I enjoy writing. I can't do it on demand, but if often demands it from me, normally when I'm out and about and I have to write notes whilst moving. Usually I just write factual trip reports, but occasionally it strays into something more creative. I wrote this in 2008 and it was published in the Climbers Club jornal in 2011/2012, and I thought I'd re-publish it here...
The path is boggy despite the blue sky. It tracks round the back of Llyn Ogwen, running westwards parallel to the road. The solitary walker is aware of the noise of vehicles passing, but only in an absent way, they’re not really part of her world, her walk. She’s distracted by her thoughts; a jumbled mess, not flowing as they should be but torpid and pitiful like the rainwater pools spread along her route.
There are plunge pools on the path and she has to stay alert which focuses the thoughts a little, teases out the strands and untangles them.
At the end of the lake the path hooks right and heads steeply up the side of Pen yr Ole Wen and the walker dutifully follows its lead. Jagged footsteps and folded cracked rock, sometimes seemingly lead to nowhere, although the way on is always obvious. At one point there seems to be an impasse but it’s a rock gate, the means of entrance a direct scramble up the central weakness. The walker’s overjoyed at the style of the path, it requires attention, momentum, application. Some of the threads of confused thought are pushed aside by this new driving force, tumbling over the precipice out of the domain of what matters. She glances back and is instantly bowled over by the emotionally breathtaking and unexpected view: ‘How could I not know that view was there?’ It’s dazzling in its intensity, it draws her in. She carries on walking but is driven now by a tangential desire to keep looking over her shoulder at the Idwal crags, almost tripping over her walking poles in distraction, until eventually the fundamental lure to power up the hill takes over again.
Every little while she’s drawn to turn around again as she daren’t forget the image, it must be committed to memory, and each time the view’s changed, it’s grown, bringing more of the familiar mountains and crags into view, until it’s all encompassing and can’t be taken in all at once. Suddenly it’s all she’s aware of, and the slowly unravelling tangled threads aren’t just insignificant, teased so fine they break and vanish, they may as well never have been there.
At some unnoticeable point, the Idwal bowl becomes just part of the view, new things still appear like Llyn Bochlwyd the elevated lake on Tryfan’s west flank, but they’re eclipsed by the long wide Ogwen valley stretching southeast. The walker’s stomach grumbles reminding that there’s still a personal reality to consider, but the jagged rocks at the summit are tantalisingly close and make the decision to press on and delay lunch seem indisputable. Hunger dulls the mind and she misjudges the steepness of the path and teeters backwards worryingly, so a compromise is taken and just below the plateau she takes a breather for some sustenance.
The summit of Pen Yr Ole Wen is then reached and surpassed, and yet that’s far from the end. A stone seesaws and the tip of the walker’s foot dips into damp ground, reminding of the plunge pools on the preamble round the lake - the attention is still demanded, new threads forming strong and resilient.
Anglesey appears shimmering on the horizon. Nearby images draw the eyes too – rocks littering the path are dappled with spots of moss which give the impression of plump raindrops, although for once the rain is holding off - perhaps the views are necessary, giving a message. The connecting ridge over to Carnedd Dafydd is strewn with scree and the walker concentrates on not sliding and not turning an ankle. She continues east and on top of Black Steps a cold wind grasps at her and she dons a pair of gloves, contemplating how this is an odd thing to have to do on the August bank holiday. The threads in her head reform into a full circle, linking the new found clarity right back to the cause, which is now no longer jumbled. The summers of late had been wet and miserable, and climbing motivation had been waning. The focus for fulfilling the year’s aims that was built up in spring had been eroded by the weather, a new mood seeped in, one of languor, permeating through all the thoughts until all the good feeling was saturated and stifled. It was a veiled process though, not noticed until too late, until the despair set in and her soul reached out with a last cry, and headed for inexplicable comfort of the hills of Wales.
