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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #56043 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/56043)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Rock-climbing in the English Lake District,
-by Owen Glynne Jones
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Rock-climbing in the English Lake District
- Third Edition
-
-
-Author: Owen Glynne Jones
-
-
-
-Release Date: November 24, 2017 [eBook #56043]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROCK-CLIMBING IN THE ENGLISH LAKE
-DISTRICT***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Anita Hammond, Wayne Hammond, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images
-generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 56043-h.htm or 56043-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/56043/56043-h/56043-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/56043/56043-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/rockclimbingengl00joneiala
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- Text enclosed by equal signs is in bold face (=bold=).
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Owen Glynne Jones]
-
-
-ROCK-CLIMBING IN THE ENGLISH LAKE DISTRICT
-
-by
-
-OWEN GLYNNE JONES, B.Sc. (LOND.)
-
-Member of the Alpine Club
-
-With a Memoir and Portrait of the Author, Thirty-one Full-page
-Illustrations in Collotype, Ten Outline Plates of
-the Chief Routes, and Two Appendices by
-George and Ashley Abraham
-
-THIRD EDITION
-
-
-
-
-
-
-G. P. Abraham and Sons
-Keswick, Cumberland
-1911
-
-All rights reserved
-
-Price 21s. net]
-
-
-
-
-PUBLISHERS’ NOTE.
-
-
-The rapid exhaustion of the first edition of Mr. OWEN GLYNNE JONES’
-book on ‘Rock-climbing in the English Lake District,’ and further
-numerous enquiries for copies of this unique and invaluable work,
-induced us to make arrangements for the publication of another issue. A
-third edition has now become necessary.
-
-Since the first edition appeared in 1897, several important new climbs
-have been made, most of which have been written about by the author,
-and are here found just as they left his pen. Of some of the other
-climbs nothing had been written, so, in response to the request of
-several climbing friends, two appendices, bringing the book up to date,
-have been added. The memoir by Mr. W. M. Crook, which is accompanied by
-an excellent portrait of Mr. Jones, will, we are sure, be welcomed by
-all as a valuable addition to the work.
-
-We are glad to avail ourselves of this opportunity of acknowledging the
-kindness of several friends for much valuable advice and assistance
-given.
-
- G. P. ABRAHAM & SONS,
- KESWICK.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-I feel I owe a word of apology to the readers of this brief and
-inadequate memoir of a dead friend. At the request of Jones’ most
-intimate friends I have compiled it in the scanty leisure moments of
-a few weeks of a busy life, too few to do justice to my theme. I wish
-to return my heartiest thanks to those of his friends who have so
-quickly and generously aided me with the materials at their disposal,
-especially to Mr. F. W. Hill, Dr. W. E. Sumpner, the brothers Abraham,
-of Keswick; Mr. W. J. Williams, Mr. Harold Spender, and M. Spahr, of
-Evolena. I hope if any inaccuracies are detected by these or other
-friends, they will communicate with me. It has been difficult to
-avoid them, for all the written documents do not agree in facts and
-dates. I trust, however, that this brief record of great effort, great
-achievement, and great tragedy will be more acceptable than no record
-at all.
-
- W. M. CROOK.
-
- _National Liberal Club,
- Whitehall Place, London, S. W.
- Feb. 26th, 1900._
-
- Region separate, sacred, of mere, and of ghyll, and of mountain,
- Garrulous, petulant beck, sinister laughterless tarn;
- Haunt of the vagabond feet of my fancy for ever reverting,
- Haunt and home of my heart, Cumbrian valleys and fells;
- Yours of old was the beauty that rounded my hours with a nimbus,
- Touched my youth with bloom, tender and magical light;
- You were my earliest passion, and when shall my fealty falter?
- Ah, when Helvellyn is low! Ah, when Winander is dry!
-
- _William Watson._
-
-
-
-
-OWEN GLYNNE JONES.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-_EARLY LIFE AND FIRST CLIMBS_
-
-
-Owen Glynne Jones was born on November 2nd, 1867. A Welshman by
-blood, he was a Londoner by birth, for he first saw the light of day
-in Clarendon Street, Paddington. His father, Mr. David Jones, was a
-carpenter and builder, and the son commenced his education at a local
-school. Of his early life there is little to tell. He seems to have
-spent his holidays in Wales, and there to have developed, among what
-may without inaccuracy be called his native mountains, that passion for
-climbing which made him famous, and which led to his early and much
-lamented death.
-
-In 1881, when not yet fourteen years of age, Owen Jones was sent to the
-Central Foundation School in Cowper Street, City Road, of which Dr.
-Wormell was head master. Those who knew him there speak of him as ‘a
-bright, promising schoolboy.’
-
-He remained at Dr. Wormell’s for three years (1881-1884). He
-distinguished himself in science and won several prizes while at the
-school. On leaving he was awarded the Holl scholarship, and passed to
-the Technical College at Finsbury, under the City and Guilds of London
-Institute.
-
-Jones spent two years (1884-1886) at Finsbury. During that time he
-passed through the complete course of instruction in the Mechanical
-department there. He worked with conspicuous ability and success
-at mechanical engineering, mechanical drawing, mathematics, and
-chemistry, as well as in the mechanical laboratory and in the wood
-and iron workshops. When he left, his teachers spoke of him in the
-highest terms. ‘Mr. O. G. Jones,’ said Professor Perry, ‘was as able,
-as earnest, as promising as any other whom I can now remember.’ Mr.
-John Castell-Evans speaks of his ‘eager enthusiasm and scrupulous
-conscientiousness;’ and Professor Silvanus Thompson wrote of him:
-‘He is imbued with modern methods, ... and is possessed of a healthy
-enthusiasm for his work that is infectious.’ At the close of his course
-he passed with a Clothworkers’ Scholarship to the Central Institution
-in Exhibition Road, South Kensington, where he passed the next three
-years of his life.
-
-The three years (1886-1889) he spent in the Engineering Department,
-and at the end of his course he had attained the highest position in
-the class-list of any student of his year, and he received the diploma
-of Associate of the Institute. On the completion of his course he was
-appointed assistant in the Mathematical Department. During his life at
-South Kensington he made the same impression as heretofore on all with
-whom he came in contact. Intellectually alert, diligent, energetic,
-enthusiastic, he seemed bound to make some mark in the world.
-
-In the year following the completion of his course, and while he was an
-assistant at South Kensington, I first met him.
-
-It was during the Easter holidays of 1890. Having broken away from the
-party with whom I had been spending most of my holiday in Borrowdale,
-I made my way to Wastdale Head Inn. I picked up a chance acquaintance
-with two young fellows in the inn, and we agreed to go together to
-climb the Pillar Rock--with the aid of a ‘Prior’s Guide’ which I had in
-my pocket.
-
-When we commenced the ascent, which proved very easy--I believe we
-went up the easiest way--the dark, slim young fellow somehow naturally
-assumed the lead. Before we started he had discovered that I had
-been to Switzerland and had done some climbs there, so he was very
-modest about his own powers. A few seconds on the rocks dissipated all
-doubt. With great confidence and speed, climbing cleanly and safely,
-he soon showed he was no ordinary climber. I had been out with some
-very tolerable Swiss guides, but never before with a man to whom
-rock-climbing seemed so natural and easy. My curiosity was excited. He
-could not be one of the great climbers, for he had never been out of
-the British Islands, but he could climb.
-
-On the top we found a small, rusty tin box, in which were a number of
-visiting cards. One of these belonged to Mr. A. Evans, of Liverpool,
-and a subsequent visitor had written on it the date of his death in the
-central gully of Llewedd. One of us produced a card, on which the other
-two wrote their names. The dark young fellow signed his name ‘O. G.
-Jones.’ I wonder if that card is there still.
-
-That afternoon and the following day he plied me with questions about
-Switzerland. How did the climbing there compare with these rocks?
-Had I climbed the Matterhorn? Did I think he could do it?--absurd
-question--and so on. Restless, eagerly active, very strong,
-good-tempered, enthusiastic, he was a man one could not forget. We
-parted after a day’s acquaintance. I never dreamed I should see him
-again.
-
-His companion on that occasion was another South Kensington man, Dr.
-Sumpner, now of Birmingham. The next time we met was at Jones’s grave
-in Evolena. During our conversations at that first brief meeting I
-learned that Jones was at South Kensington; he told me he first learned
-serious climbing on Cader Idris; I marvelled at his wonderful grip
-of the rocks, his steady head, his extraordinary power of balancing
-himself on one foot in what seemed to me then almost impossible
-positions, and I felt that his enthusiasm would soon lead him to the
-Alps, if any opportunity offered. His heart was already there. Yet he
-was so ignorant of the ‘lingo’ of the climbing world that my use of the
-words ‘handholds’ and ‘footholds’ considerably amused him.
