trail magazine october 2012

29
Britain’s greatest hills. One epic challenge. Climb 20 of ’em with THIS issue! BRITAIN’S BEST-SELLING HILLWALKING MAGAZINE ...in one route: Pillar, Scafell Pike, Great Gable and more! An Teallach Scotland’s scariest hill – for mortals OCTOBER 2012 £3.99 WWW.LIVEFORTHEOUTDOORS.COM TICK THESE OFF! 1062m THRILLS 100 PEAKS 7 LAKE DISTRICT SUMMITS LIVE FOR THE OUTDOORS OCTOBER 2012 13 WALKS + MAPS Ben Venue Jack’s Rake Nantlle Ridge Ben Loyal Great Shunner Fell KIDS UP HILLS How to make that first day out unforgettable EXCLUSIVE REINHOLD MESSNER Three strange days with Italy’s living legend p62 WELSH 3000ERS IN A WEEKEND A Snowdonia classic step by step p121 RUCKSACKS FLEECES GPS UNITS GEAR TESTS AMAZING PRIMUS OFFER! SEE P36 F R E E T I C K L I S T I N S I D E ! TRAIL 100 +

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A sneak peak of the new September 2012 issue of Trail magazine

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Page 1: Trail magazine October 2012

Britain’s greatest hills. One epic challenge. Climb 20 of ’em with THIS issue!

BRITAIN’S BEST-SELLING HILLWALKING MAGAZINE

...in one route: Pillar, Scafell Pike, Great Gable and more!

An TeallachScotland’s scariest

hill – for mortals

OCTOBER 2012 £3.99 WWW.LIVEFORTHEOUTDOORS.COM

TICK THESE OFF!

1062m THRILLS

The one that really wants to hear from

anyone who has done all 100 – trail@

bauermedia.co.uk

R

100 PEAKS

...in one route: Pillar,

7 LAKE DISTRICT SUMMITS

LIVE FO

R THE O

UTD

OO

RS O

CTO

BER

20

12

13 WALKS + MAPSBen Venue Jack’s Rake Nantlle Ridge Ben LoyalGreat Shunner Fell

KIDS UP HILLSHow to make that fi rst day out unforgettable

13 WALKS + MAPS13 WALKS + MAPS13 WALKS + MAPS13 WALKS + MAPSJack’s Rake

Ben Loyal

KIDS UP HILLSKIDS UP HILLSHow to make that fi rst day out unforgettable

EXCLUSIVEREINHOLD MESSNERThree strange days with Italy’sliving legend p62

WELSH 3000ERSIN A WEEKEND A Snowdonia classic step by step p121

RUCKSACKS � FLEECES � GPS UNITS GEAR TESTS

AMAZING PRIMUS

OFFER!

SEE P36

FREE T I C K LIST

I N S I D E !TRAIL

100

+

latest cover oct12 sw.indd 1 21/08/2012 16:00

Page 2: Trail magazine October 2012

Save our summits! 10Behind the front lines of the war on litter

Not so ‘smart’ phones? 12Why you need to be clever before you’re smart... Dream peak 14The north Highlands’ Ben Loyal, a ‘broken, multi-topped collapse of valley-bitten ridges’. Cripes!

Behind the picture 16Nanga Parbat: mountaineering’s toughest 10kmOMM

map pouch

contents Where this month’s issue will take you...

Walking with kids 52 Tips for taking little ones up hills, without tears

Ask Trail 56 Adam and Eve: which is which? Protect your smartphone; learn about lichen; sensible sleep mat storage; should you book on the GR20?

Trail talk 18 The world of hillwalking – according to you lot

Subscribe and get a gift! 36 Fancy a Primus Eta Solo stove, worth £80? Sign up for Trail today and we’ll send you one!

Why we love... 146 ...weather; specifically, the sort we get in Britain

Trail 100 special 20 Britain’s hundred very best hills, we say 7 Lakes summits 30 Kick-start your T100 tick-list in the Lakes An Teallach for mortals 38

Walking Scotland’s steepest, scariest mountain

Meeting Messner 62 Hairy, scary, legendary and utterly unique

a dv e n t u r ess k i l l so u t t h e r e

p38

october 2012 Trail 9

An Teallach. You can do this. Oh, yes you can! tom bailey

Hubble, bubble toil and tea: get this, page 32.

p62

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Page 3: Trail magazine October 2012

G E A RGear news 70The must-have kit that’s coming soon

Eureka! El Cap 2 SUL 72A large but lightweight 2-person tent

40-50 litre rucksacks 74Carry copious hill clobber in comfort

Mountain fl eeces 86For mid-layer mid-weight warmth

GPS receivers 98 6 of the best satnavs for outdoor afi cionados

Big packs put through their paces.

