Fast and Light - Outdoor Enthusiast magazine
Transcription
Fast and Light - Outdoor Enthusiast magazine
outdoor utdoor JULY / AUGUST 2014 VOLUME 10 ISSUE 6 www.oe-mag.com enthusiast OVER £1500 ORIENTEERING WORTH OF PRIZES TO WIN BIKEPACKING IN THE CAIRNGORMS GEAR GUIDE: • Trail Running ALPINISM FOR BEGINNERS • Approach Shoes • Sleeping Bags • Trousers SAXON SHORE WAY Fast and Light HOW TO MOVE QUICKLY IN THE OUTDOORS VOLUME 10 ISSUE 6 £3.50 WELCOME Welcome W FEATURE BIKEPACKING Riding High e’re talking fast and light in this issue – as high-tech outdoor materials get lighter and more affordable the days of lugging huge rucksacks through the hills while leather boots gradually destroy your feet are over. But we’re not focusing on hillwalking here – alpinism embraces a lightweight approach to mountaineering, unencumbered by excessive equipment and allowing a smooth, fluid style of protection. David Lintern tried his hand in the Swiss Alps. Those looking to move quickly through the mountains could learn a lot from runners – Felicity Martin suggests orienteering as a way of improving fast and efficient navigation and building hill fitness. And once you’ve reduced your rucksack weight and boosted your fitness, multi-day, long distance trails like the Saxon Shore Way become a breeze, as Rudolf Abraham explains. Those looking to remove the weight from their back completely yet still cover long distances in the mountains could always take to two wheels, as Tom Hutton discovered. Our gear expert Lucy Wallace has gathered together a selection of the latest lightweight footwear and sleeping bags that’ll keep you moving in the outdoors, and I’ve been putting trail running gear through its paces. Film-maker Terry Abraham spends much of his time in the outdoors and is forced to keep his camping equipment lightweight to avoid collapsing under the weight of camera equipment – Emily Sexton-Brown chatted with Terry to find out more. We know this stuff – it’s what we do – so don’t hesitate to get in touch via the usual social media channels if you’ve got a question you want our outdoor experts to answer. Tom Hutton PEDALS DEEP INTO THE HEART OF THE CAIRNGORMS ON A TWO DAY BIKEPACK THAT WAS A LITTLE MORE CHALLENGING THAN EXPECTED. T he one essential ingredient in any good epic is that took over and she (wo)manned up to the job, choosing to soldier on something goes wrong. I’m not talking about anything weakly and in pain in preference to two days in the mountains in bad quite as catastrophic as Joe Simpson’s unbelievable weather. We pressed Go. escape in Touching the Void or Aron Ralston’s gruesome The faffing however, had cost us a morning. So it was lunchtime by tale told in Between a Rock and a Hard Place. But let’s be the time we hit the first sweet singletrack trail at Feshiebridge. This, honest here, an outdoor adventure story that reads ‘we plus Steph’s necessarily rather pedestrian pace, made it obvious from went into the hills and had a nice time’ is hardly likely to capture the the start that we weren’t going to make our planned camp at the Fords imagination as much as one with a few mishaps. of Avon by nightfall. If we had realised that we wouldn’t actually reach This is good news really, because this story definitely had its it until late afternoon on day two, we probably would have quit there mishaps. and then. They started, in fact, even before the adventure did, when I noticed But we didn’t. a huge crack in my chainstay (part of the frame near the back wheel for Instead, we rolled our way slowly down the glen, soaking up some non-cyclists). This would be game-over for a normal mountain bike ride of Britain’s most sumptuous scenery, with the mighty Feshie river to let alone a two day, 100km+ expedition into very rough terrain, our right and almost endless picturesque Caledonian pine forest to our carrying overnight gear and food. Fortunately, Aviemore’s excellent left. The newly-laid path weaved a fun line between woodland and Bothy Bikes came to the rescue and hired me a rather nice Ibis Ripley, water, and a warm afternoon sun lifted our spirits. But then trouble full-suspension all-mountain bike that may as well have been built struck. Steph’s discomfort turned to crippling cramp and her legs were specifically for the trip we were about to undertake. struggling to keep the pedals turning. Should we turn back? Probably. Sadly our problems weren’t over yet though: the next hiccup was to But we didn’t. have a far bigger bearing on the outcome. Somehow, during our pre Instead I took all the luggage from her bike and attached it to mine bikepack carb-loading session – read huge meal ‘cos we like our food’ and we plodded on aiming to go just as far as she could manage before – partner, Steph, had picked up a nasty dose of food poisoning. We stopping early and letting her get some sleep. If she felt better toyed with postponing for a day or two but with a waning forecast and tomorrow, we’d continue, although it would be a big day. If she didn’t a journey back south just a few days away, the hardy adventurer in her we’d simply retrace our tracks and call it quits.The trail turned east 30 www.oe-mag.com OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 p30 ALPINISM FEATURE ner’s A Begin the Alps o Guide t YOU INTO GETTING HT. G WAY TO M UP RIG ES A LON AND TEA BASICS GO N, EQUIP CED CLIMBING ALSO PLA ROPE, BRA G A FEW FEAR OF TIME IF YOU . ST HIS KNOWIN MB FIR DE CLI ASI E THE PUT S FOR THE HOW HE D TO LOV THE ALP NS RTE LAI STA D iviers after tern EXP RTS AN of Val d’Ann David Lin at the ng. away part EARLY STA pitched up overwhelmi ntz, in a tucked cheerfully FOR THE d at Grime pt three a intact, and We arrive ped with HIMSELF rland to attem with the fridge well equip g to Switze – what of driving, ered was T ous hut, a luxuri the Moiry was to be by a two hour followed two climbs for our first a short drive, name. The Our base reached after r of the same ished refuge After ide the glacie in altitude. newly refurb metal alongs er increase and heavy y more with anoth haul of rope ce in the slightl struggled were down as we crevasse practi baby steps sun blazed er dose of Each of these ons d for anoth ield. heade r snowf new cramp lunch we the glacie with brand ndings of the wrong Equipped ed them to testing surrou it would seem. tly attach ially for me on, I promp vital - espec for the occasi especially for most hill y ased novelt purch a together, an roping’ – not we were roped feet. as ‘death first time to the d and also it referre speed This was I’ve heard e between che and the balanc the UK, where tened avalan . In the Alps, walkers in the heigh nom de plume because of ces on the encouraging nt, primarily larger distan very differe lengths of g over much by seven security is from movin attached small that comes within our g together’, crevasse risk ions, even that ‘movin unicat ered comm discov glacier. We ivity and good took sensit that new, and rope, in itself this was all lesson d to be that s. The other team of three. far seeme size chunk slowly lesson so ental bite fall’ is by The main dded by increm get to ‘not best embe nt – how you second learning is knots, the a little flippa ng g that’s learni but day the next movin is ‘don’t fall’; by little. One campsite, at least ience little crag at the ork being gaining exper t on a simple ice. Teamw soft them in contex on snow and a planned applying first time tic to have up for the it was fantas and to allow together roped know-how, and limits, as technical s strengths put the each other’ as important day would know next to The l. to get not critica start like this, when it was ast saw us to be made mistakes ible breakf a barely digest g 60m of the test. start and theory to 6:30am. Haulin of an Alpine planned at for the Our first taste later than just in time and r-ward a little we arrived roping up heading glacie work, but air, before col was heavy in the thin route at rope to the t our breath t beginners ts sunrise, caugh Le is a perfec lt’. It consis la cular de difficu specta The Pigne le’ or ‘a little iate. the ridge. – a ‘petit diffici rock to negot starting up d as a PD or angled ang classe is fairly odd overh 3392m, and for me. I’m ers, plus the epiphany and big bould a bit of an winter, solo was mostly of and rock er er on r bles in summ Moving togeth add furthe grade scram apparatus trip on Scottish the extra onal n’t rtable additi comfo Would rope is an or protection. , no. Yes, of protection without rope yes, but mostly odd piece where risk? Well placing the boulders unnecessary leader Todd around the the with our climb friction belays hazard, but mumbo jumbo all of us using good technical nuts), and angles, plus Ignoring the (cam and friction and ssed well. leader we progre - it’s all about key – the necessary, this level is of course simple at for more or unication ns asking reality is pretty y of comm perso qualit end The ion. e and and when communicat leg, the middl of they are secure the next short a good deal know when explaining well added each other unicating and letting team comm less slack singly our roped increa found I but y climbing. onally a liabilit it and I was occasi security. my chest d at the summ camera on ved. We arrive d by the With a big skills impro Durand, frame ence as my d, a little to Glacier Excite ice bag. gained confid the precip t safely in y over the Alpine ascen gawked giddil ue. well overd with our first tiny ast orn, se, d breakf r traver Obergabelh our secon for a glacie tired, and and re-roped relieved and a while, we nt was steep The desce on rock for above itheatre. Descending hanging far like amph the ice flow in a vast bowlthe top of lifeforms ed out at we bottom steady until discov beer and whatsoever two days in a van, drivin which we g drinking hree men experience a break’’, campsite, first evenin points of no prior Alpine municipal fridge could spent the n the finer climbs with crag. We ? ‘’Well, the indeed pting to discer . The other ly go wrong securely bolted bible, whilst attem An army does if r than it looked d pasta in could possib the party. Bruce’s y wondered y it was trickie member of I cooke consulting all of us quietl quipped one system. Clearl our or twice while but I think the least of ering, were fell over once crevasse rescue its stomach, e might be march on , I was discov to trees and chees y Knots There slings knots. and squidg two tied going well. sed a few warm beer that things were ss and practi the part nine days. the sole reason my harne for looked next I the Alps least t over voiced to the Still, at our touris e openly challenges our first trip important. tomorrow. along with But, despit than self-guiding t us ambition. was issued more to learn be bigger We were r than our ite also bough would be a town pass eyes might and at the camps ncy meant ts were smalle that our Alpine . The first a free stay our budge Swiss efficie of the trip ing day in allowing us up our sleeve ring’. the follow in advance as well as or two tricks Mountainee We spent concerns g on hired tax, which have one ad’s ‘Alpine telecabin. g and puffin ’s bible, it ies, we did trips in the Bruce Goodl t in Bruce our tumm 2000m, huffin us from a unlimited pack was en 1500brightly at and if it wasn’ tool in the variety on betwe for a ‘the bible’, level and Glacier glared most useful acclimatisati known as biking uphill the Moiry a reasonable ill y became to the area, bikes while , and made downh we also had g tain uction This quickl dly, isation moun organ d introd freewheelin doing. Secon e flair for and then gear and It was a relaxe anchored wasn’t worth d’Orxival, has a genuin distance. with the right time on the under Roc en us. Phil r with a right time, scramble practice, this est climbe of skills betwe place at the and then lunchtime our strong for more rope on a sling in the right Todd was campsite lead the ascended over the sure we were together. to him to back to the , we each and going to put it all the 20 years, so it was left ing. progress made in the UK, f? Definitely the right skills ed in at least nerve wrack crag. Some safely. Mysel of experience , was a little I hadn’t abseil winter UK years group maybe below of down. se, the few drop ed for fair tion abseil a good level in an icy crevas a five metre place protec fit and with with only conditions, from Mr climbs and rope but hill edge, even emergency assistance ienced with , Phil (with n limb? this be under d time to least exper or a broke y importantly How would which allowe crampon ience. Equall le itinerary, a missing that were skills exper er a sensib even with them on climbs ag.com had put togeth being then apply Goodlad) www.oe-m s, without skills and gain some Alpine novice as atise, all us acclim h for exciting enoug more than 38 T 2014 JULY / AUGUS ENTHUSIAST OUTDOOR SIAST OR ENTHU T 2014 OUTDO JULY / AUGUS ag.com www.oe-m p38 39 Phil Phil Turner, Editor MEET OUR CONTRIBUTORS... David Lin tern DAVID LINTERN quit London in 2011 to be nearer the mountains. Relocating to Edinburgh after a two month sea to sea trek across the High Pyrenees, he now splits his time between development work for wild land conservation charity The John Muir Trust, and freelance outdoors journalism. In between camping, writing, dried food prep and photo editing, you can find him online at www.selfpowered.net. www.oe-mag.com Felicity Ma rtin FELICITY MARTIN is a freelance writer, photographer and publisher who lives on the southern edge of the Highlands. Her work ranges from writing walks guidebooks and photographing nature to drawing maps and promoting Scottish food. In her spare time she orienteers and competes in dog agility with her border collie. She has walked, biked, paddled, surfed and sailed around more than 60 Scottish islands, often camping and wildlife watching as she goes. Catch up with her at www.felicitymartin.co.uk. Tom Hutto Rudolf Ab n raham RUDOLF ABRAHAM is an award-winning travel writer and photographer whose work has taken him from the Adriatic to Arctic Norway, Central Asia and Patagonia. He has written or contributed to more than a dozen books, including Cicerone’s new guide to St Oswald’s Way & St Cuthbert’s Way, and his articles and images are published widely in magazines. www.rudolfabraham.co.uk TOM HUTTON’s passion for the mountains has led to a successful career as a writer and photographer and taken him all over the world. He’s mountain biked in places as diverse as the Caribbean and New Zealand but says nowhere beats Scotland. He’s a qualified Mountain Bike Leader and runs his own guiding/instructing business: www.mtbguiding.co.uk JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 3 contents JULY / AUGUST 2014 regulars 7 16 19 21 22 NEWS News from the outdoor world VOLUME 10 ISSUE 6 features 23 CHARITY CHALLENGE Outdoor fundraising for a good cause HEALTH & NUTRITION Ian Craig discusses mountain food 25 DISCOVER... Gorge Walking SOCIAL MEDIA Top tweets 26 OUTDOOR BOOKSHELF OE profiles the latest literary launches CELEBRITY INTERVIEW Terry Abraham tells all 30 FAMILY FOCUS Why it’s important for children to experience the outdoors RIDING HIGH Tom Hutton pedals deep into the heart of the Cairngorms 34 THE SAXON SHORE WAY Rudolf Abraham follows one of England’s lesser-known footpaths 38 A BEGINNER’S GUIDE TO THE ALPS David Lintern explains a few alpine basics 42 ORIENTEERING Felicity Martin explains why orienteering is suitable for all 34 38 42 4 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 www.oe-mag.com Remember, this issue is available online – visit www.oe-mag.com CONTACT POINT outdoor utdoor enthusiast OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST MAGAZINE The Old Dairy, Hudsons Farm, Fieldgate Lane, Ugley Green, Essex CM22 6HJ Telephone: 01279 816300 www.oe-mag.com EDITOR PHIL TURNER [email protected] ASSISTANT EDITOR EMILY SEXTON-BROWN [email protected] GEAR EDITOR LUCY WALLACE [email protected] 30 55 58 gear guide p48 48 50 52 55 58 60 62 CUTTING EDGE APPROACH SHOES (HER) APPROACH SHOES (HIM) SLEEPING BAGS TROUSERS (HER) TROUSERS (HIM) TRAIL RUNNING SHOWCASE 62 SUB EDITOR JOANNA HANCOCK GROUP SALES MANAGER JAMES LLOYD 01279 810069 [email protected] SALES EXECUTIVE CHRIS KEMP [email protected] DESIGNER HANNAH WADE [email protected] PRODUCTION LEANN LAU [email protected] ACCOUNTS LORRAINE EVANS [email protected] HEAD OF MARKETING AND OPERATIONS JAMES RIX [email protected] SUBSCRIPTIONS/ADMINISTRATOR ALEX OUTLAW [email protected] MANAGING DIRECTOR DAVID CANN [email protected] ISSN: 1744-9898 Outdoor Enthusiast magazine is published by Target Publishing Ltd. Every care has been taken to ensure that the information in this publication is correct at the time of going to press, but the publishers cannot accept responsibility for errors and ommissions. Printed in the UK by The Magazine Printing Company plc www.magprint. co.uk ©2013 Target Publishing Ltd. Produced on environmentally-friendly chlorine free paper derived from sustained forests. The Publishers cannot accept any responsibility for the advertisements in this publication. To protect our environment papers used in this publication are produced by mills that promote sustainably managed forests and utilise Elementary Chlorine Free process to produce fully recyclable material lin accordance with an Environmental Management System conforming with BS EN ISO 14001:2004. Cover image Credit: Berghaus 50 www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 5 NEWS News THE LATEST NEWS FROM THE OUTDOOR COMMUNITY YHA AND THE EDEN PROJECT TEAM UP YHA (England and Wales) has announced it will be providing camping facilities in partnership with the Cornwall-based visitor attraction, the Eden Project, throughout July and August 2014. The arrangement is a pre-cursor to YHA’s planned 58-bedroom Youth Hostel, which will be constructed by Snoozebox on Strawberry Car Park at Eden later this year if planning permission is granted. This will be the first time the Eden Project has had permanent camping facilities on site. It is anticipated that as the official accommodation provider YHA will operate the facilities for 60 days during the summer season each year, in order to provide onsite accommodation for up to 80 visitors to Eden. Located within easy walking distance of the famous Eden Biomes, the camp site will be located on Little Carne Farm, which was purchased by Eden last year. The site will have catering and washing facilities. Prices will start from £13 per adult per night and £8.00 per under-18. Entry to Eden Youth Hostel facilities at Eden will enable us to reach many more can also be purchased with camping via YHA and includes unlimited young people and their families each year.” The creation of camping access for the duration of the stay. facilities at The Eden Project is part of YHA’s larger alternative YHA camping packages are also being offered for the popular Eden accommodation offering during 2014. The charity is investing £1.4 Sessions concerts, featuring Elbow and Pixies, which are taking place million in maximising the use of outdoor space at seven of its Youth during July. YHA and the Eden Project anticipate high demand from Hostels by providing camping pitches and camping pods. A number of families and young people for the camping pitches, particularly Youth Hostels have camping pods including South Downs, Hawkshead around the Eden Sessions dates. The Youth Hostel is expected to open and Grinton Lodge, and they have proved hugely popular with YHA in the coming months, replacing the nearby YHA Golant which is members. Snoozebox, which provides portable hotel accommodation popular with school groups and families visiting Eden. David Harland, and services, will be creating the Youth Hostel at the environmental Joint Executive Director of the Eden Project, said, “Working closely attraction. Caroline White added, “The Eden Project is such an iconic with YHA will enable us to develop the first-ever public campsite at place and for YHA to be able to provide first-class accommodation Eden. We are looking forward to having this in place in time for the there is really exciting. We can’t wait to start inviting guests to stay summer season, in advance of our hoped-for Youth Hostel, which is with us.” now awaiting planning permission.” Caroline White, Chief Executive of The investment in YHA Eden is part of YHA’s capital investment plan YHA (England and Wales), commented, “We are very excited by the in England and Wales. Since 2011 YHA has invested more than £20 prospect of our partnership with the Eden Project and delighted to be million in its network, helping to put further distance between the working with them. As we are both educational charities, there is great outdated public perception of Youth Hostels and the modern reality, synergy between YHA and Eden Project and we are committed to which is proving particularly popular with young families looking for providing them with a first class