Wales has a distinctive feeling. It’s strong yet unassuming, and it’s beautiful, not beautiful in the same way as Scotland, or the Lakes, but there’s an unmistakeable aura. It’s grand and yet basic, and if you spend more than a drive through in its presence you pick up those qualities too. You feel reassuringly back down to earth, it invades your consciousness perhaps because it forces you to stay alert, and things start to seem possible again. The Welsh hills are oblivious to you of course and they don’t do you any favours nor try to trick you, the summit mist doesn’t come down maliciously, that’s just what it does… but despite this indifference you can’t help but feel that as long as no one’s looking it’ll secretly lend you a helping hand and guide you on your way as long as you haven’t asked for it.
Pensively the walker continues north east slowly gaining height towards the next summit. Chestnut horses appear out of nowhere on the meadow like flank to the east, their manes glowing ethereal gold. She pauses a moment to watch them graze, picked out in the sunbeams, a focal point with fantastic views radiating in all directions, some still familiar and some foreign but all similarly captivating.
She pauses again on the summit, pinning down the map in the building wind and watching other walkers crossing westwards along the knife edge to Yr Elen. Deciding that time won’t allow her to take in that summit, she begins to descend southeast from Carnedd Llewelyn across the top of Craig yr Ysfa, and is drawn by the humped ridge dominating the view ahead so decides to return that way. On the descent to the col she meets a spiritualist come to worship the mountain, who is momentarily detached from her walking group and is bounding down the rocks like an overexcited puppy. They have a brief chat about the importance of the hills in their respective faiths, then they part, the spiritualist dropping down southwards to the reservoir and the walker ascending one final time up the steep craggy scramble to Pen yr Helyg Du, stepping aside good-naturedly half way up to allow a group of Scouts to pass.
The weather is now done with being amenable and it clags over, drizzle begins, clarity of vision no longer important now its secret message has been imparted. At the summit the walker turns south and starts to descend the ridge viewed from Carnedd Llewelyn, the soft undulations are easy on the knees so the usual pain never arrives, the rain just a steady patter never too heavy. A party of four alternately overtakes then is overtaken. The walker cannot escape them, but yet it doesn’t really matter, she no longer needs to be solitary to clear her thoughts as the threads are woven into a solid fabric, a foundation of composure and serenity.
A collection of trip reports and articles, detailing my adventures over the years. Comments and shared experiences always welcome, whether I know you or not.
For my 2011 photography blog see http://amoodaday.blogspot.com
Saturday, 11 April 2026
Tuesday, 20 January 2026
2025, a personal review
I'll start with the fun stuff:
That was my most summits bagged in a year, an improvement of 35 summits on the previous best (2022).
And perhaps most significantly was that blissful, sigh-of-relief inducing return to proper running form after 2 1/2 years off with blood clots followed by a broken ankle. I ran a marathon in June for the first time since the DVT, which was a really notable achievement since I genuinely didn’t know if I’d ever be able to run long distance again. My calf struggled with its 75% bloodflow, but I did two more 22-milers later in the year and those were okay, so I think that each time I re-reach a new milestone my body learns that it can again, and so there’s no reason I can’t train for an ultra again now.
I went away a lot: trail and sail in Croatia in July (incredible, and a new country tick), an island bagging trip to Orkney in August (met some lovely hill-baggers and went on a very rolly boat trip in the Pentland Firth), Lake District in September (as a recce for a future Wainwright trip), and Italy in November (for my first UTMB race). These were continuously active trips and I reached an all-time Strava fitness high of 130(!), which is slightly artificial due to my venous insufficiency and resultant elevated heartrate but still pleased me and I’ve managed to maintain a level near it.
I also had the magical pleasure to paddleboard with dolphins in June. I agreed to a dawn paddle which is VERY unlike me as it meant getting up at 5am, but I felt this unexplainable draw to the idea and had this uncanny hunch that we would see the dolphins - and we did!
