24th December 2005
A great day out on this pair above Glen Banchor near Newtonmore. It was a touch windy but sun and blue sky made a change from Scottish clag.
GM/CS-088 - Creag Liath - 745m - NH 663008 - 4 points
6 QSOs: 80m CW - 2, 40m CW - 4
Left the car at the end of the public road at NN 692997 and set off with head torch across the river to the cottage and barn at Glenballoch. A right turn through the woods then spat me out onto the southern slopes of the hill. I took a fairly direct route to the summit turning the very steep ground on the left.
There were quite strange band conditions and I had trouble making my presence felt with a number of stations starting to call CQ on top of me. I rather think I had my antenna setup in the wrong direction which didn't help. However, Jack, GM4COX/M (in his car at the start of his route) and Mike, EI2CL were worked on 80m and then HB9AFI, G3TJE, G0VYR & MW0IDX on 40m. Photo below looks across to Carn Dearg from the summit cairn.
GM/CS-037 - Carn Dearg - 945m - NH 635024 - 6 points
15 QSOs: 20m CW - 4, 40m CW - 11
When planning I was in two minds whether to head around the high ground or cut across the corrie. However, the stiff wind made up my mind and I headed north to the col, down to the river which I followed to beneath the summit and then took the punishingly steep grassy gully directly between the two summit buttresses. Care was needed as high up the turf was hard frozen and quite icy in places.
Below are the two summit buttresses of Carn Dearg and the view back to Creag Liath.
Three friendly Ptarmigan high in the gully.
It was extremely windy when I reached the summit and there was no shelter to be had bar perching precariously on the east face (not recommend without belay!). I rapidly set up the antenna and sought refuge instead in my bivi bag and stayed tolerably warm which was good since I had something of a pile waiting for me. HB9AFI, HB9AGH, HB9DOT & G4OBK on 20m and then the following on 40m: G4OBK, PA0XAW, DL4ALI, EI7CC, G4ERP, G3PWS, EI2CL, LX1NO, G4ZIB, GM4UBJ & GM0AXY the latter two benefitting from a quick shortening of the skip towards the end.
It is a long walk back out from this summit. But with time on my hands I dawdled and enjoyed the views, the sense of space and eventually a glorious evening sun disapearing behind the hills west of the glen. Top tip: follow the Allt Balloch all the way to the main river (pleasant and picturesque) rather than try and cut across (boggy and laborious).
8th December 2005
An evening grab of my local 8 pointer. It was cold, dark, misty and the skip was long...
GM/CS-012 - Beinn a'Chaorainn - 1050m - NN386851 - 8 points
5 QSOs: 80m CW - 5
The forest track from Roughburn takes you to a junction at NN372822 where a left turn very shortly leads to a little cairn and a way through the woods onto the hillside below Meall Clachaig. This is a good approach but the first section through the woods has now become almost intolerably boggy (swamp maybe a better word). In daylight this is just about avoidable by threading through the trees but in the dark it would potentially be horrifc. Made a mental note not to come back this way!
A straight forward plod eventually leads to the south summit. I arrived in clag and dark a little after 1800 and there was more snow on the summit than I expected so was very careful in moving across to the main summit. The cornice that forms here is a serious man trap that has claimed lives. The east face cuts into the path of the bearing between the two summits but is filled in by the cornice.
This cairn offered a little shelter from the wind but it was very cold - this was going to be a swift activation. With long-wire set up I called CQ on 80m. I was grateful to the following chasers who were worked fairly quickly: G3VQO, G3TJE, HB9DOT, DL4FDM & HB9AFI. The nearest were south UK so with long skip I was not able to work some other UK stations who I knew were waiting. A quick call on 40m went un-answered.
