Six weeks to go and the training is not going as well as expected due to snow and cold. Fiona and I have been getting out, but it's a bit sporadic and none of the long rides we need. I don't feel as good as I did this time last year. Maybe training too hard too early and really hammering the skiing and incorporating running to see if I can prevent the patellar tendonitis that wrote off the end of last season. Fiona gets out when she can but has missed weeks of biking that she and the girls normally get in, mostly becasue of the extreme weather. Anyway, never mind our groans and remember that Macmillan pays for much needed nursing and palliative care. Without donations made from nutters like ourselves many less fortunate folk would suffer. So go to http://www.justgiving.com/crankitupgear and help us reach our target. A wee taster of the event can be seen below.
Need avalanche safety gear? I supply Ortovox clothing, backpacks, transceivers, shovels and probes. I work as a ski patroler and rescuer providing avalanche training including as the UK Trainer for RECCO
Wednesday, 31 March 2010
Friday, 19 March 2010
Saturday, 13 March 2010
Avalanche Course
What a day. Great students on the course, good conditions and the hosts at Glencoe Mountain were fantastic. 13 folk passed the module with flying colours.
Martin Taylor Glenshee Patrol with Tracker DTS 2
The students doing stablilty tests and profiles
Neil Gray Cairngorm with Ortovox S1 at final phase of a 2m burial
Sunday, 7 March 2010
Another XC Race Out the Way
Spean XC today. Nice short course but steep little snaps hammered the legs by lap 4. I seem to be strong on the up but weak spot is being too cautious on the downs. Still, I am happy with the result as it's an improvement and I seem to be getting better results this year. I just need to work on not being a wimp! Fiona actualy did realy well as it was icy and slidey so 2 laps as training for the Etape. NACC Duror XC next Sunday - if it thaws enough!
Saturday, 6 March 2010
Iffy in Places?
Nice day today. Started cloudy but quickly burn't off. Checked out some training areas for next weeks avalanche course and had a ski around. A small but deep self triggered slide had come off the lower Rannoch glades, a slope that at 35 deg has gone often in the past. Pictures below to give scale. Also looked at the wall formed on the West Spring run traverse. Also the Glencoe ski club have built a nice igloo over the water hole.
Thursday, 4 March 2010
Guess who's 80 this Year?
As a young Highland lad in the early 70’s climbers were still seen as something of a mystery by Glencoe locals, but one name was very well known. Hamish MacInnes. Without Hamish, Glencoe Mountain Rescue Team would have taken many more years to form and become the extremely well organized and trained rescue service it is to this day, saving many lives through Hamish’s technical and medical initiatives. To this day he has a keen interest and maintains the team’s stretchers with the new MacInnes Mk 7 the mainstay of Scottish rescue evacuation. My climbing role models at that time were either in the rescue team, or working for Glencoe School of Winter Mountaineering as instructors. As a young sixteen year old mad keen on climbing, Hamish took me and another local lad Ronnie Rodgers under his wing. As the youngest, as long as I tagged along on rescues not getting in the way and helping a bit, then odd bits of gear would arrive from “Fishers of Keswick”(pre Nevisport) or Typhoo’s (Tiso’s), ordered for me by Hamish to encourage me for my labours.
I am not sure emulating these masters was safe, as copying Nicholson’s soloing was fraught with risk and I did end up needing rescued with friends myself from the North Face of Aonach Dubh in winter at sixteen. Hamish and Walter Elliot led the rescue and got us to safety. Hamish always had a word of caution or advice for us local lads and despite needing rescued because of inexperience, it was, and is not his nature to pass judgment.
Rescue Twisting Gully 1979
Someone told me one time that I should “carry a camera - as one day it will carry you”. Good advice that took me many years to action. If I had a camera in my early climbing and rescue years, one picture I wish I had taken was that of Hamish in Glen Etive beside an abandoned min-van. We had gallon cans of beans in our old WW2 rescue truck as sustenance, and lacking a plate and spoon there he was sitting on a rock beside the river with his iconic cap on, eating cold beans out of a mini headlight glass with a big dirty channel peg. That image will always stay locked into my brain as the epitome of a hard man climber picture. Yet behind that picture is a gentleman. Another picture I would love to have taken was in his house with a gathering of many very well known climbers, with Hamish dishing out his potent Birch Bark home made wine from gallon flagons. The later devastation flopped around the room paralyzed from too much intake, some adorned with African masks and other things on the nether parts from his expeditions would have been hilarious.Hamish is a tough customer. Cold doesn’t seem to bother him and he has always been immensely strong. This strength at the end of an axe has produced many classic winter routes, not least of which are Agags and Ravens with a youthful Bonnington. I meet Hamish often, out for his daily walk or in the local coffee shop for a daily tea and scone. If the picture of him eating beans out a headlight will also be locked into my minds eye forever, so will be the esteem shown to him from all the greats in world mountaineering. Sitting chewing the fat for a few hours about fishing, films and mountains with Hamish, Yvon Chounard, Cubby and Jimmy Marshal last year I remember as so typical of Hamish’s broad range of interests and friends, and a man unique in his contribution to world mountaineering and mountain rescue.
Left to right 1975. Wull Thompson - Willie Elliot - Sandy Whellans - Jeff Arkless
Tuesday, 2 March 2010
Another Stunning Day in the Highlands
What a great day. I went for a ski and took some pics on the way up. Amazing that I can leave home passing through this scenery and be on ski's 50 mins later. I did some transceiver practice with Christine and Keith. They are shit hot with the old analog F3 Focus. I am ok with a DTS 2 but need more practice.
Some Photo's of the glorious Scottish Highlands:
Crown wall visible below upper ridgeline of SCRL
Right hand was Saturdays incident and left the second slide with the 2m Crown Wall
300m Below the ski lift and well worth being in the top 10 in the World for photographers
Christine & Keith Transceiver Practice
Only a short evening walk but what a view