By ALEX. INKSON M'CONNOCHIE,
Author of ' Ben Muich Dhui and His
Neighbours: A Guide to the Cairngorm Mountains.
WINTER ascents of our
Scottish mountains are by no means so popular as they deserve to be, though
time and example are gradually popularising them and unfolding their
beauties and pleasures. Such ascents, of course, should not be attempted
unless one at least of the company has an intimate knowledge not only of the
proposed route but also of the neighbourhood, in case of any deviation that
may have to be made from circumstances beyond the control of the party.
I
have had an experience of over twenty years at all seasons on the Cairngorm
mountains, from the Dee to the Spey and from the Feshie to Loch Builg; and
after a big fall of snow, followed by a severe frost, I know of no excursion
more pleasant than a walk across these mountains. Under such circumstances,
I hold that the ascent is easier than in summer, for all the little hollows
are levelled up, and there is a smooth, dry, and hard surface for walking.
As for the safety of such a journey, it is—due care being of course taken—in
my opinion no more dangerous than one in summer. There are certain ascents
and descents that the prudent mountaineer will eschew at all times; while
others which might be made while the mountain sides are free of snow, will,
in the winter season, be wisely avoided whatever may be the temptation. For
a successful winter ascent, then, considerable knowledge is requisite in the
first place, and great prudence in the second. In now giving a few of my
winter experiences on the Cairngorms, I shall dwell rather on blundering and
difficult than on successful and easy ascents, not only because it will, I
think, be more interesting, but more can be learned the one way than the
other. My first ascent, or rather attempted ascent, was a complete
failure. In company with a friend, with whom I have had many pleasant
experiences and agreeable mishaps on the Cairngorms, I set out one 31st
December from Aberdeen to Ballater by train. There had been an exceptionally
severe snowstorm for some weeks in the north of Scotland, and particularly
on Deeside, so much so that the mail-gig had ceased to run between Ballater
and Braemar. In the innocence of our hearts we thought this a capital
opportunity of extending our mountain experiences. Be it observed that while
the fall of snow was more than ample, the necessary severe frost I have
mentioned had not yet made its appearance. We made absurd preparations to
face both cold and hunger, and as we waited for a "tandem" to convey us from
Ballater to Braemar, we got ourselves photographed in an outfit that might
have sufficed for a North Pole expedition. And here it may be mentioned,
that the only honour, and that a very poor one, we gained in the whole
undertaking, was between Ballater and Braemar, as we were the first to use
the road since the commencement of the storm, the mail-gig modestly
following several hours behind us. The reception we got at Castle- town of
Braemar for our "enterprise," however, scarcely compensated for the complete
collapse of the remaining part of the journey. The following morning we
bravely sallied forth for the top of Ben Mulch Dhui. But while the road from
Braemar from the east had been rendered passable for wheels by "casting," on
the west the snow mostly lay as it had fallen, deep and soft. We struggled
bravely on, however, and when we reached the Victoria Bridge, opposite Old
Mar Lodge, we made our first mistake —we crossed the bridge. Naturally
beyond the lodge the snow was untrodden, and thus every footstep told more
on us than on the distance accomplished. In short, before we had reached the
"Black Bridge" of Lui we were tolerably exhausted. Alas for the carriage
road in Glen Lui! In many places it was not to be decerned from the
pasture-ground of the glen, while in others there was a sluggish stream of
water above the snow which turned it into slush of the most uncomfortable
kind. We were often fain to give the road as wide a berth as possible, even
though the alternative was to splash through the waters of the Lui which had
escaped from the restraint of their natural channel. By the time we had
reached the head of the glen we had more thought of housing up for the night
than of being able to continue the foolish journey, for to add to our
troubles soft snow now began to fall. But the occupants of Derry Lodge and
Luibeg were either not visible or not at home at the time, so we had to
content ourselves for some hours with the shelter of a peat-shed. Refreshed
and reinvigorated in the morning, we found further progress quite
impossible; the frost had not yet made its appearance, and snow was steadily
falling in big flakes. Accordingly we retreated on Braemar, walking the same
night to Ballater to catch the morning train—some twenty-six miles through
the snow. The frost was so keen during the latter part of the walk that some
water which I carried in an inner pocket was actually frozen. Ballater was
reached in quite a different style and spirits to our start, and a damper
put, for some time at least, on such expeditions.