-
-The following Easter he was again among the Lake Mountains, having
-devoted the Whitsuntide and Christmas holidays of the preceding year
-to his favourite pursuit, the last mentioned period being spent in
-North Wales. I hurry over his climbing in the Lake District for the
-very sufficient reason that in this volume, so characteristic of its
-author, his work there is described by himself with all the accuracy
-of a trained scientist, and with all the enthusiasm of an ardent
-mountaineer. Descriptions of all these climbs were kept by him in
-numerous small notebooks, full of neat shorthand with dates, proper
-names, &c., written in, and with occasional pen and ink sketches of his
-routes up crags and gullies to illustrate the shorthand notes. Full of
-mournful interest are these touches of a vanished hand, these silent
-echoes of a voice that is still.
-
-It was, I believe, during this Easter of 1891 that he met Mr. Monro, to
-whose enthusiasm he was subsequently wont to attribute his first visit
-to the Alps, which took place in the autumn of that year. The result of
-that meeting and the wonderful amount of climbing in ‘the playground
-of Europe’ that Jones managed to cram into eight short years must be
-reserved for another chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-_CONQUERING THE ALPS_
-
-
-In the autumn of 1891 Owen Jones was an unsuccessful candidate for the
-Professorship of Physics at University College, Aberystwyth, and almost
-immediately afterwards he was the successful candidate for the post of
-Physics Master in the City of London School, which he was occupying at
-the time of his death. In the previous year, 1890, he had taken his
-B.Sc. degree in London University, coming out third in the list of
-First Class Honours in Experimental Physics. These facts are mentioned
-here now, somewhat out of their proper chronological order, because,
-with the exception of a few papers he contributed to magazines (the
-_Alpine Journal_, the _Climber’s Journal_, and _Cassell’s Magazine_)
-and sundry newspaper articles, they are the only facts that need be
-mentioned in his otherwise uneventful, though busy, life.
-
-Jones’ real life was lived among his beloved mountains. His devotion to
-them was unsurpassable, his zeal was consuming, his enthusiasm knew no
-bounds. In the summer holidays of 1891 he had his first introduction
-to the Alps. His most original work was undoubtedly done among the
-rocks of his native Wales and in the English Lake country, but he flung
-himself into Alpine work with all the ardour and energy of which his
-peculiarly ardent and energetic nature was capable. He spared neither
-time, money, nor comfort in his devotion to the noblest and most
-exacting of all sports--that of mountaineering.
-
-The following table--very imperfect, I fear--compiled by his own hand
-up to the close of 1897, and for 1898 and 1899, from letters kindly
-sent to me by his friends, will give some idea of his marvellous
-physical endurance and the extent of his knowledge of the Alps. His
-own portion of the list was found in his handwriting in his copy of
-Cunningham and Abney’s ‘Pioneers of the Alps’:--
-
- 1891 Dent des Bosses
- Grande Dent de Veisivi
- Pas de Chèvres
- Col de Seilon
- Col de Fénètre
- M. Capucin
- Tête de Cordon
- Tête d’Ariondet
- Grand Combin
- Grivola
-
- 1892 Thälihorn
- Rossbodenjoch
- Matterhorn
- [1]Mittaghorn and Egginerhorn
- Punta di Fontanella
- 2 cols to Prerayen
- Col d’Olen
- Combin de Corbassière
- Col de Boveire
- Fénètre de Saleinaz
- Col de Chardonnet
- Pic du Tacul
- M. Redessan
-
- 1893 Dent Blanche
- (This was in April, 36
- hours.) No summer
- season in Alps.
-
- 1894 Piz Languard
- Piz Morteratsch
- Zwei Schwestern
- Piz Bernina
- Croda da Lago
- Kleine Zinne
- Grosse Zinne
- M. Pelmo
- M. Cristallo
- Sorapis
- Cinque Torri (3 ways)
-
- 1895 Rothhorn from Zermatt
- Rothhorn from Zinal
- Traverse Zinal to Zermatt
- Riffelhorn from Glacier
- Dom from Randa
- Täschhorn and Dom (traversed from the Mischabeljoch to
- Randa--first time by this route--in one day)
- Monte Rosa
- Rimpfischhorn (from Adler Pass)
- Matterhorn (traverse)
- Weisshorn
- Obergabelhorn
- Grand Cornier
- Triftjoch
- Furggenjoch
- Lysjoch
- Süd-Lenzspitze (traverse)
- Nadelhorn
- Hohberghorn
- Steck-Nadelhorn (?)
-
- 1896 Little Dru
- Blaitière
- Col du Géant (twice)
- Charmoz (traverse)
- Aig. du Plan
- Aig. du Midi
- N. peak Périades (by the Arête du Capucin)
-
- 1897 Schreckhorn (in January)
- Finsteraarhorn
- Jungfrau
- Aletschorn (traverse)
- Beichgrat
- Bietschhorn
-
- 1897 Lötschenlücke
- Mönch
- Mönchjoch
- Eiger
- Aig. d’Argentière
- Aig. Moine (traverse)
- Aig. Tacul (traverse)
- Col du Midi
- Portiengrat } In one day
- Weissmies }
- Fletschhorn } In one day
- Laquinhorn }
-
- 1898 In winter: From Grindelwald to Rosenlaui by the
- Wetterhorn-Sattel, Finsteraarjoch, and Strahlegg
- Two Drus (attempted traverse)
- Big Dru
- Grèpon (traverse)
- Dent de Requin
- Aiguille du Chardonnet
- Aiguille du Midi
- Mont Maudit
- Mont Blanc (traverse)
- Aiguille du Géant
- Two Drus (traverse)
- Riffelhorn
- Wellenkuppe and Gabelhorn
- Lyskamm and Castor
- Alphubel, Rimpfischhorn, and Strahlhorn
- Allalinhorn
- Dent Blanche by South Arête
- Täschhorn by Teufelsgrat
- Dom, Täschhorn, and Kienhorn, descending by Teufelsgrat
-
- 1899 Riffelhorn } In his
- Pollux } first five days
- Breithorn (traversed from Schwarzthor) } at Zermatt
- Six chief points of Monte Rosa }
- Matterhorn
- Cols d’Hérens and Bertol
- Petite Dent de Veisivi } In 12 hours
- Grande ” } from Kurhaus
- Dent Perroc } Hotel and back
- Aig. de la Za (by face)
- Aig. Rouges (traverse of all peaks)
- Mt. Blanc de Seilon in one day
- Dent des Bouquetins
- Mt. Collon
- Pigne d’Arolla
- Dent Blanche (West Arête attempt)
-
-I cannot pretend that this list is perfect, and the brief notes I
-append are intended rather to give in a small space some of the
-points of human interest in the above bald list of names than for his
-mountaineering friends, to whom anything that could be printed here
-could convey little or nothing that was new.
-
-It is a coincidence that he commenced his acquaintance with the Alps
-in the very valleys--Ferpècle and Arolla--in which he spent the last
-days of his life, and down which his friends mournfully escorted his
-body eight years later. It was on one of the Dents de Veisivi (the
-Petite Dent) that, in 1898, Professor Hopkinson, one of Jones’ numerous
-climbing friends, met his death with his two daughters and his son.
-As we walked down the Arolla valley the day before he fell from the
-Dent Blanche, Owen Jones was chatting, with a wonderful freshness of
-recollection of detail, of his climb up the Grand Combin during his
-first season in the Alps, and I believe the guide who led him up then
-was one of the search party from Evolena who found his body on the
-rocks of the Dent Blanche.
-
-The earlier climbs of 1892 were described by him in a paper entitled
-‘The Dom Grat and the Fletschhorn Ridge,’ which appeared in the _Alpine
-Journal_ in 1898. A brief quotation from his own account will give some
-idea of the easy vivacity of his style.
-
-Speaking of the Saas peaks which ‘were designed in pairs,’ he writes:--
-
-‘It is, perhaps, to our credit that we took an easy pair first--the
-Mittaghorn and the Egginer--but our stay at Saas that year was to be
-short, and we could not afford to fail at higher work. A couple of
-Saas loafers undertook to guide us, but proved to be lamentably weak.
-They shed tears and ice-axes, and required much help from us dismayed
-amateurs. Then we left the district, and before my next visit my
-comrades were scattered over the globe, beyond the seductive influence
-of axe and rope.’
-
-How characteristic of poor Jones the whole of that passage is! The
-unconcealed evidence of his own great physical strength, the playful
-sense of humour--his friends will remember how he used to explain his
-own initials, O.G., as standing for the ‘Only Genuine Jones’--in the
-words ‘they shed tears and ice-axes,’ and the touch of pathos, in the
-light of after events, of the phrase ‘beyond the seductive influence of
-axe and rope.’
-
-The omission of the names of the Mittaghorn and Egginerhorn from
-Jones’s own list in 1892 shows that even his own record cannot be
-regarded as complete, a thing not to be wondered at considering the
-enormous amount of work he did.
-
-It will be noticed that in this year, as in the year before and in
-1894, Jones has entered the names of peaks and passes that in the
-succeeding years he would have considered quite unworthy of serious
-notice.
