Friday, 28 May 2010
Jura - Last Corbett
I've been ticking off my Corbetts for about 20 years, trying to keep them for nice sunny weather! My final one of the 220 Corbetts was Beinn an Oir, the middle of the three Paps of Jura. It was a great one to finish on, though logistics of getting a group over there was a bit complex but well worth it. It was a very sociable occasion.
14 plus a 10 month old made the summit on Saturday where we celebrated appropriately. Five of us the completed the third pap and then we all had dinner at the Jura Hotel. Sunday was a day of varied activities ranging from not doing much to going for a hill run or a cycle to the north end of the island. I did the latter but did not quite make it to George Orwell's cottage due to lack of time before the return ferry.
By the way DO NOT phone Jura bike hire on their 0709 number - it's a racket at 65p a minute just to phone them!!
To add to the interest of the weekend it coincided with the Scottish Islands 3 Peaks Race. The conditions were not so good for them as most of the time it was flat calm and much rowing was required as can be seen from this picture of the leading boat leaving Craighouse.
An evening ferry ride back to Tayvallich
Winter 2 - Georgia
That's Georgia the country - in the Caucasus. Not the most well known area for ski-mountaineering but an interesting place to visit with plenty of high mountains. A group of four of us travelled to the capital, Tbilisi, just after the major ash shutdown of flights - we were very lucky. From Tbilisi we went straight to Gudauri at 2000m and which is one of the two main ski resorts in Georgia. There are only about 3 functional ski-lifts out of around 8 or more, but then functional is perhaps the wrong word as there was a power cut on our first (warmup) day. So it was skins on from the start to ascend a 3000m peak near the top of the ski area. The weather was very warm and cloudy making the snow very heavy and sticky.
The next day we joined our guide, Gia, and another group of four, from Bavaria. The day was not dissimilar to the previous one but we did set out much earlier and went to a slightly higher and more harder (in terms of kick turns) peak. This was the last day of the lift served skiing and though we did not use lifts we did make use of the bar on the slopes and by this time the sun was shining.
A couple more days of warm up in the local area and then it was time to head north for a two hour drive to a small village and a rough track for our 4WD's up to the snow at 2100m. From here a baking hot skin up to a hut at 3700m. The hut is an old Russian meteorological station which provides basic accommodation but was not exactly tidy. Lots of old batteries and other bits of junk abounded, added to by recently left rubbish about which Gia was not pleased.
Due to time constraints and what looked like a short weather window it was a pre-dawn start the following day for an ascent of our main objective, Mt Kazbek - 5047m. It was a long gradual ascent for most of the way with the skis being left at 4850m part way up a steepening sastrugi slope. Then a steep snow plod took us to the summit. We had some great views on the way up including distant views of Mt Elbrus some 200 km away, though the top itself clouded in a little.
The descent was straightforward but very soggy snow by the time we reached the hut in the early afternoon. The next morning we skied nice spring snow back to our vehicles and returned to Gudauri. We'd been lucky with the weather because by the following morning it was back to cloud and rain so we made for Tbilisi for our final two days and did the touristy things, with plenty of ancient churches to visit.
Winter 1 - Norway
I've been rather slow updating but a quick report of my trip to Lyngen in Northern Norway for ski touring from a boat in March. A group of six of us stayed on a comfortable boat, the Goxsheim
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