Ben Vorlich (3,224 feet) and Stuc-a-Chroin (3,189
fret) on the 1st January 1891.
By A. ERNEST MAYLARD.
THERE are comparatively few who know what is to be
seen on or from the top of a mountain in midwinter. Rambles at this
particular period possess features totally unlike any experienced either in
the summer or the autumn. Let us suppose, for example, that a certain
mountain is ascended on the 1st of January, and again on the 1st of July,
the same route to the summit being taken on each occasion. From the point of
view of physical exertion, the ascent at the former season may be encumbered
with difficulties only capable of being overcome by the moderately
experienced mountaineer; while at the latter period difficulties may hardly
be said to exist, and the most hackneyed tourist will succeed in leaving his
orange peel and egg shells, and in inscribing his initials, with the date of
his accomplishment, on the cairn post.
It is not, however, a pure and simple matter of
difficulty alone, for these winter ascents are at times by no means entirely
free of danger; and indeed it may be said they are frequently of sufficient
moment to make it inexpedient for a man to go alone. So rarely does one meet
fellow-creature, or even see the footprints on the snow of previous
passer-by, that to meet with an accident, perhaps only slight in itself, but
sufficient to totally disable, would engender possibly the gravest results.
The cold is no mean item of consideration, and even a short enforced sojourn
would soon tell deleteriously on a crippled or disabled climber. It must
further be remembered that at this particular season of the year our days
are very short, daylight extending from about half-past eight to half-past
four, and when there is no moon, the darkness at night is extreme. Hence a
disabled climber would soon be benighted, and his position rendered more
hopeless and trying still. The mists, too, which so frequently cap the
mountains and linger on their slopes, both impede vision and deaden sound,
and so minimise the chance of help to him who may have become incapable of
helping himself. For all these reasons, then, I feel fully justified in
expressing the opinion that no man should venture on a winter ascent alone,
Our Club has not had an accident to relate, and long may it boast of such a
clean record; but as one of its primary objects is to encourage winter
ascents, and as doubtless they will grow in favour as each winter comes
round, a timely warning may not be out of place.
While, however, many of these features in connection
with winter climbing constitute dangers and drawbacks to be encountered by
those who may have rashly ventured on an expedition alone, and perchance met
with an accident, they must also be looked upon as some of the genuine
delights of a winter scramble. What so bracing to the mountaineer as a keen,
fresh, frosty breeze! What so inspiriting as a rock face coated with snow
and ice, that must be conquered somehow! Where such fun as when you see your
companion struggling to extricate himself from a snowdrift into which he has
sunk up to his waist! What views e4ual those which the eyes rest upon from
time to time as they travel from one point to another! If the day be a clear
one, with the wind in the north, even Switzerland, with all its majestic
grandeur, would not disdain to own Scotland as a very near relative. Truly
at such times might we speak of our Scottish Alps. It is impossible to gaze
on such a scene without recalling your Swiss experiences. Peak after peak
soars upward, its clear white outline bold against the bright blue
background of the sky; while in striking contrast are the dark glens
below,—so dark sometimes that they might be bottomless abysses for all that
it is possible to detect shape or form of any kind. Those lovely tints, too,
that tinge the snow and the sky as the sun goes down! Could you possibly
watch the fading of the golden peaks into their dead whiteness, or the
rose-purple hues of the heavens into their cold nocturnal grey, without
thinking of that evening in Switzerland when you stood and gazed on the very
same effects? Truly, I say again, may we not speak of our Scottish Alps,
—Alps indeed all but in height?