-
-But next year he ventured on a feat that, so far as I know, was not
-only extraordinary for one with comparatively so little experience
-of the higher Alps, magnificent climber though he was, but it has
-remained, I believe, unique in the annals of the great mountain on
-which it was performed. At Easter, 1893, Jones climbed the Dent
-Blanche, the mountain with which his name will be for ever associated
-in the climbing world. The ascent was made on the 25th and 26th April,
-and the expedition took thirty-six hours, a wonderful feat of strength
-and endurance. M. Adrien Spahr, the landlord of the Hotel de la Dent
-Blanche at Evolena, and of the new Kurhaus at Arolla (from which Jones
-started the day before his last, fatal climb), has kindly favoured me
-with the following brief note in reference to that expedition:--
-
- ‘C’est bien le 25 Avril, 1893, que Monsieur Jones a fait
- l’ascension de la Dent Blanche avec les guides Pierre Gaspoz et
- Antoine Bovier père d’Evolène. Je suis redescendu moi-même avec lui
- depuis Evolène à Sion.’
-
-In an interview which appeared in the press in 1894 Jones said of this
-climb, one of the most difficult things he ever did:--‘The longest
-day I ever had afoot was at Easter, ’93, doing the Dent Blanche. We
-took two guides and a porter, and had great difficulty in getting
-them to attempt the last two hundred feet. We were out in the open
-for thirty-six hours, with very short rests, no sleep, and excessive
-labour, but we revelled in every minute of it. The mountain was in a
-dangerous condition, and the last five hours on the way home we spent
-in wading, waist-deep, through soft snow. It was rather painful, of
-course, but there was a certain pleasure even in our pain, for it
-helped to make philosophers of us. We agreed to think of other things
-in the midst of our sufferings, and we succeeded creditably well. I
-believe now that I could stand almost anything in the way of pain or
-exposure.’
-
-In 1894 he commenced in the Engadine and then went on to the Dolomites,
-where his great skill as a cragsman and his familiarity with all
-sorts of rock-work made him much more at home than he yet was among
-the snow-peaks, as his list shows. On rocks I think it is not using
-the exaggerated language of friendship to say that he probably had
-no superior among his countrymen at the time of his death, and
-comparatively few equals. Among the great snow-peaks he had not
-attained so high a level. Had he lived he would, I believe, have ranked
-with the greatest, for he had not done all he was capable of; and when
-he met his death he was still in his prime, and he was a man of great
-courage, immense resourcefulness, and phenomenal physical endurance.
-
-In 1895 he devoted himself largely to the reduction of the great peaks
-in the Zermatt district, some of which he already knew. In that year
-also he returned to the Dom Grat and the Fletschhorn Ridge, whose
-acquaintance he had made in 1892. The following passage from the
-_Alpine Journal_ derives an added interest from the fact that Elias
-Furrer was his guide then, as he was his guide on the last, fatal
-climb:--
-
-‘In August, 1895, Elias Furrer took me from the Täsch Alp to the
-Mischabeljoch, and thence over the Täschhorn and Dom to Randa, a course
-of seventeen and a half hours, including halts. Shortly afterwards
-Mr. W. E. Davidson followed our route from the Mischabeljoch. During
-the same week Furrer showed me a third pair of the Saas peaks. We
-bivouacked on the Eggfluh rocks one bitterly cold night, and next day
-traversed the Südlenspitze and Nadelhorn. The usual _grande course_
-is to include the Ulrichshorn, and descend to Saas again; but Furrer
-had business and I fresh raiment at Zermatt, and we hastened over the
-Stecknadelhorn (or was it the Hohberghorn?), and thence by the Hohberg
-Pass and Festi glacier down to Randa in fourteen hours from the start.’
-
-His energy in climbing this year was remarkable, I had almost said
-stupendous. In addition to the long climbs referred to in the
-above extract, it will be seen from the list given above that he
-twice ascended the Zinal Rothhorn, traversed the Obergabelhorn and
-Matterhorn, and did two important climbs without guides. The ascent
-of the Rothhorn from Zinal was the first that Mr. Hill and he made
-together in Switzerland. The traverse of the Rothhorn and the ascent of
-the Weisshorn he did without guides, in company with the Hopkinsons,
-who perished in 1898 on the Petite Dent de Veisivi. Mr. W. J. Williams,
-who climbed much with Jones in the Alps, has kindly placed in my hands
-a very characteristic post-card of Jones’s, giving, in his own brief,
-vivacious way, a clearer idea of his boundless enthusiasm and energy
-in his favourite sport than anything that anyone else could write.
-It is dated ‘Bellevue, Zermatt, Monday, Sept. 2, 1895,’ and reads as
-follows:--‘The Hopkinsons and I traversed the Rothhorn without guides
-in grand style. Reached the summit from the Mountet in 4¼ hours,
-including ¾ hour halt. Had a shock of earthquake on the top. Next day
-we went up to the Weisshorn, bivouac in open air, and the day after
-managed the Weisshorn. It was delightful. Then they went off to their
-people at the Bel Alp, and I stayed on at Zermatt ever since. The
-weather was bad at the end of the week (Weisshorn on Friday), but on
-Monday I crossed the Furggenjoch with Elias Furrer, whom I took on for
-14 days at 20 francs, and Tuesday traversed the Matterhorn; Wednesday,
-the Monte Rosa hut; Thursday, Monte Rosa from the Lysjoch, a lengthy
-expedition, but magnificent; I carried my camera the whole time;
-Friday, the Fluh Alp; Saturday, the traverse of Rimpfischhorn from the
-Adler pass, dangerous by falling stones, but very jolly; Sunday, I
-rested and photographed down here. To-day I go to the Täsch Alp, and
-to-morrow shall attempt the traverse of Täschhorn and Dom in one day.
-If the weather still holds I shall then traverse the Dent Blanche,
-which is now in fine condition, like ourselves. Love to all.--Owen.’
-
-Lived there ever a keener mountaineer? On the day before he was killed,
-as we were walking down the Arolla Valley together, I expressed
-surprise at the vast amount of eager work he was crushing into every
-week. He replied, ‘You see there are only a few years in which I can do
-this sort of thing, and I want to get as much into them as possible.’
-Alas! Owen Jones had not twenty-four hours more; the years were ended.
-
-The season of 1896 was a terribly bad one and Jones suffered with
-less energetic and less daring mortals. In the _Alpine Journal_ he
-laments that he only did six peaks, but he crossed the Col du Géant
-twice, traversed the Aiguille de Charmoz, and did the North peak of
-the Périades by the Arête du Capucin. And the disappointments of
-that summer season had the effect of sending him to the Alps in the
-following winter--his first winter visit. He deserted his favourite
-Christmas hunting grounds, Wastdale Head Inn and Pen-y-gwrwd, for the
-Bear Hotel at Grindelwald. It so happened that I was there when he
-arrived. On the last day of 1896 I had made an unsuccessful attempt on
-the Schreckhorn after being out fourteen and a half hours, and after
-an accident to the leading guide, which confined him to bed for three
-weeks. I returned to Grindelwald and thence to England. Jones, who had
-just come out, determined to climb the Sehreckhorn. The first attempt
-failed, as the snow was in very bad condition, and he only got as far
-as the hut, where he spent a far from comfortable night. A few days
-later, however, he made a second attempt with successful results.
-Both in print and in manuscript he has left an account of the two
-expeditions. I quote a short passage--it has not too close a relation
-to the climbs, but it illustrates the playful humour which made Jones
-so charming and vivacious a companion, alike in an alpine hut or in the
-smoke room of ‘P.Y.G.’
-
-‘I approach for a moment with some delicacy the threadbare topic of
-the insect population of alpine huts, the fauna of the alpine bed. In
-summertime the traveller must not assume that the straw on which he
-lies is more dead than alive. Carelessness in this respect may cost him
-his peak next day; he should bring Keating and use it liberally. But
-in winter he is almost safe and unmolested. Some say that the fleas
-go down to the valley with the last autumn party, and come up in the
-early summer with the first tourists. Others think that they hibernate
-in the warmest corners of the hut and make it a rule to emerge only
-when it is well worth while. An occasional winter tourist is probably
-too tough, his attractions too few. The solution of the problem I must
-leave to others. It will probably be offered by some conscientious
-German biologist, in an exhaustive illustrated monograph, published in
-the Mittheilungen.’
-
-The autumn holidays of this year were again very busy ones. Jones spent
-them in the Alps, and, as his list shows, his climbs included the
-traverse of the Aletschhorn, Aiguille du Moine, and Pic du Tacul. He
-did the Portiengrat and Weissmies in one day, and the Fletschhorn and
-Laquinhorn in another. Young Emil Imseng was his guide, and he found
-Jones rather too hungry for peaks to be the easiest sort of patron to
-travel with. When they had done the Portiengrat he had had enough for
-one day, so he suggested that Jones should rest. But he did not know
-his ‘Herr;’ the Weissmies was taken that day likewise.
