- Location
- Somewhere wet & hilly in NW England.
Yesterdays jaunt was a circuit of the Lake District's Catstycam and Helvellyn taking in the two ridges of Swirral and Striding Edge.
For those of you who don't know Striding Edge it is graded as a simple scramble. It is in effect a rough and narrow path in the sky. In places a few feet wide and with some long drops either side. How people cope with this will vary from experienced mountain-goers who will happily mooch along the top to those who are paralysed (literally) with fear. Over the years I have had to guide a number of small groups and individuals off of the route as they were way out of their depth.
So yesterday was a pretty miserable day in The Lakes with a cloud-base down at around 600m and hence very limited visibility of 15-30m. Wind was gusting throughout the day with wind-speed rising as the day wore on.
Conditions underfoot on the ridge were very wet. The rock hereabouts is quite grippy but resembles tilted dinner plates in its composition. With the right footwear and an awareness of the trip hazard posed by the rock it is an ok surface to walk/climb on although accidents can and do happen.
So here's what we encountered on the ridge:
2 very friendly Asian guys who were wearing jumpers, jeans and trainers. They were soaking wet, shivering quite badly and had precisely zero kit of any description with them. No waterproofs, no map and compass - absolutely nothing. One was sitting down on a rocky shelf not wanting to move. They were a fair way from the summit, it had taken them 4 hours to get to where they were (very slow) and they had had enough. We spent 45 mins getting them down to a relatively safe point on the ridge with explicit advice to return back the way they came. They refused as they were desperate to summit. Not much we could do to force the issue.
Party of 4, two adults and two girls aged about 7. That's right 7. The whole party were in sodden fitness type gear. One of the girls was crying as she had banged her hand on a rock during a slight stumble. We asked if they were ok. The guy who we assumed was the father said that they were all fine and that once they got to the summit everyone would cheer up. Unbeknowns to them the summit plateau was minus several degrees with a heck of a wind blowing across it. The mother (?) shot him a very harsh look. Clearly they were an unhappy bunch. The mother said it was there first time up 'this way' and it was harder than they thought. We advised them that they were still at least an hour from the summit based on the slow speed that they were moving and would then have about 4-5 hours return journey. The father told us it was only 5 minutes to the summit. His first time on the route and we've done it easily over 50 times so what do we know. Hey-ho.
Party of 8, three adults and 5 minors ranging from around 8 to 14/15 at a guess. Adults and one of the older kids dressed in decent quality waterproofs with the others in pac-a-macs. Footwear ranged from trainers to what can only be described as plimsols. The kids were all wearing fleecy or nylon legwear that was sopping wet. All were very cold. One of the older lads was a complete prat and was jumping up and down on a small very wet path (about 2' wide) pretending to 'fall off'. The path had a slightly out of vertical drop of several hundred feet to its edge. One of the adults thought this was hilarious and was getting his camera out to take a photo. If the kid had slipped that would have been the end of him. We were literally speechless.
On our descent we met a party of young guys and girls at about 500m (450m and a couple of linear miles from the summit) and they asked how far it was to 'the mountain'. During the course of our conversation it transpired that they were looking forward to summiting Scafell Pike as they wanted to 'do' Englands highest peak. Gobsmacked - this is akin mixing up Manchester and Liverpool. We double checked this with them and yes as far as they were concerned they were heading up to Scafell Pike. We set them straight but they decided they would carry on to 'get up something'. Incredibly two had maps dangling around their necks. Hmmmm!
So, there you have it, a day of Bank Holiday lunacy in the mountains.
No wonder the MRT's get hacked off.
I feel better now I have got that off my chest!
For those of you who don't know Striding Edge it is graded as a simple scramble. It is in effect a rough and narrow path in the sky. In places a few feet wide and with some long drops either side. How people cope with this will vary from experienced mountain-goers who will happily mooch along the top to those who are paralysed (literally) with fear. Over the years I have had to guide a number of small groups and individuals off of the route as they were way out of their depth.
So yesterday was a pretty miserable day in The Lakes with a cloud-base down at around 600m and hence very limited visibility of 15-30m. Wind was gusting throughout the day with wind-speed rising as the day wore on.
Conditions underfoot on the ridge were very wet. The rock hereabouts is quite grippy but resembles tilted dinner plates in its composition. With the right footwear and an awareness of the trip hazard posed by the rock it is an ok surface to walk/climb on although accidents can and do happen.
So here's what we encountered on the ridge:
2 very friendly Asian guys who were wearing jumpers, jeans and trainers. They were soaking wet, shivering quite badly and had precisely zero kit of any description with them. No waterproofs, no map and compass - absolutely nothing. One was sitting down on a rocky shelf not wanting to move. They were a fair way from the summit, it had taken them 4 hours to get to where they were (very slow) and they had had enough. We spent 45 mins getting them down to a relatively safe point on the ridge with explicit advice to return back the way they came. They refused as they were desperate to summit. Not much we could do to force the issue.
Party of 4, two adults and two girls aged about 7. That's right 7. The whole party were in sodden fitness type gear. One of the girls was crying as she had banged her hand on a rock during a slight stumble. We asked if they were ok. The guy who we assumed was the father said that they were all fine and that once they got to the summit everyone would cheer up. Unbeknowns to them the summit plateau was minus several degrees with a heck of a wind blowing across it. The mother (?) shot him a very harsh look. Clearly they were an unhappy bunch. The mother said it was there first time up 'this way' and it was harder than they thought. We advised them that they were still at least an hour from the summit based on the slow speed that they were moving and would then have about 4-5 hours return journey. The father told us it was only 5 minutes to the summit. His first time on the route and we've done it easily over 50 times so what do we know. Hey-ho.
Party of 8, three adults and 5 minors ranging from around 8 to 14/15 at a guess. Adults and one of the older kids dressed in decent quality waterproofs with the others in pac-a-macs. Footwear ranged from trainers to what can only be described as plimsols. The kids were all wearing fleecy or nylon legwear that was sopping wet. All were very cold. One of the older lads was a complete prat and was jumping up and down on a small very wet path (about 2' wide) pretending to 'fall off'. The path had a slightly out of vertical drop of several hundred feet to its edge. One of the adults thought this was hilarious and was getting his camera out to take a photo. If the kid had slipped that would have been the end of him. We were literally speechless.
On our descent we met a party of young guys and girls at about 500m (450m and a couple of linear miles from the summit) and they asked how far it was to 'the mountain'. During the course of our conversation it transpired that they were looking forward to summiting Scafell Pike as they wanted to 'do' Englands highest peak. Gobsmacked - this is akin mixing up Manchester and Liverpool. We double checked this with them and yes as far as they were concerned they were heading up to Scafell Pike. We set them straight but they decided they would carry on to 'get up something'. Incredibly two had maps dangling around their necks. Hmmmm!
So, there you have it, a day of Bank Holiday lunacy in the mountains.
No wonder the MRT's get hacked off.
I feel better now I have got that off my chest!

