Per my earlier post we spent the next morning and a few pounds equipping Michelle with some Scarpa Manta boots, Black Diamond Serac crampons and an ice-axe. Suitably heavier with shiny new gear and lighter with cash we grabbed some lunch provisions and headed along the Ogwen Valley. It was a fantastic sight seeing the whole valley covered in snow, Tryfan's jagged profile jutting into the heavy sky. The weather was closing in with the wind and driving snow hampering kitting up by the car. Bracing ourselves, he headed up the path towards Llyn Idwal and soon realised we were far from alone. The snow had tempted many out for a winter jaunt, from hard-core climbers jangling back-down from Idwal Slabs to grannies out for a bimble with the dog. I'd considered heading up to Cwm Cneifon which tends to be sheltered from the wind but chatting to a couple of climbers coming downb they said they'd battled through waist- deep snow before giving up. Instead we continued along the rising path to the east of Llyn Idwal, heading into the cwm and up towards Devils Kitchen.
By now the visibility was reducing as the wind whipped up the snow. The ice-axe's came out to help balance when you were unsure of whether your feet were dissappearing into 2 or 20 inches of snow. Heading up to the rocky outcrops at the head of the cwm, where the main path ascends into the gloom of Devils Kitchen, we found an over-hang deep enough to pass as a shelter of sorts for lunch. The frozen cheese and ham roll was devoid of taste, but swiftly surpassed by a welcome flask of sugary tea.
We decided don the crampons before setting off, hoping no-one would notice how shiny and new they looked!! A few tentative steps later and you realise how much extra grip and confidence twelve spikes afford, especially when descending. With no let up in the weather we decided, rather than head up into the gaping mouth of Twll Du, to head down the main path via the west shore of Llyn Idwal and back to the car to thaw out. We'd managed to find our winter legs.
Looking up into Devils Kitchen (Twll Du)
Two days later we woke to a clear blue-sky. A quick breakfast and detour into Cotswold Outdoor and once again we headed along the A5. With a sharp northerly wind I selected Cwm Llloer, below Carnedd Daffydd as a likely candidate offering some shelter and the option of ascending the east ridge of Pen yr Ole Wen (a grade 1 scramble) or heading further up in to the cwm. A similar route was featured in the Routes section of a recent Trail magazine that I had to hand. Parking on the A5 we geared up and crossed the road ascending the path which was submerged beneath the snow. Ahead of us were a couple of guys with cross-country ski's strapped to their pack's. It was a tough slog up with around 8-12 inches of snow, much of it un-trodden. We met a family coming down who had turned back from trying the east ridge, which they described as an ice-rink and a no-go without crampons. We by-passed the start of the east-ridge and decided to head into the cwm to explore. It was the first time I'd been here and although the drifting snow made it difficult to see the profile of the land or the lake I'd imagine it would make a good wild-camp spot.
Look carefully and you can see some bodies ascending
A frozen Pen yr Ole Wen summit
The route down the ridge was fairly obvious and didn't seem it would merit a grade 1 scramble, even in winter, but for one short-lived section. We reached the main path back down to the road just in time to be overtaken by the guys on cross-country ski's...now why didn't I think of that!
No big epic trip, no snow-bound wild-camp, but two glorious winter days in the mountains and more experience gained.
No comments:
Post a Comment