Some non-active thing also took a lot of my time. I was on a FODMAP diet for 5 months to work out what is causing my IBS but I didn’t reach any conclusions. I also decided to sell my Stoke house as my tenants were being awkward about work I needed to have done on it, I put it on the market early March and sold it mid September. I used some of the money to upgrade my life, uncharacteristically buying a fancy electric car in Oct (second hand but still 6.5x more than I've ever spent on a car before, and even that was 3x what I'd spent on all my cars before that) and a upgraded to the latest phone to go with an upgraded sports watch I treated myself to earlier in the year. I’ll be more sensible with the rest and put it all into the new house.
Another biggie was applying for Mountain Rescue, or at least it was meant to be, but I didn’t get in. I had spent 2 years plus mentally adjusting for it, preparing to free up my time and ensuring I was fully committed to the demands it would bring. I knew there was a selection day but I thought that was to assess you against a minimum standard, I had no idea there were only 4 places for 20 candidates, and as it happened I didn’t manage to get one. That was more of a knock than I bargained for, as I expected it to be a whole lifestyle change and I had mentally embraced that.
Other negatives - 3 friends died. One that I had spent 2024/2025 New Year visiting and bagging mountains with, one close friend (and I don't have many of those) that has always been there for me and genuinly accepted me for who I am, and one special 16 year old boy who I’d known since he was a baby. I think about them often. I've reconsidered other friendships, moving on from people who never get in touch. I'm not that great at it but I do try and I do make occasional contact, it's not really that hard to send the occasional message or facebook comment and some people do absolutely nothing, so I think it's fair to say they're not actually friends in any way.
My house that I bought in 2024 continued to be a positive, a lovely safe place that I like to be in. Because of that’s it’s sometimes hard to tell if life is tough elsewhere as it’s such an effective escape. Some work stuff has definitely been stressful and I maybe didn’t pick up the signs early enough because of that. I did stop doing other stuff but I don’t know if that’s a bad thing or a natural consequence of being more settled, I guess time will tell - I didn’t make cider for first time in 15 years; I stopped (ceilidh) calling (and dancing largely); I mostly stopped orienteering. I know if you do fewer things your comfort zone shrinks, but don’t feel as capable as I used to, and also living in Devon I have lower energy levels as there is less buzz to feed off. I think it helps if I think of my comfort zone as a line more than a circle, that I can meander either side of, I don't have to contantly keep pushing it out. I still did a lot, and June and December were absolutely non stop. I do think life is hard, perhaps just a mid-40s thing, and much like my body is getting less bouncy, my mind is too, and each difficult experience takes its toll a little more and I don't bounce back as much (accompanying photo here is when I mentally gave up on a 22-mile run event, never done that before, seemed a good parallel). I realised that I have very few moments where I feel joy, and I made a conscious acknowledgment of that as joy should be a choice that is within our power to make and I didn’t know how to make it at that time, but I didn’t want to miss the moment when I do.
- 174 hill summits, of which 169 were new. 69 of the new ones were only TUMPs (30m prominence, no minimum heights), the rest were more significant including 5 more Historic County Tops (16 left out of 85).
- 78 new Dartmoor tors, total now stands at 457 out of 929 (49%)
- 51 trig points, 48 of which were new.
- 18 new Dartmoor 365 squares, 16 left to go
- Ran 920 miles (of which 722 was trail), only really starting again in May after my ankle recovered.
- Walked 356 miles, hiked 174 miles, cycled 51 miles, swam for 116 hours covering 37km outdoors (a lot of that was in Croatia) and 6.2km indoors, paddleboarded 56 hours covering 129 miles and learned to move around the board and do step back turns.
- 4 heatmap swims (Anstey's to Hope's nose through a jellyfish swarm, Maidencombe to Watcombe with my first jellyfish sting, Babbacombe to Anstey's, and Teignmouth to Sprey point). I've now completed South Devon from Shoalstone, Brixham as far as Ness, Shaldon.
- Ran/walked some more UK coast path in Wales, Somerset, Yorkshire, Hampshire.
That was my most summits bagged in a year, an improvement of 35 summits on the previous best (2022).