experience. Having both camping and great value, child-friendly breaks. www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 7 NEWS SCOTS PROVE TO BE THE BEST WALKERS IN THE UK YouGov survey. It showed that 50% of BERGHAUS AND BRASHER COMPLETE INTEGRATION PROCESS adults surveyed in Scotland are walking for Berghaus has announced the final stage of the integration of Brasher into its more than 150 minutes per week, an business. As of 2015, Brasher’s four core footwear styles will be marketed as part of increase from last year when only 37% of a more comprehensive Berghaus range of hiking boots. The Hillmaster, Fellmaster, people were walking more than the Supalite and Hilllwalker will be sold, promoted and supported as Berghaus recommended amount. However, the products. The Brasher brand will be represented by elements of dual branding on survey also discovered that 32% of people the products, in packaging and point of sale, and through extensive marketing in Scotland would not consider walking for support. Brasher boasts a long heritage, which reaches back to the initial vision and more than 20 minutes when planning a passion of Chris Brasher and his first innovations, inspired by his experience of journey and, worryingly, a fifth (20%) are walking the roof of Wales in 1978. The Brasher name (and the contributions of only walking, on average, for an hour or less Chris Brasher) will continue to be proactively communicated as part of the Berghaus per week. Dr Andrew Murray, President of footwear marketing activities. Meanwhile, the Brasher brand will remain part of the Ramblers Scotland, said, “Walking is such Pentland Group, which also owns Berghaus. A range of options for the future of an easy way for people to meet the Brasher, and products bearing its name, are being considered and news of longer recommended guideline to get 150 term plans for the brand will be revealed in due course. Ahead of taking the final minutes of exercise per week. I enjoy steps to integrate Brasher into Berghaus, the product team spoke to over 4,500 walking on a regular basis, it’s a great way consumers – on the hill and in detailed focus group events around the UK - and to clear the head, spend time chatting with tested their views on the potential development. The results were overwhelmingly family or friends and it leaves you feeling positive, with outdoor users confirming that they would welcome a combined great.” footwear offering under the Berghaus name. In fact, many Brasher consumers are Scots have come out as the best in Great Britain for walking more than the recommended amount, according to a already Berghaus consumers too (including their footwear purchases). Comments from consumers included, “I’m a fan of Berghaus and I’m a long term wearer of Brasher boots. It’s a win win seeing both of them together.” “Brasher product as Berghaus…sounds good to me!” “As long as the fit is the same and they are as comfortable as my current boots then I’m happy to buy either brand.” Walkers and hikers who buy the integrated Brasher boots will also benefit from the additional support of Berghaus’ substantial quality assurance, sales, marketing, retail training and customer services infrastructure. The spring/summer 2015 footwear range will be available in store from March 2015. 8 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 www.oe-mag.com NEWS MARMOT24 MARATHON visit as many checkpoints as competitors can choose to pass through the possible on a score format event centre during the race, with the course. Competitors will be able two-person teams making the choice to compete in teams of two or whether to rest, or eat, whilst the four- four people with an array of person teams can tag-in their team mates; trophies on offer for the leading swapping tired runners for fresh runners. teams in each category. The The event centre will be a hub of activity event will be held in Northern with a large marquee, race control, catering England in the heart of a and camping for competitors and supporters. spectacular and remote mountain Supporters are actively encouraged and they The UK’s first 24-hour mountain marathon, area. With the 24-hour race starting at noon can provide help for the competitors (cook the inaugural Marmot24, will be held on the Saturday, the 12-hour race starting at meals for example) at the event centre. weekend 2nd and 3rd August 2014. This midnight Saturday and the 6-hour race Competitors must compete as pairs but can exciting new event combines the very best starting at 0600 on the Sunday morning, enter in teams of either two or four people. elements of the predominantly British everyone will finish at 12 noon on the For the four person teams, this means that mountain marathon phenomenon with Sunday in an exciting and dramatic finale to there is a huge tactical dimension to the aspects of the more international, 24-hour a memorable weekend of racing. There will race, as competitors must choose when to rogaining events. With mountain running be a central event centre within the event tag-in their teammates by returning to the and navigation at the heart of the event area where all teams will start and finish. event centre. Only two team members are competitors will have 24, 12 or 6-hours to The location of the controls is such that allowed on the course at any one time. LAKE DISTRICT GAINS GREATER LEADERSHIP Changes to the make-up of the Lake District representatives are ideally placed to continue as a whole.” The new additional member will National Park Authority signal an exciting new our work with communities. be appointed from a South Lakeland parish. A era with more representation from the local community. As well as strengthening our understanding parish member replacement is being sought of local issues and opportunities, we also in Allerdale following the retirement of John want to improve local awareness about how Hayton. Defra has called on the public to the Environment Food and Rural Affairs, we operate, sharing our aspirations and contribute ideas for ways to improve the way parishes will take a greater role in LDNPA’s priorities. It will appeal to those with a passion national parks are cared for and make them future governance, which also sees both for where they live and the national park more responsive to community concerns. Announced by Defra, the Department of membership reduced by two in the modifications. The Lake District National Park will be led by 20 members, five each from county and district councils, plus national and parish appointments made by the Secretary of State. Increasing the community voice with one extra member means local people can play a crucial role in running the Lake District’s 885 square miles. Bill Jefferson, LDNPA chairman, said the announcement followed consultation with partners, including parishes, across the five distinctive areas of the national park. It recognised each had different characteristics and needed a local voice. He explained, “This marks an exciting new era, our parish 10 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 www.oe-mag.com NEWS JOHN MUIR TRUST AGAINST WIND FARM IN THE HEART OF SCOTTISH OUTDOORS The John Muir Trust today expressed bitter worth many hundreds of millions to its National Planning Framework and Scottish disappointment at the decision by Scottish shareholders. It is unfortunate that SSE’s Planning Policy and finalising its position on Energy Minister, Fergus Ewing, to give the views seem to hold greater sway over the Core Areas of Wild Land map. Up until go-ahead to the giant Stronelairg wind farm in Ministers than the opinions of the Scottish now, the government has given the the heart of one of the proposed Core Areas Government’s own expert body on the natural impression that it will provide strong of Wild Land mapped by Scottish Natural environment. protection from large scale energy Heritage. The development, the largest wind We are concerned about the wider developments in the 43 areas of wild land farm ever approved in the Highland Council implications of this decision for the future of delineated in that map. The John Muir Trust area, will consist of 67 turbines, each 135 wild land across Scotland. The Stronelairg has fought a long hard campaign against the metres – the height of the Forth Road Bridge Wind Farm is a massive industrial Stronelairg development and will now be – spread over an area larger than Inverness. development in the heart of the Monadhliath considering its options. Helen McDade, Head of Policy for the John Mountains – Area 17 of the Core Areas of Wild Muir Trust said,” This development flies in the Land map. This decision would suggest that face of advice from Scottish Natural Heritage, the Scottish Government intends either to which objected to the development on the remove the Monadhliaths from the wild land grounds that it would destroy the character of map, or to render the entire map meaningless. one of Scotland’s key areas of wild land. “SSE We will continue to fight for wild land in is a powerful multinational company with its Scotland.” Later this month, the Scottish HQ in Scotland, and we know this project is Government will be publishing its new THE YORKSHIRE GRAND DEPART UPDATE make history together, giving the Tour de France a true Yorkshire welcome. Performing at this event with Alistair in our home county is going to be a special moment for me.” To celebrate the collaboration between Yorkshire and France, million album selling French singer Pauline Vassuer will perform The Yorkshire Grand Départ of the Tour de France 20 14 kicked off with a spectacular Originally from Brighouse, Embrace have her hit “Allo le Monde”. Gary Verity, Chief Executive of Welcome to Yorkshire, said, “We opening ceremony and team presentation at three number 1 albums, six top ten singles know how keen millions of people are to the Leeds Arena, and a chance for spectators and over two million UK album sales behind make sure they get a chance to be part of the to become a part of history. Defending them. Embrace frontman Danny McNamara Tour de France coming to Yorkshire and their champion Chris Froome and sprint sensation said, “It’s going to be amazing: to have one of first opportunity will be at the Opening Mark Cavendish will be among top cycling the biggest annual sporting events in the Ceremony and Team Presentation on stars to greet the crowd on July 3, as Yorkshire world coming to our back yard and to be part Thursday July 3. Thousands of people will be welcomes 22 of the world’s best cycling of it is nothing short of massive, we’re really able to see these cycling stars up close and teams in a glittering ceremony showcasing looking forward to it!” Girls Aloud star hear from them, witnessing a moment in some of the county’s top entertainment Kimberley Walsh will join York singer/ history and making the Tour’s arrival an talent. songwriter Alistair Griffin on stage to perform unforgettable experience.” The show will be the track he wrote called The Road – the broadcast around the world, with a special event, which will be their first arena gig since official anthem of Yorkshire’s Grand Départ programme in the UK on ITV 4. their recent sell-out comeback tour and 2014. Kimberley, Girls Aloud, said, “It is going album. Their latest album went straight into to be a night to remember and one where we Yorkshire band Embrace will headline the 12 the national album chart at number 5. OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 For more information visit: www.letouryorkshire.com/tickets. www.oe-mag.com OE PROMOTIONAL FEATURE OFFERING A RICH LANDSCAPE FOR ACTIVE BREAKS S ituated in the sparkling blue Mediterranean Sea, bathed in crisp sunshine and boasting breathtaking natural beauty, Malta is the ideal destination for an active break. Whether cutting through the rugged landscape on new cycling routes, taking in azure coasts and picturesque villages on newly designed rural walks, rock climbing amidst majestic cliffs, kayaking on calm turquoise waters, or diving into the deep to discover a hidden underwater world of wrecks and beautiful sea-life, Malta offers everything for the outdoor enthusiast. Small and perfectly formed, Malta and Gozo are both easily explored on two wheels, and with new cycling routes launched throughout the islands, there really is no better way to discover the beauty of Malta than by mountain bike. As part of a recent initiative, the islands now boast a network of cycling routes and suggested itineraries that take in the island’s most stunning natural sights and most fascinating historical sites. Stretches of track of varying difficulty allows for visitors of all kinds of abilities to breathe the fresh air swept off the sea, gaze upon sublime vistas, and drink in centuries of history. 14 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY MARCH / AUGUST 2013 2014 Taking in hotels, tourist attractions and leisure stops, the network of tracks can be explored at leisure depending on ability and preference, whether as single itineraries, a combination of routes, or a day trip. From families with children to groups of dedicated enthusiasts, Malta provides everything you’ll need for an invigorating and inspiring cycling holiday. If you prefer to discover new places with both feet firmly on the ground, then a long walk or hike is the perfect way to raise fitness levels while taking in the culture and scenery. Escape to the beautiful rural idyll of Malta and Gozo and embark on a journey that sees you discover local customs and cuisine, experience day to day village life, and immerse yourself in a laid back and friendly culture that is at once steeped in history and tradition. With new walking routes recently mapped out, there is no easier way to enjoy the islands than to embark on a walk that takes in striking beaches, historic sites, scenic spots, walks, beautiful churches and picturesque villages. Why not try the Neolithic Temples Walk, which takes in and centres on Malta’s famous prehistoric religious temples which are said to be the oldest free-standing structures on Earth. Or take the Fawwara Walk, where you can start your day high in the clouds looking out on the Mediterranean Sea at Dingli Cliffs, and end it enjoying local seafood and watching colourful boats bob merrily in the small valley of Wied iz-Zurrieq. With year round sunshine and a temperate climate, there is no time of year that isn’t ideal for walking in Malta. To explore the islands by sea, there is nothing quite like the sights seen aboard a boat and Malta has a dazzling array available. If you’re hungry for the need for speed and want to feel your adrenaline rush as you skim across clear blue water, then Malta offers a range of Water-skiing, Para-gliding and Para-kiting opportunities to many ability levels, as well as power boat racing. If you prefer a slower pace, then why not charter a yacht and spend a day snorkelling alongside the Azure window or exploring hidden coves. For those who want to take the keel into their own hands, then sea kayaking is perfect for experiencing Malta’s shorelines in an active, but unhurried way. For the uninitiated, a day tour that visits unspoilt beaches and diving spots and includes a leisurely picnic lunch is the ideal option, while experienced individuals or couples can just www.oe-mag.com viewingmalta.com/kurt arrigo launch off on their own to paddle serenely over clear waters and spot the exquisite flora and fauna below. With a diverse marine life and a seabed scattered with the captivating remains from some of the most famous shipwrecks in the world, Malta’s underwater culture is just begging to be explored. Voted the top diving destination in the Mediterranean, Malta’s safe clear waters – there are no tides or dangerous currents - warm sea temperatures and beautiful underwater wrecks and reefs means that diving is a must-do activity when visiting the islands. With long stretches of craggy cliffs and rocky outcrops stretching high into the hot sky and dropping more than 100m into the deep cool sea, the Maltese Islands offer a huge range of opportunities for rock climbing enthusiasts. Whether abseiling, bouldering or deep water soloing, Malta boasts over 1,500 established rock climbing routes in about 30 different climbing areas as well as unexplored virgin rock for the truly adventurous. Easily accessible and with trained instructors on hand, Malta’s crags and cliffs offer all kinds of exhilarating and challenging experiences for all kinds of levels. www.oe-mag.com THE ROLEX MIDDLE SEA RACE - 13/10/14 - 25/10/14 (11:00-23:00) The Rolex Middle Sea Race is a highly rated offshore classic, often mentioned in the same breath as the Rolex Fastnet, The Rolex Sydney - Hobart and Newport-Bermuda as a 'must do' race. The start of the Rolex Middle Sea Race on the 13th October is from the Grand Harbour in the waters opposite the Saluting Battery in Valletta and Fort St. Angelo is Birgu as thousands of people gather on either side of this imposing harbour to enjoy this spectacle of sail. www.rolexmiddlesearace.com THE MDINA GRAND PRIX - 09/10/14 - 12/10/14 (08:00-17:00) The Mdina Grand Prix 2014 will be held this year between 9th October and 12th October. As late summer beckons the arrival of early autumn, the Mdina street track, set in the idyllic countryside beneath the imposing basstions of the Old Capital City, will be host, for the fourth successive year, to the Mdina Grand Prix, promising a magical weekend of classic car racing on the various cultural and other activties being organised for overseas participants and their guest over the preceding days. For more information visit www.vallettagp.com JULY / AUGUST MARCH 2014 2013 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 15 CHARITY Charity Challenge INSPIRATIONAL OUTDOOR FUNDRAISING EVENTS AND INITIATIVES JOIN THE TOUR THIS SUMMER Why not embrace your inner Bradley Wiggins this year and raise some money for charity at the same time? A multi-stage 180 mile road cycling challenge from York, including some of the areas being covered in the Tour de France this summer, could be your challenge if you choose to accept it. Being staged by the NSPCC, the event will run from 19th – 20th July 2014 and will cover 180 miles, climbing 10,000 feet; join the new influx of cyclists all catching the cycling bug this summer. In turn, this unique ride gives amateur cyclists the ‘pro experience’ racing on a closed road circuit with motorcycle outriders, domestiques, mechanics and soigneurs plus a comprehensive pre-event training program and coaching sessions. Minimum sponsorship for the event Stonehenge to Avebury Trekathon If you are a keen walker and enjoy the great British outdoors, why not take part in a 26 mile trek from Stonehenge to Avebury in aid of Macmillan Cancer Support, on Saturday 2nd August? Get those walking boots firmly on and sign up here: www.macmillan.org.uk/get-involved. is £49, so if this is something you might fancy take a look at www.nspcc.org.uk for further details. FLY OVER SNOWDONIA Teenage Cancer Trust is getting involved in Europe’s longest and fastest zipline in Snowdonia, later this year in August. Being hailed as the “the nearest thing to flying” this is something for any adrenaline junkie to get stuck into. Taking place within the Penrhyn Quarry in Snowdonia, the zipwire is a mile long in length, with speeds of 100mph expected. There are two zipwires; firstly ‘little zipper’ will take you down to the bottom of the quarry, reaching speeds of up to 40mph. Participation in the little zipper first provides some useful progression. When you get to the bottom of the quarry you will then pick up your specialised vehicle for a quarry tour in what was once the largest slate quarry in the world, before zip lining back down the ‘big zipper’ for a mile, reaching speeds of up to 100mph. This is a UK first and will be taking place on the 2nd August 2014. To get involved, visit: www.teenagecancertrust.org. 24 PEAKS IN 24 HOURS Do you fancy taking on 24 peaks in 24 mountains in the UK, it’s the perfect hours? If so, take a look at this challenge location to take on a challenge this taking place from the 8th-10th August physically and mentally demanding. It across the Lake District. Participants will includes long days of trekking, but if you climb the iconic Scafell Pike along with think you are up for it take a look at: numerous other scenic summits. http://www.charitychallenge.com/ Being in the home of the most rugged 16 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 expedition/1780/24-Peaks-in-24-hours. www.oe-mag.com SPONSORED BY www.buffwear.co.uk TOP TWEETS In anticipation of a sunny weekend @OEMagazine asked: what outdoor activities have you got planned for this weekend? #running, running and some more running, maybe some #cycling & most definitely some #slacklining... oh and walk the doggies Shaun Faulkner @faulkner368 Some trail running on Saturday