Entries open for Lowe Alpine Marathon

Lowe Alpine competitors

Lowe Alpine competitors

Competitors in next year’s Lowe Alpine Mountain Marathon may find the going a little easier after organisers decided to change the event’s courses.

The two-day event, which will be staged at a still-secret location in the Scottish Highlands, opened its online doors for entry recently. Organiser Martin Stone recommends getting in entries early. The event always fills to capacity, he says.

With the recent massive publicity surrounding the Original Mountain Marathon, the interest in the LAMM is bound to be high.

The course for elite runners will remain at its traditional level, but the B, C and D courses will be dropped half a notch on last year’s levels.

The only clue to the location is that it will be about four hours drive north of Glasgow, which puts it firmly in Highland territory. Organisers promise a scattering of munros and corbetts.

Renowned mountain and fell runner Angela Mudge has designed the courses, which combine a test of stamina, endurance and navigational skill.

The LAMM will take place on 6 and 7 June, offering lots of long daylight, unlike the autumnal OMM which this year offered 90mph winds, torrential rain and media hyperbole. Of course, this being Britain, and quite northerly Britain at that, there’s no guarantee of good weather. The event is for teams of two.

Last year’s entrants contributed a total of £420 to offset their climate impact in taking part in the event, which organisers doubled. The Climate Care project was the beneficiary and competitors can opt to do the same again this year.

So if you fancy a stab at finding your way round a munro or two next June, get your entry in via the LAMM website.

Recycling award winners map out future building blocks

Your old maps could be the bricks of tomorrow

Your old maps could be the bricks of tomorrow

Useful things, maps: route planning; navigating through the hills; sitting on to have your picnic; building houses.

Yes, a firm of architects has come up with a novel building material – recycled Ordnance Survey maps. The idea won Amenity Space an award from Urban Re:Vision, a San Francisco-based organisation that encourages innovative designs in the urban environment.

Discarded maps are stacked and compressed to create building blocks which are thermally efficient and as strong as concrete. Read the rest of this article »

Lords change to Planning Bill will safeguard commons

Pressure from campaigners has forced a Government u-turn on a new law which put common land at risk.

Provisions in the Planning Bill going through the House of Lords would have removed protection for commons and left them open to development. The bill receives its third reading in the Lords tomorrow, Tuesday.

Liberal Democrat Lord Greaves of Pendle – the party’s environment spokesman had tabled an amendment to the legislation after the bill’s committee stage, garnering support from many peers. Read the rest of this article »

Durham Dales night races will test adventure all-rounders

The adventure races will test runners navigation skills as well as mountain biking prowess

The adventure races will test runners' navigation skills as well as mountain biking prowess

Two night races will be an innovation in a new adventure event scheduled for next spring.

The iROC meeting will take place in the Durham Dales and will combine running, orienteering and mountain biking. Points will be accumulated in each of five successive races over the weekend, so the winners are likely to be all-rounders who can run, navigate and ride a bike on ‘technical’ ground at night.

The organisers say there will also be ‘fun events’ for families and supporters who want to tackle lesser distances while their more elite mates are on the fells. Read the rest of this article »

Naked Rambler back behind bars after court acquital

The Naked Rambler was yesterday cleared of a breach of the peace – and promptly rearrested as he left the courtroom.

Stephen Gough, who made it his mission in life to walk the length of Britain unclothed, had just been cleared by Sheriff Margaret Gimblett of the charge. He was rearrested in the foyer of Glasgow Sheriff Court.

The sheriff had decided there was not enough evidence to convict the 49-year-old former Royal Marine of breach of the peace. Mr Gough had been arrested and charged after leaving Barlinnie Prison in October this year.

The court heard that the Naked Rambler was held only a couple of metres from the prison gate. Because the police acted so quickly in arresting him, no complaints had been received from members of the public, so there was no evidence of a breach.

PCs Amanda Daly and James Clark were waiting for Mr Gough when he left the jail. He was detained after refusing to put on his clothes.

Mr Gough’s lawyer John Good pointed out that for the breach to have occurred, members of the public would have to be placed in a state of fear and alarm and be disturbed or upset. This, he said, had not been proved.

Sheriff Gimblett agreed and dismissed the charge.

But the Naked Rambler’s freedom was short lived. Police arrested him in the court’s foyer and he is back behind bars.

A spokesperson for Strathclyde Police said: “We can confirm that around 6.30pm yesterday [Friday], a 49-year-old man was arrested and charged with a breach of the peace.”

Stephen Gough’s crusade reached its peak in 2003 when he walked the length of Britain, from Land’s End to John O’Groats wearing only his boots and rucksack. Despite being repeatedly arrested, the Naked Rambler eventually reached his destination.

A second walk started in June 2005 was more problematic for the Eastleigh-based walker. He was arrested several times in Scotland, including once when he left Saughton Prison, Edinburgh, wearing no clothes.

Mr Gough claims it is a breach of his human rights to force him to wear clothes.

Walkers warned after death of Dales dormouse

Walkers in the Yorkshire Dales have been asked to be on their guard after a baby dormouse was recently crushed to death.

The national park authority has asked visitors to stay away from nesting boxes after the body of a young dormouse was found near Aysgarth Falls.

The tiny rodents have just been reintroduced to the area, and are thriving, but the young mouse appeared to be the victim of someone illegally interfering with one of the boxes in Freeholders’ Wood. Read the rest of this article »

Kendal gears up to welcome world’s top mountain names

Catherine Destivelle

Catherine Destivelle

Its previous claims to fame were that it was the home of the sickly sweet mint cake that fuelled many a mountain ascent and that it was where the Grumpy Old Fellwalker chose to lay his flat cap and create his masterpieces of Lakeland literature.

