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© Graeme Haynes


Outdoor Capital of the UK Blog

Want to know the latest about your favourite outdoor activities? Get an inside look at what's happening in Lochaber with our blog.


Starry, starry night ...

Monday, January 05, 2009

The recent spell of clear weather has not only provided beautiful white landscapes and amazing sunsets. After dark, conditions for viewing the night skies have been near enough perfect. You don't have to travel very far in the Outdoor Capital to find an spot with no light pollution, and watching the skies requires no special equipment, just a little knowledge, warm clothing and patience. Don't take the amazing skies for granted - get out there and stargaze once in a while. You won't be disappointed!

Last Friday (3rd January), I wrapped up warm and braved the freezing temperatures to watch the Quadrantid meteorite shower, a natural spectacle which often passes unnoticed. I set up camp in the garden just before midnight, with coffee, sleeping bag, gloves, hat and hood up. I spotted quite a few meteorites during the hour I spent outside (one every couple of minutes, at least) and it becomes addictive. You find yourself deciding to wait and see one more, then go to bed. However, after each subsequent one, I would either think, "That one was small - it didn't count" or "Wow! That was a good one. I bet another one will be along soon"! Unfortunately, the decision to retreat was made for me, when I heard rustling in the bushes and strange bird calls not very far away! I'm sure it was only the pair of pheasants who recently set up residence chez Braes, but I was seriously spooked by then!

In December, the Moon passed closer to the Earth than at any other time in the last 15 years, meaning it appeared bigger and brighter than usual, and January's Full Moon (on January 10th) will be almost as spectacular. This might also be a good month for the Moon to exhibit "Earthshine", when the dark part of a crescent Moon’s surface is faintly illuminated by Sunlight reflected from the tops of clouds on Earth.

Five planets are lined up in the western sky soon after Sunset at the moment. Mercury and Jupiter appear very close together, 6 or 7° above the SW horizon, with Venus very noticeable from dusk onwards as a very bright object in the SW, rising higher during the evening. Neptune and Uranus are in the vicinity but are barely visible to the naked eye.

The Milky Way is often spectacular in the Lochaber skies, and it is rewarding to learn just a few constellations (and sounds impressive to those who don't know any!). So don't neglect the ultimate outdoor activity - you don't get much more "out there" than the night sky with its celestial objects, thousands of light years away!

images courtesy of www.bbc.co.uk and www.spaceweather.com

posted by Outdoor Capital of the UK @ 4:14 PM  0 comments

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Back to work blues?



Having had a fab NY enjoying the great weather it was with a heavy heart that I went back to work this morning......only NOT really - one of the great things about living up here is that my morning drive to a meeting in Crianlarich meant I got views like this through Glencoe and Rannoch Moore!

Well there has to be some compensations for living in a town that doesn't have a cinema!

Anna

posted by Outdoor Capital of the UK @ 4:11 PM  0 comments

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Fantastic Start to the Winter

I used to keep track of my winter climbing each season by keeping a points system and comparing (competing) with my friends to see who got the most points. For each winter climb you get the same number of points as the overall grade plus a point for each star as well. So Tower Ridge on Ben Nevis gets you 8 points because it is grade IV and has four stars.



Over the last eight days I have been out climbing on seven days and did everything on the list below -

Green Gully IV ***
Thompson's Route IV ***
Point Five Gully V ****
Tower Ridge IV ****
Curved Ridge III ***
Two Step Corner V ***
Good Friday Climb III ***

So my tally in the last eight days is 51! This must be some kind of record especially as (apart from Good Friday Climb yesterday) they were all in sunshine with perfect cold and dry conditions, often above a sea of cloud in the glens.


The snow cover is quite patchy and doesn't look very impressive when you look up from the roads. However when the temperatures dropped just after Christmas and after a few days of rain on the tops of the hills the snow froze absolutely solid and ice started forming.


The snow on the tops and in the corries and gullies is hard and icy and lots of ice has formed lower down where streams and trickles have frozen. The conditions underfoot are quite tricky and crampons and ice axes are essential along with the ability to use them! There are several activity providers that can coach you in essential winter skills or even show you the secrets of ice climbing.

We now have brilliant ice climbing conditions on Ben Nevis and Aonach Mor with superb winter hill walking and many people were out enjoying the Alpine conditions during the holidays. The weather is forecast to stay cold for another few days to come so the good winter conditions will continue.




It's been a fantastic start to the winter! Let's hope it continues.

Mike

posted by Outdoor Capital of the UK @ 11:38 AM  0 comments

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