in the North York Moors and then Mountain Biking on Sunday… Can’t wait..! SOCIAL MEDIA OUR FAVOURITE OUTDOOR TWEETS: #GETOUTDOORS TESSA HILL @TESSAHILL ‘Just’ another day in the mountains. @Arcteryx @SilvaUK Reuben @ReubenTabner Black Mountains, almost on our doorstep here, beautiful #welshmountains Credit to Tessa Hill WeatherProof Paper @wetweatherpaper Manchester airport....20 mins away and gateway to a world of mountains :) MyOutdoors @MyOutdoors KERIM MORRIS @KMADVENCUTEBLOG A break in the mist on Snowdon Check out @OrdnanceSurvey guide to using maps #outdoors. http://www. ordnancesurvey.co.uk/ blog/2014/05/fun-ways-touse-maps-outdoors/ … #geocaching #orienteering BMC WALK TALK @BMC_WALK Only 17% of Brits have ever climbed a mountain, say @TravelodgeUK. Are we a bunch of scaredy cats? HELLO A BIG HELLO TO OUR NEW FOLLOWERS @oli_broom @NoHangingAround @ldshield @Fieldbarnpark @YHAOfficial @UltimatOutdoor @septemberlegs @EleRhi @HLindenberger @HHTrailTeam @KeswickFestival @GardeningGent @RobJGreenfield @ThomEdCollis plus hundreds more... www.oe-mag.com BRITAINONFOOT @BRITAINONFOOT THE RAMBLERS @RAMBLERSGB Happy #volunteersweek! We want to say a huge thank you to all our amazing volunteers. We’d be lost without you. JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 19 BOOK REVIEWS Outdoor Bookshelf Never Again By Jeremy Cameron RRP £12.99 This is a great read, very comical and light-hearted but with a strong theme running through it; a love of walking. Jeremy Cameron, who has written numerous other titles all based around the Walthamstow area, has produced a novel entitled ‘Never Again’ centred around a walk he tries to recreate from 1933, when Patrick Leigh Fermor walked from Hook of Holland to Istanbul. Cameron, who has a heart condition, in no way mirrors Fermor’s health, as he was a war hero and historically a pretty tough guy. This was a little far-fetched, but an incredible challenge to set yourself by any means. To give you a better idea of Cameron’s character the following passage is very fitting: “Elderly British men display a variety of annoying habits. They write letters to the newspapers; they drink too much; they reminisce about the old days; they make lewd comments to younger women; they shout at the television screen; they go for long walks and get lost. Jeremy Cameron chose the last of these options.” Jeremy has a very direct and witty writing style, he details his entire trip in a very blunt way and likes to rant including a very British rant about tea, which I particularly enjoyed: “Finding a nominal cup of tea is not the same, of course, as finding a proper cup of tea. That’s the main trouble with abroad: they just don’t know about tea… I always remember to my horror the first time I ever bought a cup of tea in a French bar. At first I thought I had got someone else’s order, then I thought perhaps I had gone colour blind. A glass of what appeared to be (and indeed was) warm water was placed on my table.” This is one of the many insights into Jeremy’s life you can read about in this very funny book, detailing his challenging 128 day trek, which he proclaimed he would do “never again”. ESB www.oe-mag.com Wild Running By Jen and Sim Bensen RRP £16.99 Do you consider yourself a bit of a wild runner? Wild Things Publishing have produced a rather beautifully presented book detailing perfect trails and fells to explore in the UK. It goes without saying that trail and fell running is a hell of a lot more exciting than running at your local gym, but you might not be aware of exactly where you can go. In this book, the country is divided into regions, and each region has very clearly labelled routes; 150 routes to be exact, which include runs through mountains, forests and along coastal tracks. Like all Wild Things publications the photography is stand alone, absolutely faultless and makes you want to be in these amazing locations straight away. Now we are entering the height of the summer months, why not give it a go? One run that particularly stood out to me, entitled ‘Peel to Port Erin’ on the Isle of Man, consists of 13 and half miles with a total ascent of 1324 miles and appears to offer some stunning scenery. At the front of the book there is also a really helpful section detailing the ‘best of…’, for example ‘best of urban escapes’, which as expected showcases the best places to escape the city and enter into the great outdoors. ESB Walking the Literary Landscape By Ian Hamilton and Diane Roberts RRP £12.95 This new book published by Vertebrate Publishing showcases fantastic walks but also injects a burst of culture, with every walk detailed having a nice link to a certain classic novel. Beautifully detailed, the walks include Bassenthwaite Lake & Dodd, which is connected to Alfred Lord Tennyson’s infamous poem Morte d’Arthur, nicely describing an almost 5 mile jaunt around the Lake District area. If you’re more of a Dickens fan then Carrock Fell might appeal, which is where Charles Dickens actually enjoyed walking himself, again in the glorious surroundings of the Lake District; a slightly shorter route, at 3.2 miles. The lakes are generally a hotspot for literature, forming the backdrop for many other famous tales, including stories by Beatrice Potter and poetry from William Wordsworth. Moving away from the Lake District and into the Peak District and South Pennines region, walks include the Hurst Green & Stonyhurst College area, which is the countryside reputed to have been the inspiration behind one of the most famous stories in the world: JRR Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings; or perhaps a walk around Daresbury, the area that inspired Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland? If that doesn’t get your literary taste buds tingling and your walking boots on, then I’m sure nothing will. ESB JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 21 FAMILY FOCUS Family Focus FAMILY MAN AND AVID OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST READER Chris Woodcock EXPLAINS WHY HE BELIEVES IT IS SO IMPORTANT FOR CHILDREN TO EXPERIENCE THE GREAT OUTDOORS. AS A CHILD WERE YOU ENCOURAGED TO GET OUTDOORS? puddles! It’s helped his motor skills, his Yes, I’ve always enjoyed being outdoors and flowers and weeds as well as describing the had an active interest in nature. My dad was weather and colours. We go away to rural in the forces so we moved around a fair bit places on holiday so we can explore and I’ve been lucky enough to live in a somewhere new. fitness and his speech because he can name a few different bird species and common variety of areas, from rural East Anglia to the shoved outside as soon as I finished HOW DO YOU ENSURE YOUR SON IS SAFE WHEN OUT AND ABOUT ON YOUR WALKS? breakfast with orders not to be seen again I can’t really think of any dangerous until tea time! We built dens, explored, went situations we’ve been in and I try to avoid on bike rides, climbed trees and got shouted them as his safety is my responsibility and I at for climbing on hay bales. don’t want the guilt of an accident being my rugged Cornish coast, then finally ending up in beautiful Shropshire. I grew up being fault. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t wrap him in IN YOUR OPINION, HOW IMPORTANT IS IT FOR CHILDREN TO BE OUT IN THE FRESH AIR? cotton wool, I allow him to investigate It’s really important for kids to get outside experience! I guess I ensure his safety with and there are obvious health benefits. If good old common sense, I don’t allow him to there are others present it also develops climb anything too high unless I’m holding social skills. Let’s face it, it’s the youngsters onto him and when we are at the edge of of today that will be the policy makers of water we hold hands while he throws stones tomorrow, so if they are not fit and healthy, in, as he loves the ‘plop’ sound. whatever he likes, climbing tree roots and throwing sticks and things - he knows why we don’t touch nettles or thorns through with respect for the world we live in, what hope is there? AS A FATHER, HOW DID YOU INTRODUCE YOUR CHILD TO THE OUTDOORS? WHAT IS YOUR FAILSAFE PIECE OF EQUIPMENT YOU TAKE WITH YOU WHEN YOU ARE OUT? I always take a small rucksack with My son is just over two years old now and waterproofs, warm layers, water, sun cream, was taken out in the buggy daily from day hats and nappies and food, which can be one, then in the baby carrier backpack and used for emergencies or more often to bribe now whenever you ask what he wants to do him when he complains he’s too tired to you get the same answer: “outside dadda carry on walking! Lad and dad walks on a walk walk”, whatever the weather! He can Saturday really are the highlight of my week. now walk 2-3 miles comfortably on his own; I’ve never seen a child so obsessed with 22 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 Chris spoke to Emily Sexton-Brown. www.oe-mag.com Mountain Food HEALTH & NUTRITION WHEN IT COMES TO SPENDING THE DAY (OR DAYS) IN THE MOUNTAINS, WHAT DO YOU EAT? YOUR TRIP MAY BE ONLY BE A FIVE HOUR LOOP OF THE LAKES OR WELSH MOUNTAINS, OR IT COULD BE A TWO DAY EVENT WITH BIVI BAGS IN THE CAIRNGORMS. Ian Craig DISCUSSES EATING. I ’m at least going to assume that you’re going to lucozade in sight; nor any brand products that tomato, cucumber, olives, bell pepper, feta cheese, be out in the elements for a longer period than promise instant energy. olive oil and balsamic vinegar (stored in a small jar for which a mug of coffee will suffice. Let’s start with the main nutrients that you MAIN MEALS to avoid the salad going soft). Serve with wholegrain or rye bread. will need as fuel. If we study a bit of exercise Sandwiches offer a convenient and easy-to-eat physiology, we’ll soon realise that our long mountain option for a main meal, especially when SNACKS distance fuel is, without a shadow of a doubt, FAT! you’re ducking behind a cairn in 50mph winds. Your backpack should also be filled with lots of Look at Figure 1 below - it’s very clear that But, consider quality: sourdough Polish rye bread nice snack options - remember, better to have too carbohydrates (CHO) are needed for high intensity is a far cry from Hovis superwhite; farm-style goats much than too little. Always allow a ration portion aerobic and anaerobic exercise - an increasingly cheese is superior to orange processed cheese in case of emergency. Here are some snack ideas high proportion of your energy comes from carbs strips; and 100% roast beef would actually be a - the only brands that you’ll find are healthy ones: as the exercise becomes more intense. On the better choice than my old favourite, corned beef! other hand, if you’re out for an all day trek, you So far, I have talked about macronutrients - the want volume, not rate of energy, so your food fat, protein and carbohydrates, which provide fuel must contain a decent amount of fat. to the body. Then there is phytonutrition - fruits and vegetables and so-called superfoods. Using the analogy of a car, macronutrients are the petrol, but if the dynamics of the internal combustion are not working well, the petrol is used very inefficiently. Phytonutrients, including the vitamins and minerals that are interwoven, are essential to the inner workings of our body. For • Dried Fruit - figs, mango, dates (dates can be stuffed with peanut butter for a tasty treat) • Nuts - almonds, cashews, brazils, walnuts, hazelnuts • Vegetables - carrot sticks and pepper strips • Seed packs - pumpkin, sunflower, sesame (you can buy small mixed packs in health shops) • Cheese - if not in a sandwich, blocks of cheese in a sandwich bag • Biltong - not common in the UK, but if you are example: to make fuel into energy, our close to a South African shop it’s one of the best mitochondria need B-vitamins, magnesium, zinc, mountain snacks by far CoQ10 and a host of other micronutrients to complete the conversion. That is why we need our veggies - even, or should I say especially, on the mountain. With fat in mind, one of my favourite mountain • Fruit - apples, bananas, oranges • Bars - there are some lovely bars, packed with nuts, dried fruit and protein powders Some of you may be wondering about foil-packed expedition foods. There are a number Tupperware containers can contain superb of companies that produce them, but in my mind, foods has always been corned beef and cheddar non-sandwich alternatives. Use these containers these only come into their own after at least two cheese sandwiches, with a smear of pickle. That’s to store last night’s dinner, a nice salad and/or a days of trekking, when weight is more of a one way of squeezing in as much fat as possible, selection of snacky items. Here are a few meal consideration. You will undoubtedly gain more in with some slow-releasing carbs - of course, you ideas: terms of nutrition by staying with fresh food as have to choose a nice wholegrain or rye bread. Add some lettuce or rocket, tomato and cucumber and you also have a few phytonutrients (more on this later). This very much forms the basis of mountain food - some fat, some protein, some slowreleasing carbs and some vegetables and fruit. No www.oe-mag.com • Stir-fried chicken with vegetables and brown rice • Sautéed salmon, steamed green vegetables and sweet potato • Roast lamb and roast veggies - e.g. carrot, parsnips, aubergine, courgettes, sweet potatoes • Tuna Nicoise - a tin of tuna, lettuce, rocket, long as you can. But if you are heading for a multi-day outing, carefully inspect the ingredients list on these freeze-dried foods - you are looking to maximise on the real food ingredients and minimise on the additives, (which are the big words you don’t understand)! Happy hiking! oe JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 23 PRODUCT SHOWCASES LOWE ALPINE CALDERA JACKET What’s HoT Product Showcases ALWAYS CONNECTED WITH THE MIO CYCLO™ 505 The easy-to-use bicycle navigation device sports a stylish flat screen and comes with built-in WIFI and Bluetooth™ 4.0. You are always connected with the wireless Shimano Di2 support, indoor trainer support with actual track resistance, music control, call and text message alerts and even the ability to answer incoming calls. With bicycle and road maps pre-installed, you are able to get started right out of the box. Check more information at www.mio.com LOWE ALPINE AIRZONE QUEST 37 The latest version of Lowe Alpine’s best-selling AirZone trekking and mountain walking backpacks gain a softer bodycontact mesh for the breathable mesh back system, while the Adaptive Fit shoulder strap design now ensures the harness adapts to any body shape. Weighing just 1.2kg the Quest features easy-access side entry to the main body, harness and hip belt pockets, plus plenty of external gear stowage options.The special trekking pole attachment secures any type of pole and the highquality nylon fabric gives incredible tear resistance due to its unique silicone content. RRP £90.00. Visit www.lowealpine.com for more information. 24 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 The Caldera Jacket is a summer soft shell garment designed with a slim, formed fit for minimal bulk, and weighs just 415g. It uses a tough nylon/ poly stretch version of Lowe Alpine’s Stormweave fabric to give wind and water resistance with freedom of movement. Designed to give mountain protection with high breathability, the Caldera features a hood that fits under a helmet and three external pockets. RRP £90.00. Visit www.lowealpine.com for more information. HOBO STOVE Place this Hobo Stove™ accessory on to the fire base of your ‘Base Camp’ or ‘Scout’ Kettle to create a highly effective wood fired Camp Stove. Any size pot or pan can be used on the Hobo Stove™. Takes up no extra space... it fits neatly inside the fire base of your kettle for storage. In fact, the new cup set fits inside our cook pot, which fits inside the Hobo, which fits inside the fire base. Made from Stainless Steel. Note: This Hobo stove will not fit the fire base of the smaller ‘Trekker’ Kettle. Visit www.kellykettle.com for more information. SPRAYWAY GRENDAL HYBRID JACKET Since 1974 we have been keeping you warm, dry and comfortable in all conditions and all locations. The new Grendel jacket is no different. An insulated Gore® WindStopper® and stretch side panelled hybrid mountain jacket that is as at home on the mountain as it is on the trails. With features comprising a mountain hood and athletic fit with stretch sleeves & cuffs, 4 pockets (including stuff sac inner pocket) and an adjustable drawcord hem; the Grendal is a must have. For more information call 0161 366 5020 or visit www.sprayway.com www.oe-mag.com DISCOVER GORGE WALKING Discover... g n i k l a W e g r o G A MIX OF SCRAMBLING AND WILD SWIMMING; CARL DURHAM, DIRECTOR OF BLACK MOUNTAIN ACTIVITIES IN POWYS, DESCRIBES THIS ADVENTUROUS OUTDOOR CHALLENGE. G orge walking has become very guided up a river by an instructor, where they you’ll need to hire a guide familiar with the area popular throughout the UK, get to jump into the river, crawl behind and ensure you have the correct safety with Wales one of the premier waterfalls, scramble up cascades and explore equipment. locations. Available all year holes in the ground. If they’ve got the nerve round - although summer is they’ll also have the opportunity to jump from Black Mountain Activities have been offering warmer the rivers are at full height into deep pools. It’s physically gorge walking in the Brecon Beacons for 25 level in winter - gorge walkers are kitted up with demanding, exhilarating and ideal for groups, years. Find out more from them at wetsuits, buoyancy aids and helmets, then but in order to avoid running into difficulties http://www.blackmountain.co.uk/ Enthusiasts For everything you need to know about gorge walking visit: www.adventureswales.co.uk www.adventurebritain.com/gorge-walking www.nationaltrust.org.uk www.arranadventure.com/Activities/Gorge-Scrambling www.lostearthadventures.co.uk/gorge-walking www.ciadventures.com/canyoning Equipment www.riverdeepmountainhigh.co.uk/activities.aspx/general/kitlist Events Ironbridge Gorge Walking Festival www.visitironbridge.co.uk/walkingfestival www.moraywalkingfestival.co.uk/events www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 25 INTERVIEW TERRY ABRAHAM A SELF CONFESSED OUTDOOR OBSESSIVE, TERRY ABRAHAM HAS TAKEN HIS PASSION FOR THE OUTDOORS AND PUT IT ON THE BIG SCREEN IN ORDER TO SHARE HIS FASCINATION WITH THE WORLD. Emily Sexton-Brown GLIMPSES BEHIND THE CURTAIN. Terry’s latest creation Life of a Mountain: so she’d often take me to museums and other important aspect of Terry’s life. When asked Scafell Pike premièred at Rheged and a shorter places of interest along with reading a great why he decided to base his film on Scafell version was shown at the Keswick Mountain deal of reading books about our history. I Pike he says, “I’ve always has a special affinity Festival earlier this year. When asked about think both of them taught me to enjoy and with the Scafells and their people and culture. the audience reaction Terry comments, “I appreciate all levels of our countryside.” I often joke that I’m sure I was born a guess it was a triumph. It all passed me by in a When Terry was the tender age of 13, he shepherd in a previous life! I’m never happier blur to be honest. Hearing the audience laugh, visited the Lake District for the very first time. than when camping out on the fells. I adore cheer and cry at the film gave me such a thrill. He recalls, “I was in awe of the fells - in fact I the Scafells, but not out of some blind Made all the blood, sweat and tears was desperate to ascend as many peaks as patriotism or the fact they are England’s worthwhile, believe me.” He continued, “I possible and camp out on them!” Passionate highest tops. I can’t explain why they make me don’t seek the limelight. I just wish to be out about outdoors since a youngster, Terry feel the way they do; I’m no Wordsworth, on the fells doing what I do. Inevitably of explained why his enthusiasm soon became Coleridge or Byron I’m afraid.” He then speaks course I will have to deal with things like his career: “It was only after a health scare in about the Scafells in great depth and his festivals, screenings and interviews. I don’t my twenties that my love for the countryside reasoning behind the film, stating, “I’ve always mind that so much. I’m a sociable bloke. But turned into an obsession. I felt compelled to wanted to see a video featuring the Scafells it’s not something I seek at all.” spend more and more time outdoors, thinking, through the seasons. The idea of that whets we only get one short life on this earth and I my appetite to enjoy a scenic spectacle. At want to make the most of it.” night too! The area is just as wonderful in the INTRODUCTION TO THE OUTDOORS Hailing from Newark, Nottinghamshire, A LIFE LONG AFFAIR Sherwood Forest is Terry’s old stomping Being in