I took a direct bearing off the summit and this wonderfully gave me a quick descent on firm névé to about half way down by linking large snow patches. After this the crust was collapsing so went for linking the heather patches after that! Now out of the clag I was able to set my bearing to the twinkle of house lights at Inverlair which guided me down to the Allt a'Chaorainn. I tried diluted tomato soup in my flask which turn out to be great food but lousy drink so I quenched my thirst at the river before heading back through the woods to the road.
5th December 2005
GM/CS-104 - Beinn a'Bhacaidh - 555m - NH 431119 - 2 points
7 QSOs: 80m CW - 1, 40m CW - 6
There are several things I will do differently the next time I activate this fine hill:
1) I'll probably try and walk in from the north rather than from Loch Tarff avoiding much bog and deep heather
2) I'll choose a clear day rather than clag so to get nice views of Loch Ness
3) I'll take a 1:25,000 map not a 1:50,000 which in the clag proved useless on this complex multi-knolled summit.
4) I'll try and take my gloves rather than my wife's and hopefully send half decent CW as a result.
After doing away with several impostors I eventually ended up on the true summit in thick clag at about 1500. This summit is perfect for a long wire antenna and I had only just got one set up between the summit and a nearby knoll when I heard G3CWI calling me on 80m. I immediately started to reply and then realised you need to tune the ATU with a long wire! So after working Richard and then tuning up properly on 40m the following stations were worked amid heavy QRM and with very squashed fingers: HB9AFI, G3VQO, EI7CC, DL1AUU, DL4FDM & MW0IDX.
After picking the wrong way off the summit I stumbled back to the car in the dark, in much bog and in next to no visibility contemplating my seeming lack of hillcraft and eventually blamed a heavy week in London, a long drive home and general lack of sleep, rest and time off! Made a commitment to escape to the hills a little more often this month and chase down G3CWI's CW score!
18th November 2005
GM/CS-044 - Beinn Teallach - 914m - NN 361859 - 6 points
I felt like an uncomplicated plod on this rather cold day so chose Beinn Teallach which is just up the Glen from home. I got away after lunch and thoroughly enjoyed the increasing views up the otherwise boring ascent of the south side of this 'only just munro'. The northern aspect of this mountain is much more interesting and was my route of ascent last time after Carn Dearg.
Right is Beinn Teallach from the Allt a'Chaorainn which one has to cross shortly after leaving the woods from Roughburn.
Below is the view across to the Aonach Beag ridge which along with Ben Alder will complete all of Region 4b of the Relative Hills of Britain for me. It's a big expedition I've been saving up for quite a while - maybe this winter??
The sunset was nice but my photography skills failed me so I haven't pained you with my rather poor efforts!
At the summit, it was getting dark and very cold so I every layer including down jacket was emplyed before putting up the dipole. Pictures below show the dipole in place with the Minipoles as previously described and 80m loading coils in place (click for larger image).
G3CWI, GM0AXY, EI7CC & G4OBK were all worked in quick succession on 80m followed by G3XJS & DL4FDM on 40m. Nothing on 20m. I was logged into the SOTA IRC channel on my phone and arranged a sched back on 80m with G4OWG who was on channel. I could hear him just in the noise but unfortuantely he couldn't hear me. The temperature was about -4deg C with a breeze and I was getting a little chilled despite all layers so I didn't hand around much longer than necessary and strided back down with a full moon lighting my way.
2nd March 2005
SOTA Ref GM/CS-101 - Beinn a'Mhonicag - 568m - NN287854 - 2 points
8 QSOs: 80m CW - 3, 40m CW - 2, 20m CW - 2, 2m FM - 1
This is my fourth time operating from this convenient hill in Glen Roy (and second successful activation). I was up and running with the Slinky Special well before schedule at about 0745z. The weather conditions were pretty wild - a very cold gale with frequent blizzarding. However the ground drops away sharpish just south west of the summit giving almost perfect shelter so I was quite comfortable!