Two or three years after we tried to cross Braeriach
from Braemar to Boat of Garten. The morning was clear— there was a good
moon—and frosty, so the walk to Derry Lodge was very pleasant. But no sooner
was it put behind us than a slight fall of powdery snow commenced, which by
the time we had reached Glen Dee, via Glen Lui Beg, developed into large
snowflakes. When we came to the (popular) Wells of Dee, Braeriach was not to
be seen, so we prudently gave it up and walked on, by the Learg Gruamach and
Aviemore, to Boat of Garten. In the higher regions the cold was intense, and
it was with difficulty it could be withstood while we prepared a cup of
coffee. Next year we tried
Cairn Toul in the spring, there being on this occasion a party of seven. But
though it was spring in the lower grounds it was winter on the mountain
tops. We went by Glen Lui, Glen Lui Beg, and Glen Dee to the junction of the
Alit na Leirg Gruamaich with the "infant" Dee from Braeriach and Cairn Toul,
and there, in a snow-storm, commenced the ascent of the latter mountain. We
reached, with a little trouble, the level of Lochan Uaine, but there our
real difficulties began, and indeed at one time we had all but resolved to
descend and proceed to the Spey by the Learg Gruamach. The ascent from
Lochan Uaine is steep enough in summer; then it was a long smooth snow
slope, with here and there a black rock jutting out above the snow. These we
used as coigns of vantage and rest, but the last stage almost compelled a
retreat. We had to dig our feet into the snow, and clutch above with our
hands, before we succeeded in getting on the top of Sgor an Lochain, at a
height of about 3,750 feet. The top of Cairn Toul was now within a mile on
our left, with exceedingly easy ground for walking, but so strong was the
wind and dense the falling snow that it was deemed judicious to make for the
Feshie direct. Passing the upper crags of Loch Eunach, we reached the river
a little above Achlean, whence we made our way to Lynwilg Inn. For six hours
continuously we had snow, sleet, or rain. This expedition may also be looked
on as a failure, but nevertheless all enjoyed it.
In the first week of April the following year, when
the weather was wintry enough, a party of us set out from Aberdeen to Nethy
Bridge, with the intention of taking Ben Muich Dhui and Cairn Gorm on the
way. Derry Lodge was reached without much trouble, but along Glen Derry, the
route selected, progress was not so easy, as the glen was completely
snow-covered. Coire Etchachan was also of course full of snow, no trace of
the stream being visible; indeed in some places the snow could not have been
less than from fifty to a hundred feet in depth. The snow was very hard in
the corrie, and the ascent therefore pleasant and invigorating; but when the
level of Loch Etchachan (3,100 feet) was reached, a furious gale came on,
and baffled any attempt at making for the top of Ben Muich Dhui. The loch
was completely frozen over, even where the Derry leaves it, but the ice was
too rough for skating. The gale soon became a whirlwind, driving the snow in
all directions, so that the party had to keep close together to prevent
losing one another. A hurried council was held, and a compass course struck
for the upper end of Loch Avon and the Shelter Stone. The walk across the
plateau was a continued struggle against the elements, while in descending
to the loch great caution had to be used to prevent a slip from the top of
the ridge. The Shelter Stone was visited as a curiosity at that season, and
was found full of snow. The course was then along the frozen loch, one of
the party having the curiosity to measure the breadth by pacing it. A
capital dinner was partaken of on the ice, for we were in complete shelter
in the great hollow. How majestic the crags that framed its upper end
appeared from about the middle of the loch, topped here and there by big
rocks standing bare and snowless! As for the Garbh Uisge, and its gigantic
leap into the Maghan na Banaraich, not a drop of water was to be seen, all
was sealed up by ice and snow. After dinner we ascended the " Saddle" to the
source of the Nethy, only to encounter another little whirlwind that drove
the hard snow against our faces with such force that another deviation
seemed almost inevitable. But after a short sharp struggle we got into the
shelter of the glen, and walked for about three miles on the snow in the bed
of the river, and so on to Nethy Bridge. Though we had failed in getting to
the top either of Ben Muich Dhui or Cairn Gorm, the excursion was considered
both pleasant and successful. The time taken between Derry Lodge and Nethy
bridge was thirteen and a half hours, but two hours were agreeably idled on
Loch Avon and in Strath Nethy below Rebhoan.
My next winter expedition had both its comic and
almost tragic side. Again Ben Muich Dhui and Cairn Gorm were to be crossed
from Bracmar, and the weather was propitious,—that is, there was a great
depth of snow, and severe frost of some days' duration. The party numbered
six, two however only going, by arrangement, as far as Derry Lodge. The
drive from Ballater to Braemar was made on wheels; from Braemar to Derry
Lodge it was done in sleighs. Bidding good-bye to our two friends at the
Lodge, the Lui Beg route was taken. In the lower part of the glen walking
was not particularly easy, so thinking to better themselves two of the
party, in spite of my remonstrance, took to the ridges on the right. The
consequence was that, getting round by Cairn Crom and along the ridge
between that hill and Derry Cairn Gorm, progress was at last found by them
to be impossible, more especially as their knowledge of the Cairngorms was
limited. In these circumstances they returned to Braemar, after making an
unpleasant slip on the frozen slope, the consequence of which was rather
unpleasant to one of them who wore the kilt. When 1, along with the
companion who had stuck to me, got to the turn of the Lui Beg (1,536 feet),
we found walking easy enough; and after we got into the fork of the burn, at
a height of from 2,500 to 3,000 feet, we could decern our two friends away
over on the ridge of Derry Cairn Gorm. So steep, however, is the slope
there, that a descent, in the snow, was quite out of the question, and, as
already stated, and as I had fully expected, they retraced their steps. We
reached the cairn on Ben Muich Dhui without difficulty. As might be
expected, it was a solid mass of ice, most fantastically shaped on the north
side. Here sky and mountain seemed to meet ; above, one could only see for a
few feet; while a radius of about a dozen yards closed the vision around.