Where this month’s issue will take you...

Lake District 107Route 1 GlaramaraTwo sparkling tarns plus a fantastic view

Dorset 109Route 2 Golden CapA Jurassic walk to the south coast’s high point

Lake District 111Route 3 Jack’s RakeWhy experienced scramblers love Pavey Ark

Snowdonia 113Route 4 Nantlle CircularThe ‘lite’ version of a classic ridge-walk

North Highlands 115Route 5 Ben Hope & Ben LoyalA full-on weekend including a wild camp

South Highlands 117Route 6 Ben VenueThis tasty wee hill is defi nitely the place to go!

Llanberis 121Route 7 Y CarneddauRoute 8 Y GlyderauRoute 9 Snowdon massif

All 15 Welsh 3000ers – the highest mountains in the principality – savoured during a 3-day route

Pitlochry 129Route 10 Beinn a’GhloRoute 11 Carn a’ ChlamainRoute 12 Ben Vrackie Fancy a long weekend walking in Perthshire? Then why not head to this bustling tourist town, the perfect place to mix mountains and tea shops

Yorkshire Dales 135Route 13 Fossdale Horseshoe Our Classic Route takes you on a circular route over the wild, contoured giants of Great Shunner Fell and Lovely Seat

= Includes Trail 100s

R O U T ES

OCTOBER 2012 TRAIL 9

Classic Route

with 3D maps

p98

Have gizmo, will walk!

p74

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A I L R OUTES P E C I A L

100

TR

A I L R OUTE

S P E C I A L

100

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A I L R OUTE

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A I L R OUTE

S P E C I A L

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A I L R OUTE

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S P E C I A L

100

Page 4: Trail magazine October 2012

out there

14 Trail october 2012 october 2012 Trail 15

Page 5: Trail magazine October 2012

OCTOBER 2012 TRAIL 15

BEN LOYALNORTH HIGHLANDS

Ben Loyal’s broken outline looms above the Kyle of Tongue.

© DAVID ROBERTSON / ALAMY

DREAM PEAK

No mountains in the UK are as extraordinary as those in Scotland’s farthest north. Ben Hope gets all the attention,

being the most northerly Munro in Britain; but it’s 763m Ben Loyal, 10km to the east, that cuts the most arresting

dash on the skyline. A broken, multi-topped collapse of valley-bitten ridges, a journey to the summit of this free-standing conquest takes you to a place

that feels like the end of the world.

DO IT! ›› TURN TO PAGE 115

Page 6: Trail magazine October 2012

16 Trail october 2012

Words Dan aspel photograph lhakpa RangDuk sheRpa

The world’s mosT fearsome ridge

out there

october 2012 Trail 17

This summer a British team achieved a Himalayan first on Nanga Parbat’s Mazeno Ridge. Team member Cathy O’Dowd talks us through mountaineering’s toughest 10 kilometres...

Page 7: Trail magazine October 2012

behind the picture

T

16 Trail october 2012

The world’s mosT fearsome ridge

october 2012 Trail 17

he sheer horizontal distance makes it a ridiculous way to climb Nanga Parbat,” says South African climber Cathy O’Dowd. This is no

exaggeration. The 10 kilometre Mazeno Ridge is the longest arête on any of the world’s 8000m peaks, dividing the mountain’s immense Diamir and Rupal Faces. It undulates like a dragon’s back, tipped with eight 7000m crests as it approaches the airless summit of the world’s ninth highest mountain. Safe escape from the route is a difficult – if not impossible – proposition. The sides are so sheer and treacherous that complete commitment or a crushing backtrack are the only two ways off in an emergency.

“It’s very British in a way,” says Cathy. “It’s an endurance test. It’s about sticking it out day after day after day. It’s about taking a route that is not the most direct in any sense but you do it because you can. Because it’s worth a try.”

That the Mazeno route to the summit remained unconquered until this summer is no surprise: Nanga Parbat scarcely struggles for challenges. In terms of technical difficulty the 8126m peak deputises K2. Sixty-eight mountaineers have died on its slopes, around half that number before its first ascent (1953, Buhl). It almost killed Reinhold Messner (see page 62) and did kill his brother. Its southerly Rupal Face is the largest in the world, towering 4600m over the already elevated Himalayan wilderness. The number of successful summiteers lies in the 300s, a tenth the number that have climbed Everest. And as of 15 July 2012 the number of climbers who have achieved its summit via the Mazeno Ridge stands at just two: Britons Rick Allen and Sandy Allan.