And perhaps most significantly was that blissful, sigh-of-relief inducing return to proper running form after 2 1/2 years off with blood clots followed by a broken ankle. I ran a marathon in June for the first time since the DVT, which was a really notable achievement since I genuinely didn’t know if I’d ever be able to run long distance again. My calf struggled with its 75% bloodflow, but I did two more 22-milers later in the year and those were okay, so I think that each time I re-reach a new milestone my body learns that it can again, and so there’s no reason I can’t train for an ultra again now.
I went away a lot: trail and sail in Croatia in July (incredible, and a new country tick), an island bagging trip to Orkney in August (met some lovely hill-baggers and went on a very rolly boat trip in the Pentland Firth), Lake District in September (as a recce for a future Wainwright trip), and Italy in November (for my first UTMB race). These were continuously active trips and I reached an all-time Strava fitness high of 130(!), which is slightly artificial due to my venous insufficiency and resultant elevated heartrate but still pleased me and I’ve managed to maintain a level near it.
I also had the magical pleasure to paddleboard with dolphins in June. I agreed to a dawn paddle which is VERY unlike me as it meant getting up at 5am, but I felt this unexplainable draw to the idea and had this uncanny hunch that we would see the dolphins - and we did!
Some non-active thing also took a lot of my time. I was on a FODMAP diet for 5 months to work out what is causing my IBS but I didn’t reach any conclusions. I also decided to sell my Stoke house as my tenants were being awkward about work I needed to have done on it, I put it on the market early March and sold it mid September. I used some of the money to upgrade my life, uncharacteristically buying a fancy electric car in Oct (second hand but still 6.5x more than I've ever spent on a car before, and even that was 3x what I'd spent on all my cars before that) and a upgraded to the latest phone to go with an upgraded sports watch I treated myself to earlier in the year. I’ll be more sensible with the rest and put it all into the new house.
Another biggie was applying for Mountain Rescue, or at least it was meant to be, but I didn’t get in. I had spent 2 years plus mentally adjusting for it, preparing to free up my time and ensuring I was fully committed to the demands it would bring. I knew there was a selection day but I thought that was to assess you against a minimum standard, I had no idea there were only 4 places for 20 candidates, and as it happened I didn’t manage to get one. That was more of a knock than I bargained for, as I expected it to be a whole lifestyle change and I had mentally embraced that.
Other negatives - 3 friends died. One that I had spent 2024/2025 New Year visiting and bagging mountains with, one close friend (and I don't have many of those) that has always been there for me and genuinly accepted me for who I am, and one special 16 year old boy who I’d known since he was a baby. I think about them often. I've reconsidered other friendships, moving on from people who never get in touch. I'm not that great at it but I do try and I do make occasional contact, it's not really that hard to send the occasional message or facebook comment and some people do absolutely nothing, so I think it's fair to say they're not actually friends in any way.
My house that I bought in 2024 continued to be a positive, a lovely safe place that I like to be in. Because of that’s it’s sometimes hard to tell if life is tough elsewhere as it’s such an effective escape. Some work stuff has definitely been stressful and I maybe didn’t pick up the signs early enough because of that. I did stop doing other stuff but I don’t know if that’s a bad thing or a natural consequence of being more settled, I guess time will tell - I didn’t make cider for first time in 15 years; I stopped (ceilidh) calling (and dancing largely); I mostly stopped orienteering. I know if you do fewer things your comfort zone shrinks, but don’t feel as capable as I used to, and also living in Devon I have lower energy levels as there is less buzz to feed off. I think it helps if I think of my comfort zone as a line more than a circle, that I can meander either side of, I don't have to contantly keep pushing it out. I still did a lot, and June and December were absolutely non stop. I do think life is hard, perhaps just a mid-40s thing, and much like my body is getting less bouncy, my mind is too, and each difficult experience takes its toll a little more and I don't bounce back as much (accompanying photo here is when I mentally gave up on a 22-mile run event, never done that before, seemed a good parallel). I realised that I have very few moments where I feel joy, and I made a conscious acknowledgment of that as joy should be a choice that is within our power to make and I didn’t know how to make it at that time, but I didn’t want to miss the moment when I do.
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