the outdoors is obviously a hugely ground, in fact he had a very strong link to the forest itself, he explains, “My grandfather, who was an immigrant, worked as a gamekeeper in Sherwood Forest and his love for the British countryside had a profound effect on me. We’d regularly go on walks in the forests and fields of Sherwood, observe wildlife and even camp out at night. My grandmother was also an immigrant and she adored British culture 26 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 dark hours. But the Scafells are much more than simply a sight to behold. Equally, the people are important too. So combining the scenic delights of the Scafells along with the “I FELT COMPELLED TO SPEND MORE AND MORE TIME OUTDOORS, THINKING, WE ONLY GET ONE SHORT LIFE ON THIS EARTH AND I WANT TO MAKE THE MOST OF IT.” local farmers, rangers, MRT and well-known faces who frequent the area seemed the logical way to go about producing my film.” Terry obviously felt it was of vital importance to portray an accurate representation of Scafell Pike, he reveals, “Watching the Lakes on TV or DVD, I always felt frustrated that the areas covered were www.oe-mag.com never done any justice. Most TV crews are on a daily or hourly rate, turn up, film and go home. As a backpacker I know how good these places can look, so I always felt I could truly capture how world-class our landscapes can be, while camping on the tops and watching and waiting with my video camera.” BACK ON SOLID GROUND There is no denying that Terry has a real love for the outdoors, but when asked what his biggest achievement to date was, he replied, “Getting married to my wife, Sue. I was a bit of a ‘Jack the Lad’ until I met her in my late twenties. She’s brought a great deal of stability into my life and faith and trust, which I’ll always be grateful for.” Prying into his earlier life, I asked what got him into filming in the first place, he said, “I always had an interest in video and am considered a bit of a film buff. Alas, being a working-class lad I never had the opportunity (or at least be able to afford) to play about with camcorders or edit suites to enable me to get into filmmaking. Despite being academically bright and considered a talented illustrator, I never got the chance in further education to chase my dream of being a filmmaker.” He continues, “It’s only in the past few years that technology has enabled me to afford video equipment, edit on a PC and showcase work on YouTube to audiences. My two passions in life have combined to lead me on the path I’m on today! It’s been hard work learning the craft of filmmaking but I’m sure it’s all been worth it.” LIFE BEHIND THE LENS Being totally self taught, Terry has obviously met a few challenges along the way but always manages to produce stunning and vivid films and photography. “It’s been a steep learning curve I have to say! But an enjoyable one none the less, I guess my artistic ability with drawing and painting helps me a great deal. I’d love to take up painting again one day! But knowing what makes a pretty picture and how to create that helps me with my video work- albeit I www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 27 INTERVIEW don’t create the scenes, I have to capture Cairngorms as some backdrop or playground film was well received. It still astonishes me them. It all comes instinctively to me. I for action and gung-ho climbing.” Oddly now. But the experience of working on that couldn’t possibly explain the hows and enough, he then goes on to criticise his own helped me tremendously as I began filming whys. I just follow my heart to be honest. If it work, stating, “The film is far from perfect on properly on my ‘baby’ - the Scafells.” looks good, I film it. If not, I walk on or wait.” many levels. I hate most of it in fact! But I I ended by asking the question I tend to Commenting on his own work, “I guess I only had 50-60 days or so to film around ask everyone, “So, Terry are you an outdoor have a signature style with my work, but I’m there. An area I’ve never visited before and enthusiast?”, he answers, “I’m more than an not consciously aware of it in truth. I’m just in the height of winter! Furthermore, I was enthusiast. It’s who I am. I belong outdoors. I lucky that it resonates with audiences. After constantly learning how one goes about feel like a caged animal when at home or in all, without the public I’m a nobody. It’s filming, editing a feature-length video. That a town. I need to be outdoors or I become a sharing the sights I see with them on social was tough. And I’m pleased as a result the recluse.” networks or video that gives me the biggest thrill.” When asked about the time required to edit the films, he responds, “I edited the Scafells film in about 6 weeks in total. That included sound mixing and rendering various formats for presentation. I’d be at my desk for 20 hours a day. No joke. Alas, I did have tight deadlines to adhere to. Some say ‘it’s all in the editing’. Aye, that’s true up to a point.” Terry’s previous film The Caingorms in Winter with Chris Townsend was a huge success and I asked him if he ever imagined it would go down as well as it did. “Not at all. These things are subjective. We don’t all like DVD: www.stridingedge.com/catalogue/scafell_pike.html Digital download: www.steepedge.com/categories/trekking-walking-travel/life-of-a-mountain- the same films do we? I felt what I wanted to scafell-pike.html see may not prove to be so enjoyable for From 1st June the film will be shown every day until the end of October on the IMAX screen at others. I wanted to focus on the landscape www.rheged.com with Chris as a guide - not film the www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 29 FEATURE BIKEPACKING Riding High Tom Hutton PEDALS DEEP INTO THE HEART OF THE CAIRNGORMS ON A TWO DAY BIKEPACK THAT WAS A LITTLE MORE CHALLENGING THAN EXPECTED. T he one essential ingredient in any good epic is that took over and she (wo)manned up to the job, choosing to soldier on something goes wrong. I’m not talking about anything weakly and in pain in preference to two days in the mountains in bad quite as catastrophic as Joe Simpson’s unbelievable weather. We pressed Go. escape in Touching the Void or Aron Ralston’s gruesome The faffing however, had cost us a morning. So it was lunchtime by tale told in Between a Rock and a Hard Place. But let’s be the time we hit the first sweet singletrack trail at Feshiebridge. This, honest here, an outdoor adventure story that reads ‘we plus Steph’s necessarily rather pedestrian pace, made it obvious from went into the hills and had a nice time’ is hardly likely to capture the the start that we weren’t going to make our planned camp at the Fords imagination as much as one with a few mishaps. of Avon by nightfall. If we had realised that we wouldn’t actually reach This is good news really, because this story definitely had its mishaps. They started, in fact, even before the adventure did, when I noticed a huge crack in my chainstay (part of the frame near the back wheel for it until late afternoon on day two, we probably would have quit there and then. But we didn’t. Instead, we rolled our way slowly down the glen, soaking up some non-cyclists). This would be game-over for a normal mountain bike ride of Britain’s most sumptuous scenery, with the mighty Feshie river to let alone a two day, 100km+ expedition into very rough terrain, our right and almost endless picturesque Caledonian pine forest to our carrying overnight gear and food. Fortunately, Aviemore’s excellent left. The newly-laid path weaved a fun line between woodland and Bothy Bikes came to the rescue and hired me a rather nice Ibis Ripley, water, and a warm afternoon sun lifted our spirits. But then trouble full-suspension all-mountain bike that may as well have been built struck. Steph’s discomfort turned to crippling cramp and her legs were specifically for the trip we were about to undertake. struggling to keep the pedals turning. Should we turn back? Probably. Sadly our problems weren’t over yet though: the next hiccup was to have a far bigger bearing on the outcome. Somehow, during our pre But we didn’t. Instead I took all the luggage from her bike and attached it to mine bikepack carb-loading session – read huge meal ‘cos we like our food’ and we plodded on aiming to go just as far as she could manage before – partner, Steph, had picked up a nasty dose of food poisoning. We stopping early and letting her get some sleep. If she felt better toyed with postponing for a day or two but with a waning forecast and tomorrow, we’d continue, although it would be a big day. If she didn’t a journey back south just a few days away, the hardy adventurer in her we’d simply retrace our tracks and call it quits. The trail turned east 30 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 www.oe-mag.com beneath Craig na Caillich and the scenery became even more stunning Geldie watershed it would be downhill all the way. But the climb to the as we got our first views deep into the heart of the Cairngorms. We stuck highpoint proved to be just as depressingly peaty and we just ran out of at it with grim determination, and although I was feeling the extra go. We backtracked to a grassy riverbank and it was almost dark by the weight and had slowed considerably, we were actually making good time we’d eaten and crawled into bed. It had been a long day. Tomorrow progress. Then we reached what looked like an unavoidable deep and was going to be longer. scary-looking ford. One of the golden rules of water crossing is delay I love bivvying. Falling asleep looking up at the stars is one of life’s and as the thought of getting wet immediately before stopping to camp, greatest pleasures. I don’t think I did much star gazing on this particular didn’t appeal, this then would be our camp. We found an idyllic riverside night though – I was out like a light. spot with a grassy floor and a small grove of trees for shelter. While It was raining when we awoke. No big deal I thought, sure that Steph Steph fell almost straight asleep, I went exploring and discovered a was going to want to quit anyway. But she didn’t; and she definitely had small path that avoided the ford - some good fortune at last. a bit more spark about her as we set off over the hill again. She even I was about to crawl into my bivvy for an early night when Steph took back some of her kit – a relief to me as I could see I was the one awoke, claimed she felt a lot better and suggested we carried on – a few that was going to struggle if we carried on as we were. Our patience was more miles achieved tonight would be a few less tomorrow. I reluctantly tested to the limit by the next few kilometres and we clambered on and agreed but not until I’d given some thought to various bail-out options off the bikes time and time again before finally getting enough help should things turn worse. We hopped back on our bikes, me now with all from gravity to roll down to the Geldie Burn and a good track that led us the gear, and set off again. Steph was definitely moving a bit quicker – or to Linn of Dee. Our average since breakfast had been little over 3kph, was it me that had got slower? And the evening sun was gorgeous. We suddenly we were rolling along at 25-30. This was more like it. rose out of the forest and out onto the wild, open moorland that formed the watershed of the Feshie and the Geldie Burn. The going was lovely: a mix of sweet moorland singletrack and At Linn of Dee we turned north, up Glen Lui, although we didn’t travel far before stopping for a brew and a bit of food. It was then that another realisation dawned on us: we had limited food supplies. We’d planned a easy-rolling duplex, and I started to believe we might make Linn of Dee long day, followed by a short day and had stocked up accordingly. We’d – an arbitrary half-way point - before stopping, but I was soon to be ended up with a long day, albeit one that didn’t cover much distance, disappointed again. Suddenly the good going ran out and a rutted, peaty followed by another long day. Steph was already weak through her bug, section took over, forcing us off the bikes. With mine now carrying two and I was tired having done so many miles with all the kit; we were now person’s worth of camping kit, it was pretty gruelling. A wobbly bridge as far from the start of the route as were going to get. We tucked into a over an impressive cascade marked the end of this section and we few snacks and a cup of hot chocolate and slowly digested our remained optimistic – especially knowing that once we reached the predicament. We then got back on. www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 31 FEATURE BIKEPACKING Glen Lui was both easy and lovely – perhaps we wouldn’t find it so tough after all. It led to the beautiful, wooded Glen Derry, which we reached just as the sun came out. The combination of mouth-watering scenery, warm spring sunshine and a well-surfaced path put smiles on both our faces. We started to believe again. But this was also the biggest single climb on the whole route and we had no idea how strong Steph’s legs were feeling. It didn’t take long to work out that they weren’t great. I took her gear once more and we set off again. Grimaces again replaced the smiles. We reached the atmospheric Lairig an Laoigh in surprisingly good time and with some downhill now ahead, things didn’t seem so bad. But we knew that if we crossed this watershed, we really were committed, whilst if we turned back now, we could roll downhill all the way back to the sanctuary of Linn of Dee and Braemar. A look at the map revealed another 20km and around 350m of ascent to the road at Glenmore. If we made it there we’d have plenty of options. We told ourselves that these statistics added up to little more than easy spin, which was true on any other day, but we both knew that it was gone 3pm already and the way things were panning out, we were going to be up against it to finish tonight at all. Then things got worse again. The lovely singletrack path we’d followed up gave way to a rocky horror show that we’d struggle to ride when fit and without fully loaded bikes and packs. And the hotly anticipated descent to the Fords of Avon – our original planned camp – turned into a 3km walk. The crossings themselves were deep and turbulent and we waded through the icy water using our bikes as props. We stopped by the little emergency shelter and soaked up a little sunshine, sharing at the same time our last energy bar and a couple of emergency gels. We then set off northwards again, not even attempting to ride now, until the trail dipped briefly to cross another ford. This set us up for the first of two remaining climbs. The second of which crossed the northern spur of Bynack More, reaching an altitude of 815m - the highpoint of the whole ride. As the trail turned tail again, and gravity started to work with us instead BIKEPACKING GEAR You can bikepack on any bike but dedicated bikepackers tend to of against us, we realised that we were still in with a chance. Sure, we still use hardtail bikes or even fully rigid bikes. We used the same had over 30km left to the finish, but were currently over 800m above sea full-suspension, all-mountain style bikes that we usually ride. level and the finish was little over 200m. And what’s more, there really was These are heavier but do offer better handling on rough and little in the way of uphill in between. A 30km descent? Wow! We were technical trails. having some of that. We softened suspension, tightened packs and plummeted - now with a For camping or bivvying, it’s critical to keep things as light as possible, so we used alpine climbing style sleeping bags, mats and final gasp of wind in our sails. We bunny-hopped water bars and skipped bivvy bags. For cooking, we used a Jetboil between us which we sweetly down huge granite steps, and we even managed a few brief uphill used to boil water for dehydrated food. strokes to gain the Ryvoan Pass above Glenmore. The easy rolling continued past the azure waters of An Lochan Uaine which looked even bluer than usual in the evening sunshine; we passed walkers and joggers, We wore our usual mountain bike gear but also carried an insulated jacket and a hat for camping. Whilst it’s possible to carry all your kit in a pack, this isn’t ideal. reminding us that we’d not seen anyone since Linn of Dee. The smell of Fortunately you can get dedicated bikepacking luggage systems chips from Glenmore Lodge almost pulled us off course but we had the bit now that make it possible to carry most of the kit on the bike itself. between our teeth now and pressed on, first along the road to Loch Morlich We used a Wildcat Tiger seat pack and Mountain Lion handlebar and then on forest tracks into the lovely Rothiemurchus Forest. harness and an Alpkit Kanga handlebar harness and a Roo pouch. At Loch an Eilein the forest roads gave way to delightful singletrack and All these products are used in conjunction with drybags that our legs responded with a final push that had us both smiling again... and protect the kit. In our opinion, the Alpkit set-up worked best if you then suddenly there was the car – we’d made it. We’d been in the saddle want to keep all the weight up front, especially as a selection of for over 11 hours. We’d covered over 75 kilometres of pretty technical pouches can be easily attached. But the Wildcat Tiger seat pack going, and all that after a tough day the day before. The smiles were more proved to be our favourite bit of kit, keeping most of the weight of relief than happiness now: our thoughts turned to food – we hadn’t on the rear of the bike and allowing us to carry just a light weight eaten for hours. We should have been tired but we weren’t. Instead we dry bag on the bars. were elated. It had been an epic – sure. But would we do it again? Of www.wildcatgear.co.uk course we would. oe www.alpkit.com/bike-luggage 32 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 www.oe-mag.com FEATURE SAXON SHORE WAY The Saxon Shore Way Rudolf Abraham FOLLOWS IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF THE ROMANS ON ONE OF ENGLAND’S LESSER-KNOWN LONG-DISTANCE FOOTPATHS. J ust a few minutes walk up from the busy port of Dover, with the especially along the North Kent coast, there are also just as many that stream of cars and trucks being ingested by ferries still visible aren’t. The Saxon Shore Way crosses one end of the Kent Downs Area of below, I sit on a bench while Exmoor ponies graze on the lush Outstanding National Beauty, passes alongside the vast areas of surrounding grassland and the occasional rabbit hops about in marshland that encircle the Thames and Medway estuaries, follows the the undergrowth. Looking to the northeast, the Saxon Shore course of the River Stour and the edge of Romney Marsh, crosses the Way stretches back over the magnificent, sheer chalk cliffs of white chalk cliffs at South Foreland, and takes in a whole raft of SSSIs, South Foreland – the so-called ‘White Cliffs of Dover’, surely one of the most iconic spots on the entire British coast, if not in the UK as a whole. The Saxon Shore Way is a 263km long-distance footpath running from SPAs and RAMSAR sites. It is easy to forget that the Thames Estuary, so close to London and the densely populated southeast of England, is one of the most important Gravesend on the north Kent coast, to Hastings in East Sussex. The route wetland areas in the UK. The North Kent Marshes and the Thames and follows the position of the coast as it would have been during the late Medway estuaries are vitally important stopping points for birds on the Roman and Anglo-Saxon periods – that is, in the six centuries or more migration routes between northern Europe and Africa, and birds can be leading up to the Norman conquest of Britain in 1066. The Romans built seen here in their thousands. Grey plover, redshank, brent goose, or strengthened a line of forts to defend this stretch of coast against widgeon and marsh harrier are just some of the species that can be Saxon invaders, and it is in a document referring to these where the term spotted here, while Northward Hill on the Hoo Peninsula is the site of the ‘Saxon Shore’ is first recorded. largest grey heron colony in the UK, and one of the country’s largest The ‘shore’ as it was then is not always the same as the modern-day colonies of little egrets. Plant life is equally rich and varied, with rare coastline, and the route cuts across the mainland between Reculver and orchids growing on the chalk grasslands, and eelgrass and sea lavender Sandwich, along the course of what was once the Wantsum Channel, a among the many areas of saltmarsh. 