“The idea was owned by Sandy and Rick,” says Cathy, who alongside Sherpas Lhakpa Nuru, Lhakpa Rangduk and Lhakpa Zarok made up the six-strong team. “Both had been part of Doug Scott’s Mazeno reconnaissance climbs in the nineties. It had stuck with them, particularly Sandy, for whom Doug is a friend and mentor. This was a project two decades in the making.”

First setting foot on the ridge on 2 July, the team spent ten days traversing its icy pinnacles, reaching the Mazeno Col (6940m) and the summit approach on 11 July.

The conditions weren’t ideal,” says Cathy. “We’d have got nowhere without the Sherpas, who broke trail for all ten days. It was just heartbreaking. We probably had about 200m of proper névé [compacted snow] where you just

walk along the top on your crampons. The rest was anywhere between knee-deep and hip-deep. It didn’t consolidate. It was a bit of a crust over sugar. You’d get steep sections where every time you placed your foot it crumbled under you. If you got lucky you’d hit rock, but the rock was loose and slabby. It wasn’t terribly easy to climb.”

With the summit slopes reached, history could be made. Though previous expeditions had traversed various lengths of the Mazeno (an American partnership had even reached the same col in 2004), until now none had gone on to successfully summit Nanga Parbat.

“Other expeditions had done it much faster than we did,” says Cathy, “but they got to the Mazeno Col with no supplies left and absolutely shattered. Whereas – thanks to the Sherpas – we got there with enough supplies and food for people to hang around for quite some time. Sandy and Rick used that as a foundation.”

The team made a joint summit bid on 12 July, but poor weather and exhaustion held them back after a full day’s climbing. “Our original plan, after the first attempt, was to turn around and go down the next day,” says Cathy.

“The next morning Sandy turned to me and said ‘I don’t want to leave.’ They were so close. Given their age – both in the second half of their fifties – they considered this expedition possibly their last great Himalayan challenge. They were thinking and talking about it like it was the last time they’d try something really outrageous. The two of them had a level of determination, and were prepared to take a level of risk, that I just wasn’t by that point. They needed the rest of us to go down. We didn’t have food and gas for six.”

So after resting at the col for two days, Englishman Rick and Sandy, a Scot, made a second attempt on 15 July. Their successful summit marks an achievement unprecedented in mountaineering history. Their descent, via a route on the Diamir Face (“otherwise unclimbed this season,” says Cathy), was harrowing and wrought with difficulty. The physical strain and dwindling supplies left Rick Allen, in his own words, “skeletal”. But on 19 July, after two and a half weeks at high altitude, the pair successfully returned to base camp.

“They’re both superb climbers, much better in the end than I am,” says Cathy, who in 1999 became the first woman to have summited Everest from both the north and south routes. “I love being out there, but I’m also very keen on coming back in one piece!” T

‘The physical strain and dwindling supplies left Rick Allen, in his own words, “skeletal”.’

Sherpas Lhakpa Nuru and Lhakpa Zarok break trail on the route described as

“the last great challenge of the Himalayas”.

Page 8: Trail magazine October 2012

a lifetime of mountains

Page 9: Trail magazine October 2012

ne hundred peaks. One hundred spectacular summits. One hundred excellent reasons to go hillwalking. It’s the Trail 100.

Since 2007, this mountain must-do list has celebrated the very best that the British outdoors has to offer. But unlike many alternatives, this collection of great hills isn’t tied together by geography or height; their common quality is brilliance. Scattered from the northern tip of the Highlands to the southern reaches of the Brecon Beacons, these are the mountains that have earned a special place in our hearts. We think you should walk them because, simply put, they are special.

So if you’d like to bag the best of the 283 Munros, the cream of the 221 Corbetts, the very finest of the 214 Wainwrights (and many more) in a list mere mortals can find the time to complete, look no further.

The Trail 100 is a life-changing adventure – and you can start yours simply by turning the page...

o

Turn The page for your Trail 100 Tick-lisT

Page 10: Trail magazine October 2012

your trail 100 tick-list 23the trail 100Miscellany 257 lakeland trail 100s...in one route! 26an teallachThe most awesome Trail100 of all? 38pavey arkA Lakeland classic via a cracking scramble 111the nantlle ridgeBag a remote Snowdonia tick 113ben hopeA giant northerner (and its superb neighbour)115the welsh 3000ers...including seven Trail 100s! 121

W

Previous page, top L-R: Tryfan, Liathach, Cairn Toul, Scafell, Ben Lomond, Coniston Old Man, Stac Pollaidh, Helm Crag, Suilven. Bottom, L-R: Blaven, Skiddaw, Scafell Pike, Goatfell, Blencathra, High Street, Y Lliwedd, Helvellyn, Buachaille Etive Mor, Bowfell.