A call on 20m CW raised Martin SP5JNW in Warsaw and a shout on 2m FM caught Robin, GM7PKT/M on his way to work in Fort William (line of sight into town!). On 80m CW I worked GM0AXY, EI7CC & G0TUE getting fair reports and then G3VQO (Sussex) & DL2IAD on 40m CW on long skip. A final call on 20m got OK2MSS in the Czech Republic.
I was asked for advice regarding overnight expeditions so I thought I'd post my answer here:
Doing overnight expeditions has a number of advantages. For instance it allows you to make use of the evening and early morning meaning you don't have to write off an entire day work or family-wise and yet get a good length expedition in. You also tend to have the hills to yourself & get to see lots of sunrises and sunsets!
Equipment I use is as follows:
- Goretex Bivibag (of course you could take a small tent instead but the bivibag is much easier and you don't need to worry about finding a pitch. Anywhere flattish 6 x 2 feet will do!)
- Warm sleeping bag (I'm using a 5 season down at the moment but will downgrade once the Spring arrives)
- Thermarest (I use the ultra small one and stick my rucsac down the bottom for my feet (if it's dry otherwise a fleece or something)
- 2 or 3 rucsac liners (for wet kit/stashing boots outside, etc)
- I don't take a stove, just butties, etc. But this is personal preference!
- I do totally overdo it on warm clothing. Many layers, down jacket, spare gloves, spare hats, balaclavas. However, this probably applies to SOTA expeditions in general not just overnighter!
I am finding 80m a great band to use for overnight trips. Very reliable early morning and evening. I have done some Top Band but find it is often quite late before the band wakes up and I'm snoozing by then!
Even if I am not acitvating in the evening (say getting onto a top late), then I still try and set up the antenna since it gives the luxury of operating from the sleeping bag in the morning without having to get up first!
I don't want to paint too rosy a picture. This is roughing it! And if the weather is bad it can be quite a trial. For instance, at 6'3" I *really* struggle to get dressed and kitted out inside my bivibag so if it is chucking it down outside, that's a pain.
Obviously, it goes without saying, stay within your comfort zone and experience hill-wise if you are out on your own. If I had to stress one point it would be warmth, warmth, warmth. Take lots of layers. And be careful with down in Scotland. I use it, but it is useless if it gets too damp. Always seriously overengineer the layers/hats, etc. You definitely don't want to be caught out alone and hyperthermic. Keeping weight to a minimum is moderately important but over-rated especially in the British hills. More of an issue in Alpine Climbing, say, where speed is of the essense, but if you are wondering whether to put in the extra fleece, etc: Put it in!!! Warmth should always win out over weight if you are solo. Just think, a small injury could have you waiting a long time in the wind and the wet and you have no friend to lend you his spare fleece!
The other thing of course is (especially in the winter), much of the walking is in the dark. So you must be comfortable with night navigation in anything but the very simplest of trips.
When solo be much more cautious than you would be when with others in all respects- take your time, stay well within your hill experience and ensure someone knows your exact plan, proposed bivi spot, and possible diversions/escape routes.
Having said that, enjoy! I have had hugely rewarding experiences in these less travelled hours of the day.
26th February 2005
GM/CS-093 - Creag Dhubh - 658m - NN322824 - 2 points
QSOs: 80m CW - 3, 40m CW -1
It was nearly exactly a year after activating this hill that I was up here again. Last year this was the site of my first CW QSO for nearly 20 years. This time I activate it with 4 CW QSOs on 80m and 40m.
I headed up from the A86 straight up through Tulloch Wood and steeply to the top. This is the quickest way up but punishingly direct. Last year's route from the Chapel is easier going. There were some sizable patches of quite deep soggy snow to plough through but the weather was benign giving nice views. I used a slinky special inverted L and was pleased to work GM4CXP, GM0AXY, G4KKI & OK1DEC between 0800 and 0900.