-
-In 1898 Jones again paid a winter visit to the Alps. Grindelwald was
-a second time his centre. He crossed from there to Rosenlaui by the
-Wetterhorn-Sattel, and crossed the Finsteraarjoch and the Strahlegg.
-
-In the Summer of 1898 he went first to Chamounix, and afterwards
-to Zermatt, and got through a portentous amount of work. He began
-by attempting the traverse of the two Drus, but failed owing to
-bad weather. However, he climbed the Grand Dru, and then in rapid
-succession the Grépon, Dent du Requin, Aiguille du Chardonnet, Aiguille
-du Midi, Mont Maudit, traversed Mont Blanc, climbed the Aiguille du
-Géant, and finished up in that district by accomplishing his formerly
-thwarted purpose, and traversing both the Grand and the Petit Dru.
-
-Then he came on to Zermatt. He climbed the Riffelhorn again (by
-the Matterhorn Couloir), did the two peaks of the Lyskamm (in
-conversation with me the last time I met him he seemed to think this
-the most difficult thing he had ever done) and Castor, Strahlhorn and
-Rimpfischhorn, Wellen Kuppe and Gabelhorn, Allalinhorn and Alphubel,
-Dent Blanche (by the south arête), the Täschhorn by the Teufelsgrat,
-and the traverse of the Dom, Täschhorn and Kienhorn.
-
-I was standing outside the Monte Rosa Hotel, in the main street of
-Zermatt, one bright sunny day, that summer, when early in the afternoon
-Jones, with his two guides, came in from one of these climbs. He had
-been frequently doing two peaks in one day (I believe he had once done
-three). All the party showed signs of wear and tear, but Jones was the
-freshest of the three. His face and hands were as brown as berries,
-covered with dust and sweat; his clothes were literally in rags, torn
-to pieces on the rocks. Yet in a few minutes he had washed, changed
-into the garb of civilization, and reappeared as fresh in body and as
-vigorous and vivacious intellectually as if he had undergone no fatigue
-at all. Twenty hours’ physical work did not appear to take as much out
-of him as five hours does out of humbler mortals.
-
-It was just about this time that his friends the Hopkinsons were killed
-in the Arolla Valley. Jones was a good deal upset by the news, and
-knocked off climbing for a couple of days, a wonderful thing for him;
-but then he resumed as busily as ever. Of the climbing skill both of
-Dr. Hopkinson and of his young son, who was killed with him, he spoke
-in the highest terms. He had frequently climbed with both.
-
-I have said little of Jones’s British climbs, for the simple reason
-that the fullest and best record of his work in Lakeland is contained
-in the book to which this brief memoir is prefixed, and his work in
-Wales (which he also intended to describe in a volume) is not so easily
-accessible or so fully recorded in any published documents as is his
-work in the Alps. Apparently there does not exist among his papers any
-list of his Welsh climbs, though he kept voluminous shorthand notes of
-almost everything he did in the climbing world; but it is not possible,
-in the short space and time at my disposal, to attempt to give from
-them any complete picture of the work he did in Wales. The Messrs.
-Abraham, however, have kindly placed in my hands the following brief
-notes of some of the most remarkable experiences they have had in
-company with Jones, both in Wales and in the Lake District:
-
-‘Two climbs with Mr. Jones are most strongly impressed on our memories,
-and these two would probably rank as the two finest rock climbs made in
-our district.
-
-‘These are Scawfell Pinnacle from the second pitch in Deep Ghyll in
-1896, and the conquest of the well-known Walker’s Gully on the Pillar
-Rock in January, 1899.
-
-‘Both of these were generally considered impossible, and it is probably
-no exaggeration to say that no leader excepting Mr. Jones would have
-had confidence to advance beyond the ledge where the last _arête_
-commenced on the Scawfell Pinnacle climb.
-
-‘The same thing might be still more emphatically said of the last
-pitch in Walker’s Gully, and to those who know the place it is almost
-incredible that the climb could even be commenced under such conditions
-as prevailed during the first ascent.
-
-‘We visited North Wales with Mr. Jones in 1897, and explored the climbs
-in the Cader Idris district. The finest climb in this district is the
-Great Gully above Llyn-y-Cae on Mynydd Pencoed, and Mr. Jones was the
-first explorer and climber of this and most of the Cader Idris climbs.
-Some time was also spent at Penygwryd during this visit, but unsuitable
-weather prevented any climbs of importance being done.
-
-‘Shortly after Easter, 1899, Mr. Jones paid his next visit to North
-Wales, and on this occasion much new and first-class climbing was done
-from Ogwen Cottage as centre.
-
-‘The second ascent of Twll Du was made by a party led by Mr. Jones, and
-shortly afterwards the two great gullies to the right of Twll Du were
-first ascended under Mr. Jones’ leadership. Amongst several minor first
-ascents the gully in the Eastern Buttress of Glyder Fach and the first
-direct ascent of the Northern Buttress on Tryfaen from Cwm-y-Tryfaen
-are most worthy of note.
-
-‘The following Whitsuntide again saw Mr. Jones at Ogwen Cottage,
-but the weather conditions were such as to prevent any very notable
-climbing being recorded.
-
-‘Of course it is impossible to give in the space at my disposal any
-idea of the large amount of climbing done in these various districts by
-Mr. Jones.
-
-‘To one with his abnormal physical powers, and true love and enthusiasm
-for the mountains the most was generally made of every opportunity to
-climb.
-
-‘He was never so happy as when in a really ‘tight’ place, and to
-many climbers the spirit and energy shown by him under most trying
-circumstances will act as an incentive to worthy imitation.
-
-‘As a climber he was unique, and many years must elapse ere another
-can hope to fill his place worthily; but, as a friend under all
-circumstances, he was always to be depended upon, for the weakest and
-heaviest members in every party were generally his special care, and
-many can never forget his true unselfishness and the kindly way in
-which personal blunders were criticised.
-
-‘Whether the party was struggling up a waterfall or resting shivering
-and wet under a huge chock-stone, or clinging desperately to a
-wind-swept ridge or icy couloir, everyone felt happy with Jones as
-their comforter and leader.
-
-‘The musical gatherings in the evenings seem now to lack one voice,
-and nought but sadness can be left for many of those who remember
-companionships which can never be replaced.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-_THE LAST SEASON IN THE ALPS_
-
-
-I come now to the last season in the Alps, the season of 1899. The
-first part of his holiday was spent at Zermatt, and then he and Hill
-met by arrangement at the Kurhaus at Arolla. They soon got to work,
-beginning with the two Dents de Veisivi (the scene of the accident to
-the Hopkinsons the previous year) and the Dent Perroc, in twelve hours
-from the Kurhaus and back. Then followed the Aiguille de la Za by the
-face, a traverse of all the peaks of the Aiguilles Rouges, Mont Blanc
-de Seilon and the Pigne d’Arolla in one day, the Dent des Bouquetins,
-and the traverse of Mont Collon. A slight accident to one of the party
-of which I was a member, necessitated an unexpected descent on the
-evening of August 26th to Arolla, in the hope of finding a doctor.
-There was none there, but we found many friends and acquaintances,
-among them being Owen Jones. On the morning of Sunday 27th, our party
-left for Evolena just after breakfast, as we heard there was a German
-doctor there, and we wanted our wounded member attended to without
-delay. Just as we were starting we found Jones and Hill leaving also,
-intending to traverse the Dent Blanche, climbing it by the west arête,
-which had only been done twice before, and we all hoped shortly to meet
-again in Zermatt.
-
-It was a bright sunny morning, hot and dusty. For a good part of the
-way from Arolla to Haudères I chatted to Jones. We did not go very
-fast on account of the damaged member of our party, about whom Jones
-was very solicitous. He himself seemed very fit, and was full of life
-and enthusiasm for his favourite passion. He chatted freely of all
-his climbs, of our first meeting nine years before, of all that had
-happened since, of frostbite on the Dom, and the remedy--sticking his
-fingers into boiling glue--worse than the disease. His traverse of the
-ice arête between the two peaks of the Lyskamm and his Easter ascent of
-the Dent Blanche seemed to me to have made the deepest impression on
-him of all his achievements in the mountains. He was rather inclined
-to underrate his wonderful rock-work in North Wales and in the Lake
-District, a department in which, in my opinion, he was really greatest,
-though his feats of endurance in the Alps were something off the
-common. He told me that his ambitions inclined towards a tour in the
-Himalayas, if circumstances allowed of his realising that dream.
-
-At Haudères we parted company. Hill and Jones, with their guides, who
-met them at Haudères, turned up to Ferpècle; we went on to Evolena. If
-my friend’s health permitted, I had arranged to see Jones in Zermatt on
-Tuesday afternoon. Difficult as was the expedition he was undertaking,
-the awful reality of the morrow never crossed my mind even as a
-possibility. A stronger or more well-equipped party I had never seen
-start on an expedition. It was about 12-30 when we all said good-bye.
