Showing posts with label Countryfile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Countryfile. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 March 2023

Countryfile Going to Extremes on BBC iPlayer with my five minutes!


The Countryfile episode I wrote about in this post is now available on BBC iPlayer.  I think the whole episode is worth watching (other than the now out-of-date weather forecast). My five minutes during which I wander across some rotten snow, talk about the Cairngorms, and camp out in wind and rain starts at 32minutes 22 seconds.  

https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m001jp34/countryfile-going-to-extremes

Tuesday, 14 February 2023

Ten years ago Countryfile filmed a short piece with me in the Cairngorms - it's being shown again on February 26th


Back in December 2013 I was filmed walking and camping in the Cairngorms for Countryfile's Winter Special. Unfortinately the weathe was more wet and windy rather cold and snowy than but we did find a patch of old rotten snow for me to wander about on insecurely with ice axe and crampons. You can see it in the picture below.

I wrote about the trip here

The short piece was shown on the 19th January 2014. I'd forgotten all about it when I had an email saying that Countryfile were going to show it again as part of a compilation episode in commemoration of the ascent of Everest in 1953, with links to mountain walking and how you can stay safein the mountains. The episode, to be shown on 26th February, will feature other material from the Countryfile archives. So if you missed my little snippet ten years ago or would like to see it again, along with other outdoor stuff, here's an opportunity. 

After the piece was shown there were some comments from people obviously unfamiliar with winter camping and tarps. I used the Trailstar and one viewer berated Countryfile, asking "why did you make that poor man sleep under a sheet!".

Thursday, 23 January 2020

Guide to the NW Highlands, Countryfile online.

Liathach, Torridon
I wrote a piece on the NW Highlands in winter for Countryfile magazine that appeared in the January print issue under the title Discover The Land Of Ice And Fire. Countryfile has now posted some of the general information on its website, headed Guide to Scotland’s North-West Highlands: where to stay, places to visit and great walks.


Tuesday, 17 December 2019

My Countryfile feature on winter in the NW Highlands


I have a feature on winter in the NW Highlands in the January issue of Countryfile magazine. Writing this certainly made me think I need to go there again soon. And hope for more wintry weather than on my last winter visit when I joined Alex Roddie in Torridon on his Cape Wrath Trail walk last February. It was an enjoyable trip but it rained most of the time and there was no snow. I'd like to see the area looking as it does in the spectacular pictures accompanying my article (none of them mine).


Thursday, 11 February 2016

BBC Countryfile features on wild camping gear & the Cairngorms in winter

I've chosen a selection of gear for wild camping for the March issue of BBC Countryfile magazine, which is just out. I'll be interested to hear what people think of my selection! A version of the feature with fewer items is online here.



















This is my second piece for Countryfile. The first one was about the Cairngorms in winter and appeared in the January issue.


Thursday, 16 January 2014

Countryfile Winter Special

The Countryfile team in Coire an Lochain

The Countryfile Winter Special, for which I was filmed back in December (see this blog post) will be shown this Sunday, January 19th, at 7pm on BBC 1. Whether I get two minutes or ten minutes remains to be seen .......

Wednesday, 18 December 2013

Filming in the Cairngorms for Countryfile


The film crew in Coire Lochain

The snow has returned to the Cairngorms and the hills are white, though still storm-blasted and inhospitable. Before the temperatures dropped and the snow began to fall I went out into the soggy, windswept hills to do some filming for the BBC's Countryfile Winter Special, which will be shown on January 19.

The wind was too strong to film on the summits - standing up would probably have been a challenge - and anyway the cloud was low so we'd have seen nothing. Instead with a three-person film crew and accompanying ranger in tow I wandered over to Coire Lochain where there was still some snow - enough for me to clamber about with ice axe and crampons - plus the usual dramatic backdrop of this magnificent corrie.

On the upper edge of the long snow bank I climbed we could see and hear ptarmigan, lots of ptarmigan, lots and lots of ptarmigan. The more we looked the more we saw. I'd never seen anything like this many in one place before and neither, had Nick, the ranger. He counted 150 so we reckoned there were probably at least 200. A magnificent sight.

Coire Lochain

From the corrie we descended a little in search of a reasonably sheltered camp site for me as the director wanted to film me setting up camp before the crew retired to a hotel in Aviemore. Most ground flat enough for a comfortable camp was absolutely sodden from recent rain and snowmelt and it took a little time to find a just-about-adequate spot, right on the banks of the Allt Creag an Leth-choin. The stream was roaring down in a series of little whitewater cascades. Luckily I find this noise quite soothing!

Before departing the crew left me with an infra-red video camera and infra-red torch so I could make a night time video diary. I used it several times inside and outside the shelter but whether any of the material will actually appear in the programme I have no idea! I'd never tried filming myself before. I hadn't expected to start doing so with an infra-red camera.

When I made camp the wind wasn't too strong and I was looking forward to a peaceful night, especially as I knew the film crew would be returning to film me having breakfast and packing up. I didn't want to look too bleary-eyed or sound half-asleep!

However during the night the wind shifted slightly and my sheltered site was sheltered no longer. Rain came too, rattling and bouncing on my shelter walls. The storm woke me several times and at 3.30 a.m., fed up of the racket, I hastily donned my waterproofs and went out to lower the profile of the shelter so it shed the wind and rain better and wasn't so noisy. I then fell back asleep, waking as the first grey dawn light crept over the sodden landscape. It was still raining and there was no colour in the morning sky.

A grey and stormy dawn

The film crew returned, their waterproofs dripping, and I displayed my gear for the camera and was filmed packing up before we headed back across the moorland to warmth and coffee, pausing for a little while in a wet but sheltered peat bog hollow to record me talking about the joys of the Cairngorms in winter and the pleasures of long distance walking.

If only the snow had come sooner.