17th February 2005
GM/CS-070 - Geal-charn Mor - 824m - NH837124 - 4 points
1 QSO: 40m CW - 1
Thanks for anyone who may have been listening out for me on CS-070. It
was quite wild wx condx and this made it difficult to do anything
very constructive with antennas. On arrival, I couldn't get in my bivi bag
fast enough and in the morning after a few calls on 40m at 0730 all I had in
mind
was getting off the hill and out of the wind!
A grand total of 1 QSO with EC2AHL/QRP in Northern Spain at a little after 2130. He didn't hear me call when on the dipole (in fact he started calling CQ on top of me doing the same) but came back straight away when I switched to the vertical (which was only the slinky stretched about 2.5m, the top part of my vertical was abandoned because of the high wind). So only one data point for my experiment! On receive, however, I thought the dipole was better.
The hill is an easy and accessible one with a very good track (almost road) from near Aviemore (NH875110) leading to within 125 vertical metres of the 824m summit, then a straight forward wander to the top. Deep snow made it hard going .... oh how I envied those ski tracks running along besides me as I floundered along! This is classic back country skiing territory.
This was a thoroughly enjoyable and varied outing. Variable weather conditions, variable band conditions, stunning views from the tops, tricky navigation through the clag below.
GM/WS-031 - Geal Charn - 1049m - NN 504812 - 8 points
QSOs: 40m CW - 1, 30m CW - 3
Set off from the car on mountain bike at about 0530 and abandoned the bike near Lochan na Earba. A steady plod saw me at the summit nearly an hour before my scheduled activation time. It was clag all the way but as I approached the summit the cloud fell away and gave spectacular views all around and a magnificent sunrise.
I worked DK1KQ on 40m CW and then went and had a look around the higher bands. I came back and called CQ on 7030 at 0930 for about half an hour with no joy. The skip was long and the band was swamped with - . ... - so I didn't stand much a chance! Up to 30m then where there was deep QSB in play. I am realising a quick report is essential in these conditions, by the time I had got through ...[gm om tnx fer call, ur rst 559 559 559 = name is jon jon jon es QTH is hill top nr fort william nr fort william sota ref ws031 = hw?, etc] the station had faded away! I lost three QSOs this way! But then a more quick fire approach gave good chats with DL0HWI, DK7LX (which was one that got lost but found me again, thanks Georg) & OK1AJ giving me my fourth and 'qualifying (!)' QSO.
GM/WS-023 - Beinn a'Chlachair - 1087m - NN 471781 - 8 points
QSOs: 40m CW - 4
The compass led me faithfully back to the beallach and I headed straight up the steep broken ground up to the plateau where there were a couple of very tame ptarmigan waiting for me. By the time I'd got my camera battery warmed up they had grown a little more wary and I spent quite a while chasing them across the snow fields! So, already late, I was now even later!
There was now a very vicious northerly gale wipping across the plateau and I was rather concerned about not finding shelter up here. However, on getting to the summit there was a remarkable corniced holllow just lee of the summit that was almost perfectly sheltered.
A CQ on 7030 brought G3CWI, EI7CC, G4RQJ & GM0AXY in fairly rapid succession. There were no other takers so I was up and away , back around the corrie rim and onto the north ridge and back to the bike. Then a simply marvelous 5km free wheel back to the car. This is otherwise quite a slog out after a long day as testified by the dogged looks on some walkers I sailed pass on the bike!
2.5 watts into multiband dipole on walking poles througout.
Here is a video of the 360 deg view from Geal Charn (836k) (mpeg4 file - you will need quicktime or similar)
30/31 December 2004
This was a bit of an epic weather-wise but thanks to the chasers I managed to activate all four tops on 40m & 80m CW. I was aiming for a weather window which I thought would start about midday but didn't appear until about 4pm so the first two tops were activated in atrocious conditions.
GM/WS-088 - Carn Dearg - 941m - NN418661 - 6 points
QSOs: 40m CW - 5
Leaving Corrour Station with a gale force wind and torrential rain at my back (best place to have it!), I headed along a very boggy Road to the Isles to its summit at NN395657 before turning left up Carn Dearg's broad west ridge to the top.