This page, top L-R: Grasmoor, Beinn Tarsuinn, A’ Mhaighdean, Cross Fell, Ben Alder. Bottom L-R: Lochnagar, Pike of Stickle, The Cheviot, Beinn Alligin, Pillar.

hat do we want from a lifetime of mountains? The most varied, spectacular outdoor experience possible – and that's what this list is: all thriller, no filler. And you can climb a whopping 20 of the Trail 100 with this issue, as well as fill in your tick-list and share your experiences online! So tick off the ones you've done and size up your next adventure ...and don't forget to let us know how you get on!

specialHere's where you can unlock these special mountains this issue...

tick ’n’ click! Share your experiences online via Trail’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Visit www.livefortheoutdoors.com where you can download the Trail 100 tick-list, plus the original Trail magazine feature from 2007, which features descriptions of and recommended routes for all 100 mountains!

Page 11: Trail magazine October 2012

Ben Nevis 1344m/4,409ft NN166712 Britain’s highest peak; a stunning, complex labyrinth of routes for all. Bidean nam Bian 1150m/3,773ft NN143542 A fortress of a mountain, closeted and grand – the highest in Glen Coe. Ben Alder 1148m/3,766ft NN496717 Fiercely remote and hard-won, but impressive and satisfying with it. Ben Lui 1130m/3,707ft NN265263 Tall, elegant gatekeeper to the Highlands, defined by amazing NE corrie. Ben Cruachan 1126m/3,694ft NN069303 A massive presence, once thought to be Scotland’s highest peak. Sgurr a’ Mhaim 1099m/3,606ft NN164667 Snaggly satellite of the Mamores’ thrilling Ring of Steall horseshoe. Schiehallion 1083m/3,553ft NN714547 Scientifically important for its symmetry; a wonderful mountain besides. Buachaille Etive Mór 1021m/3,351ft NN222542 Sentinel of Glen Coe; star of a million postcards. Demanding as a climb. The Saddle 1010m/3,314ft NG934129 Mighty and sharp, climbing this Glen Shiel hulk via Forcan Ridge is a must. Ben Lomond 974m/3,195ft NN367028 Most southerly Munro, many people’s first. Scenically stupendous. The Cobbler 884m/2,899ft NN259058 Collapsed, tortured jumble of a peak with a thrilling summit block. Merrick 843m/2,766ft NX427856 The highest point in a fascinating zone of incredibly rough uplands.

Ben Macdui 1309m/4,295ft NN988989 Brooding and sprawling, Britain’s deputy is a wilderness of a mountain. Cairn Toul 1291m/4,237ft NN962972 Bucks the trend of the Cairngorms with dramatic contours and peak. Lochnagar 1155m/3,789ft NO243861 Scotland’s eastern giant; half sub-Arctic plateau, half vertical cliff.

Slieve Donard 849m/2,786ft J358276 Highest point in Northern Ireland, and a fine figurehead for the Mournes.

W&s scotland

cairngorms

n scotland

scottish isles

n ireland

Mountain name Height Grid ref Trail says... Done/date

Sgurr Fhuaran 1067m/3,502ft NG978166 Central of Kintail’s Five Sisters. West ridge a stunningly sustained ascent. An Teallach 1060m/3,478ft NH063837 Brutally built and terrifyingly sheer; probably our scariest walker’s peak. Liathach 1055m/3,463ft NG929579 Dominates Torridon like an open bear trap. An awesome expedition. Sgurr na Ciche 1041m/3,415ft NM902966 Fantastically remote, rough, tough cone on the edge of Knoydart. Ladhar Bheinn 1020m/3,346ft NG821041 Isolated and complex king of the Knoydart wilderness. One of the best. Beinn Eighe 1010m/3,314ft NG951611 Immense... a circle of Munro summits enclosing an ancient corrie. Beinn Alligin 986m/3,236ft NG865612 Charismatic, satisfying and home to Britain’s hardest-won views. A’ Mhaighdean 967m/3,173ft NH008749 One of the UK’s remotest peaks, part of a fearsome northern wilderness. Ben Hope 927m/3,041ft NC478501 Most northerly Munro, magical and isolated on the northern coast. Foinaven 914m/2,998ft NC315507 Bulky, northern ridge walk with incredible views and precipitous screes. Beinn Dearg Mòr 910m/2,985ft NH030798 Remote and dramatic neighbour to An Teallach. Compact but spectacular. Garbh Bheinn 885m/2,903ft NM904621 Unexploited and breathlessly rugged... a gem of a rough diamond. Quinag 808m/2,651ft NC209291 A flail of contours from above, underfoot a stunning set of walker’s ridges. Suilven 731m/2,398ft NC153183 Fantastically weird, utterly unique and set in a special part of Scotland. Stac Pollaidh 612m/2,008ft NC109105 Ragged little peak; great scrambling and views that belie its accessibility.