While then there is much to recall one's Swiss
experiences, there is also much that is essentially peculiar to these
Scottish ascents themselves. I have no knowledge of what the Alps are like
in winter, but in summer I have never seen the rocks coated so completely
with frozen snow of the most fantastic shapes as I have seen them here in
Scotland. The lowness of the sun in the horizon at this time of the year,
and the frequency with which the bills are enshrouded in mist, are both
important factors in the production of these conditions. The mist freezing
on the rocks coats them entirely with minute ice crystals, which the sun has
no power to melt. Again, we owe to these mists a peculiar charm in the
varied effects they frequently give us. It may read -a little strange to
some of my brother members, but I would almost as soon climb a mountain in a
mist as without one, such wonderful effects have I seen produced. Shifting
or stationary mists may give to an ascent something so novel, so entirely
unexperienced, that though you might have climbed the mountain a dozen times
before, it would still be like a new ascent. It is difficult almost to say
whfch of the two gives the most pleasing and mysterious effects. It is
perhaps wrong to speak of a stationary mist, as a mist is almost always
changing in some way; if not actually moving, it may be vanishing or
re-forming; but some are so slow and imperceptible in their progress, they
might be called practically motionless. A mountain which appears to be
capped by a dense stationary mist may be encircled only by a belt, some two
or three hundred feet of its summit projecting into clear space above. To
emerge suddenly under such circumstances into a clear atmosphere: from a
contracted view into a vast expanse of scenery, is indeed one of nature's
grand transformation scenes, and needs only once to be seen to be for ever
remembered and longed for again. These distant views, however, are often
strangely modified. The same mist which encircles the climbers' mountain may
be only a part of an immense stratum, which similarly girds all the
neighbouring heights; and then is produced that strangest of all effects,
the appearance of innumerable peaks projecting through, or rather appearing
to rest upon, a perfect sea of white cloud. It sometimes happens that,
besides the mist below, the sky above is clouded, and then cloud above meets
cloud below, and earth seems continuous with heaven. Such a peculiar effect
we had the opportunity of observing on the 1st of January on the top of Stuc-a-Chroin.
The shifting mists produce the most varied effects. At
one time cutting off the view in one direction, and as rapidly opening it up
in another; arising in one spot out of nothing, and vanishing at another
into nothing; sometimes so dense as to obscure all distinct vision, at other
times so thin as to form a sort of white gauzy veil through which objects
seem almost to have a fairy aspect. So numberless and so beautiful are the
changes produced by these shifting vapours, that but for the cold so
freq4uently associated with them the climber would often gladl' prolong his
sojourn in order to watch their constantly varying effects. They are as much
beyond the power of the artist to depict as they are beyond the power of the
writer to describe. It is only he, who will climb and see, can know.
There is a distinct pleasure peculiar to being in a
mist. You are cut off for a time from all nature around; there is nothing
but ice and snow below your feet and before your eyes; there is not a sound
to be heard,—the stillness is absolute. You are aiming for a certain point;
obstacles, you know not what, may lie in your course; you must constantly
consult your map, and you must as constantly, if not more so, consult your
compass. Your aneroid, too, needs an occasional glance. All this entails an
amount of excitement and enjoyment which adds special zest to the climb, and
introduces novelty where, under other circumstances, there might be none.
It is in the conquering of difficulties that the true
climber most frequently finds his greatest pleasure; and however much he may
delight in the glories of scenic effects, he will often love most to look
back upon that bit where he had to hang on to a slippery rock by his
fingers, stick the tip of his toes on to a narrow ledge, hitch up his other
knee, and sprawl to safety on his stomach.
I have now run over very briefly some of the delights
connected with winter ascents, than which, to my mind, there are none more
enjoyable. Alas that our climate is so fickle, and our winter thereby made
so variable. The first of January may show us hardly a mountain capped with
snow. In place of a keen frosty atmosphere, we may have a warm, muggy,
stuffy day. Instead of snow and ice to lightly and rapidly tread upon, we
may find ourselves sinking into, and heavily toiling over, miry bogs, and a
deluge of rain may replace the more seasonable snowstorm. But to the real
climber, whose love centres primarily on the pleasures connected with
physical exercise, these inclemencies will not detain him, and he will not
miss reward. I might add still further, that the climber who makes love of
scenery the chief reason for his rambles, will not be disappoizted by these
inclement conditions. The wild grandeur of the hills, when storm-beaten by
rain and wind, contrasts so strongly with their appearance under calmer and
more peaceful conditions, that they may be said to possess a special charm
and interest at these times. However, in speaking of winter ascents, I have
really meant to imply only such as a typical wintry day, with ice, snow,
frost, and a clear or misty atmosphere would afford. Such days may be had
usually from the 30th of November to well into April. I have made what might
be termed winter ascents towards the end of November and the end of April,
but that perhaps is a little outside the usual period. It often happens with
us that when the months of December and January are mild, March and April
bring some good sharp, clear, wintry weather. The early green beginning then
to show itself about the glens and loch sides lends a fresh bright colouring
to the scene, and with the hills covered with snow a general effect is
produced, perhaps as beautiful as can be seen at any time of the year.