After finding some shelter, I set up the dipole on the walking poles and had a sniff around on 20m before putting out a CQ on 40m at about 1145z. Thanks to G3TWJ, EI7CC, M0DEV, G4EHT & PA0XAW who were worked in fairly rapid succession.
GM/WS-081 - Sgor Gaibhre - 955m - NN444674 - 6 points
QSOs: 40m CW - 5
All the way across to my second top I was looking behind me wondering when the weather was going to break. I had obviously misjudged the transit of the cold front which separated the current maelstrom from fine clear conditions. I was willing it to hurry up and shift south a little quicker!
No change on the summit of Sgor Gaibhre by which time I was getting damp all through despite full Goretex body armour. Nothing escapes this sort of rain, and it is at it's most unpleasant at near zero degrees!
I was glad again for a fairly rapid activation with 40m CW yielding G3MJX, M0DEV, EI7CC, PA0XAW & DJ4EL.
As I was finishing up the rain ceased, the clouds lifted and the wind started to ease. At last!
GM/WS-136 - Ben Pharlagain, Meall na Meoig - 868m - NN448642 - 4 points
QSOs: 80m CW - 7
It was dark by the time I reached the summit. It was a still, clear, moonlit, starry night...and very cold! I found a bivy spot, set up a Long Wire and counterpoise before stripping off all my soaking gear and diving into my 5 season down bag.
The skip by this time had lengthened severely on 40m and Age, PA0XAW's signal was somewhat subdued even on 80m so I hunkered down for an early night. I awoke about 4ish to a deep frozen morning and switched on the rig to find french stations coming in strong on 80m. I worked F5SJB (559 both ways) and then a very difficult QSO with G3KJC nr Newbury (339/229). I also heard a US station calling on 80m.
At 0700, I could just about hear EI7CC calling me. He was a 229 at best. However, I worked DL1HSI and got a 589 report from Radisleben. By 0800, some crucial part of the Ionosphere had started to wake up and thanks to G4YSS, EI7CC & GM0AXY I had the activation tied up, all on 80m CW.
Having already had an extended lie in it was a serious problem getting out of the sleeping bag into -6deg C and wet and/or frozen gear! However, once moving I appreciated the fabulous views and firm going under foot. Breakfast was had by the river in Coire Eigheach.
Frozen Bivi Bag!
Sunrise from Meall na Meoig
GM/WS-300 - Sron Smeur - 511m - NN452602 - 2 points
QSOs: 40m CW - 4
By the time I had reached this summit, the weather window was starting to close again with winds howling and sleet. PA0XAW, EI7CC & G3KKQ were worked quickly but I then really struggled for a 4th. I was hugely relieved when Richard G3CWI came back to my call allowing me to pack up and leg it off the hill and start the long walk to Rannoch Station to catch the train back. I had to wait an hour for the train while pondering the very dubious value of a CLOSED station tearoom!
2.5 Watts into dipole for 40m and long wire & counterpoise for 80m.
24th December 2004
GM/WS-247 - Meall nan Eagan - 658m - NN597875 - 2 points
QSOs: 40m CW - 6
I was glad to be on a lower hill this morning as conditions were quite wild. It was blizzarding when I left the house to drive to Dalwhinnie and remained so most of the way up the hill. However, at dawn the wind dropped a bit and the sky cleared to give a very Christmas Card-ish scene with snow flakes drifting down on a soft snowy landscape against a beautiful pastel sky. Didn't last long - the blizzard recommensed about half an hour later!
I parked at NN637863 on the A889, followed the track past the Lodge to its end and then just aimed straight for the summit. It is about 4km and 270m of ascent so quite good value for a 2 pointer.
40m was in a fairly good mood. Thanks to PA0XAW, M0GJH (his first CW QSO, well done Andrew!), EI7CC, GM0AXY, PA2JJB & G3UZU. 2.5W into dipole.