Sgurr Alasdair 992m/3,256ft NG450207 Highest on Skye; a scrambly ridge takes you into the heart of the Cuillin. Sgurr Dearg 986m/3,235ft NG444215 The ’Inaccessible Pinnacle’. A V Diff climb, but a hell of an ambition. Ben More 966m/3,169ft NM525330 High point of Mull, a Munro that is often left until last due to its location. Sgurr nan Gillean 964m/3,164ft NG471252 Cuillin end-stop is horned and scary-looking; easiest way up is a scramble. Blaven (Bla Bheinn) 928m/3,045ft NG530218 Skye’s most impressive single mountain, and a stunning objective. Goatfell 874m/2,867ft NR990414 Sharp centrepiece to Arran’s under-rated and dramatic highlands.

Beinn Tarsuinn 826m/2,710ft NR959412 Arran’s most exciting hill; traversed with A’Chir, one of Scotland’s toughest. Askival 812m/2,664ft NM393952 Most satisfying peak on the utterly extraordinary island of Rum. Beinn an Oir 785m/2,576ft NR498749 One of Jura’s ’Paps’ – three unique mountains on this sequestered isle.

britain’s greatest mountainsHere it is: your hundred-hill ticket to adventure.Rip it out, print it, laminate it... and most importantly, enjoy it!

Page 12: Trail magazine October 2012

26 Trail october 2012 october 2012 Trail 27

Words dan aspel PhotograPhs tom bailey

Seven SummitS of the trail 100Want to climb the finest mountains the British Isles has to offer? The Lakes is the perfect place to start. Grab your Trail 100 tick-list and walk this way…

Where? Lake DistrictWhat? Trail 100 kick-start!

t r a i l

s p e c i a l100

Page 13: Trail magazine October 2012

october 2012 Trail 27

The jagged outcrops of lower Pillar, looking down into the

wilderness basin of the Ennerdale valley.

Seven SummitS of the trail 100Want to climb the finest mountains the British Isles has to offer? The Lakes is the perfect place to start. Grab your Trail 100 tick-list and walk this way…

Where? Lake DistrictWhat? Trail 100 kick-start!

Page 14: Trail magazine October 2012

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The Primus Eta Solo gas stove is stable, lightweight (365g), extremely compact and highly effi cient thanks to its award-winning burner and heat exchanger – ensuring fast boil times.

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Page 15: Trail magazine October 2012

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Page 16: Trail magazine October 2012

38 TRAIL OCTOBER 2012 OCTOBER 2012 TRAIL 39

Where? North-west Highlands What? Taming Scotland’s beast

WORDS PHOEBE SMITH PHOTOGRAPHS TOM BAILEY

It’s Scotland’s steepest, scariest, most notorious mountain. But does this make An Teallach the realm of the elite, or can walkers tame it too?

AN TEALLACHFOR MORTALS

T R A I L

S P E C I A L100

Page 17: Trail magazine October 2012

october 2012 Trail 39

Where? North-west Highlands What? Taming Scotland’s beast

Sheer beauty: An Teallach’s pillars rise above Loch Toll an Lochain.