As I have ventured to enter somewhat into the
delights, difficulties, and dangers of winter ascents, I might perhaps give,
for the benefit of those uninitiated members of our Club who have not yet
tried a good hard day on our Scottish Alps, some few directions regarding
equipment and preparations for such desirable exploits. In starting this
Club its founders had as one of their strongest incentives to the project
the encouragement of winter ascents; and I am one of those who would make
the accomplishment of such ascents the most crucial test for the admission
of new members. I most ardently hope the time will come when, under the new
scheme devised by the Club of periodical Club meets, such meets may be
frequent all over Scotland in winter, and that one may hear of our members
scaling the craggy tops of the Cuchullins, or perched on the many peaks of
our" 3,000's" throughout the mainland. Those who look further ahead than the
humble pretensions of our Club, who seek higher flights and more meritorious
achievements, cannot better prepare themselves for such accomplishments than
by frequently testing their power and skill on the slopes and summits of our
own mountains in winter. To one who knows not the* Alps, such ascents must
create a keen and healthy desire to try his mettle on finer game; and our
Club will do well if it becomes the means of importing new blood into the
Alpine Club.
I hope I may be pardoned this brief digression. I will
now return to the subject of equipments. The mountaineer's first
consideration must be his clothing. He should above all things be warmly
clad, with plenty of woollen underclothing. The cold is sometimes intense
and piercing to a degree; and while cold of itself does not seem to be
actually dangerous, so long as we are actively engaged, it is desperately
uncomfortable; and to feel oneself half perished with cold is to banish more
than half one's pleasure. You do not want heavy overclothing, but you do
want plenty of light warm underclothing. Beside the clothes worn, a complete
change should always be taken, and had in readiness at the place where the
day's expedition is to be concluded. It goes without saying that the climber
must be well -shod, and that his soles and heels must be well sprinkled with
the proper-shaped hobnails. He will be miserable on ice without good nails,
and he will be absolutely useless on rock. He should always wear gaiters,
made either of leather or cloth. The snow is thus kept from getting into his
boots, which it otherwise certainly will do, and give him cold feet for the
rest of his expedition. A good thick pair of worsted gloves will be of the
greatest service, as they will be of the greatest comfort. On the matter of
food and drink, he should have a sufficiency in his pockets,—too much rather
than too little. No man feels the cold so bitterly as he who has to endure
it with an empty stomach, and no man feels exhaustion more rapidly than he
who has ill provided himself for his day's work. It is usually advisable to
take a little whisky or brandy. It is not often actually needed, and the
kind of necessity which as a rule calls for it is not that which is usually
ascribed as a reason for its conveyance! It is often a matter of hours
before the climber can get a draught of water; but if he feels really very
dry and parched, an occasional icicle will be sufficient to moisten his
mouth; and, in my humble opinion, he is wiser under such conditions not to
touch the contents of his flask.
As regards other requirements, an ice axe is perhaps
the most helpful implement of its kind; it is not always needed, but
occasions do occur when it is all but indispensable. Twenty feet of good
hempen rope should also be carried for every two men; it is not often
needed, but may prove at some time invaluable, and allow of being safely
accomplished that which might otherwise have been impracticable or
dangerous. A compass and a good map of the district are indispensable to
every mountaineer. The map should be well studied before any ascent is
begun, and distances and directions carefully noted. A man might as well be
in the moon as in a mist without a compass for all that he would know of his
whereabouts. It is one of the most difficult things possible to keep only a
hundred yards in a straight line when enveloped in a dense mist. In reading
the compass, it should always be carefully noted that your axes are well
away from you, and there is no other cause in or near to you to deflect the
needle. In the ascent which I shall conclude the paper by describing, the
effects on the needle by the nearness of our axes was most marked; and to
make certain at all times of the "points," we usually compared two
compasses, held at some little distance from each other. By the aid of a
compass and a reliable map it is possible to arrive at the required spot, in
the densest of mists, with the greatest exactness. The aneroid, although not
an essential, is at least an interesting adjunct. In a mist it allows of
judgment upon the possible height yet to be traversed before reaching the
summit; and at all times it serves to instruct on the general matter of
altitudes. An aneroid which registers up to 5,000 feet is of course quite
sufficient for Scotland. I think I have completed my list when I say don't
leave your watch behind you. Yet three other homely articles I must add,— a
pocket-knife, a piece of stout string, and a box of wax matches. They are
almost too simple and insignificant to think of when preparations are being
made, but it is wonderful what little useful ends they sometimes serve, and
how sadly we feel their absence when really needed.
I daresay some of my readers will accuse me of
forgetting one, they say, most important adjunct; but I am bound to confess
that with tobacco, like whisky, the less I believe it is indulged in during
work the better. When in front of your fire, with your heels on your
mantelpiece, talking over your day's exploits, then is the time to enjoy
such pleasures; but tobacco before or during exertion has, I am quite sure,
a somewhat enervating effect, and rather lethargises a man than braces him
up for his labours. In starting for these winter ascents, you never know
what difficulties and delays lie between you and your bed; and the greater
the store of energy you start with, the surer will be your success, and the
more pleasurable your victories.
