
Gone off to climb some stone heads, Stone Country will be back back in three weeks with some new photos and essays about rocks, no less...
Glen Nevis waters
What pleases me most about bouldering is this rare combination of perfection...holding the project crimp just sweetly, sending the line, nattering with friends & encouraging them on, gasping up steep crispy hummock-grass to a glimpsed boulder in the pines of Glen Nevis, dipping my head in the cool blue stone-smoothing waters, finding that crucial body postion that suddenly brings clarity to your head as you float through the bloc...
It has been a rare period of fineness. Glen Croe has been in good nick and the classic lines are seeing repeats: Turbinal Nose is the most popular, with quick ascents by Ali Robb and Alan Cassidy, who nearly did Precious on the same day. Falling off the easy bit proved a crucial turning point... the sun got up and heated the slopers and it was all diminishing returns. You'll get it next visit pretty quickly Alan!
Alan Cassidy on 'Precious'
Andy Bullock on 'Storm', Glen Nevis
Lost Valley hallucination!
The Trossachs has been popular as the compact schist is clean and dry... the Sentinel boulders seeing repeats of classic lines and folk working round the boulders on other projects. The outlook over Loch Katrine is serene and as I said, the rock is in perfect condition. Niall McNair repeated 'Lock, Stock...' and The Victorian at the Trossachs, confirming them as excellent problems, though now it might be getting a bit warm to hold those quartzy slopers... get there before the sun, then chill out in the afternoon!
Dave Kerr on the Jawa dyno, Trossachs
Richie Betts on The Lone Ranger, Meig
Extract from ‘Cross Country: Nature and Magical Landscapes of The Trossachs’ A Crow Dictionary Feannag – black asterisk of the sky, fithe...