Page 18: Trail magazine October 2012

52 Trail october 2012

masterclasstrail skills

Our survey said…Loughrigg Fell Lake District “Loughrigg Fell from Ambleside is a good starter hill with great views and a cave to find, and it seems higher than it really is.” Jon Hill via Facebook

Fleetwith Pike Lake District “A group of us including two kids aged under ten went up Fleetwith Pike, and the young ’uns really enjoyed it. They liked the industrial archaeology and the nice rock scrambles...” GuyHurst via LFTO Form

Roseberry Topping North York Moors “Took my kids when they were little. Makes them feel like they’re climbing a proper mountain.” Tony McGonnell via Facebook

Snowdon Snowdonia “The café at the top gives them a goal to reach and recharges the legs for the descent. There’s also the bragging rights for getting to the top of the highest point in Wales & England.” PhilR via LFTO Forum

Helvellyn Lake District “It was my first mountain/fell and I climbed it as a 7-year-old. My sister was only 4 and was lured on with jam sarnies!” Seth Dunn via Facebook

Clwydian Range north-east Wales “Moel Famau, Moel Arthur and Moel Fennli. Trig points at the top, hill forts and castles, and amazing panoramic views of Snowdonia, the Irish Sea, and even Blackpool on a clear day. Hard enough for the kids to feel

they’ve achieved something yet easy enough for even the youngest explorer.” Ian Mckay via Facebook

Mam Tor Peak District “A safe walk with the option of going on to or past Lose Hill, and the family have Castleton to enjoy for the rest of the day.” Glen Bradford via Facebook

Catbells Lake District “It has to be that old chestnut, Catbells. It’s the easiest hard hill there is and gives a great feeling of achievement for kids.” Paula Ball via Facebook

The Roaches Peak District “Places like the Roaches are packed with interest to stimulate their imaginations.” Matthew Thorpe via Facebook

Hillwalking with children

You and your partner have always been keen hillwalkers, but since having children you’ve tended to pursue your hobby separately with one staying behind to look after the kids. You’d love a way to involve them so you can enjoy the hills as a family, but you’re not sure where to start.

It’s probably fair to say that, until you’ve had children, it’s difficult to appreciate what a major rearrangement of your life they require. A previously enjoyed leisure activity such as hillwalking is just one of many things affected by the arrival of small people. But it’s good that you’re still getting out there; and if your kids are

now at an age where you’d like to involve them too, thus reuniting you and your other half in your love of the hills, the future is looking bright.

Of course, taking the children with you isn’t as simple as simply taking the children with you. It’s unlikely you’ll be able to go to all the same places, climb all the same routes or do all the same things as you did before. Nonetheless, with the right choice of destination, some careful child management and the right gear, you’ll have them bagging summits before you can say “You’re not going out dressed like that!”

Team Trail only has a small number of sprogs between us, so we’ve enlisted the help of our Facebook followers and LFTO Forum members to see what their recommendations are when it comes to getting kids out on the hill…

Where to take them...Choosing the right hill is a difficult balancing act. On one hand you don’t want the route to be too long or too hard, but on the other it needs to be enough of an achievement that your children can feel proud of completing it. Walk your kids into the ground and they’re unlikely to want to repeat the experience again. Make the trip too easy or dull and you’ll struggle to prise them away from the excitement of an Xbox.

The trick, then, is to pick a hill that feels like an adventure. Go for routes that cover exciting terrain, offer loads of features and have a definite summit to arrive at. It might not be a Munro or even a Wainwright, but if it’s somewhere the kids can be Indiana Jones, you’re probably on to a winner. Beyond that, avoid scrambles (certainly initially) stay safe and keep a firm eye on the weather.

Hannah (7) rock-surfing on Glyder Fach.

Eugene (13), Ehven (10), Eyana (6) and Ehvalene (4) on Ben Nevis - a long way from their home on the Pacific island of Guam!

Harry (11), having a blast on Snowdon.

Osian celebrating his 4th birthday on his first Lakeland peak (Helm Crag)!

SMaLL TRaiL ReadeRS’ big aCHieveMenTS

Hands up if this scenario is familiar:

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masterclass

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kids on hills

...and how to keep ’em keen“…and it was only upgraded from a Munro Top in 1984 when a survey… PUT THAT BOULDER DOWN! And where’s your sister? What do you mean ‘pretending she’s a sheep’?”

Children aren’t generally known for their long attention spans. This is why your choice of route is important, but there are other things you can do to keep them interested and motivated. Geocaching is probably the single biggest revolution in child-friendly outdoor pursuits that we’ve seen in recent years. Give them ‘treasure’ to hunt for and most kids will gobble up the miles without even noticing. But their short legs will get tired more easily than yours. Make sure that you allow enough time for regular stops and carry enough food to keep their engines fuelled. They may appear smaller, but an active child can devour food at a rate that an Old Testament locust plague would struggle to keep up with.

