Fair enough on Fairfield
Posted: Sat Dec 12, 2015 8:12 pm
Preamble.
My mission to walk all the Wainwrights in a single winter splutters into life again. It had been 2 weeks since my last outing, where I trod the sodden and sleet-ravaged heights of the northernmost Eastern Fells to Clough Head. I was proud of that effort, but it took a lot out of me, mentally more than anything. I did not see a soul, and the weather has been pretty damn miserable since October. Last week I ventured out to the Far Eastern Fells, in the sense I drove to them. I paused at Pooley Bridge to take a photo of the delectable view of Place Fell where I was headed. The weather was pretty stable. No excuse, except... I discovered I had forgotten my camera. This coupled with the sore throat I was suffering from and the bad night's sleep obliterated what morale I had for the walk, and I said to myself 'to hell with it' (or something worse), and did an about turn for home (Lancaster). That's not quite the full story, as I did try gamely to buy a disposable camera at the newsagents in Pooley Bridge at 8.30 a.m., and they would have had one if not sold out. I enjoyed the drive home on the A6 as far as Shap, which is pleasingly quiet compared with the normally taken M6. Two days later, Pooley Bridge was gone:
The Walk.
It took another week to galvanize myself for action. In the wake of Storm Desmond, biblical amounts of rainfall and the tragic flooding of Glenridding, I headed out for where else but... Glenridding. Well, no, I'm not quite that crazy. The Eastern Fells from that side happened to be on the itinerary I'd already set for myself, but I only needed go as far as Patterdale to start the walk. Kirkstone Pass was passable, if a tad worrying. It was barricaded half way across at the top. There were signs of serious debris which had been cleared, and a shallow 'river' still flowing down the tarmac from a beck which had burst through/over the roadside wall. I didn't get up in time to do Helvellyn (a 14 mile day), and opted instead for Fairfield and 7 of its relatives (only 12 miles). Nevertheless, it was a naughtily late start, 10.30 a.m., and I had to set a brisk pace to get it all done by nightfall. I anticipated probably being on the lower reaches of Hartsop Above How as darkness came, and this is exactly how it worked out. Happily, I did not need the headtorch until I was down in the valley fields.
It was a day of nervous watch-checking, my mind also partly on whether I'd be able to get back up Kirkstone again (what if new landslides had occurred etc etc, and in darkness too, ugh!), but also a day of beautiful winter weather. There was full visibility at all times but interesting and moody cloudscapes above, half-hearted scuds of snow and strong but kind of 'fun' winds. The type that make you feel like a real mountaineer and you have to wrap up against, yet not very dangerous at all, especially on such a clear day. Ironically, the day after such horrendous flooding, this was my best weather-day since October, and the only one I have finished with dry feet (there's another reason for that, though, which I'll mention at the bottom). Furthermore, there were people! I'm not so insane after all. I was back at the car (which had not floated away into Ullswater) by 5 p.m. I easily drove back up Kirkstone, and was reassured to note somebody else doing it behind me. So, I still haven't done Helvellyn, but this walk was in football commentator's parlance 'useful' , and number 6 - 'six', ie one fifth - of the original 30 I had plotted.
A couple of notes on equipment. For the first time this year I complete a walk with more equipment than I set out with. I found a glove on the summit of Hart Crag, which had clearly been left there before this day (it was drenched) so I decided the best chance of it finding its owner again was for me to take it. See my post in 'lost and found'. Thinking it might be pretty cold for feet up there, what with all the water around, this was my first outing for my Scarpa winter boots. In the event, they proved too heavy and uncomfortable for this distance, and scraped a patch of skin off my heel by the end of it. I stayed warm and dry though. I'm now trying out Compeed's '20% extra cushioning' blister plasters. I'll report back if these have enabled me to do the next walk, Sunday 13th December (Red Screes probably, Helvellyn just maybe).
My mission to walk all the Wainwrights in a single winter splutters into life again. It had been 2 weeks since my last outing, where I trod the sodden and sleet-ravaged heights of the northernmost Eastern Fells to Clough Head. I was proud of that effort, but it took a lot out of me, mentally more than anything. I did not see a soul, and the weather has been pretty damn miserable since October. Last week I ventured out to the Far Eastern Fells, in the sense I drove to them. I paused at Pooley Bridge to take a photo of the delectable view of Place Fell where I was headed. The weather was pretty stable. No excuse, except... I discovered I had forgotten my camera. This coupled with the sore throat I was suffering from and the bad night's sleep obliterated what morale I had for the walk, and I said to myself 'to hell with it' (or something worse), and did an about turn for home (Lancaster). That's not quite the full story, as I did try gamely to buy a disposable camera at the newsagents in Pooley Bridge at 8.30 a.m., and they would have had one if not sold out. I enjoyed the drive home on the A6 as far as Shap, which is pleasingly quiet compared with the normally taken M6. Two days later, Pooley Bridge was gone:
The Walk.
It took another week to galvanize myself for action. In the wake of Storm Desmond, biblical amounts of rainfall and the tragic flooding of Glenridding, I headed out for where else but... Glenridding. Well, no, I'm not quite that crazy. The Eastern Fells from that side happened to be on the itinerary I'd already set for myself, but I only needed go as far as Patterdale to start the walk. Kirkstone Pass was passable, if a tad worrying. It was barricaded half way across at the top. There were signs of serious debris which had been cleared, and a shallow 'river' still flowing down the tarmac from a beck which had burst through/over the roadside wall. I didn't get up in time to do Helvellyn (a 14 mile day), and opted instead for Fairfield and 7 of its relatives (only 12 miles). Nevertheless, it was a naughtily late start, 10.30 a.m., and I had to set a brisk pace to get it all done by nightfall. I anticipated probably being on the lower reaches of Hartsop Above How as darkness came, and this is exactly how it worked out. Happily, I did not need the headtorch until I was down in the valley fields.
It was a day of nervous watch-checking, my mind also partly on whether I'd be able to get back up Kirkstone again (what if new landslides had occurred etc etc, and in darkness too, ugh!), but also a day of beautiful winter weather. There was full visibility at all times but interesting and moody cloudscapes above, half-hearted scuds of snow and strong but kind of 'fun' winds. The type that make you feel like a real mountaineer and you have to wrap up against, yet not very dangerous at all, especially on such a clear day. Ironically, the day after such horrendous flooding, this was my best weather-day since October, and the only one I have finished with dry feet (there's another reason for that, though, which I'll mention at the bottom). Furthermore, there were people! I'm not so insane after all. I was back at the car (which had not floated away into Ullswater) by 5 p.m. I easily drove back up Kirkstone, and was reassured to note somebody else doing it behind me. So, I still haven't done Helvellyn, but this walk was in football commentator's parlance 'useful' , and number 6 - 'six', ie one fifth - of the original 30 I had plotted.
A couple of notes on equipment. For the first time this year I complete a walk with more equipment than I set out with. I found a glove on the summit of Hart Crag, which had clearly been left there before this day (it was drenched) so I decided the best chance of it finding its owner again was for me to take it. See my post in 'lost and found'. Thinking it might be pretty cold for feet up there, what with all the water around, this was my first outing for my Scarpa winter boots. In the event, they proved too heavy and uncomfortable for this distance, and scraped a patch of skin off my heel by the end of it. I stayed warm and dry though. I'm now trying out Compeed's '20% extra cushioning' blister plasters. I'll report back if these have enabled me to do the next walk, Sunday 13th December (Red Screes probably, Helvellyn just maybe).