2km wide channel dividing the southeast heel of England from (what was There is a vast amount of historical interest along the route, including then) the Isle of Thanet. Once a key navigation route for shipping an impressive tally of castles – Dover, Rochester, Walmer and Deal, to between Continental Europe and the Thames Estuary (the Romans built name just a few – as well as the second oldest cathedral in England forts at each end of the channel), the Wantsum Channel gradually silted (Rochester), historic Chatham Dockyard, several of the confederation of up from the Middle Ages, though its southern half still remains as the towns and villages of the Cinque Ports (Hastings, Dover, Sandwich, and mouth of the River Stour. Later the route follows the northern edge of the exquisitely beautiful Rye) – even the remains of a 2nd century Roman Romney Marsh – once again, the position of the shore during Roman lighthouse. The massive, ragstone shell of Rochester Castle is the tallest times, when Romney Marsh was still a large estuary at the mouth of the surviving Norman keep in Britain, and one of the tallest ever built; Deal River Rother. Castle, built in the late 1530s at the order of Henry VIII, remains one of Opened in 1980, the Saxon Shore Way remains much less well- the country’s finest Tudor artillery castles. It was from the Great Tower of known than other nearby long distance footpaths such as the South Dover Castle that Henry II ruled the Angevin Empire in Britain and France Downs Way and North Downs Way. Nevertheless, it crosses a in the 12th century; and it was from the secret tunnels and bunkers kaleidoscope of different landscapes, and its route is very clear, with beneath Dover Castle, enclosed within its enormous, sprawling good footpaths (and inevitably, some road walking), and waymarking in concentric walls, that the evacuation of Dunkirk was coordinated the form of a horned Saxon helmet (though whether or not the Saxons between May and June 1940. did ever wear horned helmets is another matter). While it’s true that there are quite a few built up areas on the route, 34 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 Much of this area is Charles Dickens country. The churchyard of St James’ Church at Cooling, which the Saxon Shore Way passes on its route www.oe-mag.com “Surely one of the most iconic spots on the entire British coast, if not in the UK as a whole” www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 35 FEATURE SAXON SHORE WAY across the Hoo Peninsula, provided Dickens with his inspiration for the known as the Stade, where Europe’s largest fleet of beach-launched fishing opening chapter of Great Expectations, where Pip meets Magwitch, and boats is based. Appropriately enough, stade is a Saxon word meaning Restoration House in Rochester provided the inspiration for Miss landing place. Haversham’s house in the same novel. All things Dickens are celebrated at Arrive in Hastings on May Bank Holiday and you will find the Jack-in- Dickens World in Chatham (Dickens’ father worked at Chatham Dockyard). the-Green Festival in full swing. Jack-in-the-Green is a traditional May Day The clifftop walk between Kingsdown (just south of Deal) and Dover, festival, originating several hundred years ago, in which a man covered in a across South Foreland, is perhaps the finest section of the Saxon Shore tall conical green mass of foliage (the ‘Jack’) is paraded through the town – Way. There are phenomenal views out over the Channel, and the French typically accompanied by much revelry (and beer) – to mark the end of coast, some 21 miles (34km) away as the crow flies, is easily visible on a winter and the beginning of summer. The tradition was originally clear day. Kittiwakes nest on ledges on the otherwise 300ft sheer cliffs, associated with chimney sweeps, but went out of fashion in the Victorian and skylarks are audible somewhere in the sky overhead. Peregrines can Britain of the late 19th century, replaced by a tamer and less bawdy version sometimes be seen here, along with a wealth of butterflies and other of May Day celebrations. However several Jack-in-the-Green festivals were insects. revived towards the end of the 20th century – Hastings in 1983, Rochester The lighthouse at South Foreland, built in 1940 and now managed by (the ‘Sweeps Festival’) in 1980, Whitstable in 1976. ‘Jack’ is accompanied the National Trust, watches over the Goodwin Sands – a vast, ever-shifting by a small army of attendants, painted and dressed in green, known as the area of sandbanks just offshore, which over the centuries has claimed over Bogies, together with other characters and troops of Morris Dancers. 2,000 ships. South Foreland was the first lighthouse in the world to use an It was only a few miles from here that William the Conqueror and his electric light, and was also used by Marconi during his work on radio waves Norman army defeated the last Anglo-Saxon King of England, Harold – the first ever ship-to-shore radio transmission was recorded here on Godwinson, at the Battle of Hastings in the year 1066 – a landmark event Christmas Eve 1898; with the first international transmission in March the in British history, which sees its 950th anniversary in 2016. Walking along following year. The lighthouse’s historic tearoom is worthy of a visit in itself. this quintessentially English stretch of coast, it’s often hard to imagine The proximity of the Saxon Shore Way to London – many points on the anything quite so turbulent disturbing its peace. oe route are just 1hr-2hr away from the capital by train – means that those based in London or the southeast can effectively do much of the route as day trips. Otherwise, the walk is usually broken down into ten stages, though plentiful accommodation means there’s plenty of scope to change these. There are also several shorter routes nearby which are well worth exploring, such as the Maritime Heritage Trail near Rye. The Saxon Shore Way descends from the gorse-covered Firehills (so-named after their blaze of colour during the summer months) and For further information on the Saxon Shore Way see www.visitkent.co. uk and www.visit1066country.com. Most of the historical sites visited on the route are managed by English Heritage www.english-heritage. org.uk or the National Trust www.nationaltrust.org.uk. Southeastern covers many of the points on the route of the Saxon Shore Way on its rail network (including Gravesend, Rochester, Whitstable, Deal, Dover and Hastings), and often runs promotions with low return fares from London – see www.southeasternrailway.co.uk for timetables. Hastings County Park, to finish in Hastings, by the historic shingle beach www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 37 FEATURE ALPINISM A Beginner’s Guide to the Alps KNOWING A FEW CLIMBING BASICS GOES A LONG WAY TO GETTING YOU INTO THE ALPS FOR THE FIRST TIME IF YOU ALSO PLAN, EQUIP AND TEAM UP RIGHT. David Lintern EXPLAINS HOW HE PUT ASIDE HIS FEAR OF ROPE, BRACED HIMSELF FOR THE EARLY STARTS AND STARTED TO LOVE THE CLIMB. T hree men in a van, driving to Switzerland to attempt three climbs with no prior Alpine experience whatsoever – what overwhelming. We arrived at Grimentz, in a tucked away part of Val d’Anniviers after could possibly go wrong? ‘’Well, the fridge could break’’, two days of driving, with the fridge intact, and cheerfully pitched up at the quipped one member of the party. An army does indeed municipal campsite, which we discovered was well equipped with a march on its stomach, but I think all of us quietly wondered if securely bolted crag. We spent the first evening drinking beer and warm beer and squidgy cheese might be the least of our consulting Bruce’s bible, whilst attempting to discern the finer points of a challenges over the next nine days. We were self-guiding our first trip to the Alps for the sole reason that crevasse rescue system. Clearly it was trickier than it looked. The other two tied slings to trees and fell over once or twice while I cooked pasta in our budgets were smaller than our ambition. But, despite openly voiced my harness and practised a few knots. Knots, I was discovering, were concerns in advance of the trip that our Alpine eyes might be bigger than important. Still, at least I looked the part - things were going well. There our tummies, we did have one or two tricks up our sleeve. The first and would be more to learn tomorrow. most useful tool in the pack was Bruce Goodlad’s ‘Alpine Mountaineering’. Swiss efficiency meant a town pass was issued along with our tourist This quickly became known as ‘the bible’, and if it wasn’t in Bruce’s bible, it tax, which as well as allowing us a free stay at the campsite also bought us wasn’t worth doing. Secondly, we also had a reasonable level and variety unlimited trips in the telecabin. We spent the following day in of skills between us. Phil has a genuine flair for organisation, and made acclimatisation between 1500-2000m, huffing and puffing on hired sure we were in the right place at the right time, with the right gear and mountain bikes while the Moiry Glacier glared brightly at us from a the right skills to put it all together. Todd was our strongest climber with a distance. It was a relaxed introduction to the area, biking uphill for a fair few years of experience in the UK, so it was left to him to lead the lunchtime scramble under Roc d’Orxival, and then freewheeling downhill climbs and place protection for the group safely. Myself? Definitely the back to the campsite for more rope practice, this time on the anchored least experienced with rope but hill fit and with a good level of UK winter crag. Some progress made, we each ascended on a sling and then skills experience. Equally importantly, Phil (with assistance from Mr abseiled down. I hadn’t abseiled in at least 20 years, and going over the Goodlad) had put together a sensible itinerary, which allowed time to edge, even with only a five metre drop below, was a little nerve wracking. acclimatise, gain some skills and then apply them on climbs that were How would this be under emergency conditions, in an icy crevasse, maybe more than exciting enough for us all as Alpine novices, without being even with a missing crampon or a broken limb? 38 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 www.oe-mag.com Our base for our first two climbs was to be the Moiry hut, a luxurious newly refurbished refuge reached after a short drive, followed by a two hour haul of rope and heavy metal alongside the glacier of the same name. The sun blazed down as we struggled with another increase in altitude. After lunch we headed for another dose of crevasse practice in the slightly more testing surroundings of the glacier snowfield. Each of these baby steps were vital - especially for me it would seem. Equipped with brand new crampons purchased especially for the occasion, I promptly attached them to the wrong feet. This was also the first time we were roped together, a novelty for most hill walkers in the UK, where I’ve heard it referred to as ‘death roping’ – not an encouraging nom de plume. In the Alps, the balance between speed and security is very different, primarily because of the heightened avalanche and crevasse risk that comes from moving over much larger distances on the glacier. We discovered that ‘moving together’, attached by seven lengths of rope, in itself took sensitivity and good communications, even within our small team of three. The main lesson so far seemed to be that this was all new, and that learning is best embedded by incremental bite size chunks. The other lesson is ‘don’t fall’; but that’s a little flippant – how you get to ‘not fall’ is by slowly gaining experience little by little. One day learning knots, the second applying them in context on a simple crag at the campsite, the next moving together roped up for the first time on snow and ice. Teamwork being at least as important as technical know-how, it was fantastic to have a planned soft start like this, to get to know each other’s strengths and limits, and to allow mistakes to be made when it was not critical. The next day would put the theory to the test. Our first taste of an Alpine start and a barely digestible breakfast saw us heading glacier-ward a little later than planned at 6:30am. Hauling 60m of rope to the col was heavy work, but we arrived just in time for the spectacular sunrise, caught our breath in the thin air, before roping up and starting up the ridge. The Pigne de la Le is a perfect beginners route at 3392m, and is classed as a PD – a ‘petit difficile’ or ‘a little difficult’. It consists mostly of big boulders, plus the odd overhang or angled rock to negotiate. Moving together on rock was a bit of an epiphany for me. I’m fairly comfortable on Scottish grade scrambles in summer and winter, solo and without rope or protection. Wouldn’t the extra apparatus add further unnecessary risk? Well yes, but mostly, no. Yes, rope is an additional trip hazard, but with our climb leader Todd placing the odd piece of protection (cam and nuts), and all of us using friction belays around the boulders where necessary, we progressed well. Ignoring the technical mumbo jumbo the reality is pretty simple at this level - it’s all about friction and angles, plus good communication. The quality of communication is of course key – the leader explaining the next short leg, the middle and end persons asking for more or less slack and letting each other know when they are secure and when climbing. I found our roped team communicating well added a good deal of security. With a big camera on my chest I was occasionally a liability but increasingly gained confidence as my skills improved. We arrived at the summit and gawked giddily over the precipice to Glacier Durand, framed by the Obergabelhorn, with our first Alpine ascent safely in the bag. Excited, a little relieved and tired, and our second breakfast well overdue. Descending on rock for a while, we re-roped for a glacier traverse, tiny lifeforms in a vast bowl-like amphitheatre. The descent was steep and steady until we bottomed out at the top of the ice flow hanging far above www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 39 FEATURE ALPINISM the hut. More crevasse practice followed to really bring the skillset home, this time with Todd YOU WILL NEED: being the ‘man down’ (the hole) and Phil nailing the details of a rescue. Even I began to pick up some of the nuts and bolts of how this might work. Our Alpine day was done by 1pm, after A van, a fridge and at least one other willing which followed a beer and a brownie, a shower and snooze. soul to share your growing pains with. The following morning we left at 6am for a PD+, the 3564m Pointes de Mourti. Moving more slowly but with less rest stops, was more efficient in the long run. The glacier traverse took a Bruce Goodlad’s ‘Alpine Mountaineering’ good while, before we ditched our crampons and shortened the rope from seven to five lengths www.pesdapress.com/p47/Alpine- for an engaging climb over loose and rotten rock. Arriving at the head of this crest around 50m Mountaineering/product_info.html under the summit, we ate a few snacks and ogled a snowfield hovering at a slightly obscene angle above us. The snow was consolidated and safe despite appearances. With the last few A crevasse rescue kit each (detailed in the book) metres dry tooled uncomfortably over rock, a cast iron effigy of Mother Mary awaited us at the and a simple rack and rope, emergency shelter very top. This climb, for me, was the crowning glory of the whole trip. I’ve never been anywhere and first aid kit (shared). quite like it. The descent by the same route was slow and tiring but not overly complex. More serious was A harness, crampons, axe and light waterproof. the glacier, which was very soft on our return. Lots of small crevasses had opened up in the Softshell recommended. At least B2 boots three hours since we passed them. It was an object lesson in the real reason for those highly recommended (I used B1 and got away uncomfortably early starts, and a powerful reminder that this whole Alpine world is on the move with it…just, but crampons did slip and this is and very fragile indeed. not the place you want them to). After a beautiful walk-out the following day, we decamped to Tasch ready for the easiest 4000m peak in the alps – Breithorn. Over dinner, we discovered, via the wonders of smartphone Insurance – BMC do the best by far. research, that the cable car to the start of the ascent – ‘glacier paradise’ – would cost us £70 www.thebmc.co.uk/modules/insurance/policies. each. We were still smarting from the ticket price when we swooshed effortlessly past the aspx Matterhorn, crowned with a red raw alpenglow early the following morning. All was forgiven. Breithorn is classified as ‘facile’ or easy and really a short walk in the snow rather than a THE NUTS AND BOLTS: climb as such, but there are other considerations. Due to the ease of access, lots of larger groups were present, so it was useful for us to take hand coils to avoid our rope becoming The ferry from Dover to Calais was by entangled with others on the route. A 30 degree slope and the high altitude were also a myferrylink: www.myferrylink.com/ challenge and slowed our pace considerably, but moving steadily in low gear meant we were Those further north should consider travelling soon at a very breezy and somewhat crowded summit. We decided not to move onto the overnight from Hull to Zeebrugge with P&O second top as the winds were too high for safe traversing, took photos and got ourselves down Ferries, skipping a load of driving and waking as yet more arrived. Suddenly our little group of three felt quite secure, compared to organised up refreshed: www.poferries.com gangs of 15 moving up the hill. For these reasons, we all agreed Breithorn was an invaluable experience for the first timer to the Alps. Tourist tax: A Pass Liberté or ‘freedom pass’ if With the weather window closing firmly behind us just hours after we finished our hero’s staying in Grimentz, Valais – 16CHF gets you a lunch of sausage and rosti in Zermatt, we headed home early the following day. It had been the free stay in the town campsite and unlimited perfect introduction to Alpine mountaineering: the right combination of weather, logistics, use of the ski telecabins. Available from the progression in routes and development of our team. Am I glad I got over my phobia of rope and Tourist Information office in Grimentz village. early starts? Absolutely - walking amongst those crags and glaciers really is an incomparable experience. oe Mountain Bikes are available for hire in town – approx 35CHF per day. www.aiglon-Alpine.com/Biking.html Another 16CHF for a ‘bike map explorer’, which shows in the detail the MTB trails in the area. For our first two climbs, we stayed in the luxurious Cabane de Moiry www.cabane-de-moiry.ch/home.php We stayed in nearby Tasch at www.campingtaesch.ch/location.html and caught the Zermatt shuttle to car free Zermatt, and then the longest cable car in the world to begin our climb for Briethorn – 99CHF each. www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 41 FEATURE ORIENTEERING Orienteering COMBINING THE EXCITEMENT OF A TREASURE HUNT WITH THE PHYSICAL DEMANDS OF A CROSS COUNTRY RACE, ORIENTEERING IS AN ADVENTURE SPORT FOR ALL AGES AND ABILITIES. IT’S OFTEN SAID THAT IT’S A FUN WAY TO GET FIT WHILE IMPROVING YOUR NAVIGATIONAL SKILLS. THAT’S TRUE, BUT IT OFFERS MUCH MORE THAN THAT. Felicity Martin EXPLAINS. M el and Grahame Nicoll met through a mountaineering club and have been keen hill walkers all their adult lives. The arrival of children made big trips into the mountains impractical, although they were keen to get the kids active from an early age. When a friend persuaded them to come along to an orienteering event, they found an outdoor activity they could all do together. It helped that it was a Christmas event, with sweets hidden at the control sites! At their first events they did easy courses that followed paths and had undemanding navigation. Laura was sent a few paces ahead to find the next control, while Alice, from her viewpoint in a backpack, was told to shout out if she saw the control flag. “I remember when we started orienteering as a family,” Laura says. “We walked together and worked as a team. Dad did the navigation really, but we felt involved. It was great fun to come across something in the woods.” Before long, Laura was doing courses on her own and getting a real buzz from finding her way around them. “It seemed different to what I’d done before, as I could go at my own pace. It felt really good working up to more difficult courses. I love the challenge and am really pleased when I complete a course successfully, working my brain as well as my body.” With start times at orienteering events spread over a couple of hours, the family soon found it feasible for all of them to do their own courses, with one parent going for an early run and the other a late one. Now, nearly a decade after taking it up, 14-year-old Laura can see that orienteering has benefited the other