After a slight lunch we made for Cairn Gorm, walking by compass. We got as
far as the head of Coire Domhain, where the ridge between Loch Avon and Loch
Morlich is very narrow and precipitous, especially towards the latter.
Somehow or other I slipped here, and slid down the corrie a considerable
distance. I managed to stop myself by the aid of my stick, fortunately a
stout one, but my thoughts may be imagined as I shot past black bits of
jutting rock, contact with which would have sent a bruised, perhaps
lifeless, mass into the Maghan na Banaraich. I may tell my feelings. I had
no fear—perhaps there was no time; I only said to myself, Well, if my head
comes against any of these black rocks, it is all over, but I can't help it.
Judge of my horror when, after having succeeded in safely stopping my
descent, I saw my companion sliding down at a fearful rate. He had thought
my hurried descent was voluntary, and an easy way of getting downwards, so
off he went! I tried to catch him as he passed, but he slipped like an eel
through my hands (I had on worsted gloves), and, head first at times, did
not stop till he was about 200 feet below me. When I reached him—which it
was only possible to do by turning over face downwards, and making my way
step by step with toes and hands dug into the snow—he was minus his hat,
stick, and flask, but providentially uninjured. We walked the rest of the
way to the Shelter Stone and examined the interior, and thence along Loch
Avon, ice-covered, with here and there "cats' paws" of snow, to the Saddle.
Then up the Saddle, and along the Nethy to Nethy Bridge Hotel, eighteen
hours after leaving Derry Lodge; but, be it observed, the last four miles
were done within the hour. Before breakfast next morning a telegram was
received from Braemar, announcing the arrival there of our quondam
companions and inquiring as to our safety. As our reply took several hours
in transmission, not a little anxiety was evinced on our account. The scene
from the moment we left the Ben Muich Dhui cairn was not one which we shall
readily forget, apart from the untoward incident of the journey. For
mountain and rock, loch and stream, were shrouded in ice and snow; not a
water-course visible—in summer we all know how numerous the burns and
water-courses are; everything white, except here and there the black top of
some great rock. The outlines, storm-formed, were weird and grand, though
often fantastic enough. The walk along the Nethy, with the slope of Cairn
Gorm on the left and Ben Bynac on the right, and their picturesque snow-clad
crags, was also one to be remembered for a lifetime. On the top of Ben Muich
Dhui we estimated the depth of the snow to be six feet, and in the corries
often a hundred, but of course we had nothing to test the actual depth. It
may be interesting to state that the only deer we saw were between Braemar
and Derry Lodge. My friend recovered his cap and stick at the bottom of
Coire Domhain, and next summer I found the flask, full and uninjured, on the
bank of the burn.
My next
winter ascent was on a New Year's Day, when, along with a young student
friend, I went to Ballater by rail, and on to Braemar by sleigh. The
following day, by 8 a.m., we had passed Derry Lodge, and at 1.30 p.m., by
the Glen Lui Beg route, we had reached a height of 4,210 feet on Ben Muich
Dhui. Then blinding showers of snow began to fall, and nothing could, of
course, be seen. So steady was the snowfall, and so strong the wind, that it
was necessary to get into some sort of shelter at once; so Cairn Gorm, the
original intention, had to be given up, as well as the cairn of Ben Mulch
Dhui. We got into the Feith Buidhe, where we experienced quite different
weather, and so down to the Shelter Stone. Not a burn was visible; even the
rapid Garbh Uisge could only be seen (and sometimes heard) through the thick
transparent ice as it fell headlong on its way to Loch Avon. The old route
via the Saddle was taken, but so soft and deep did we find the snow in
Strath Nethy, that it was not till ten o'clock that Rebhoan was reached. The
walk along the Nethy, however, was not without its pleasures. It was a
glorious evening, with moonlight and stars; and a short rest on one's back
on the snow, looking at the constellations, seemed then the very acme of
bliss. But my young companion's years began to tell on him after we reached
the point where the Nethy is crossed by its uppermost bridge, where the Lang
an Laoigh path bends for the east side of Caiplich and Ben Bynac. For, the
road reached, we found the snow soft, and walking necessarily very slow and
stiff work, and an hour was required between the bridge and Rebhoan. I
reluctantly deemed it prudent, in the circumstances, not to proceed further,
and accordingly burst open the door of the bothy. Some of the furniture,
including a quantity of paraffine, had to be sacrificed to make a fire, and
a table formed our couch for the night. We started before daybreak for Nethy
Bridge, with the result that six hours were required for an eight miles'
walk, for the snow was soft, and in the dim morning light I mistook the
bearings of Cairn Rynettin. A stray stag was observed in sad straits in the
deep soft snow near Rynuie. A local newspaper, commenting on this ascent,
concluded its notice by remarking that, "notwithstanding the vicissitudes of
the journey, the travellers enjoyed the expedition, and have not suffered
from fatigue or exposure."
At
some future time I hope to be able to add to this list of winter
"adventures" on the Grampians.
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