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mate, great pics but truly sketchy conditions - you are a brave lad

WEDNESDAY 15 MAY 2013     I returned home to Wales a month ago hoping for April turns but the snow which fell at the start of the month had unfortunately long since disappeared.   With Scotland s

Went for a bit of a drive up Uonuma Skyline this afternoon, hardly any up there. Will post some pics.   In another thread, sorry Mike!

SUNDAY 04 NOVEMBER 2012

 

Saturday evening brought torrential rain, hail, sleet, thunder & lightning in Aberdare putting a dampner on the Guy Fawkes fireworks celebrations.

 

But I went to sleep hoping that elevation would result in elation with the precipitation falling as snow in the Central Beacons Massif.

 

I met regular Beacons partner Chris Dainton just before 9am, and we were at the Bwlch Duwynt saddle about 40 minutes later.

 

By this time the morning valley mist had mostly burned off and the sun was lighting up all around us.

 

Ordinarily I don't head up to the summit plateau of Corn Du because it can be too icy and rocky, but I'm glad we went up today as the views were spectacular.

 

Yours truly heading up to the summit plateau of Corn Du

(Chris Dainton pics)

 

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Cwm Llwch panorama - Pen-y-Fan to the right

 

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33yWUv134yQ&feature=plcp

 

 

 

Chris Dainton on the summit plateau of Corn Du

 

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Yours truly on the summit plateau of Corn Du

 

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Yours truly on the summit plateau of Corn Du with Pen-y-Fan in the background

 

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And a first for both Chris & I, a Brocken Spectre projected into Cwm Llwch.

 

Wikipedia describes the phenomemon as

 

"the apparently enormous and magnified shadow of an observer, cast upon the upper surfaces of clouds opposite the sun."

 

http://en.wikipedia....Brocken_spectre

 

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Ridgelines rarely provide good opportunities to make turns but I was in luck today. There was consolidated and skiable snow on the ridgeline below Corn Du in the left of this shot

 

Corn Du slope

 

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and Chris did a fabulous job of catching me in the act.

 

Your truly skiing Corn Du with Cwm Llwch below

(Chris Dainton pics)

 

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With turns under my belt it was time to take a look at the slopes off Pen-y-Fan.

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FAN-TASTIC

 

The slope into Cwm Llwch which I skied yesterday was looking good, but the NE Face was looking great.

 

Chris Dainton on the summit plateau of Pen-y-Fan with Cribyn in the background

 

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Additional snowfall combined with wind transported snow overnight had covered up most of the rocks and large tufts of grass and I felt the face was skiable.

 

I first skied the NE Face of Pen-y-Fan in mid-January 2010 which was the first time this face had been skied. And to my knowledge it hasn't been skied since.

 

1st descent line on the NE Face of Pen-y-Fan, January 2010

 

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On my first attempt I was belayed over the rock buttress on wind blasted, hard packed snow, but this time I downclimbed kicking steps into the windpacked powder.

 

Looking down the NE Face of Pen-y-Fan

 

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Chris walked around to the ridge line separating Cwm Llwch and Cwm Sere and took the following shots of me skiing and hiking back up the NE Face

 

Ready to drop in

 

 

 

 

Yours truly skiing the NE Face of Pen-y-Fan

(Chris Dainton pics)

 

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The snow was very different from my January 2010 run.

 

Then the snow was hardpacked and slick in the upper section and powdery in the gullies down low.

 

Today the snow was toe to knee deep light powder with each turn going to grass and sending plenty of slough and pinwheels down the slope.

 

Amazingly the bases went scratch free.

 

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Bootpacking back up

 

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As I bootpacked back up, I took the following pic below me

 

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and the top section of the face above me

 

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And Chris took these pics of me getting back over the buttress

(Chris Dainton pics)

 

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Fantastic day with great views, great turns, great company, and great memories.

 

And action shots in the Brecon Beacons to boot, a rarity for me, courtesy of Chris.

 

Here's to the next time.

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Parts of Wales really are beautiful.

I have never really explored it all that much.

Perhaps I should.

 

They certainly are.

 

Small country, very diverse - seascape, woodland, upland moor, mountains.

 

Small villages, steam railways, canals, castles, Roman ruins.

 

Been very fortunate to have had the time and the weather to explore the past couple of years.

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