activities she does. “I started running a year ago and am now doing hill races. Orienteering has helped build up my strength and technique for terrain running. My stamina for hill walking is also much better. And it helped recently on my Duke of 42 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 www.oe-mag.com Edinburgh, as I can read maps really well. Last year I went on a training week with the Scottish Junior squad and met lots of people. Now I go and have a wee chat with them when I see them around at events. My plan is to keep doing it, alongside other sports, while always trying to improve.” The whole family are now passionate about maps and reading them – what Mel describes as “learning another language”. And – “having never enjoyed ordinary running” – they are now all trail running around the woods and hills near home. “Grahame hadn’t run since he left school until he started orienteering in his 40s,” says Mel. “Orienteering gave a reason to run, it was a revelation how much fun it is chasing around looking for things. The sport led us to hill running and now we have made the transition to doing mountain marathons.” Like the Nicolls, I only started orienteering after some persuasion. When Steve Hale, the then British Champion, came to work in my office and founded a new local club, it seemed churlish not to give it a go. All the lunchtime runners were recruited, as well as many others who had never dreamt of doing anything as energetic. One colleague started by bringing her son to events, but found it boring waiting around for him. She started walking around courses then jogging. Years later she is over 70 and still jogging around the controls. She is by no means alone, as orienteering has a substantial share of grey-haired competitors, many of whom are remarkably fit for their age. A lot of them joined the sport when it first became popular about 50 years ago, after being introduced from Scandinavia. They have brought their children up with the sport and they in turn have introduced a new generation to orienteering. Many events offer string courses to entertain and involve children. As soon as they can toddle, they can follow a string around a series of control flags, finding pictures of cartoon characters or animals. The Nicoll family often set up the string course at their club events, making full use of Alice’s knowledge of dog breeds to come up with appealing pictures. Most clubs put on an event every month or so in the spring and autumn, with a lull mid winter and during mid summer, and many have training sessions or regular get togethers to run and socialise. Keen orienteers compete in their neighbouring clubs’ events and many travel longer distances for league races and national events. The biggest event in the UK orienteering calendar is the JK, which began in 1967 and is held in a different region each Easter. It is named after the Swede, Jan Kjellström, who played an important role in promoting the sport in Britain. The son of Silva compass founder Alvar Kjellström, he helped develop orienteering competition, mapping and coaching, but died tragically young in a road accident. Once I went on a ‘Pre JK Improvers’ Course’ and spent a memorable week in Holmbury St Mary’s Youth Hostel in the wooded Surrey hills. We did interesting training exercises each day and had plenty of time to relax and chat in the pub each evening (apart from the one where we tried night orienteering!). Our instructors took us to some very different sorts of terrain, varying from rolling beech woods to reclaimed sand pits, all areas mapped for orienteering. Coming from Scotland, I hadn’t orienteered on lowland heath and got a particular surprise when we visited a military training area near Aldershot. Although familiar with running through heather and dodging gorse bushes, I’d never before jumped down into a control site in a depression to find it full of soldiers. I’m not sure who got the biggest shock. www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 43 FEATURE ORIENTEERING That week I made two lasting friends and we began booking a self catering BEGINNER’S GUIDE cottage together for the Scottish Six Days, which runs every other year. The large assembly area and accompanying traders move to a different venue each Clubs day, adjacent to woods or moorland where courses have been laid out. Like Geographically-based clubs run other multi-day holiday events, the Six Days is held in the summer and has a events and training sessions, and carnival atmosphere with a large number of peripheral activities. It has publicise them through introduced me to mountain bike orienteering, fast and furious sprint newsletters and websites. Each orienteering and trail orienteering, which is mentally rather than physically club has its own colour and design demanding and is designed to be possible from a wheelchair. of orienteering suit (lightweight Being more of an individual than a team player and not enjoying mindless nylon top and trousers), which exercise, orienteering has proved ideal for me. I find repetitive activities quickly makes it easier to recognise fellow members. The 120 UK clubs become boring, so love the fact that every time I do it I face a different are affiliated to regional orienteering associations and the challenge. The techniques that I’ve learnt while orienteering have rubbed off British Orienteering Federation. The BOF website will help you elsewhere. It’s given me greater confidence in exploring the outdoors, so I’m find a club and learn more about the sport: www. quite happy to wander off the beaten trail or climb mountains on my own. A lot britishorienteering.org.uk. of navigational techniques have become second nature, from basics such as orientating the map so that it matches the ground ahead, to pace counting as a Events means to judge distance or aiming off a target. This has often proved useful, for You can just turn up on the day to enter informal, local events. instance in a white-out on Creag Meagaidh, where after pace counting the They offer a choice of colour-coded courses; the darker the necessary distance on a bearing, I knew that the summit cairn should be close colour the longer and harder the course. Children normally by on my right, as I had deliberately headed slightly to the left. As hoped, I start with white or yellow courses, adults on yellow or orange. found it without going round in circles. Larger events require pre entry and have courses by age class, Although the sport suits independent minded people, there is always time ranging from 10 and under to 80 and over! Entry fees vary to socialise. The introduction of electronic timing devices to replace punch from about £2/£4 for juniors/seniors at local events up to cards has made results instantaneous and provides every orienteer with a £10/£20 for major events. printout of their split times at each control when they finish, which allows for close scrutiny of performance. After their runs, groups of orienteers can be Equipment seen poring over their maps, analysing who made the best navigational All you need to start is loose fitting outdoor clothes that cover decisions. Mel is typical: “I enjoy comparing my route choices with other your arms and legs. Don’t overdress, as you’ll get too warm, but people. You gradually get to know others on the scene and develop a friendly take a lightweight cagoule if the weather is bad. A compass rivalry with those doing the same courses.” oe soon proves useful, but isn’t essential for easy courses. You can hire a dibber (electronic card) for punching controls at events or buy your own. Maps Orienteering maps are produced specifically to cover competition areas and are drawn at a larger scale than OS maps, usually 1:15000 or 1:10000. A contour interval of 5m is used, so small land features are shown. White areas represent open ‘runnable’ woodland, with shades of green depicting progressively denser vegetation. Un-wooded areas are shaded yellow. Black is used to show tracks and paths, as well as rock features such as crags and boulders. Starting out Ask for help – orienteers are friendly folk and will give you guidance while enthusiastically sharing their expertise. Maps are usually pre-marked with numbered control circles; you have to go round them in order, but can choose your own route in between. It helps to fold your map, so you only see the area your are concentrating on, and to use your thumb to mark your place on it. When you find a control, check that the code on it matches the control description before punching it. Go at your own pace and enjoy it! www.oe-mag.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 45 ker Buuff® Alit eD Icebrea CamelBa k esig ns TO CELEBRATE 10 YEARS OF OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST, WE ARE GIVING ONE READER THE OPPORTUNITY TO WIN OUR GREATEST OUTDOOR KIT PRIZE. JUST ANSWER THE QUESTION BELOW: HOW OLD IS OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST MAGAZINE? A. B. C. 10 YEARS 15 YEARS 20 YEARS ENTER ONLINE: www.oe-mag.com/giveaway* *terms and conditions can be found on the website erman Rab Leath p Satma Sole £1 W ,5 00 IN OV E F PR R IZ ES O Biolite Keen Montane Nalgene PRIZES WORTH OVER £1,500 Alite Designs - Mayfly Chair ■ Buff® - High UV Protection BUFF® with Insect Shield ■ CamelBak - Fourteener™ 24 litre ■ Icebreaker - Oasis Crewe - mens and womens ■ Keen - The Marshall light hiker ■ Nalgene - On-the-Fly ■ Biolite - Camp Stove ■ Montane - Featherlite Sleeping Bag ■ Rab - Rab Xiom jacket – mens or womens. ■ Satmap - Active 12 GB Edition ■ Sole - SOLE Performance Socks ■ Leatherman - Juice cs4 Pocket Multi-tool - Columbia Blue ■ Tilley - T3 Hat ■ Turbo Flame - Twin Laser Jet V Flame ■ Vango - Mirage 200 ■ Lowe Alpine - AirZone Quest 37 ■ Kelly Kettle - 2 x High quality single walled Camping Cups (350 & 500ml) ■ Kelly K ettle Vango Tilley Turbo Flame lpine Lowe A Gear guide Gear Guide OUTDOOR ENTHUSIASTS ARE DEMANDING CUSTOMERS – REQUIRING THEIR CLOTHING AND EQUIPMENT TO PERFORM NO MATTER THE CONDITIONS. THE OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST TEST TEAM SPEND THE MAJORITY OF THEIR WORKING LIFE IN THE OUTDOORS NO MATTER WHAT THE WEATHER, ENSURING THAT EACH ITEM FEATURED IN THE PAGES OF THE GEAR GUIDE HAS BEEN SUBJECTED TO EXTENSIVE REAL-WORLD USE. Lucy Wallace PHIL TURNER Gear Editor, Lucy, is based on the Isle of Arran, Scotland. When not writing about outdoor equipment, she is putting it through its paces whilst working as a Lucy Walla ce mountain leader and wildlife guide. In her spare time she can also be found outdoors - mountaineering, sea kayaking, mountain biking or just taking it all in. Based in Edinburgh, a short hop from the Scottish Highlands, Phil spends much of his time finding new and innovative ways to break outdoor equipment. An experienced Phil Turner hillwalker, mountaineer and long distance backpacker, he’s an advocate of a fast and light approach and can talk Cuben Fiber and cut-down toothbrushes with the best of them. Cutting Edge Lucy Wallace takes a look at a selection of the latest products to hit the outdoor shops. Platypus Big Zip 2L LP Black Diamond Trail Poles New to the Platypus family of hydration systems, the Big Zip LP has been cleverly designed with twin compartments to keep the profile of the bladder neat and slim. This slides easily into a small pack or purpose designed pouch, with minimum bulk: ideal for people who like to pack things tidily. This design is currently only available in the Big Zip wide mouth model, which is an excellent design that aids easy cleaning and refilling. The hose clips in at the bottom and comes with a simple bite valve and clasp to attach to straps or a lapel within easy reach for drinking. The bladder is BPA free, plus odour and taste resistant, perfect for a refreshing drink on the trail. LW ■ www.platy.com New for 2014, the Trail Pole features Black Diamond’s tried and tested flicklock system, which is both secure and reliable, being less prone to problems arising from corrosion and freezing up than its competitors. The Trail is an adaptable trekking pole for mountain walking and backpacking. It is tough and light, at under 500g for a pair, with an extended length of up to 140cm and a packed length of 63.5cm. The comfortable foam grip extends down the pole- very useful for quick hand adjustments, especially when heading up on to steep ground and rapid gradient changes. The carbide tips can be replaced with rubber ones (available separately) and the poles come with low profile summer baskets as well as snow baskets for winter use. LW ■ www.blackdiamondequipment.com £30 48 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 £70/Pair www.oe-mag.com Gear guide Approach Shoes her... LUCY WALLACE AND PHIL TURNER PUT THEIR BEST FOOT FORWARD IN A SELECTION OF THIS SUMMER’S TOP ALL-TERRAIN SHOES. La Sportiva Xplorer £120 Awarding Editor’s Choice was tough with so many excellent shoes on test but this was my personal favourite, outperforming the others on steep terrain. As an approach shoe it is bold, with top to toe lacing, a slim toe profile and aggressive rand. Even the wild colours are making a statement. There is no membrane, so it isn’t waterproof, but the robust mesh uppers are therefore very breathable. The heel cup is deep, with good Achilles support and heel cushioning, and the midsole is supportive, though lightweight (a tad sensitive under the forefoot). The outsole has a dotty pattern and a climbing zone for terrific grip on rock. It’s a reasonable walking shoe, though others here will cope better with mud. However, it’s a truly fabulous scrambling and low grade climbing shoe which is why I love it so much. ■ www.lasportiva.com Scarpa Zen Pro £125 I just love the design with their ice-lolly colours and contrast quilting. The technical details are impressive too, with a heavy-duty outsole, solid lugs and a generous climbing zone, made from Vibram Spyder 2 (impressively sticky). The uppers are leather lined with Cocona, which wicks and dries well (there is no waterproof membrane). There is a lot of cushioning and stability: they are built to last and should keep going whatever you throw at them. The trade off is that these shoes are relatively heavy. The fit is a touch broad, ideal for knocking around in, but never quite precise or supportive enough on steep rock and rough terrain for me. That said, people with wider feet should find them to be an excellent scrambling shoe. ■ www.scarpa.co.uk 50 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 Berghaus Cuerra Cuesta Tech £85 This is a lovely shoe that ticks a lot of boxes for anyone looking for a solid all round approach shoe for walking and scrambling. It is light, despite the full grain leather uppers and chunky heel cradle. The asymmetric technical fit is very supportive with superbly adjustable lacing right down to the toe. A rubber rand protects the Tardis-like toe box, simultaneously neat but roomy. I’m a big fan of the outsole, which is a good compromise of a sleek climbing zone at the toe for gripping rock, but geometric lugs for cutting in to mud and turf. For pure scrambling, the rubber feels stickier than average (but some others perform even better here), and there is no waterproof membrane, so hardworking feel stay cool (but not necessarily dry). It’s a kind of “do everything shoe”from travel to technical, and anything in between. ■ www.berghaus. com Mammut Reburn Low GTX £120 It’s a technical shoe with a Gore-Tex membrane for boggy approaches and mountain weather. The uppers are a mix of lightweight textile and hardwearing suede. The fit is precise and asymmetric, with secure lacing that extends most of the length of the foot. Initially I found the heel cup to be too deep and aggressive on my Achilles tendon, until I adapted the fit using a high support footbed that raised my foot slightly in the shoe. Underfoot everything feels stable and well protected. The outsole has a good climbing zone at the front and is wonderfully sticky when clambering about on rocks (possibly the best rubber on test). This is a versatile shoe for all terrains and activities, from mountain biking to easy scrambling. ■ www.mammut.ch www.oe-mag.com Gear guide Asolo Outlaw GV £130 The latest offering from Asolo’s innovative Natural Shape range, it’s a high quality construction, with top-notch raw materials, including 1.8mm suede uppers, a Gore-Tex membrane and a robust Vibram sole. Unlike others I’ve tried, this one is quite stiff, with plenty of stout underfoot protection, but losing the impression of reckless barefoot freedom of the lighter models in the series. The midfoot is broad and shallow; I have high arches and narrow feet, so this isn’t a great combination for me. Nevertheless, it’s comfortable for walking around on easy trails, but I don’t feel it is precise enough for technical terrain. I have found it works well for mountain biking, with the ridged outsole lugs hanging on to my flat pedals nicely. ■ www.asolo.com Anatom V1 Trail £70 First impressions are of an old school walking shoe, but whilst it doesn’t look that exciting, it is a quality option and very good value. The uppers are well put together with a tough rubber rand, hard wearing leather and a quick drying wicking mesh, sandwiched within which is a tri.aria waterproof membrane. I think the tongue design could be rejigged to wrap the foot better but this is a minor gripe. There is plenty of protection and support for the foot with a chunky midsole and robust heel cradle, and generous lugs on the outsole that bite in to mud and wet grass. The overall impression is of a durable workhorse that will cope with rough trails and even some scrambling. ■ www.anatomfootwear.co.uk Merrell All Out Blaze £100 Built to go light and fast, it has leather and textile uppers with a rubber rand at the toe and a minimalist cradle around the heel cup. There is solid stability under the heel, with a remarkable amount of flexibility at the front and plenty of room in the toe box, giving a nice sense of freedom for the toes more akin to a running rather than an approach shoe. Merrell warned me that the sizing was snug, so I went up half a size, but needn’t have done as these felt a little too big. Despite the size error, it was easy to lock my foot down in the shoe with the laces and keep my mid foot, arch and heel securely in place. The outsole has studded circular lugs typical of Merrell that I find are less effective on mud than they are on gravel and rock where they provide good traction. With no waterproof membrane, this is a lightweight, breathable travel and hiking shoe for fine days and warmer climes. ■ www.merrell.com Hi-Tec Alto WP £45 It’s a phenomenal price for a waterproof shoe and if you are walking easy trails and get along with the Hi-Tec fit then you possibly need look no further than this shoe. The uppers are a fabric and leather construction. Hi-Tec give no clue as to the membrane that they use to make the shoe waterproof, but I haven’t found it unduly sweaty, and it certainly works. Underfoot, the midsole gives reasonable cushioning and the sole unit as a whole is chunky with a deep tread. I’ve got some questions about the durability of the sole unit- so this may not suit someone who does a lot of miles. However my main concern is the overall fit, which is sloppy and unstructured, without much arch support. Subsequently I couldn’t wear them for long walks, which is why they don’t achieve the Best Buy award. ■ www.hi-tec.com www.oe-mag.com Keen Madison Low CNX £100 I was initially surprised at Keen’s claims for these shoes, as they seem to be a simple plimsoll at first glance. However, when I poked and prodded them I found there is a lot more going on than meets the eye. The back of the shoe is made from super lightweight nylon, whilst mesh wraps the toes. The midsole is very minimalist and supple, and although this isn’t always a good thing, (I prefer more shock absorbency when walking), there is some rigidity under the heel, and the overall impression is of minimalist freedom. The rubber outsole provides reasonable grip although the tread is quite low profile. The famous Keen “bumper” protects the toes. These are an excellent alternative to sandals for walking dusty trails in the heat; giving much better protection for the foot, just don’t expect them to perform well on rough terrain. A pair is spectacularly lightweight at just over 400g and they pack flat in a bag: ideal for travellers. ■ www.keenfootwear.