-
-At Evolena the doctor ordered our invalid a day or two of complete
-rest. So on Monday morning the third member of our party, with his
-guide, started for the Col de la Meina to return to his wife, whom he
-had left in the Val des Bagnes, from which we had come. For the sake
-of the walk I accompanied them to the top of the Col. About 9-15, just
-before we lost sight of the west arête of the Dent Blanche, I searched
-the arête with my field glasses to see if any trace of Jones and
-Hill’s party could be detected. None of us could see anything, so we
-concluded, as the mountain was in very good condition, that they had
-probably already got to the top, and were then descending by the south
-arête. But they were still on the arête, though we failed to see them
-on the dark rocks. Had it been three-quarters of an hour later we might
-actually have been witnesses of the accident.
-
-On the top of the Col de la Meina we were caught by a storm of mist and
-rain, blowing up from the west. I bade adieu to my friends and hastened
-back to Evolena. That was the mist which caught Mr. Hill on the
-gendarme in his descent after the accident and detained him 22 hours
-alone on the great mountain.
-
-But of the accident no one dreamed. No premonition, no presentiment,
-troubled our thoughts. Monday and Tuesday passed quietly and
-uneventfully for us.
-
-On Wednesday morning my friend got permission from his doctor to walk
-up to Arolla for lunch. We gladly availed ourselves of the new freedom.
-
-At Arolla we found many of Jones’s friends hoping to meet him shortly
-in the Zermatt Valley. On our way back to Evolena we passed the body
-of the Tiroler guide, Reinstadler, of Sulden, which was being carried
-down the valley. He had been killed on Monday, August 28th--that black
-and fatal day in the Evolena Valley--by falling into a crevasse on the
-Pigne d’Arolla.
-
-As we re-entered the garden of our hotel, M. Spahr met us looking very
-grave. ‘Had we heard of the great accident on the Dent Blanche?’ For
-the first time the thought of danger to Jones and Hill crossed my mind.
-I quickly asked him for details, telling him why I was apprehensive.
-
-He had had a telegram from Dr. Seiler from Zermatt, which he showed
-me. It was in French and ran something like this: ‘A tourist and
-three guides have fallen from the Dent Blanche. A caravan of guides
-is starting from Zermatt to look for the bodies, which will reach
-Haudères about six o’clock to-morrow evening. Have four coffins ready
-at Haudères. I am coming round myself.--SEILER.’
-
-Four bodies! This could not be Jones and Hill’s party, there would
-be five or three, for they had intended to make the ascent on two
-ropes, three and two respectively on each. If all five had been roped
-together, one could not have been saved. My mind grew easier. So we
-reason when we do not know.
-
-But I could not avoid thinking of the awful accident, and as I thought
-my fears returned. No other party had left the Evolena Valley for the
-Dent Blanche that week. The bodies had fallen on the Evolena side. It
-was improbable they had climbed from the Zermatt side. Could it be that
-the fifth body had not been seen? One climber and three guides was a
-most unusual party? I grew uneasy again, and finally telegraphed to Dr.
-Seiler: ‘Have Messrs. Jones and Hill arrived?’
-
-While we were waiting for dinner and a reply, a voice hailed me by name
-out of the gathering gloom. It was that of Mr. Harold Spender, who had
-just driven up the valley with his sister and a younger brother, Mr.
-Hugh Spender. We exchanged greetings and discussed the accident. I told
-them what I feared.
-
-We were sitting in the balcony outside the hotel in the summer darkness
-when a villager put a yellow telegraph envelope in my hand. I hastily
-tore it open, and this is what I read: ‘M. Hill arrived safely this
-morning, but Jones and three guides fell an hour and a half from the
-top on Monday morning.--SEILER.’
-
-Owen Glynne Jones was dead. My mind almost reeled at the fact.
-Intellectually I knew it must be so, but I was utterly unable to
-realise it. I could almost hear the sound of his voice and the rattle
-of the nails of his dusty boots on the stones that last Sunday morning.
-But his voice was stilled for ever.
-
-And Hill! He had escaped, but how? Where had he been since Monday
-morning? Out on the mountain alone, without guides, or food, or drink.
-The thing was incredible, impossible. But the impossible and the
-incredible was true.
-
-At eleven o’clock fifteen guides and Mr. Harold Spender started as a
-search party. My injured friend and myself went with them as far as we
-could. The little village was already in darkness, swathed in sorrow.
-For the telegram that brought me news of Jones’ death announced the
-death of a village guide too.
-
-In the chapel only lights burned. It was the vigil round the body of
-Reinstadler. Silently and sadly we tramped up the valley along the
-carriage road to Haudères. Then in single file, like an army on a night
-march, we marched up the steep and narrow path to Ferpècle. Far below
-us, on our right, the torrent roared. We picked precarious steps by the
-light of our lanterns and the aid of our axes. We talked little and in
-muffled tones.
-
-We reached Ferpècle about 1.30 a.m. on Thursday. The hamlet was asleep.
-The guides broke eight huge poles out of the fences of the fields and
-from the outbuildings. Grim duty! The poles were to make four rude
-biers on which to carry the bodies down.
-
-Between 3 and 4 a.m. we gained the Bricolla Alp, where Jones and
-Hill had slept the night before the fatal climb. The kindly shepherd
-provided us with milk and a fire--it was now very cold--and we produced
-provisions from our rücksacks and had a much-needed meal. It was a
-curious sight--the little stone hut, a big wood fire blazing in a hole
-in the floor, pails of milk all round the walls on shelves, a circle
-of rough weather-beaten men, their faces lighted by the flickering
-flames and by the uncertain light of one or two of our lanterns.
-Rembrandtesque--and profoundly sad.
-
-A little after four we went out. The grey dawn was just breaking, but
-a cold, thick, clammy white mist had swept down on the alp and chilled
-us to the bone. At the top of the moraine my friend and I had to turn
-back. We should only have been a hindrance had we gone on, as both of
-us were damaged. Spender and the guides went forward. Let Mr. Spender
-describe the rest.
-
-‘At four the column resumed its way. Rain had begun to fall and a dense
-mist was closing down upon us. But it was soon light enough to put out
-our lanterns, and courage came with the dawn. We rounded the alp, and
-then began to climb the long, dreary moraines which lead up to the
-glacier. The guides went at a terrific pace. But it was good to be
-taken into this noble fraternity--to be accepted as a comrade and not
-as a “climber”--to be honoured by a share in the generous quest.
-
-‘But the pace soon slackened. We halted on the edge of the glacier,
-roped in fours, and began to search gingerly for a way through the
-terrific ice-fall of the glacier. We were mounting by the old approach
-to the Dent Blanche, up the ice-fall, now long since abandoned. The
-glacier was, of course, quite changed since any of these guides had
-last visited it. The ice was split and rent into every conceivable
-shape. We were surrounded with leaning towers of ice, threatening at
-any moment to fall on us and crush us.
-
-‘A great pile of seracs on the Northern ice-fall, across the ridge,
-fell with a mighty crash. Away to the right we could hear the thunder
-of avalanches. But never for a moment did the guides hesitate. Steadily
-and unflinchingly they threaded their way between the menacing seracs.
-Crossing broken fragments of ice, balancing between profound crevasses,
-not thwarted but ever searching for a way. At last we suddenly struck
-upon the tracks of Jones’ party away to the North side of the glacier
-close to the rocks. There we scrambled up, half by the rocks and half
-by the ice, and then at last, after many hours, found ourselves on the
-great plateau beneath the long snow couloir running down from the West
-Ridge. There, if anywhere, they were likely to be. And there, high up
-among the rocks, we could just see, with the aid of a good telescope,
-some dark objects which were not rocks.
-
-‘“There are our friends,” said the guides.
-
-‘Yes, there was no doubt of it. It was now ten o’clock and the sky had
-cleared. A party was formed, and mounted the rocks to fetch the bodies.
-As they climbed, suddenly another army of men appeared below us, above
-the ice-fall, advancing swiftly. They were the party of the Zermatt
-Guides. They came on unroped, climbing fast. It was a magnificent sight
-to see this troop of giants in their own element, a troop of equals,
-masters of peril. They halted below the rocks and sent up another small
-band to join the Evolena Guides. There was a long pause, and then they
-all began to descend, bringing the bodies.
-
-‘I will draw a veil over what we found. Men cannot fall many thousands
-of feet and lie in artistic attitudes.... But it was four o’clock
-before the Bricolla hut was reached, and darkness had fallen before the
-bodies came to Haudères. The Zermatt Guides were out for twenty-four
-hours, and the Evolena Guides over twenty.’