I shall now conclude by narrating what I would term a
typical winter ascent. It is the best, I think, I have ever made, and not
the least reason for its being so was owing to the exceptional enjoyment I
derived from the delightful companionship of four Club members. I had
casually heard of the projected trip, and to the originator I am indebted
for kindly accepting my proffered company.
We were, then, a party of five,—Messrs Fraser
Campbell, Lester, Wm. Naismith, Gilbert Thomson, and myself. Our
arrangements were to meet at the Lochearnhead Hotel on the eve of the last
night of the year. Accordingly, on the afternoon of that day I left my
quarters at Callan- der, where I was spending a few days, and trudged over
that lovely stretch of road which runs through the Pass of Leny and along
Loch Lubnaig side to the hotel at the western extremity of Loch Earn. I
arrived at five o'clock, when quite dark. However, the worthy host had
already completed his preparations for us. His house was all aglow with
brightly burning lamps, and his rooms snugly warmed by blazing fires. Two
weary hours had I to wait before my looked-for companions arrived. What with
the railway strike and the extra traffic on this particular day, they were
delayed exactly two hours on their journey from Glasgow. We sat down to
dinner at 8.45, and that good repast, and the pleasure which followed, I
pass over without further comment.
At 6.30 next morning we were called, and at 8.30 we
left the hotel. For the moment our enthusiasm was somewhat damped, by
finding that the wind had veered from the NE. to the S.W., blowing up dark
heavy clouds, and changing the keen frosty atmosphere of the night before to
a moister and milder temperature. However, I think it would have taken
something very bad to have banished our good hopes for better things later,
or depressed our exuberant spirits; so off we started with a will, through
any weather, to do a good day's work. In about twenty- five minutes we
reached the spot where we desired to commence our ascent. Nothing more than
the base of Ben Vorlich could be seen, all the higher ground being
enshrouded in dense mist. As we knew that much of our course would have to
be by compass, Messrs Naismith and Thomson undertook to be our pioneers, and
little fault could we find with their good steering. Lester kept the time,
myself the aneroid, and Campbell devoted his attention to a gigantic ice axe
lent him by Mr Stott. It was at the very commencement that we noticed what a
serious effect the proximity of the axes had on the compass needles, and
good care was always subsequently taken to cast them aside before taking a
reading. At about i,000 feet we entered the mist and got well on to the
snow. The wind had shifted back to the east, and the temperature was much
lowered thereby. The first object aimed at—the cairn on Ben Our—was most
accurately hit by our guides. From here our course for about a quarter of a
mile was due south, and then more or less due south-east for the summit. As
a physical climb there is little to record. An occasional partial
submergence by some unwary walker over a drift gave him a little extra
exertion to extricate himself, and the others some amusement in watching his
endeavours, but the snow was fairly hard, and easily traversed. As the
summit was neared, several steep snow declivities were seen, forming
apparently the northern and southern faces of the mountain. It is in such
places that the mist adds so much to the otherwise contracted view. Nature,
like a great artist, leaves in her picture free scope for the imagination to
exercise itself; and as you gaze on these steep snow gullies, you might
imagine they lead away to bottomless abysses for all that the eye can
undeceive you. However, they often do sheer away almost perpendicularly, and
a slip might be as fatal in its results as if it were thousands of feet
instead of hundreds. Any prolonged stay by the cairn was as useless as it
was almost impossible. A radius of twenty feet might have been the limit of
our field of vision, and the cold was intense. It was impossible, however,
not to remark the beauty of the snow and ice conformations around us.
Running over the summit was a wire fence, and it was interesting to see what
silent destruction was being carried on by the winter's snow and frost. The
stout iron wires were lying about, buried beneath the snow, coiled and
twisted in all directions, and those that were standing showed how this
havoc had been wrought. Around each wire was a solid coil of frozen snow,
forming a con- tinuous band of some ten to twelve inches in diameter. A few
feet of this solid heavy band would weigh near upon a hundredweight, and no
wire of this calibre could possibly stand a prolonged strain of this
magnitude without sooner or later snapping. The coils were very picturesque
in appearance, but more so perhaps were the upright iron supports which
carried them. These were very oddly fringed with ice. The east sides of the
standards had, from summit to base, a complete fringe of icicles, some six
to eight inches long, as sharp as needles at their points, and disposed
directly at right angles to the perpendicular. Probably this odd fringe of
icy stalagmites owed its origin to the constant blowing on and freezing of
the minute particles of moisture carried in the mists. By whatever means
produced, the effect was extremely beautiful. Another curious effect—and I
am almost tempted to say more beautiful—was the remarkable aspect presented
by the rocks. A bare rock we never once saw,—all were coated with pure snow
or ice. But those I particularly refer to were coated with fine particles of
ice and snow. Over the flat smooth surface the film was thin, but towards
the edges it thickened, and here we had the most perfect representation of
leaves laid one upon another, so as to produce a sort of frozen garland
around the rock. I had never seen anything like it before. Where perchance a
small space or cavern was formed by the apposition of the sides or edges of
two or more masses of rock, an ice grotto of the most fanciful description
would be seen.