Our survey said…I-spy “We make up a kind of I-Spy-type book with stuff related to the particular walk that we are doing.” alib via LFTO Forum

Let them lead “Get them to help with the nav, giving them a simple task like ‘take us to that point’. Makes them feel good that they have the map and the responsibility.” PhilR via LFTO Forum

Natural playground “My kids loved places where they could run free, climb trees, explore and make a base camp. In a few miles they don’t realise how far they had walked.” DaveHarris via LFTO Forum

Geocaching “We’ve been geocaching with our 4-year-old daughter. She loved following the GPS and telling us how close we were getting.” Peter Wainman via Facebook

Something to carry “I loved my first little rucksack and when I had a water bottle on a strap round my neck – heaven.” alteredego via LFTO Forum

Snap happy “If you have a camera that you’re happy for them to have in their hands you can let them take photos when you get to the destinations.” Olivia Fox via Facebook

Bring a friend “My daughter has a teddy which comes with us on walks and has ‘his’ photo taken on trig points.” Ruth Revell via Facebook

Keep them fuelled “Don’t underestimate how much food they need. My daughter eats LOADS when we’re out!” Jo Barrett via Facebook

Isobel (9) at the foot of the

Devil’s Kitchen in Snowdonia.

Cameron (10) on his first Munro – Ben More on the

Isle of Mull.

Ellen beneath Am Basteir, Skye.

Year 6 pupils from Countess Anne CofE primary school on Sheffield

Pike, having also climbed Helvellyn.

Oliver (5) on Snowdon.

SmaLL traIL readerS’ BIG achIevemeNtS

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mountain leGenDS part 2

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october 2012 Trail 63

words and PortraIt simon ingram

mountains of his mind

words dan aspel PhotograPhs matthew

mountain leGenDS part 2

einhold Messner is Mad. arms folded, he’s fidgeting and irritably watching flies. Behind us, some geese are making a racket. somewhere inside the inn, his dinner is getting cold. his face is fixed in his trademark, hairy glare. it’s a look that says ‘make this damn quick’.

We’re in italy’s south Tyrol, above the town of Bruneck. if one of those geese was to shut up, take off and fly south-west about 10 miles over the dolomites they would find Villnoss, where reinhold was born. The spired massif flown over en route is the Geislerspitzen. like most of the dolomites in this sequestered region, it’s gorgeous, incredible, stupendous: an expletive of a mountain, elegant and brutal, seeming to defy gravity. This was Messner’s first mountain: he was five years old. Figures.Trail has spent three days with reinhold travelling through the region

across which five newly completed museums bearing his name are poised. installed in the ruins of mountaintop fortresses, like most of his challenges the Messner Mountain Museums are stunning, controversial and unique. Their creator hopes they reflect the relationship between man and mountain. i’m hoping they might give some insight into the mind of one of mountaineering’s most embattled and superhuman figures.

reinhold the Mountaineer is the greatest of all time. he took what others had done in alpinism and smashed it, along the way redefining what was thought possible for a human. he’s taken the bullets of both mountaineer and celebrity: acclaim, injury, tragedy, fortune, envy, attack – leaving peers mouthing incredulous ‘how the hells’ in his wiry italian shadow. as mountaineer ed Viesturs put it: “after Messner, the mystery of possibility was gone; there remained only the mystery of whether you could do it.”

as for reinhold the Man, the answer is more complicated. slight but cinematic of presence, his features peer sternly out of a crinkled, tanned

R

Unbowed. Unbeaten. Unhinged? Trail spends three days with the many faces of the world’s most controversial mountaineer.

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group test

test graham thompson PhotograPhs tom Bailey

rucksackswhat we tested

Osprey Talon 44 £100 Karrimor Alpinist 45+10 £110Gregory Savant 48 £110Lightwave Fastpack 50 £115Fjällräven Funas 45 £120Kathmandu Altai Pack V2 £120Lowe Alpine Alpine Attack 45:55 £140Berghaus Bioflex 45 £140

A 40-50 litre rucksack is ideal for year-round hillwalking, scrambling and mountaineering. Here we check out eight excellent options.

40-50 litre

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Which rucksack will best suit your needs?

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rucksacks

rucksacks

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group test

fleeces

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mountain fleeces

test claire maxted PhotograPhs tom Bailey

fleeceswhat we tested

Berghaus Parione £80Columbia Thermarator II £100Rohan Gradient £125Icebreaker Cascade Full Zip £130Vaude Shipton Hooded £130Haglöfs Bungy Q Zip Hood £140The North Face Radish Mid Layer £155Brynje Antarctic Merino £190

A mid-weight fleece provides ideal insulation for cold-weather walks,

scrambles and mountaineering trips. To find the right one for your needs, read on…

mountain

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buyer’s guide

Satnav devices have revolutionised how we travel by car, and hand-held outdoor versions are extremely popular with hillwalkers, too...

test graham thompson

GPS receivers

In-car satellite navigation (satnav) devices have transformed how we navigate when driving, and the same

technology is becoming increasingly popular with hillwalkers.