Now, Kendal, the small former Westmorland town of 28,000 souls is carving out an unlikely reputation as the place to be if you’re interested in all things mountainous.

How’s this for a roll call of top mountaineers: Reinhold Messner, Andy Kirkpatrick, Doug Scott, Kenton Cool, Andy Cave, Catherine Destivelle, Sir Chris Bonington? Read the rest of this article »

Nevis cairns: job done, now leave Ben in peace, pleads trust

The path to the summit, showing cairns which have been left

The path to the summit, showing cairns which have been left

Walkers on the summit of Britain’s highest mountain are being asked not to build any more cairns on it.

The plea follows five years’ work by volunteers from the John Muir Trust, owners of Ben Nevis, involving the removal of more than 120 piles of rocks which the trust said were unsightly.

But about 20 cairns have been left in place near the ‘tourist’ path to the 1,344m (4,409ft) summit – with a warning to inexperienced hillwalkers that these are not adequate to guide the way safely to the top of the mountain, which has precipitous gullies on three sides.

The completion of the clearing of the many cairns littering the summit follows a campaign which caused controversy among many walkers. A large number of the cairns were placed as memorials to loved ones. Plaques were removed and placed, where possible, in a memorial garden in Glen Nevis.

A spokesman for the JMT said: “Cairns and memorials on Scotland’s hills are a source of intense controversy amongst walkers and conservationists.

“The debate rages between those who think that they add to the experience of a good walk and others who are convinced that any man-made structure is an unnecessary intrusion into a remote landscape. The John Muir Trust has removed these cairns in line with its wild land policy to ‘remove redundant non-archaeological structures’.”

The trust said the cairns were being used as rubbish bins and their proliferation was giving people a false sense of security.

Sandy Maxwell, the trust’s conservation activities co-ordinator, said: “These randomly laid cairns could easily deceive walkers into thinking they were following a path.

“On Ben Nevis, like all mountains in Scotland, the weather can change rapidly so it is essential to be prepared to navigate yourself.

“These cairns should not be used as a primary feature for navigation,” he said. “There is no substitute for a map and compass, and if you are not confident with your navigation skills, do not attempt to walk to the summit of Ben Nevis in poor weather. The cairns are spaced too widely apart to be followed in poor visibility.”

Ben Neviss northern gullies

Ben Nevis's northern gullies

The JMT said the cairns had often been started simply as a means of covering rubbish left by walkers. They had been added to by further additions of stones and rubbish stuffed into nooks and crannies. During the work to remove the ubiquitous piles, trust volunteers had uncovered a piano and a wheelchair bearing a sticker from a van-hire company in Skipton, North Yorkshire.

Hundreds of sacks of litter had also been removed from the ben during the clean-up.

The JMT has left a few cairns in place for both pragmatic and historic reasons, it says.

They were built as part of the pony track that wound up to a Victorian observatory built on the summit in 1883.

The observatory, funded by private donors, provided constant meteorological data for twenty years before being abandoned in 1904.

One important cairn which has been left in place is the world-famous peace cairn. The Fort William-Dudley Memorial and Peace Cairn was built on top of Britain’s highest mountain on VJ Day in 1945 and dedicated to universal world peace.

Mr Maxwell made a final plea to walkers: “Ben Nevis is no ordinary mountain and we are committed to protecting its unique history together with its rugged landscape.

“Now that the main work of clearing unwanted cairns is over, I urge visitors to Britain highest mountain to leave its summit as you find it.”

The John Muir Trust, named after the Scottish-born Victorian founder of the national park movement, also owns land on the Red Cuillin in Skye, Schiehallion, Quinag and Sandwood Bay.

See also

Clean-up team finds wheelchair buried on Ben Nevis

Nevis: no more memorials, please

Nevis memorials to be removed

Nevis cleanup strikes strange note

All I want for Christmas is a new footpath…

Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas!

Loath as we are to mention the C-word so early – we hate the ads for hideous sofas and jingle-bells jollity just as much as anyone in the midst of dark, miserable November – we have come across a festive gift for the fellwalker who has everything.

If you despair at the thought of trying to buy something original for the well-kitted walker who already has the latest Gore-tex, Scarpas and electronic mapping wizardry, how about buying your favourite mountain nut a piece of footpath?

Well, actually, it’s not the footpath itself that’s on offer, but the gift of restoration of some of the Lake District’s most damaged rights-of-way, and the warm glow that comes with knowing you’ve done your bit for helping the struggling hill terrain of Cumbria. Read the rest of this article »

Highland cable-car firm fined for accident that left five injured

Climbers on Aonach Mòrs eastern corries

Climbers on Aonach Mòr's eastern corries

The operators of the cable cars that hoist thousands of mountaineers up Scotland’s ninth-highest mountain were fined £2,000 after an accident which left five people injured.

Nevis Range Development Company, which runs the Aonach Mòr gondola, admitted breaking the Health and Safety at Work Act after two of the cars collided, causing one to fall off the cable and plunge 8m (25ft) to the mountainside below. One man was thrown from the gondola and suffered a punctured lung.

Kevin Byrne, the operator at the top station on the day of the incident, also admitted health and safety offences and was fined £1,000. Ironically, Mr Byrne was a member of the Lochaber Mountain Rescue Team. Read the rest of this article »



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