I headed up to the Dark Peak to walk around the Edale skyline, starting in Hope. Sunny spells and good visibility gave excellent views, especially with the heather starting to come into bloom. Definitely feeling the benefit of my recent high-altitude training in the Alps!
This year’s main summer holiday was to the Marienne valley in the French Alps, with Ruth, Alison, Ian and Emma. Staying in the village of Termignon, we spent eleven days sampling the excellent walking, scrambling, via ferrata and mountaineering in and around the Vanoise National Park. We then spread the drive home over a few days to visit a few cities and sights along the way.
I went up to County Durham to attend Ian and Emma’s wedding in the Morritt Arms Hotel at Greta Bridge. This also gave opportunity to bag a nearby Marilyn before the ceremony, and a Nuttall on the Sunday!
We then headed to Glen Nevis for a couple of days, where Ruth wanted to tick off a few Munros and I had a few unclimbed Munro Tops. Hot and sunny weather made for tough walking conditions but excellent views!
Ruth and I spent another week in the Highlands, starting in the Cairngorms, as that was where the forecast was best. On the first two days, we visited the two Corbetts by Gaick Pass, and Braeriach. Then Ruth was on a course at Glenmore Lodge for a couple of days, so I did a solo bothy trip to the Hutchison Memorial Hut to tick off another Corbett (Creag Mhor) and a few Munro Tops.
To make the most of the sunny weather, I spent the weekend in the Brecon Beacons – my first visit since 2004! On Saturday I did a long-ish walk to tick off a few Nuttalls and Deweys in the east of the range. On Sunday I opted for a shorter walk near Storey Arms, so I could head home in time to watch Andy Murray triumph in the Wimbledon final.
I went up to eastern Cumbria for Ian and Emma’s joint Stag/Hen weekend, staying at Bents Camping Barn near Kirkby Stephen. Among other activities including canoeing on Ullswater and a pub dinner in Ravenstonedale (of which no photos), we did two short walks in the nearby limestone fells, fortuitously including two HuMPs!
The weather forecast was too good not to go to the hills, so I made an impromptu trip to Snowdonia. On Saturday, I did a long-ish walk from Bethesda over Carnedd Dafydd, Pen yr Ole Wen, Y Garn and Elidir Fawr. On Sunday, I did the classic traverse of Tryfan, Bristly Ridge and the Glyders, descending via Gallt yr Ogof. Brilliant warm sunshine throughout, and pretty good visibility too!
Ruth, Jo and Alison stayed up in the Highlands with me for the week following my Munro completion. For the first few days, we headed to Assynt, where we camped at Ardmair Point and had fantastic weather for substantial walks on Ben More Assynt and Conival (plus the Corbett of Glas Bheinn), Cul Mor and Cul Beag, and An Teallach (plus a few Munro Tops!). On Friday we drove down to Glen Shiel, pausing en route to climb Ben Wyvis in the rain, and on Saturday we climbed Ben Tee before the long drive home. 44 Corbetts down, 177 to go!
After six years of dedicated bagging, the Bank Holiday weekend was the appointed date of my Munro completion. We stayed in Edinburgh on Friday and Saturday nights, making a day-trip to the Lomond Hills on Saturday before going to watch Ausma play with the Meadows Orchestra. Then on Sunday, fourteen friends joined me for the ascent of Schiehallion, my final Munro, with champagne and cake on the summit and a celebratory dinner afterwards at the Loch Tummel Inn. On Monday, a few of us climbed the nearby Corbett of Beinn a’ Chuallaich.
Gordon and Marianne’s wedding in Sturminster Newton took me down south for the weekend. Ruth and I broke the journey home by visiting the nearby HuMP of Hambledon Hill, and Wiltshire’s two Marilyns, Win Green and Long Knoll.
Mum and Dad visited for a long weekend. Despite showery weather, we walked in the Peak District both days, heading to Lathkill Dale and Haddon Hall on Saturday and to Stanage Edge on Sunday.
Ruth and I spent the Bank Holiday weekend in eastern Snowdonia. Based at a campsite near Bala, we climbed various obscure Nuttalls and Deweys in the Berwyn and Arenig ranges, encountering lots of heather but very few people! Good weather on the Monday made Rhobell Fawr the undoubted highilight of the trip.
For the second weekend of the trip, I headed south to Saxony with Adam, an English colleague from the RRD office. We hired a car and drove down to Dresden on the Friday night, and explored the city centre on Saturday morning. Then we headed into the nearby Sächsische Schweiz National Park, in the Elbe Sandstone Mountains, where we spent the afternoon visiting the hilltop fortress of Festung Königstein. On Sunday we went for a walk from Bad Schandau to Schmilka through the mountains, made a brief foray into the Czech Republic, and finally visited Bastei to see the famous bridge. An excellent, varied weekend!
I broadened my horizons on the Sunday with a day-trip to the state of Saxony-Anhalt, west of Berlin and Brandenburg. A few hours’ train journey took me to the pretty medieval town of Quedlinburg and the impressive gorge of Bodetal, in the Harz mountains.
As usual, I headed to the Highlands for the long Easter weekend. An awesome few days in the hills with sunshine every day, snow on the high ground, and probably the best air clarity I’ve seen in Scotland. Hills were mainly chosen based on the others’ bagging needs this time, but I did tick off a couple of new Corbetts and a Munro Top!
I made my first visit of the year to the Dark Peak, where I enjoyed sunshine all day for a circuit from Ladybower Reservoir. I started on the familiar ridge of Derwent Edge, then looped back round to the east to explore some of the hills around Bradfield Dale.
For today’s local walk in the White Peak, I started in Winster and did a circuit to the northwest, including Stanton Moor, Lathkill Dale and Robin Hood’s Stride. A good cloud inversion in the Derwent Valley lasted most of the morning, and the sun shone most of the day. At 36km, this was my longest walk in almost a year.
I joined CUHWC for a weekend in Eskdale, staying once again at the Eskdale Centre near Boot. On Saturday, I did a snowy horseshoe of Bowfell, Esk Pike and Scafell Pike from Brotherilkeld. On Sunday, I opted for a shorter, lower-level walk to tick off the nearby Marilyn of Muncaster Fell.