Dedicated hand-held satellite navigation devices for walkers are generally called Global Positioning System (GPS) receivers, or GPS for short. Until recently they were fairly complicated to use, but these days it really is simply a case of turning them on and watching a system of on-screen arrows and cursors.

The most basic unit will require you to input a grid reference, which you will

need to read from a map. You then simply ask the unit to point you in the right direction, and an on-screen arrow will guide you to your destination.

Alternatively you can create a route on a PC with mapping software and download this to the GPS receiver. It will then be able to direct you along the route.

The latest units will display full-colour Ordnance Survey mapping, and all you have to do is watch your progress across the map via an on-screen pointer.

Here’s a cross section of six of the best GPS receivers currently available, so you can choose whichever suits your needs.

98 Trail october 2012

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OCTOBER 2012 TRAIL 99

GPS RECEIVERSTO

M B

AIL

EY

Most of the time when hillwalking you just need a device that will give you a position, help you get to or from a summit or to a footpath that you can more easily follow. To do this the most basic GPS receiver is all you need, and the Garmin eTrex 10 is a perfect example. At only £110 it is a much more cost-effective means of navigating than other devices featured here. Also, as it has only the essential features required to get you from A to B, it is far easier to use than more complex units. There is no mapping here, so you just punch in the grid reference of where you want to go and the device will direct you there (in a straight line!) via an arrow. You can also create routes on Garmin’s Basecamp software and then import them into the device to allow it to navigate you along a specifi c route. The screen is very small, but as you are not using it to read an on-screen map this is no great problem. A simple joystick allows easy navigation of the functions, while the unit’s tiny size means you can easily stash it in your pack ready for use. Better still, as the screen is not colour, you get far better battery life than other units. All this adds up to a unit that is easy to stash in a rucksack pocket for emergencies. An option that is ideal when basic functionality is all you need.

GARMIN ETREX 10 £110

If you own a smartphone such as a model from the Apple iPhone, Samsung Android or Nokia Symbian ranges then you can benefi t from its built-in GPS receiver and just add mapping software. Many brands now produce mobile-phone friendly software, but one of the most well-established products comes from Viewranger. The software can be downloaded directly from the ViewRanger website onto your phone, and at only £10 including credit to purchase the Ordnance Survey mapping of your choice this is a remarkably cost-effective means of streamlining your navigation. Mobile phones often have incredibly good screens, which when combined with ViewRanger software (and its ease of functionality), makes a superb navigational tool. Phones are not as durable as dedicated outdoor devices, though, so you’ll need something like an Aquapac or Ortlieb phone case. Battery power may also be limited to a few hours so such a system should never be relied on. However the ViewRanger software itself is outstanding and includes the ability to create routes on the phone directly or on your PC via my.viewranger.com, which you then import to the phone. The unique Buddy Beacon feature allows you to share your pictures and location via Twitter or share your position with other ViewRanger users.

SCREEN 10.5x6cm colour touchscreenBATTERY LIFE 7 hours WEIGHT 131gWEBSITE www.viewranger.com

AT A GLANCE

SCREEN 4.5x3.5cm greyscaleBATTERY LIFE 25 hours WEIGHT 145gWEBSITE www.garmin.co.uk

AT A GLANCE

SAMSUNG GALAXY S III (FREE ON PLANS FROM £41 PER MONTH)

WITH VIEWRANGER SOFTWARE £10

GPS RECEIVERS

GARMIN GARMIN ETREX 10£110

GALAXY S III (FREE ON PLANS FROM £41 PER MONTH)

BEST VALUE GPS

DEVICE

BEST FOR BASIC FUNCTION

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Yr Elen from the north-east ridge.tom hutton

Foel-fras from Foel Grach.tom hutton

Carnedd Llewelyn.tom hutton

On Tryfan, looking across to Pen Yr Ole Wen.tom bailey

On Glyder Fach, looking towards Glyder Fawr (and ultimately Y Garn).tom bailey

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ultimate weekend

welsh 3000ers

Tryfan, seen from the east ridge of Pen yr Ole Wen.

tom bailey

Elidir Fawr from Bwlch y Marchlyn.tom hutton

Crib Goch, Crib y Ddysgl and Snowdon.

tom bailey