t blame the estate. I’ve never seen this before out here but it seems to be becoming common, together with the curse of disposable barbecues.



We found shelter from the cool breeze in the sheepfold near the bothy, had rolls, hot cross buns and tea. An oyster catcher flitted about on a wall. From here the track continues into Glen Almond, a glen well known to us starting from Newton Bridge in the Sma’ Glen.

Distant hills above Glen Almond

Lynne took some better pics but I haven’t transferred them to the phone yet so these will have to do. (Mobile blogging seems much harder than I remember!) 


Sunday, 19 May 2024

Sunday 19 May - Loch Tay

A lovely drive with the early light cloud lifting to bring welcome sunshine. We’re not sure what we’ll do tomorrow but we’ll be among the hills somewhere.



Sunday, 12 May 2024

Test

Just checking that I can remember how to post to blogger.









Saturday, 14 May 2022

Apollo 11 Command and Service Module; Apollo 11 Lunar Module

 This is for Sir Hugh at conradwalks.blogspot.com


These two models were built to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landing. 




Command and Service Module

I was a bit disappointed with the Command and Service Module because the clear panels had small manufacturing imperfections and getting a good finish on the Command Module's clear panel seams  risked damaging the panel. I did enjoyed building this model but could have made a better job. 

The Command Module instrument panel with decals applied.


Lunar Module

The real Lunar Module was pretty rough-looking affair so the painting was easy - it's meant to look  imperfect. Jim McDivitt said that when he first saw the LM he thought it looked like a 'piece of junk' but it was in fact a brilliant piece of engineering (which he knew of course). In March 1969 McDivitt and Rusty Schweickart took the LM on its maiden flight in Earth orbit as part of the Apollo 9 mission and, following the explosion on board Apollo 13, the LM became a lifeboat for the crew.

 Some photographs I've posted previously:

USS Voyager




Space Transport System (STS), commonly referred to as 'the Shuttle'




The Saturn V - one of two I've built so far.

Building the first Stage



The final result



The stages shown separately









Monday, 23 August 2021

29 July - a third and special visit to Ben-y-Hone

On a very misty February morning in the late 1970s we arrived at Invergeldie after a a snowy drive up the narrow twisty hill-road. Only one other car was parked, a yellow Saab which we were sure belonged to my brother and his wife - Saabs were not common in the UK at the time, let alone yellow ones! The snow was at road level so we donned skis and set off into the mist, following the Invergeldie Burn to Coire Riabhach and so to the large summit cairn. The mist never lifted but we did see other ski tracks which we assumed belonged to brother and wife, although we never stumbled across them and their car was still at Invergeldie when got back. That was Ben-y-Hone but it could have been anywhere. 

It was many years after finishing the Munros when we returned to enjoy a perfect spring day, crossing the Turret Burn before Lochan Uaine then through the moraines to reach the snow patches shown in the photo below. These are the sort of days we all dream about.


Snow patches and Carn Chois distant

Sadly nowhere to be seen on our latest ascent

Biorach a' Mheannain from the slopes of Ben-y-Hone. 


Some rough going through deep heather and the moraines 

When we first did Ben-y-Hone we weren't actually 'doing' the Munros in any serious way. It was just a convenient and easy hill to ski. Later, that was all to change and on the morning of 29th June 1991, 100 years after the publication of Munro's Tables, we stood on the summit of Sgurr Dubh Mor having come up by Coire a' Ghrunnda from our camp in Glen Brittle. In November of that year the SMC (Scottish Mountaineering Club) held a dinner in Edinburgh to mark the 100th anniversary of publication of The Tables - we used the 1974 and revised 1981 editions, which kept the spirit of exploration and adventure alive (they are not guidebooks). We were fortunate enough to get two tickets and had a grand evening of celebration with talks and slides, speeches from SMC stalwarts and enjoyable swopping of experiences with fellow Munroists, particularly when the wine began to flow. 

Since then we've always tried to be on a hill to mark the occasion, sometimes a Munro, sometimes not, and in 2019 we chose Meall Bhuidhe in Glen Lyon since we were on holiday in the area. However, given the invasion of people in 2020 and with some pretty unsavoury behaviour on display, we gave the Highlands a miss. This year though, we were determined to be on a Munro on the 29th no matter the obstacles. It was, after all, the 30th anniversary of our 'compleation'.



Invergeldie in Glen Lednock is a popular start for the hill so we were there early to guarantee a parking spot and avoid the anticipated crowds. Surprisingly though, it was relatively quiet with plenty of parking available and we were soon away crossing the bridge beyond Coishavachan, making swift progress to get high before the mist burned off and temperatures soared. 

Gloomy conditions and the unsightly track which thankfully stops before the broad ridge is gained (below)



The broad ridge to the shooting butt (just visible) gives lovely walking


Looking towards the summit

Lower down we'd overhauled a few walkers who were clearly feeling the heat and seemed very unfit, so we were soon on our own enjoying the gentle stroll across the sort of terrain which, I'd guess, every walker loves. We expected to find the summit environs quite busy but only one couple were at the large cairn and they didn't stay long after our arrival. 


Approaching the large cairn. I love these old fence posts in the hills






Lunch spot


We lazed about a short distance from the cairn, reflecting on how enjoyable all our recent days had been on these hills around Loch Turret and Glen Almond. Sadly, where mountain  hares in abundance were once a delightful sight there were none, slaughtered along with those in Glen Shee and many other areas in the name of grouse shooting. I detest every one of you involved in this.





Our first ascent of this Munro on skis followed the glen (above) and Invergeldie Burn before breaking off right. The path, (faintly visible) continues to Dunan Bothy in Glen Almond and ultimately to Artalnaig on Loch Tay.

The forecasted high temperatures didn't materialise until late in the afternoon and the last of our tea was gratefully enjoyed in fairly intense heat. Our only other pause was to take a photograph of these lovely orchids, then it was home for a celebratory meal with a bottle of Chablis going down rather nicely.