The Allt Coire nan Eoin |
The heatwave came. Glasgow was hot. I wasn’t. I was inside building
an igloo and then watching it being filmed. On the hottest days of the year I
was wearing winter mountain clothing and needing it. The first day we spent
almost twelve hours working on the igloo (and discovering that artificial snow
has strange properties), finally venturing out into the Glasgow night an hour
before midnight. The air was warm. The city felt unreal, basking in the heat. The
next day it was back into sub-zero temperatures and playing with fake snow.
That evening I was on my way home, watching torrential rain lashing down as the
heatwave broke.
With that rain came thunder and lightning. Back home I had
no phone line or internet connection. The wall socket was dead, fried by
lightning. A frustrating day was spent talking to BT help people who assured me
nothing was wrong with the line – ‘you must have left the phone off the hook’
was one comment (I’d disconnected the phone and the router whilst away anyway).
Finally it was agreed that an engineer would come out and check the line – in a
week’s time. During that week, when I did bits of work in various cafes that
had wi-fi, BT sent me texts saying tests showed the line was fine and I’d have
to pay if the fault was with my equipment. I knew it wasn’t. When the engineer
did arrive it took him a few minutes to confirm the wall socket was blown and
just a few minutes more to replace it. Back online!
Sunshine in Glen Spean |
In between the café wi-fi sessions I headed off into the
hills for sanity and escape. The plan was for a two-night trip. The weather
thought otherwise. I drove across the Highlands to Glen Spean in sunshine. The
hills looked wonderful. The evening was warm as I set off through flower-filled
meadows into Killiechonate Forest. There was a gusty wind though and I knew
this was meant to strengthen during the night so I intended finding a sheltered
site at the forest’s edge ready for a climb onto the Grey Corries ridge the
next day. The wind did indeed become stronger, much stronger. I reached the
forest boundary where a hydro dam lay across the Allt Coire nan Eoin diverting
much of its water into a tunnel. Above the dam the river, running free, crashed
down in a series of cascades and water slides. Also above the dam the wind
hammered down the open slopes. There was nowhere sheltered here. I retreated
into the edge of the trees and pitched the tent beside some alders. The wind was
much gentler. There was a pink sky after sunset. Maybe the next day would be
sunny? The forecast said the wind would ease during the morning and any clouds
would clear in the afternoon.
A sheltered site? |
A roar woke me before midnight, a roar of wind rushing down
the glen, wind that soon shook the tent. Then there was calm. I dozed off. But
soon the wind returned with another great roar. I slept on and off, woken frequently
by the huge gusts and then, in the early hours, heavy rain. After finally
giving up on sleep I looked out to mist drifting across the tree tops and
steady rain falling. The wind roared on. For a few hours I stayed in the tent
reading but eventually I felt the need for more space so I packed up and
ventured out. The river was spectacular as it tumbled over crags and slabs. The
hills were hidden in the cloud. Above the waterfalls the battering wind and
driving rain made walking difficult. There was no sign of the storm easing.
Tired from the disturbed night I retreated again, this time back through the
forest to my car and then to hot food and coffee in the Stronlossit Inn in Roy
Bridge. The rain continued to pour and did so all the way home.
Storm clouds race across the Cairngorms |
A few days later the forecast was for equally stormy
weather, though much colder. Much, much colder. Snow was predicted. Snow in
July. I couldn’t resist. In the Cairngorms it was certainly cold. I wore hat,
gloves, fleece jacket and waterproof jacket and trousers all day. Showers of
rain as I set off turned to wet mist on the summit of Cairn Gorm. The northerly
wind was fierce. I wandered over to the subsidiary summit Cnap Coire na
Spreidhe and sheltered behind big granite boulders. There was a hint of
whiteness in the bits of wind-flung drizzle. Back on Cairn Gorm I waited to see
if it would snow. The temperature was just above freezing. I sat amongst some rocks out of the full
strength of the wind, watching the mist. Then a white splash hit a rock
followed by another and another. Big wet snowflakes were falling. They touched
the stones, lingered for a fraction of a second and then were gone. But it was
snow.
In the Cairngorms storm |
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