I got accosted by a nice young man at Eden Edinburgh the other day who said he'd met me at Ratho and enjoyed reading my
Well
it's actually from a couple of decades back. Early in my climbing life,
early exploration of Dumfries and Galloway sea-cliffs. D&G -
Scotland Lite, but peaceful and charming in it's own way. Same goes for
the sea-cliffs. Beautifully scenic inlets at Portobello, idyllic slabs
above a beach at Larbrax, diverse greywacke adventures at Meikle Ross,
plentiful good honest microgranite walls at Crammag and Laggantalluch.
The latter feels a bit like hidden parts of West Penwith, imagine
everything from the rock crystals to the approach slopes have been
compressed down to a quarter of the size and the caravans have
thankfully fucked off.
I
went to Laggantalluch all those years ago, did some nice E1s, backed
off the so-called E2 5b Freewheeling, a grand slab that the Fox and I
confirmed as E3 5c *** in 2011. And I also backed off a new route at the
reasonably well established Laggantalluch Head sector. There was a
crack and a roof and a headwall and it was all more committing than I
was committed.
Many
years later I went back again, I think with The Pylon Kunt. This may or
may not have been the visit where we developed the semi-esoteric but
rather charming Buchan West Crag, subsequently all of our routes there
were upgraded (possibly rightly, hard to tell as we had to abseil clean
and inspect - another thing that makes pre-inspection such toss as you
can't give an accurate estimate of the normal experience, albeit needs
must on a new crag), and downstarred by Stephen Reid because he was
miffed that it was the one obvious Galloway Hills crag that John Biggar
and himself hadn't hoovered up (this explanation may be speculation or
entirely accurate). Once again we had a nice time at Lagg and once
again the line got away - to the extent that I posted about it on UKC to
suggest someone did it before the imminent new guide. No-one did.
Fast-forward
to many years later again, or is it rewind to a few months ago? Either
way I went back with the Purkle who has a penchant for the area. The
weather was stunning, glorious spring sun with an even more glorious
crisp cool breeze - no nuclear death heat back then! We warmed up at
Portobello and I finally did the intimidating wall of St Elmo's Fire E3
5c *** which was bold and lovely and a good reassurance that maybe I
could potter okay with my PVIBSUDT (this was before the derived
depression though). Then we went to Lagg and this time I was going to
do that bloody route. Warmed up, did a sandbag E2, ignored the other 3
or 4 potential new lines and got on the main one, the most obvious of
the lot.
Womble
to the roof, fiddle in good gear, lean out off a good, unavoidable jam
(well there has to be something to stop the wall rats), reach a good
crimp, tiptoe feet to hold it, match and gain sinker lip jug. Get pumped
fiddling in unnecessary back up gear, then realise the second crux is
to come. Furtle up on diminishing nubbins to get stood up and then
realise by far the best hold is at your shins. A bit of lateral thinking
leaves you hanging the footholds of the classic E1 that circumvents the
roof and allows more gear and enough relaxation to shuffle leftwards to
jugs and what would be glory except Galloway is all a bit too peaceful
for that.
Nothing
earth-shattering but I finally got it done and it's a good line and a
good route and a good useful addition to the cliff. Shadow Of Intent E3
5c **. The leaning rock strata make it look quite hard in a Gogarth Main
Cliff sort of way but it's not. So named partly because of the
aeons-old intention of doing it and partly because of one of the vast
plethora of technical melodic deathcore metal bands I am in to is Shadow
Of Intent and I was listening to them on repeat to motivate myself on
tedious auto-belay laps at Kendal Wall which may or may not have
provided the necessary stamina.