Dawn came with quiet and a subtle beauty. Slowly the sky
lightened and a weak sun rose through thin layers of cloud. There was no burst
of glorious red or brilliant light but the rain had stopped and the dense low
clouds had gone. This day was forecast to be a brief interlude in the run of
storms that has marked the early autumn. I’d set off in the dark and rain the
evening before, wanting to wake in the wilds and make the most of this day.
Deep pools on the track, which in places was running with water, reminded me of
how wet it had been. My headlamp, essential in the deep darkness, picked out
sparkling rain drops on the trees and the grasses and the heather. Once two
bright spots caught the beam. I turned to see a deer, motionless, watching me.
I had a camp site in mind at the mouth of the long valley of Strath Nethy. There used to be a crude
bothy here called Bynack Stables where I stayed once on a wild November night
long ago. Some seven years past, after a big winter storm, I came here to find
the bothy demolished by the wind and snow. Soon after the remnants were removed
by the landowners, the RSPB, and all that is left now is a flat patch of grass.
On this occasion I arrived to find the ground saturated and covered with
puddles. Water oozed up through the grass at every step. I pitched my shelter
right on the edge of the flat area, where the ground was relatively dry though
bumpier than I would have liked, then crawled inside, away from the rain.
Outside I could hear the River Nethy roaring past.
Although I was off early the next morning clouds were
already starting to build up. The patches of sunshine only lasted a few hours
and were never strong. I was heading for Bynack More, that 1090 summit on the
north-eastern edge of the Cairngorms that gives splendid views of the higher
mountains to the south-west and is also a nice rocky hill itself. As I climbed
the long north ridge I watched rolls of cloud drifting over the even longer
north ridge of Cairn Gorm across Strath Nethy. Cairn Gorm itself was buried in
dark clouds, just a steep dark mountainside visible, rising to who knew what
peak.
Gaining height I looked back and saw that wisps of cloud
were trailing across the ridge behind me, driven by an increasingly strong
north-west wind. From the summit the views were curtailed as the clouds were thick
and continuous over the Cairngorm Plateau. The wind was gusting strongly now
and much colder, bringing with it stabs and slashes of rain. On the lower top
of Bynack Beag I sheltered behind granite boulders for a snack then descended
steeply into Strath Nethy, where I was out of the wind but not the now steady
drizzle. I collected the tent and walked back out to the forest and the car.
The promised fair weather had shrunk to less than a day but the dawn and the
clouds had made the trip worthwhile.
Wonderful post Chris, making me feel most envious in my fenland home
ReplyDeleteChris, very atmospheric descriptions and lovely photos, a long way from my Somerset levels home though :-(
ReplyDeleteTwo questions I have wanted to ask you and your first photo above reminded me.
Firstly, you tend not to use an inner with your tarptents - how do you cope with the slugs, etc?
Secondly, it looks like wine in those bladders?
David, actually on this occasion I was using an inner, in case there were still any midges about. (There weren't). Slugs and spiders and insects occasionally wander about when I don't use an inner or when I don't close the inner doors with a tent (which I normally don't, again unless there are midges) but never enough to be any problem. As long as the creature doesn't bite I'm not bothered!
ReplyDeleteDavid, that's not wine in the bottles! It's peat-stained water from the River Nethy. Peat does give a nice golden colour to the water.
ReplyDeletenothing wrong with the fens martin, they have a beauty all of their own!!.
ReplyDeletei am a fen tiger too.
hey chris, when i did that walk in good snow a few winters ago, there was a grouse acting as a bridge guardian on the nethy bridge. he took a piece of flapjack out of my hand!!.
is he still there?.
he was either very smart, or very brave!!!.