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 51 Gear guide Approach Shoes him... Asolo Plasmic GV £125 The Plasmic GV is part of Asolo’s Natural Shape range, which has resulted in a last that more accurately reflects the shape of the foot. The forefoot is a bit wider than usual, and the sole and heel unit more curved to cradle the foot. It’s a good idea, and the shoe certainly feels supportive and the foot cradled, yet the forefoot has space to spread out naturally. I’m not sure if it’s a consequence of this technology, but the footbed seems to shift around within the shoe a little – nothing too drastic, but it’s a bit disconcerting. The tread pattern is good – deep with self-clearing lugs and Vibram rubber. The upper has a Gore-Tex membrane, which I find self-defeating in a low shoe, but as it’s a common feature throughout this review I guess I’m in the minority! ■ www.asolo.com Keen Marshall WP £110 La Sportiva Boulder X £100 The best true approach shoe in this review, the Boulder X ticks all the boxes for me. A clever lacing system that sees the laces themselves form the eyelets then run around the heel, means the foot feels really cradled, much like a climbing shoe. But unlike a climbing shoe, there’s a bit of padding around the ankle and under the tongue, adding some comfort when walking. La Sportiva’s typical narrow fit tapers the shoe to a point – ideal for climbing performance where weight can be focused over the big toe. The tough leather uppers need a bit of breaking in, and it’s a fairly stiff affair overall to suit edging and create a stable platform. The Vibram outsole seems to be a good combination of stickiness and durability, with the usual flat ‘climbing zone’ at the toe plus effective yet shallow lugs elsewhere. www.lasportiva.com The Marshall WP has the classic Keen rubber toe bumper and generous forefoot, yet doesn’t look quite as eccentric as other models. A good lacing arrangement with webbing straps locks the heel securely into the shoe for good stability. The upper has a proprietary KEEN dry waterproof, breathable membrane (sigh) and pleasant styling. There’s not much in the way of underfoot cushioning – this gives good terrain feedback but can take some getting used to on rough ground. The usual large lugs are present on the sole so it’s not the best on wet rock, but performs well elsewhere. The low weight is pleasing too. ■ www.keenfootwear.com Hanwag Approach II GTX £150 A serious approach shoe (hence the name), with a sticky rubber outsole, ‘climbing zone’ and deep lacing. The good, stiff sole makes this a great choice for scrambling or via ferrata, and the full rubber rand means they’re capable of coping with being wedged in cracks and general crag abuse. The tough Cordura and leather uppers enhance the general feeling of ruggedness (though the weight is also quite high). Coupling a durable upper with a soft rubber outsole sounds like a recipe for disaster as the tread wears down to nothing and you’re left with a pair of stiff leather slicks, but Hanwag highlight that their construction techniques permit easy resoling – much better than adding to landfill. ■ www.hanwag.com 52 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 www.oe-mag.com Gear guide Anatom V1 Trail tri.aria £70 Anatom specialise in foot stability, so it’s no surprise that the V1 feels positive and secure. The substantial heel cradle probably has something to do with this – there’s an obvious external support structure that combines with the lacing to hold the foot securely in the shoe. The rest of the shoe is unremarkable, with a suede and mesh upper protected by a toe rand and a tri.aria membrane (a non-membrane version is available). Omni-directional lugs on a proprietary outsole work well in varying conditions and as they’ve not had to consider licensing it no doubt contributes to the low price of £70, which represents excellent value. ■ www.anatomfootwear.co.uk Berghaus Prognosis II £100 A good multi-purpose outdoor shoe. Trainer styling and comfort mean they get called into action for a variety of activities, from walking to mountain biking, with a level of cushioning and stability that copes with everything I’ve thrown at them short of technical climbing. The Vibram sole can handle a bit of mud and wet rock and is stiff without restricting the walking action. Mesh uppers are perfect for low shoes, keeping things cool and allowing any water that has entered the shoe to drain out. Sadly I was supplied with the Gore-Tex model, which reduces the effectiveness, but an unlined version is available and is £15 cheaper. That’s the one to go for. ■ www.berghaus.com Hi-Tec South Trail WP £70 Merrell Grassbow Sport £80 The Grassbow Sport is a real hiking shoe/running trainer hybrid, both in appearance and performance. The lightweight, yet durable upper is breathable thanks to a lack of membrane (there is a Gore-Tex lined model available) and features some distinctive styling, including a seam running lengthways along the toe. Merrell like to ensure that their footwear looks good with jeans as well as trekking trousers, and the external TPU heel counter has been incorporated into the overall styling to good effect. The forefoot contains a shock absorption pad and the heel includes an air cushion – neither are overt, but the shoes feel light and offer a good walking action. Interestingly, no leather has been used, making the Grassbow Sport vegan friendly. ■ www.merrell.com www.oe-mag.com A good, solid outdoor shoe, there’s not much to dislike about the South Trail. The sole is bendy yet possesses good torsional stability, and the heel counter is well padded yet structured enough to offer the requisite level of security. The upper features a high proportion of very fine mesh, backed up by Hi-Tec’s own waterproof, breathable membrane, which reduces ventilation somewhat. The level of cushioning is appropriate and the outsole is grippy and suitably aggressive. A good price for a well-performing shoe. ■ www.hi-tec.com Scarpa Vitamin £140 While many shoes claim to be approach shoes, the Vitamin is a shoe that really deserves the moniker. Designed for technical use – for the walk-in to a crag, the climb and the walk back to the car – it’s not as stiff as I expected, though has a sticky Vibram rubber outsole that is aimed at climbing performance rather than bog-wading. There’s a selection of wide-spaced lugs at the heel and forefoot and a large, flat ‘climbing zone’ at the toe with sharp edges and good toe rand. The suede upper is attractive with lacing right down to the toe to facilitate a close, tailored fit. Beneath this is a Cocona lining, which aids moisture transfer and does a good job of handling odour. ■ www.scarpa.co.uk JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 53 Gear guide 2-3 Season Sleeping Bags FROM BUDGET CAR CAMPING, TO LIGHTWEIGHT AND LUXURY MODELS, LUCY WALLACE HAS BEEN SLEEP-TESTING A SELECTION OF THE BEST SLEEPING BAGS ON OFFER THIS SEASON. Mountain Hardwear Ratio 15 £240 It’s a bit of a beast with a lavish helping of 650 fill power goose down and generous dimensions (length 198cm), which is reflected in the weight at 1.14kg. However, it’s by far the warmest bag on test, with a comfort rating of -6°C. I wasn’t able to test it at this temperature, but I’d be more than happy using it below freezing, if not in the depths of winter, and the Q Shield hydrophobic down copes well with damp camps. The shell is tough 33 denier Nylon, and there is a smart diagonal baffle construction that keeps the down locked in place. All this is offered at a stupendously good price, making the Ratio 15 a very good budget option for anyone looking for a reliable three season bag that will extend in to the colder months if necessary. ■ www.mountainhardwear.com Rab Women’s Neutrino 400 £350 At first glance it’s a simple down bag with a hefty price tag, and easy to wonder what all the fuss is about. However, behind the scenes, Rab have put a phenomenal amount of research into raw materials and baffle design, and it shows: for comfort and warmth relative to weight, this bag beats all comers. Filled with 400g of superb, ethically sourced 800 fill power goose down, the lofting (fluffiness) is wonderful, giving the bag an almost inflatable feel. The down has a PFC-free hydrophobic treatment, developed in partnership with NikWax, to help maintain loft in damp conditions. This is good because the lightweight Quantum Pertex shell does not repel water as well as heavier fabrics. The bag has an adjustable neck baffle and internal zipped pocket, but not much else. The women’s version is shorter than the men’s and it just fitted me at 5’8”. The weight is 790g: brilliant for a three season bag. Comfort rated to 2.5°C, I happily found this to be realistic, with many comfortable nights’ camping in Scotland in spring conditions, down to about 3°C. ■ www.rab.uk.com www.oe-mag.com Highlander Voyager Super Lite £38 Generally you get what you pay for, but every now and then a product comes along that bucks the trend: the Voyager Super Lite is one of these. I’ll get the negatives out of the way first- it isn’t “Super Lite” with an advertised weight of 1.39kg; on my kitchen scales the packed weight is more like 1.6kg. That said, everything else about this bag is a nice surprise. There is a lot going on, including an adjustable neck baffle, a roll away midge net, a generous mummy hood and very accommodating dimensions (215cm long). On test I was a bit fed up about carrying all that bulky weight, (it’s also less compressible than more expensive options), but was very happy to sleep in it in cool spring conditions that were close to the comfort rating of 6°C. It’s the perfect bag for family camping trips and Duke of Edinburgh’s Award participants on a budget. ■ www.highlander-outdoor.com Vango Venom 200 £120 This bag and I got off to a bad start. It arrived packed into a tiny stuff sack, which for me speaks volumes about a manufacturer’s lack of regard for its raw materials; in this case 200g of 700 fill power goose down, (which should never be stored squashed). After a little TLC, the bag and I were able to move on, and I could appreciate its finer points. It’s very light at just 650g and is a great summer weight bag for overseas travel where space is at a premium. Features include a half zip- long enough for venting, but keeping weight down, and an internal pocket. The shell is a tough 30 denier nylon that should stand up to a fair bit of use. It is comfort rated to 10°C, and would be perfect for summer cycle touring and backpacking around the Med or further afield where nighttime temperatures are higher than the UK average. ■ www.vango.co.uk JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 55 Thermarest Women’s Mira £330 (reg) £350 (long) Continuing the anthropomorphic theme, the Mira is the mad scientist of the sleeping bag world. Filled with 380g of 700+ fill power down, positioned mainly on the top where it is needed most; underneath, loops of stretch fabric slot over your sleeping mat to hold it in place. This system works best with one of Thermarest’s Neo Air mats (thinner mats may not have sufficient insulation). Inside, reflective fabric helps keep heat in. With an optimistic comfort rating of -3°C and a weight of just 820g for the regular length (168cm), I was keen to put it to the test. At 5’8” I opted for the longer length (183cm/930g), which is also wider- less good for my skinny shoulders where cold spots were a drawback. I liked the elastic sleeping pad loops- I’m prone to rolling off in the night and they solve this problem perfectly. The reflective liner must work as the bag is surprisingly warm, and it may even offer additional benefit as a vapour barrier, but it makes a rustling sound and has a crispy texture. Overall verdict: a very clever and slightly idiosyncratic bag, suitable for three season use, but I’d be cautious about using it below freezing. ■ www.thermarest.com Montane Prism £175 As the first ever sleeping bag to be filled entirely with Primaloft Eco (made from recycled bottles), it is not only innovative, but also very hardy and environmentally friendly too. Primaloft Eco stays warm when wet, like other synthetic fills, but generally offers a higher degree of warmth and compressibility too. Realistically rated to a comfort level of 5°C and weighing around 1.2kg, it is marginally lighter than its competitors, but when I tested it I was surprised that it isn’t warmer. However, it’s the attention to detail that makes this bag stand out as Montane have evidently put a lot of thought in to the design, including a shaped footbox, internal zipped pocket and rubberized dotty pattern on the base to prevent sliding around. I particularly like the giant draft excluder for a neck baffle, ideal for exposed bivouacs, though the draw cord closure could do a little tweaking as it slips (I tied it off). Montane supply it with a cleverly shaped drybag, much more packable than the usual cylinder designs, and also a cotton storage bag, as like down, Primaloft Eco lasts longer if stored loosely. I do a lot of soggy backpacking, and at the end of a long day in the rain it is always a relief to snuggle into this bag and get warm. ■ www.montane.co.uk www.oe-mag.com Gear guide 2-3 Season Sleeping Bags... The North Face Gold Kazoo £200 The hilariously named Gold Kazoo is a lightweight, intelligent down bag at an entry level price. Features usually available only to premium bags are here, and the low weight (reg length is 183cm and 878g) makes it a potential choice for serious lightweight types too. The soft nylon shell is filled with 650 fill power down, which isn’t treated, but there is a DWR finish to repel moisture. The clever bits are the Climashield Prism inserts, located on the base at the head, shoulders, backside and feet; areas where the bag is compressed, and the synthetic fill maintains loft under pressure, giving a pleasant cushioned sleep. There is no neck baffle, but the mummy hood is a good shape and the bag still feels cosy. The fit is snug and contoured to minimize cold spots, with a shaped footbox. Rated to 2°C, this felt a little optimistic to me, but I was warm and snoozing at around 5°C. A good sleeping bag should feel like a friend on long trips and this a three season hug in sleeping bag form. ■ www.thenorthface.co.uk Snugpak Chrysalis 2 £80 A versatile synthetic bag, that works for large or small sleepers courtesy of the expander panel in the side that doubles as a zip baffle when not in use and the footbox that clips out of the way if you don’t need all 220cm of length. As a smaller sleeper, I wonder why I would want to carry all that extra around with me, (it weighs 1300g) but if the bag is to be shared between two very different sized people it’s a good idea. Filled with Snugpak’s compressible Softie insulation, it’s comfort rated to 2°C, which I found to be optimistic. Since 2005, sleeping bags have been tested to conform to European standards, but there is a big variation in personal comfort levels. For me it was sufficient for spring temperatures of 6°C and above. Other innovations include a reflective layer built in to the construction, and a handy LED light in the hood. ■ www.snugpak.com Mammut Nordic EMT £90 The Nordic EMT is a hard working synthetic bag at an affordable price. The shell is polyester and the lining has a pleasant cotton-like feel. There isn’t a neck baffle and the fit is fairly broad, so smaller sleepers may suffer from cold spots. I had to do a fair bit of adjusting to get the bulky but shallow mummy hood to stay on my head. It works best when the draw cord is cinched right in, when it is agreeably warm and cosy. Happily the comfort rating of 5°C seems pretty close to reality. It’s a robust three season bag, at a very good price, with a slight weight penalty at 1350g packed weight. ■ www.mammut.ch JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 57 Gear guide Trekking Trousers r... he LUCY WALLACE AND PHIL TURNER HAVE BEEN PUTTING WALKING TROUSERS TO THE TEST. Paramo Atca Trousers £60 Berghaus Allalinhorn Mountain Trouser £85 Simply one of the best pairs of summer weight trousers I’ve tried. With an athletic cut, the stretch polyamide/elastane mix material has been treated with a DWR finish to repel water, and is also extremely tough despite being lightweight and cool to wear. Mesh lined thigh vents help with temperature regulation on hot days. There are four zipped and mesh lined pockets, all usefully sized- the one on the thigh even takes a small guidebook. A possible tweak could be to move the zips on the hip pockets so they don’t interfere with a rucksack harness. The waistband has a micro-fibre lining, agreeable against the skin, and a low profile belt is included. Sadly only available in black- I could cheerfully own several pairs of these if they made other colours. ■ www.berghaus.com Keela Peru Trousers £43 These simple and quick drying cargo pants have a loose fit and four way stretch that makes them very comfortable. With lots of handy pockets, including an internal zipped pocket on the hip, they are perfect for travellers. The webbing belt supplied with them also has a hidden zipped pocket for stowing currency- but I found it uncomfortable under a rucksack belt, so swapped this for one of my own. Available in three leg lengths. ■ www.keela.co.uk 58 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 Ideal for exploring in hot climates, Parameta A Cotton+ is a tough 73% cotton mix that feels wonderfully cool next to the skin, aided by the loose fit of these lightweight trousers. They can be converted in to capri pants by rolling up the legs and fixing with button down tabs on the side. There are mesh lined hip pockets, and a hidden zipped pocket, as well as a supple fabric belt, that wasn’t stiff enough for me, so I swapped it for a webbing one of my own. Available in short and standard leg lengths, I found the regular too short. Paramo- take note: more trousers for tall women please. ■ www.paramo.co.uk Craghoppers Nosilife Pro Stretch Convertible Trousers £65 Nosilife clothing comes with permanent insect repellant, which is a major plus for anyone heading to warmer climes, especially if there is a threat of insect borne diseases. These zip-offs have a soft stretch, and an elastic waistband that is cleverly hidden for a smooth shape. Unfortunately I found the zips rubbed on my legs- not good for trekking. If your legs are slim, they are worth a look as there are lots of other great attributes including three zipped pockets and two hand pockets, removable sunglasses cloth, security clip for keys, and reinforcing tape at the hem. The Nosilife fabric is a particularly good idea, and this model is available in non-convertible format too. ■ www.craghoppers.com www.oe-mag.com These packable lightweight trousers are made from zoned areas of tough and water resistant stretch fabric at the knees and seat, and quick drying nylon canvas elsewhere. They are very comfortable and cool to wear, and their tiny pack size makes them ideal for backpacking expeditions. They have a relaxed but active fit, two hand pockets, and the legs can be gathered up using nifty draw cords behind the knees to create a pair of capri pants for hot days. I’ve had these to test for a while and despite their simplicity, (or perhaps because of it) they have become a staple for walking and climbing trips. ■ www.sherpaadventuregear.co.uk Sprayway Escape Pant £55 Sprayway’s Tecweave fabric is a lightweight and stretchy polyamide/ spandex mix that packs down small and dries quickly. These trousers are simple and comfortable to wear, and have three handy zipped pockets (one hidden) and a soft microfiber lining to the waistband. There are elastic draw cords at the leg hems, a possible point of wear in the fabric, which is something to watch out for. The sizing is generous, and comes in short and regular leg lengths, although the regular doesn’t seem overly long. ■ www.sprayway.com Silverpoint Nordic Outdoor Lillehammar £55 A no nonsense pair of traditional walking trousers from a brand that is inspired by the Swedish countryside. These are cut from a polycotton mix with a touch of elastane for a subtle stretch. The fabric is tough- they feel like they will last forever. The design is classic, and the fit is relaxed, with an elasticated waist and three zipped pockets. Available in two leg lengths, short or regular. ■ www.silverpointoutdoor.com www.oe-mag.com Gear guide Sherpa Adventure Gear Baato Hybrid £70 Lowe Alpine Java Convertible Pant £65 Made from tough nylon with a subtle stretch, these versatile quick drying trousers are easily converted to shorts. Zip-offs usually cause me problems as I have muscular quads, but these were a nice surprise, with a loose fit and careful design that prevents the zips from chafing. The attention to detail is superb, with a beautifully finished hem, articulated knees and large zipped, mesh lined pockets- two on the hips, one on the backside and one on the thigh. The waist is low profile, with a double poppered fastening and belt loops, (no belt supplied). I’m happy to say that the Java’s comfort, quality and wallet friendly price tag have converted me to convertibles. If you are not convinced, a non zip-off version is available too, as well as short, regular and long leg lengths. ■ www.lowealpine.com Mountain Hardwear Chockstone Pants £100 Perfect for walking in cooler climates, the Chockstone Pant is butter soft and very stretchy, with a slim and athletic leg shape. The polyamide/elastane mix soft shell fabric has a DWR finish to shed moisture and has good abrasion resistance too. The waistband is lined with soft wicking micro fibre and features a low profile integrated belt. All of the three pockets are zipped and secure. In summary, these are tough, comfortable, practical and warm: an excellent pair of trousers for all year UK use and treks in Alps or greater ranges where temperatures can drop. ■ www.mountainhardwear.com Didriksons Trickett Stretch Windproof Pants £110 Here’s the good news- these stretch, wind resistant trousers have a flattering clingy shape, and really good freedom of movement. The elasticated waist fits well and sits neatly under a harness or rucksack hip belt and they come in one leg length- super long, with unfinished hems for the user to adjust themselves. This could be annoying but I’m quite tall and being in a rush, just left them long. There are five pockets, the two thigh ones have zips and are big enough for a guidebook. It’s no wonder I thought they would make great rock climbing trousers. Unfortunately I scuffed the fabric badly on some rough French sandstone and they have never recovered from a bobbly pilling effect, looking like I’ve had them for eons. I still think they are nice for walking, but I’d avoid slithering over rocks while wearing them. ■ www.didriksons.