For some slight distance from the top of Ben Vorlich
we retraced our old steps. Our next object of attainment was the top of Stuc-a-Chroin,
and to reach this a dip of almost a thousand feet had to be made. For once
our worthy guides got out of their bearings, and we somehow found ourselves
groping about in some rough ground. A steep scramble of two or three hundred
feet placed us on our searched-for col, which we should not have missed had
we kept the wire fence ; and after crossing it we reached the base of the
steep rocky eastern face of Stuc-a-Chroin. We soon found we had our work
before us, but it was what we had all most looked forward to. So the greater
our difficulties the more we should enjoy them. About a thousand feet of
real stiff rock climbing lay before us,—not mere big boulders, big good
wholesome snow-covered slippery rocks. With the exception of your teeth, all
other parts of your body would be needed for prehensile purposes. We had not
climbed far before we felt it advisable to rope. We carried with us two
ropes—twenty and thirty feet ones. Naismith and Thomson used the former;
Campbell, Lester, and myself the latter. We proceeded cautiously, each
making quite sure of the security of his position before the other moved. In
this way we did some capital work; and although we had a few
breech-splitting strides and stomach-scrubbing heaves, I don't know that any
of us materially suffered. [The above very forcible and Carlylean sentence
is retained at the special request of the author.—ED.]
Only a few feet lay between us and the top, when one
of those wonderful mountain effects suddenly burst upon us. For six hours
exactly we had been completely enveloped in mist, seeing at no time more
than twenty yards distant. Every yard of our path almost had previously been
made out by map and compass, but now we quite suddenly got above it, and
were breathing a clear dry atmosphere, and gazing over miles and miles of
hill and vale. These effects upon one are indescribable. They come often
when least expected, and when they do come they reveal sights entirely
beyond previous conception. It was not a blue sky above our heads. There
were dark clouds high up, and the only bit of light was a long rift seen far
away in the west, stretching almost across the horizon. It was a wonderful
streak of tinted colour, for the sun was already sinking. The clouded sky
above, touching, as it did in places, the dense mists below, gave the
peculiar appearance of the heavens almost being continuous with the earth.
Our distant vision really extended only north and west, and we fancied we
made out Ben More, Stob Binnian, and a few others; but the mist hung. about
many of these mountains, making them difficult to distinguish. To the west
and south we could at first see nothing; but all in the course of a minute a
sudden change took place,—the upper mist passed away, and apparently only a
stone's throw from us towered the peak of Ben Vorlich, like a white island
in a dense sea of cloud. Another few seconds, and it had vanished from our
vision, obliterated by a volume of mist. This rapid appearance and
disappearance, happened several times within the course of a few minutes. It
was strange to look upon this dissolving view. But if anything would have
tempted us to linger, it was the more distant scenery in the west, where the
light and shade were becoming more beautiful as the sun went down. One of
our party said the scene recalled to him the passage in Milton's "Paradise
Lost" where Satan stands gazing into the abyss below. The dark glens might
have suggested the abysses, but whom he had in his mind's eye that might
have completed the analogy of the passage he graciously kept to himself, as
did the rest of us our own surmises!
There is now little further to relate regarding the
rest of our expedition. Our original intention had been to take the ridge
along to the top of Ben Each, and descend to Loch Lubnaig. The light,
however, began to fail, and it would have been far from pleasant to have
been benighted anywhere above a thousand feet up. The burns were all hard
frozen, and in many places had overflowed in such a way as to form convex
masses of ice. Such ice slopes are particularly nasty to cross, and a large
number of them lay in our path. It was a sense of relief to one's legs, as
also to one's feelings, to be well off them before dusk. For these reasons,
therefore, we did not make the final ascent of Ben Each, but dropped down
just short of it into Glen Ample, reached the Loch Lubnaig road, and then,
after six miles of level walking, arrived at Callander at 6.20 P.M., just
ten hours after our start.
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