-
-Mr. W. R. Rickmers, a German resident in England, and a member of the
-Alpine Club, sends the following to the _Alpine Journal_:--
-
-‘Mr. Seiler sent out thirty guides under Alois Supersaxo. Dr. R. Leuk,
-Mr. K. Mayr, and Mr. W. R. Rickmers joined them. We left the Staffelalp
-at 10 p.m. on August 30th, reached the Col d’Hérens at 6 a.m. on the
-31st, in fog and snow, which cleared away later on. Descended Ferpècle
-Glacier towards termination of W. ridge of Dent Blanche, and ascended
-the small glacier which comes down from point 3,912 on the S. _arête_.
-At the spot under the “g” in “Rocs rouges” this glacier forms an
-icefall (moderately difficult), and besides that a bit of the Glacier
-de la Dent Blanche hangs over the narrowest part of the W. ridge. We
-then came to the foot of a great gully. On the map it is the first one
-from W., and it is very clearly indicated. In the rocks to the right
-of the couloir (looking down) and about three hundred feet above the
-rim of the glacier, the bodies were found. It was about 10 a.m., and a
-party of Evolena guides, accompanied by Mr. Harold Spender, was already
-on the spot.
-
-‘The height above sea-level was ca. 3,600-3,700 m. Straight above, on
-the ridge, one saw a smooth cliff (ca. 400-500 feet below summit),
-and if that was the fatal _mauvais pas_ the fall must have been about
-1,500-1,700 feet in a series of clear drops of many hundred feet. The
-rope was intact between Furrer and Zurbriggen.
-
-‘The guides did their work well; the icefall, of course, caused a great
-deal of trouble.’
-
-While the search party was crossing the glacier and the snow-fields, I
-watched them through my glasses. Presently the sun got the better of
-the morning mist, and the pure white snow gleamed beautifully. Then
-from the Col d’Hérens there swept a tiny, serpentine black line,
-moving fast. It was men. I turned my glasses on them. They were the
-Zermatt party, some thirty strong, advancing at a rare pace. It was a
-beautiful sight, so masterful, so sure was their progress.
-
-As the long, hot hours of mid-day passed, I descended to Ferpècle, and
-sent up a boy with food and drink for the certainly wearied searchers
-when they returned from their sad duties. At length they came, drawing
-the bodies over the grass slopes till they reached a path where they
-could be carried on their shoulders. Darkness had fallen when we
-reached Haudères.
-
-Late on Friday night Mr. Hill came round for the funeral. His voice
-seemed to me strangely altered. Otherwise he had come through his
-terrible experience wonderfully, thanks to a splendid constitution and
-nerves of steel. Then first I heard the true story of the accident.
-I reproduce his own account from the _Alpine Journal_. All had roped
-together early in the climb, and the accident took place about ten
-o’clock. Mr. Hill says:--
-
-‘When I reached the level of the others, Furrer was attempting to climb
-the buttress, but, finding no holds, he called to Zurbriggen to hold an
-axe for him to stand on. Apparently he did not feel safe, for he turned
-his head and spoke to Jones, who then went to hold the axe steady.
-Thus we were all on the same level, Vuignier being some twenty-five
-or thirty feet distant from them and also from me. Standing on the
-axe, which was now quite firm, Furrer could reach the top of the
-buttress, and attempted to pull himself up; but the fingerholds were
-insufficient, and before his foot had left the axe his hands slipped,
-and he fell backwards on to Zurbriggen and Jones, knocking them both
-off, and all three fell together. I turned to the wall to get a better
-hold, and did not see Vuignier pulled off, but heard him go, and knew
-that my turn would soon come. And when it did not I looked round, and
-saw my four companions sliding down the slope at a terrific rate, and
-thirty feet of rope swinging slowly down below me.
-
-‘It is difficult to analyse my sensations at that moment. My main
-feeling was one of astonishment that I was still there. I can only
-suppose that Vuignier had belayed my rope securely to protect himself
-and me during our long wait on the traverse.
-
-‘It must be admitted that Furrer did not choose the best route; but
-his choice is easy enough to understand, for the only alternative
-did not look inviting. At all events, it is certain that he acted
-on his own initiative. I say this reluctantly, and solely for the
-purpose of contradicting a statement I have read in an account of the
-accident--that he was induced by Jones to climb straight over the
-gendarme instead of going round it. It is a pity that historians, who
-must of necessity be ignorant of the facts, should go out of their way
-to make such conjectures.
-
-‘The problem before me was a difficult one. It was quite impossible to
-climb down alone, and I could not expect to succeed where guides had
-failed; the only course open was to attempt to turn the gendarme on
-the right. This I succeeded in doing with great difficulty, owing to
-the ice on the rocks and the necessity of cutting up an ice slope in
-order to reach the ridge. In about another hour I gained the summit,
-and was greeted with a faint cooey, probably from the party we had
-seen. I could not see them nor make them hear, so made my way down
-with all reasonable speed, hoping to overtake them. When I reached the
-lowest gendarme--the one with a deep narrow fissure--a sudden mist
-hid everything from view. It was impossible to see the way off; and
-while I was trying various routes a snowstorm and cold wind drove me
-to seek shelter on the lee-side of the rocks. There, tied on with my
-rope, and still further secured by an ice-axe wedged firmly in front
-of me, I was forced to remain until mid-day on Tuesday. Then the mist
-cleared, and, climbing very carefully down the snow-covered rocks I
-reached the snow arête, where most of the steps had to be re-cut. The
-next serious difficulty was the lower part of the Wandfluh; I could not
-remember the way off, and spent two or three hours in futile efforts
-before I found a series of chimneys on the extreme right, leading down
-to the glacier. The sun set when I was on the high bank of moraine on
-the Zmutt Glacier, and in the growing darkness it was far from easy to
-keep the path. The light in the Staffel Alp inn was a guide as long as
-it lasted, but it went out early, and, keeping too low down, I passed
-the inn without seeing it, and being forced to stop by the nature of
-the ground, spent the night by the side of the torrent. It was late in
-the morning when I awoke, and then a scramble of a few minutes brought
-me to the path, near the sign-post, and I reached Zermatt at half-past
-eleven.’
-
-Mr. Hill’s escape is one of the most wonderful in the history of
-mountaineering. His endurance and courage are not less remarkable. To
-have been out alone, in bad weather, without anything to eat save five
-raisins, and with nothing to drink but ice and snow, on a difficult and
-dangerous mountain, and to have returned safely is, I believe, a record
-in climbing annals. I may add a few details, given me by Mr. Hill when
-I first met him after the accident, which he has not reproduced in the
-above narrative.
-
-He thinks his companions were killed instantaneously. They uttered no
-sound; they made no apparent attempt to save themselves. With arms
-outspread they rolled helplessly down the awful face of the mountain.
-He watched them for a few seconds, powerless to help, if help would
-indeed have availed, and then turned from the sickening sight.
-
-During the last part of his descent, even his great strength began to
-fail. Once, on the Wandfluh, he lost his axe and had to spend an hour
-in climbing down to recover it, as it was absolutely essential to his
-safety. After he left the Zmutt glacier in darkness, he appears to have
-become delirious. He was constantly talking to imaginary companions.
-He fell into holes in the ground and went to sleep without strength to
-rise. He wakened from cold, called to his companions to go on as it was
-time to be leaving, stumbled, and fell asleep again.
-
-On Saturday morning Dr. Sumpner arrived, having travelled straight
-through from Birmingham to Evolena. Friends tramped down from Arolla,
-others had come from Zermatt, the secretary of Jones’s section of the
-Swiss Alpine Club came from near Neuchâtel. A carriage bore Jones’s
-plain black coffin, with a gilt cross on it, down from Haudères. We
-buried him and the Evolena guide, Vuignier, in the little graveyard
-of the Roman Catholic church, almost in sight of the glorious, but
-terrible, mountain on which they met their fate. The scene in the
-village almost baffles description. All the villagers, men and women,
-attended the funeral, clad in coarse white robes. The grief of the
-women, especially of Vuignier’s poor old mother, was heart-rending to
-witness. The little Roman Catholic chapel was crowded, the congregation
-all in white, save the acolytes, two village boys, who served the altar
-in their coarse brown, everyday clothes, and the choir, whose strong
-voices rang through the whitewashed, humble building. A little knot
-of Englishmen, sunbrowned, of another faith or of no faith at all,
-joined in the impressive and solemn service. It was a sight that no one
-present can ever forget.
-
-After the service, we bore the two coffins to the graveyard. Rev. Mr.
-Scott, the Anglican chaplain, read the English burial service over
-Owen Jones’s grave. Mr. Hill sent a beautiful wreath of edelweiss and
-the foliage of the Alpine rose. A rude wooden cross marked the spot
-till Jones’s friends erected a suitable gravestone. The lovely warm
-sunshine and the bright blue sky, and the gleaming snows on the slopes
-of the Dent Blanche, formed a curious contrast to the mourning of the
-village in that Alpine valley.
-
-Thus perished, as he would, I doubt not, like to have died, Owen Glynne
-Jones, a brave and dashing mountaineer, a cheery and kindly friend,
-whose presence will be long missed by all who had the privilege of
-knowing him. His death was due to a pure accident, occurring when he
-was in the plenitude of his powers, and when he seemed just about to
-reap the reward of long years of patient, ardent toil.