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 59 Gear guide Trekking Trousers ... him Sherpa Adventure Gear Baato Convertible Pants £70 I have a love/hate relationship with zip-off trousers – if located badly the zip can rub, but that’s not the case with the Baato Convertible Pants. Designed to cater for travellers as well as walkers, they’re a sensible choice, reducing the need to pack separate shorts. The fabric is a combination of stretch nylon at the seat and knees, and a more durable canvas-esque nylon elsewhere, both with a good DWR coating to resist precipitation. The styling is attractive, which makes them acceptable in the pub as well as the hill. There’s a zipped rear pocket and two handwarmer pockets, a zipped fly and popper fastening. I’d prefer a way of cinching in the ankles to form a good seal around boots and prevent flapping. ■ www.sherpaadventuregear.com Didrikson Trickett Windproof Stretch Pants £110 A straight-forward yet accomplished pair of trousers from Swedish brand Didrikson. The polyamide/elastane blend fabric has four-way stretch for ease of movement, and as the name suggests, resists wind and drizzle. Unusually, the bottom of the legs are unfinished, allowing one waist size to accommodate a variety of leg lengths. You’ll need to find someone handy with a sewing machine unless you’re happy with turn-ups though. There’s a zipped pocket on the left thigh, two handwarmer and two rear pockets. The clever locking press-stud waist fastening works well (just don’t forget it isn’t a normal one and panic) and the zipped fly – with contrast zip pull – is protected to prevent draughts. ■ www.didriksons.com Sprayway Compass Pant £55 Simple, functional outdoor trousers – they’re stretchy, lightweight and resist wind and rain well. The cut is close but not skinny-jean, and a shockcord and toggle arrangement cinches in the ankles. The waistband is semi-elasticated, fleece-lined and fastens with a button and zip fly, and also conceals a small zipped valuables pocket. There are two zipped handwarmer pockets, a zipped thigh pocket and a Velcro rear pocket. One colour, one fabric (polyamide/spandex blend) and no frills – excellent value outdoor trousers. ■ www.sprayway.com 60 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 Houdini Twill Action Pants £120 Swedish brand Houdini are newcomers in the UK market, and if the Twill Action Pants are anything to go by, they are one to watch. These trousers embody the trend for crossover wear – garments suitable for everyday or ‘lifestyle’ wear as well as outdoor use. Available in three colours, the fabric is almost denim-like in appearance and comfort, though in reality a blend of 68% polyamide, 28% recycled polyester and 4% elastane, which gives a bit of stretch and moisture resistance. The fit is close but nonrestrictive, and the ankles can be further tightened for cycling or general anti-flap by a simple button arrangement. A perfect combination of form and outdoor function. ■ www.houdinisportswear.com Black Diamond Lift-off Pants £65 Despite the high percentage of cotton in the fabric (71% cotton, 29% nylon) the Lift-off Pants dry surprisingly quickly. Nonetheless, I’ve found them more suitable for trips to the crag and climbing wall than serious foul weather expeditions, with plenty of climbingspecific features integrated. The integral ladder-lock webbing belt is really clever, remaining clear of a harness and button fly and incorporating the quality metal hardware used throughout. The pocket arrangement is jeans-style, with an additional small slip pocket on the thigh useful for a mobile phone. The price is excellent for a such high quality trousers, but for serious outdoor use there are better options. ■ eu.blackdiamondequipment.com www.oe-mag.com Gear guide Berghaus VapourLight Fast Hiking Trousers £80 Mammut Runbold Pants £90 Made from a thin, lightweight softshell material, these comfortable trousers are ideal for summer use where a thicker material could cause overheating. They’re stretchy and non-restrictive, but don’t offer as much wind protection as others. However – they breathe very well, which is welcome in the warmer months. The fit is relaxed and the waistband non-elasticated, fastened with a press-stud and zip fly. The lower legs can be rolled up and secured with a neat tab-and-loop system similar to that found on the sleeves of some trekking shirts, to form three-quarterlength shorts. The fabric is durable but won’t cope with being repeatedly dragged across rock – similarly there’s no wear patch on the inner calf so these are really summer walking trousers, and for this they’re excellent. ■ www.mammut.ch Páramo Maui II Cargo Trousers £60 Very much a travel trouser rather than outdoor-specific, the Maui II has features such as a hidden zipped passport pocket inside the left cargo pocket – one of many pockets – and an included belt. The Nikwax Parameta A Cotton+ fabric is a blend of cotton with synthetic yarns which performs that classic Páramo trick of actively sucking moisture from the skin before it spreads out on the surface for quick evaporation. Two gusseted cargo pockets on the thigh accept an OS map and are secured with easy buttons (one contains the zipped inner pocket), there are two handwarmer pockets and two rear zipped pockets. The waistbelt has elasticated sections and the belt is practical. Good, comfortable, general purpose outdoor trousers. ■ www.paramo.co.uk www.oe-mag.com Whereas the rest of the Berghaus VapourLight range is filled with minimalist, stripped-down equipment aimed squarely at fast and light adventure racers, the Fast Hiking Trousers possess a full range of mountain features despite a low weight of around 360g. The knees and seat are a stretch fabric, with thicker fabric panels at the thigh and lower leg. Best of all, there’s a simple Velcro tab tightening system at the ankles which makes me happy. The waistband is lined with fleece and a semi-captive webbing belt, with low profile buckle to avoid a clash with hipbelts or harness. Two long mesh-backed double-ended zipped vents allow a welcome breeze in, and there are two handwarmer pockets plus a zipped thigh and rear pocket. ■ www.berghaus.com The North Face Speedlight Pant £85 These have the classic walking trouser style that tends to polarise opinion – a stretchy grey main fabric with black knee patches that instantly singles you out as a hillwalker! Looking beyond that they are very functional trousers, the cut is excellent and the attention to detail top-notch, with quality hardware and stitching all round. Even the supplied elesticated webbing belt is superb, with a low-profile buckle and TNF branding. The press-stud fastening is plastic, which is unusual, but feels secure and durable. All pockets – two handwarmer and single thigh – are zipped and mesh-lined to perform as vents when not in use. Lovely trousers, at a good price for this level of quality. ■ www.thenorthface.co.uk Keela Paraguay Zip-Off Trousers £45 Keela can be relied upon to produce highperforming kit that belies the low price, and the Paraguay Trousers are no different. The cut is baggy and casual and they look more like travel trousers than other close-fitting, articulated outdoor trousers in the review, but movement remains good. The leg zips are high enough to prevent clashing with the knee, and once unzipped the legs can be stowed in a little pocket and clipped to the belt. A nice touch. With a nylon and spandex blend the fabric stretches nicely and dries fast, as well as being lightweight and low-bulk for packing. A versatile option, but I’d prefer a less flappy cut, particularly at the lower leg. ■ www.keela.co.uk JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 61 Gear guide Trail Running Showcase DRIVING TO THE GYM TO RUN ON A TREADMILL IN A HOT AND SWEATY ROOM IS RUBBISH. RUNNING ALONG A FOREST TRAIL OR MOUNTAIN FOOTPATH IS NOT ONLY EASIER ON YOUR BODY, BUT THE SCENERY IS FAR BETTER AND THE SENSE OF FREEDOM AND ADVENTURE HARD TO BEAT. PHIL TURNER EXAMINES THE KIT THAT WILL GET YOU OUT THERE. Inov-8 Trailroc 245 £110 Your usual gym or pavement trainers probably won’t cope with the varying terrain encountered offroad, so it’s a good idea to invest in something designed specifically for hard-packed trails, perhaps a bit of peat bog and a scrambly summit ridge. The Trailroc 245 has a minimalist sole that enables you to feel the underfoot conditions and allows the foot and supporting structures to do their job efficiently, so there’s just a 6mm footbed with a rockplate to provide protection. The tread pattern features an array of lugs that are spaced enough to cope with mud, and three different rubber compounds – the toe is a high-wear area made from a more durable rubber, the midfoot from a slightly softer, longer-lasting rubber and the instep from sticky rubber for scrambling on rock. It’s an adaptive, flexible design that works well. In the outdoors the chance of plunging into a bog or stream (intentionally or otherwise) is very real, and a waterproof lining is just going to ensure that water stays inside the shoe. It makes more sense to use a mesh upper that allows the water to simply drain out, and the Trailroc does just that. The upper is almost entirely mesh, with a weave close enough to stop debris entering, but water just flows out and the shoe dries quickly. At 298g per shoe in size 11 they’re extremely lightweight too. n www.inov-8.com Silva Race Jet £65 It’s important to take the usual navigational precautions when trail running, so don’t leave the map and compass at home along with your walking boots. It’s even more important if progressing into the realms of competitive running – things like orienteering (see page 42) or adventure racing – where fast, accurate navigation is critical. There’s no time to stand around twisting the bezel and waiting for the needle to settle though, so most choose to use a thumb compass like the Race Jet, which comes at a price, but makes a normal hillwalking compass look antiquated. Designed to be strapped to the thumb of the hand holding the map it allows for fast orientation and a simple ‘go this way’. Specialist, but once you’ve tried it it’s hard to go back to a conventional compass. n silva.se SOLE Lightweight Sport Ankle Socks £9.50 F Lite Ultralight 70 GP £35 F Lite claim this to be the lightest baselayer in the world, and at 79g for my size L they’re probably right. The fabric is tubular knitted to avoid any side seams that might rub or ruin the shape – baselayer moisture transmission works best with total skin contact. And this is a figure-hugging baselayer yet it’s extremely comfortable. The sleeve seams are flat and unobtrusive and are off the shoulder to remain clear of rucksack straps. The conventional synthetic polypropylene/polyamide blend works well to regulate temperature, though the polka dot design inspired by American free-rider and extreme skier Glen Plake is quite unconventional! n www.f-lite.com 62 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY / AUGUST 2014 A bad sock can undo all the benefits of a good running shoe; no matter that you have found the perfect shoe if it’s ruined by a sock that bunches up, becomes sodden and causes blisters. SOLE socks are brilliant – they’re foot-specific (and marked L or R) to reflect the anatomical fit, which gently hugs the foot with no hint of excess fabric. There are no obvious seams either, and the fabric dries and breathes particularly well. I have the ankle length, but they’re available in ‘no-show’ or crew length too. The black colour makes a lot more sense for outdoor use too... n www.yoursole.com www.oe-mag.com Gear guide Mammut MTR 201 Micro Jacket £120 Vivobarefoot Trail Freak £85 When running, being able to feel the terrain through your feet is generally a good thing – being cut off from the ground underneath you doesn’t allow your body to work effectively, and some people take this to extremes by running barefoot. That’s probably not going to work for everyone, so companies like Vivobarefoot have produced shoes that offer a degree of protection while fitting like a second skin and allowing feet to perform naturally. The Trail Freak is totally flexible, easily bending in half, with a mesh upper that breathes and allows water to drain out. The thin sole is puncture resistant without offering too much cushioning to act as a barrier. Even with lugs to provide traction in mud, wet grass and loose ground, they still offer a barefoot feel. Transitioning to this kind of footwear takes time, but it’s a wonderful feeling. n www.vivobarefoot.com Arc’teryx Aerios 10 £70 Designed to hold a hydration bladder, some snacks and protective layers, the Aerios 10 is the perfect size for trail running. Inside there’s a divider with hanging strap to secure the hydration bladder, with a covered exit port that allows for a left or right hose routing. A simple ridged plastic back panel prevents the pack from collapsing in on itself with a dimpled mesh outer introducing some air between back and pack. The main compartment will hold a shell jacket plus some insulation and a packed lunch, and valuables can be carried in a separate zipped internal pocket. Externally the bungee cord system on the front is ideal for stashing wet waterproofs, and unusually there’s a simple elasticated and removable waistbelt to stop the pack bouncing around. n www.arcteryx.com www.oe-mag.com A windproof shell is often all that is required for trail running – runners tend to keep moving and therefore stay warm, so there’s no need for a thick waterproof that will probably also result in overheating. The MTR 201 is a compressible yet weather-resistant shell that packs down into the chest pocket, fitted with a simple elastic band to enable it to be worn around the waist when not in use. Despite the low weight of 100g, achieved by the use of gossamer-thin 10 denier fabric, there’s a full-length zip protected by an internal storm flap, an adjustable hem and ‘finger gaiters’, which unfold over the hand in bad weather to offer a bit of protection. The fabric is treated with a DWR coating to shrug off drizzle, and breathability is enhanced by underarm mesh vents. n www.mammut.ch Mountain King Trail Blaze Poles £79 Walking poles are a common sight in the hands of hillwalkers, but the Trail Blaze is aimed at trail runners who needs poles for stability on insecure ground rather than as crutches – the shafts are 11mm thick and really not designed to be heavily weighted. They’re essentially a beefed-up tent pole with a handle and tip. The four pole sections join like an avalanche probe, with a length of cord running internally to emerge through the top of the handle. All joins feel surprisingly solid with little play, and in the event of breakage or excessive wear it’s easy to replace just the problem section by untying one knot. The handle is soft foam with a mesh cover that compresses just enough to provide comfort without losing contact and feedback. The cord runs through a notch in a plastic cap on the top of the handle – pull the cord to seat the pole sections until a knot appears, this is then held captive by the notch and the excess cord secured under a Velcro strap just below the handle. It’s a simple system that works well, and weighing 250g a pair can easily be collapsed and strapped to a rucksack when not in use. n www.mountainking.co.uk Berghaus VapourLight Hyper Smock £100 The Berghaus VapourLight range is a collection of trail running equipment and apparel; the HyperSmock was developed for Berghaus athlete Philippe Gatta for his attempt at the Great Himalayan Trail. It looks and feels like a windproof shell – the fabric is 7 denier polyamide ripstop, which is translucent and feels pretty unsubstantial, coated with PU to provide waterproofing. It’s not the normal membrane laminate found in waterproof breathable hardshells and does rely on the integrity of the PU coating to maintain waterproofing. This type of fabric works by the fibres themselves transmitting moisture through the fabric from the inside rather than the microscopic pores of a membrane, but it’s a considerably lighter option. The seams are taped – as much to reinforce the stitching through the gossamer-thin fabric as to stop leaks – and allows it to qualify as ‘waterproof’ within the tough rules and kit regulations of adventure races. At 105g for my size L it’s hard to imagine a lighter waterproof shell. n www.berghaus.com JULY / AUGUST 2014 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST 63 READERS’ PHOTOS William Bridges @BridgesWill2 Dave Slack @Daveslack1973 Went up Bird Rock. Beaut. Taking a much needed breather! pic.twitter.com/evvgNKYmva pic.twitter.com/xHvsLlG7Xo Readers’ Photos PROOF THAT OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST READERS #GETOUTDOORS. DO YOU? Chris Woodcock @Chrisw00dcock coolcampkit @coolcampkit Sickeningly sweet hilltop selfie... Enjoying the elements and #scenery on Harris! pic.twitter.com/d2wJyUXrq4 pic.twitter.com/P4lmeaveqn WANT TO SEE YOUR OUTDOOR PHOTO ON THIS PAGE? Simply share your photo on our Facebook page: fb.com/OutdoorEnthusiastMagazine or tweet us: @OEMagazine 64 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY MARCH / AUGUST / APRIL 2014 2014 Eleanor Morris @EleRhi I #SupportTheWalk! #CumbrianChallenge #WalkingwiththeWounded Team comp, so excited to be involved! pic.twitter.com/3q58MdFTBZ www.oe-mag.com GUARANTEE YOUR COPY OF MOUNTAIN PRO. Mountain Pro is the UK’s leading digital magazine for outdoor professionals and aspiring outdoor professionals. The UK’s Leading Magazine for The oUTdoor ProfessionaL Featuring: WWW.MOUNTAINPROMAG.COM JULY 2014 VOL.2 ISSUE 2 Tried and Tested: Nick Parks Lakeland Passes Steve Birkinshaw ireland’s highest peaks Latest news and views Research Kit reviews Destination guides Skills & Training gear reviews: MOUNTAINEERING RUCKSACKS, WATER TREATMENT AND ROCK PROTECTION To regularly receive your copy of Mountain Pro in your email inbox, complete your details online at: www.mountainpromag.com www.mountainpromag.com OE CLASSIFIED OUT AND ABOUT SCOTLAND CLASSIFIED HIKING AND ADVENTURE L’Haras Guest House / Alderney Alderney, the most northern of the Channel Islands has uncrowded beaches, 50 miles of foothpaths with some spectacular views, unusual birds and flowers and you may WALKING EQUIPMENT even spot a blonde hedgehog. It has a quaint harbour and a fully-functional airport as well as a 9-hole scenic golf course. For historians, there are fortifications from Victorian times as well as the German occupation to be explored. SELF CATERING HOLIDAYS L’Haras Guest House is just minutes away from the beach and located between the harbour and town, nothing is OVERSEA ADVENTURE HOLIDAYS far on Alderney! Any guests aged 10 or over are very welcome to stay with us. Know your routes with the Wales Coast app CHANNEL ISLANDS ALDERNEY The Wales Coast app is the Channel Islands ideal tool for exploring and B & B from £30pppn. Situated between the harbour and town, only 5 minutes walk to the beach. getting the most out of the Wales Coast Path and Welsh coastline. It is full of extremely useful information, including walk and trail INSURANCE recommendations, handy area guides, weather reports and L’HARAS Guest House Newtown Road, Alderney, Channel Islands GY9 3XP Email: [email protected] Website: www.internet.alderney.gg/lharas Tel/Fax: 01481 823174 ROPE CLEATS 66 OUTDOOR ENTHUSIAST JULY/AUGUST 2014 www.oe-mag.com