Showing posts with label cairn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cairn. Show all posts

20160904

Today I swam at the very top of a mountain





This morning in service I looked longingly out of the window at the purple headed mountains and so, having looked at an ailing coffee maker, mended a crackling 'phone and established that there was nothing else that I needed to do I donned minimal clothing, took my shoes off and ran away.

The track and elevation graph are from my Garmin and, once again, it has lost track whilst climbing Silsean. I was also tracking on my Samsung which was more successful, see below.  The total distance was 14.95 miles, maximum height 755m, average speed moving 4.35 mph.



This gate and the inscription are at the end of the quarry road in Ballyknockan and gives easy access to the Wicklow mountains.


I seem to be attracted to cows. This is half way up and I gave them wide berth - I didn't bother them and apart from raising their heads and sizing me up they didn't bother me.



I followed a wadi - a water course through the peat, with lots of wet sphagnum moss, one of the most delicious substances to walk barefoot on.



Here is the wadi, looking back towards the Blessington Lake


And here's looking upward.


More of the same. Although overcast there was no rain from the duration of my adventure and it was very warm, warm enough to make me sweat profusely.


At the summit the wadi took me slightly north of Silsean's peak, so I ran south and circumnavigated the cairn to prove that I had been there. As one does.


This is a screen shot from Oruxmaps on my Samsung smart phone that is no longer a phone, and the mapping is not as good as in my recent Willand posts. Sadly Ireland is not so gracious with their OS mapping as is the UK.  The cows are not shown on this map.




Silsean has a cairn. It also has some nice muddy peat and two shallow "lakes" to mess in. So after messing I ran to the companion peak Moanbane where, we are told, instead of a cairn there is a lake at the top. And sure enough there is, right smack at the very summit. It is quite small, perhaps 10 ft wide and 20 ft long. But the amazing thing is its depth.  I lowered myself into the water expecting it to be like one of the inactive ponds in the Wood between the Worlds, but found that at shoulder depth I was only just beginning to find what might be the beginning of the bottom (one never quite knows how much or what sort of mud to find). And the water continued a bit under the surrounding ground which was a bit scary. So I left the bottom largely undiscovered and gingerly swam across the lake - the temperature was quite reasonable, and it very effectively washed off all the mud. I can thoroughly recommend it.

It seems a strange place to find all that much water. In my experience I have found that water generally goes downhill but not, apparently, in Ireland. After all, why else would they put Cork at the bottom?



Having done Silsean and Moanbane I continued in a generally north direction with no definitive idea as to get back to the road and this turned out to be a mistake. Ignoring such details, how I loved the freedom of the mountains! To run barefoot across peaty grass-land or heather without a soul around and such beauty all around. But life cannot be all fricasseed frogs and eel pie and I had to get back in time for a shower before dinner at 6pm.


This stream between Moanbane and Black Hill is marked on OpenStreetMap as Cook Brook. I looked in vain for a suitable place for a dip.



This picture is from the flank of Black Hill looking towards home, having just crossed Cook Brook. At this point I started looking for likely places to regain civilisation.


The heather on this mountain grows twice as high as normal, sometimes waste height, which made my progress slow. Eventually I decided to descend come what may. The heather eventually gave way to gorse and I began to fear that the way might become impassable (to bare legs and feet) but thankfully I made it through. Towards the bottom the gorse gave way to ferns and these were even higher and I had to fight my way through - but it was nice fighting. Bracken is friendly. I headed for a dwelling place and was able to join its (no doubt private) driveway and thence to the road and the long haul back home.



20160423

Mountain barefoot




I've hiked parts of this route before but never tackled the whole as a "run" starting from base. Not that I ran up the mountain - I wish I could!  Something went wacky with the GPS whilst climbing.

Stats: 10.55 miles (19km), 12:46 min/mi (4.7mph) time 2:14:46. Barefoot of course.

I followed the lake-shore for starters: it was sandy until the corner where it looks like I swam (I did not: the tide is out at present). But then it became increasing stony and I whacked my toes several times. I intended to join the road at "Jonathan's bay" but passed it without realising, so followed the next water course which involved several fences and other minor difficulties. Then past the Ballyknockan quarry and straight up to the cairn atop Silsean (698m), one quick loop around the cairn (hardly visible on the map) then down via the back road behind Knockalt.

You can enlarge the images by clicking on them.

The corner I cut

Ballyknockan from the corner, Silsean in the distance

The watercourse I followed

Ballyknockan from the quarry road

Doubtless an essential part of the quarry works

Looking back, a third of the way up

Half way up - can you see the hang glider?

I live somewhere over there

The hang glider is clearly visible at horizon level, centre

The cairn at the top, which I circumnavigated

On the way home

In Valleymount






20140628

Beautiful Ireland 2


Beautiful Ireland from Church Mountain

Last Sunday I was returning the long way from a swim in the river and happened upon three mountain-cyclists about to head over the pass between Corriebracks and Church Mountain. On their encouragement I followed their route this afternoon, parking my bike on the way down to walk (barefoot of course) to the summit of Church Mountain. The last time I climbed this mountain was many years ago - I think in the snow with my younger daughter who was so small the snow kept coming over her boots so I had to carry her.  

I strongly recommend this route to anyone who enjoys the outside. We live somewhere close to those lakes you see in the panorama above. Like I said before - Wow! We are so blessed to have places like this within walking or cycling distance! 

My new road bike has aluminium rims and I thought might not like the stones and ruts, so I used my trusty "mountain" bike (aka my old road bike promoted).

Courtesy Google Maps: Yellow = cycling, Red = walking
(Click on image to display large version)

So here are some more pictures from the trip:

You can see the track over the hills and far away

Looking back, and the typical track surface

Half-way up - looking towards Hollywood

My trusty mountain bike and one of the many gates to negotiate

The pass summit - looking south

The pass summit - looking west towards Church Mountain

Here I left my steed and climbed on foot - literally

View from the summit of Church Mountain

The cairn enclosing the remains of a church

In memory of someone or other who also loved these hills

Last glance back at the summit


The descent towards Donard

On the way home through Hollywood Glen

20120828

Not Moanbane

One thousand apologies - it was Silsean not Moanbane, and it seems the new cairn was built in 2010 which just shows how often I climb the peak.  The two peaks are kind of joined so it was easy to make the mistake. For those of you who NOTICED the lack of pictures in my last post, here is the cairn.