-
- W. M. CROOK.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- MEMOIR OF OWEN GLYNNE JONES vii
-
- CHAP.
-
- I. PIKE’S CRAG 1
-
- II. DEEP GHYLL, GREAT CHIMNEY AND PROFESSOR’S
- CHIMNEY 12
-
- III. THE RAKE’S PROGRESS AND CERTAIN SHORT CLIMBS
- NEAR IT 29
-
- IV. MOSS GHYLL, COLLIER’S CLIMB, AND KESWICK
- BROTHERS’ CLIMB 43
-
- V. SCAWFELL PINNACLE 69
-
- VI. GREAT END AND ITS GULLIES 89
-
- VII. GREAT GABLE, THE ENNERDALE FACE, AND THE
- OBLIQUE CHIMNEY 114
-
- VIII. THE ENNERDALE CENTRAL GULLY AND TWO LITTLE
- CHIMNEYS 134
-
- IX. THE GREAT NAPES AND ITS GULLIES 146
-
- X. THE RIDGES OF THE GREAT NAPES 153
-
- XI. THE GABLE NEEDLE 168
-
- XII. KERN KNOTTS 175
-
- XIII. THE WASTWATER SCREES 190
-
- XIV. PAVEY ARK 208
-
- XV. DOE CRAG, CONISTON 219
-
- XVI. COMBE GHYLL 237
-
- XVII. THE PILLAR ROCK 254
-
- XVIII. NOTES ON REMAINING CLIMBS 285
-
- APPENDIX I. 295
-
- APPENDIX II.--
-
- CHAP.
-
- I. THE PILLAR ROCK AND ITS PURLIEUS UP TO DATE 317
-
- II. NEW CLIMBS ON GREAT GABLE, SCAWFELL, AND
- AROUND WASTDALE HEAD 332
-
- III. THE BUTTERMERE CLIMBS, AND THOSE IN OUTLYING
- DISTRICTS 344
-
- IV. RECENT CLIMBS AROUND LANGDALE, AND DOE
- CRAG 358
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PORTRAIT OF OWEN GLYNNE JONES _Frontispiece_
-
- THE PIKE’S CRAG GULLIES _To face page_ 6
-
- DEEP GHYLL, FIRST PITCH ” 12
-
- SCAWFELL PINNACLE AND THE PROFESSOR’S
- CHIMNEY ” 20
-
- SCAWFELL CRAGS FROM THE PULPIT ROCK ” 26
-
- THE ASCENT OF THE BROAD STAND ” 30
-
- THE PENRITH CLIMB FROM MICKLEDORE ” 40
-
- COLLIER’S CHIMNEY, MOSS GHYLL ” 51
-
- KESWICK BROTHERS’ CLIMB ” 66
-
- ATTITUDES ON SCAWFELL PINNACLE ” 69
-
- SCAWFELL PINNACLE AND DEEP GHYLL ” 73
-
- THE LAST HUNDRED FEET ON THE SCAWFELL
- PINNACLE ” 76
-
- ASCENT OF SCAWFELL PINNACLE FROM DEEP GHYLL ” 83
-
- THE GREAT END GULLIES, SEEN FROM SPRINKLING
- TARN ” 90
-
- TOP OF THE CENTRAL GULLY IN WINTER, GREAT
- END ” 99
-
- WASTDALE AND GREAT GABLE ” 114
-
- ENNERDALE FACE OF GREAT GABLE ” 127
-
- GREAT GABLE FROM LINGMELL ” 146
-
- THE RIDGES OF THE GREAT NAPES ” 153
-
- THE UPPER PART OF THE NEEDLE RIDGE ” 156
-
- THE GABLE NEEDLE ” 168
-
- KERN KNOTTS CHIMNEY ” 178
-
- KERN KNOTTS CRACK ” 184
-
- THE SCREES AND WASTWATER ” 191
-
- THE PAVEY ARK GULLIES FROM STICKLE TARN ” 208
-
- DOE CRAG AND GOATSWATER ” 220
-
- FIRST PITCH IN DOE CRAG, GREAT GULLY ” 225
-
- THE EAST FACE OF THE PILLAR ROCK (viewed
- from the Shamrock) ” 257
-
- ROUND THE NOTCH, PILLAR ROCK, EAST SIDE ” 267
-
- THE NORTH FACE OF THE PILLAR ROCK ” 271
-
- OVER THE NOSE--THE PILLAR ROCK ” 325
-
- THE BROADRICK’S AND HOPKINSON’S CRACKS, DOE
- CRAG ” 376
-
-
-OUTLINE DRAWINGS OF THE CHIEF ROUTES
-
- PLATE
-
- I. THE PIKE’S CRAG GULLIES _To face page_ 2
- _Diagrammatic_
-
- II. SCAWFELL FROM THE PULPIT ROCK ” 46
- _From the photograph facing p. 26_
-
- III. THE GREAT END GULLIES ” 94
- _From the photograph facing p. 90_
-
- IV. THE ENNERDALE FACE OF GREAT GABLE ” 135
- _From the photograph facing p. 127_
-
- V. THE GREAT NAPES RIDGES ” 161
- _Diagrammatic_
-
- VI. i. THE WASTWATER SCREES ” 203
- _From the photograph facing p. 191_
-
- ii. THE PAVEY ARK GULLIES ” 203
- _From the photograph facing p. 208_
-
- VII. DOE CRAG, CONISTON ” 370
- _Diagrammatic_
-
- VIII. PILLAR ROCK, EAST SIDE ” 242
- _From the photograph facing p. 257_
-
- IX. PILLAR ROCK, NORTH SIDE ” 254
- _From the photograph facing p. 271_
-
- X. PILLAR ROCK, WEST SIDE ” 318
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-Some eight years ago chance led me to the Lake District for the first
-time, and a kindly acquaintance whom I then met at Wastdale taught
-me something of the joys of rock-climbing. Since that occasion every
-holiday has been spent on the mountains, either in Cumberland or
-North Wales or Switzerland, and they have taught me much that is
-worth knowing and that when once learnt can never be forgotten. Men
-with the highest literary qualifications have written of the charm of
-mountaineering, and every aspect of the subject has been touched upon
-with fullest justice and with a grace of style that has captivated many
-a non-climber in spite of his prejudices. Yet I cannot refrain from
-adding my own humble tribute of praise to the sport that has done so
-much for me and my best friends.
-
-It satisfies many needs; the love of the beautiful in nature; the
-desire to exert oneself physically, which with strong men is a
-passionate craving that must find satisfaction somehow or other; the
-joy of conquest without any woe to the conquered; the prospect of
-continual increase in one’s skill, and the hope that this skill may
-partially neutralize the failing in strength that comes with advancing
-age or ill-health.
-
-Hunting and fishing enthral many men, but mountaineering does not
-claim the sacrifice of beasts and fishes. Cricket and football are
-magnificent sports, and it is a perpetual satisfaction that the British
-races are becoming enthusiastic in their appreciation of keen contests
-in these games. Yet there is something repulsive in the spectacle of
-five thousand inactive spectators of a struggling twenty-two, and the
-knowledge that the main interest of many players and observers is of a
-monetary character does not tend to convince one of the moral benefits
-that these sports can offer. On the other hand, it is scarcely fair to
-judge a sport by those who degrade it in this manner, and we all know
-that genuine cricketers and footballers play for love and honour.
-
-The mountaineer does not reap any golden harvest by his exertions--even
-if he writes a book on his subject. He does not exhibit his skill to
-applauding thousands; and his vanity is rarely tickled by the praise of
-many. He must be content with the sport itself and what it offers him
-directly.
-
-Probably the scientific mountaineer gains most. He is certain to
-acquire rare and valuable knowledge of facts in zoology, botany, or
-geology, if he starts with the necessary intellectual equipment. The
-physicist’s mind is perpetually exercised by the natural phenomena
-he witnesses; mist bows, Brocken spectres, frost haloes, electrical
-discharges of the queerest description, mirages, all these offer him
-problems of the most interesting kind. But the fact is, there is
-so much to do that is directly connected with the climbing itself
-that the natural sciences are usually left to themselves, and their
-consideration reserved for special expeditions.
-
-On the other hand, science can often assist the climbing. The engineer
-can triumph with applications of the rope. He can tell us some facts
-worth knowing on the value of friction as an aid to stability, on
-the use of an axe as a support or as a lever, or on the safe methods
-of negotiating loose stones. The man who knows something of geology
-is a useful member of an exploring party; he is often able to guess
-correctly where available passages occur in a wilderness of rock, and
-can judge at a distance what quality of climbing the party may expect.
-The expert in mountain weather does not exist; perhaps he does not dare
-to, or perhaps the subject is too complicated for a nineteenth-century
-scientist. However this may be, it is worth while paying a little
-attention to meteorology and noting the quality of weather that follows
-any definite condition of the wind, the barometer, or the atmospheric
-temperature.
-
-The causes that have resulted in the publication of this little book
-are as difficult to define as those that produce a rainy day in the
-Alps; and, now that the book is written and nothing remains but an
-introduction, I wish that the reverse order of proceeding had been
-adopted, and that the introduction had been written as a peg on which
-succeeding chapters might have been definitely hung.
-
-From the outset the illustrations have been regarded as the chief
-feature of the book, and it was my good fortune early to obtain
-the co-operation of Messrs. G. P. Abraham & Sons in the production
-of good photographs of the most interesting pieces of rock scenery
-that the Lake District affords. Messrs. George and Ashley Abraham
-have accompanied me on several climbing excursions with the express
-purpose of obtaining artistic and yet accurate photographs of the main
-difficulties that beset the cragsman’s course, and I am bound to add
-that they are as skilful in tackling severe pitches as they are in
-taking successful pictures. The practical troubles in manipulating
-heavy photographic apparatus where most people find work enough in
-looking solely to their own safety, the frequent impossibility of
-finding a sufficient contrast in light and shade among the crag
-recesses, and the subsequent difficulties in development of such
-awkward subjects, will convince the reader that theirs has been
-no light task, and at the same time will offer sufficient excuse
-for certain small defects that we have been unable to eliminate
-from the photo-mechanical reproductions. These are in collotype
-on platino-surface paper which shows the fine texture of the rock
-structures.
-
-For the benefit more particularly of climbers several outline diagrams
-have been introduced to explain the outlines of those more important
-crags up each of which many different routes have been found, lines of
-ascent that cannot be readily recognised in the photographs themselves,
-and that cannot be briefly described in words. Some of these are purely
-diagrammatic, where it has been found impossible to base them on good
-general views. The others are outlined from photographs, and can in
-most cases be compared directly with the corresponding views from which
-they are derived.
-
-With the knowledge that I was getting substantial aid in the
-illustrative portion of the book, the management of the rest has been
-much simplified. There are very many people who come regularly to the
-English Lake District to ramble about on the fells and to make the
-ordinary ascents. Of these, by far the greater number steer clear of
-the precipices and other steep parts, wisely recognising the danger
-that attends the inexperienced in such places. Nevertheless, they enjoy
-the mountains and are charmed with the scenery. They do not know much
-about the innermost recesses of even their favourite peaks. To many
-of them Mr. Haskett Smith’s little book on ‘Climbing in England’ must
-have been a revelation; for it indicates with sufficient clearness
-that every crag in the country of any considerable dimensions has been
-explored with wonderful thoroughness by Alpine climbers, and that these
-abrupt walls and gloomy gullies are the happy hunting-ground of many
-an enterprising athlete. If my accounts of the different ascents were
-briefly stated in the orthodox climbing-guide form, the book could
-appeal to none but the elect; only an athlete in excellent training
-could digest such solid diet. If, on the other hand, they were recorded
-in narrative form, with a little expansion of detail where serious
-difficulties occurred during the expeditions, the book might at the
-same time appeal to many a tourist who loves the country and who likes
-to learn more about it. The latter course has been adopted, and it is
-sincerely to be hoped that the succeeding chapters will interest such
-tourists.
-
-There was another and more important consideration which helped to
-decide on the form actually taken. Our Alpine climbers of the highest
-rank are born, not made. But most of the others, taking with them
-some natural aptitude and plenty of money, are made abroad. Why do
-they not take their preliminary training for a year or two in Wales,
-or Cumberland, or on the Scottish hills? It would be much wiser and
-cheaper to support the ‘home industry’ so far as it goes, before
-making their _débuts_ on the high Alps. Our British hills can give
-them no glacier practice, but they can learn a vast deal concerning
-rock-climbing before they leave the country. To such as these the book
-is primarily dedicated. There are no professional guides in Cumberland
-who know anything about the rocks. The amateur must come out and manage
-for himself. But it is here intended to show that the Cumberland school
-is a well-graded one; that the novice can start with the easiest and
-safest of expeditions, and can work his way up to a standard of skill
-comparing favourably with that of the average Swiss guide. There is
-nothing so instructive as guideless climbing, be it ever so humble in
-character. It makes the man wonderfully critical when taken in hand by
-guides later on, and renders him also much more able to profit by their
-practical instruction.
-
-For such beginners, the mere statement of the position of a gully
-and the number and character of its chief obstacles would be quite
-useless. He requires something more; a suggestion here and there of
-the manner in which the troubles can be avoided or overcome, and a
-comparison of these difficulties with others. It is natural that every
-man has his own way of employing the limbs; my way of dealing with a
-pitch might not at all suit another climber, who perhaps relies less
-upon balance and more on strength of arm than myself, or _vice versâ_.
-It is therefore unwise to appear dogmatic in describing methods, and
-I hasten to assure those knowing critics that I have never meant to
-appear so. And yet it is none the less a definite object throughout
-to render the accounts in sufficient detail for those who want
-assistance in repeating the ascents. I have not hesitated to draw on
-old experiences, gained when the ground was comparatively new to me;
-for there is a tendency to depreciate, or indeed to overlook entirely,
-the difficulties in any familiar route after constant practice has
-removed those elements that introduce risk or uncertainty of success,
-and a novice can often explain to a novice far more effectively than an
-expert.
-
-The Lake District is becoming more popular every year as a centre of
-operations for cragsmen. Yet there is no corresponding development of
-a set of professional guides out there, though I believe they would
-thrive exceedingly, and all stock information about the mountains is
-confined to a few manuscript books, and to Mr. Haskett Smith’s little
-publication already referred to. The new comer is continually at a
-loss for details; he has no means of learning what is difficult or
-easy, how to circumvent dangerous obstacles or to discover the safe
-points of attacking them; he is dependent for such facts on chance
-acquaintances made in the country or on correspondence more or less
-painfully elicited from authorities. When unsuccessful in these ways
-he is sometimes tempted to launch out on his own account and wrest
-the information from the mountains themselves. This heroic method is
-undoubtedly the most effective, but it involves too much risk for the
-unpractised hand, and the wonder is that so few serious casualties
-occur in its application. Such accidents do occur through ignorance of
-the district, and always will so long as the necessary knowledge that
-gives safety to the explorer is confined to the few.
-
-Mr. Haskett Smith’s book serves in the fullest manner to indicate where
-good scrambling can be obtained, to define the few technical terms
-in the cragsman’s vocabulary, and to give general advice concerning
-the best centres. It has been of the greatest use to the climbing
-fraternity, who owe their thanks to him. But he gives no detail of the
-scrambling itself. He has appealed more particularly to the expert, who
-can manage all his pioneering for himself. Notably is this the case
-with the Pillar Rock--practically his own particular preserve--where
-most of the routes have long since been made out by him. For years
-he knew the Rock as no one else knew it; every chimney and ridge and
-wall was within his ken. Yet in his little handbook there is scarcely
-an indication of the possession of all this unique knowledge. Most
-climbers expected some expansion in the description of his early
-explorations; but he has kept rigidly to his scheme of treatment, and
-dealt but scant justice to himself throughout the work. This book,
-then, is to be regarded in some sense as supplementary in character,
-the cordial witness of the good sport obtainable by following his
-advice and general directions.
-
-There are many men who think well of the sport, but speak slightingly
-of the narrow field offered for it by the Lake District. No doubt the
-Alps offer far more scope both in range and quality. But we cannot
-very conveniently reach Switzerland at every season of the year. At
-Christmas and Easter it is entirely barred to most people. The expense
-of foreign travel is a consideration, and the question of length of
-holiday is rarely negligible. Cumberland can be reached in a night
-from London; the district is an inexpensive one for tourists. The fact
-that there are hundreds of climbs at our disposal in the Alps is no
-great inducement in itself; we can never climb more than one or two at
-a time, and for most of us there will always remain scores of ascents
-that we shall never have the opportunity of accomplishing. One can
-learn how to swim as effectively in a swimming-bath six feet deep as
-in an ocean; and one can gain an extensive and practical acquaintance
-with rock-climbing in a district where the whole set of climbs can be
-accomplished by the expert in a few short holidays, as in a country
-where the choice is unlimited. Personally I should always go to the
-high Alps when the chance offered itself, but Cumberland serves
-remarkably well to allay the desire for mountain air and vigorous
-exercise when Switzerland is out of the question.
-
-What does it matter that a climb has been done before? Climatic
-conditions and the members of one’s party introduce sufficient variety.
-Years ago an expert reporter was trying to teach me shorthand. His
-method was to induce me to copy out the same report again and again;
-it was an excellent idea, and the system was well vindicated with
-apter pupils. Likewise in climbing, an apt pupil will learn rapidly by
-repetition of the same ascents.
-
-This introduces a point on which I am scarcely qualified to speak,
-that of physical aptitude on the part of the would-be climber. Mr.
-Clinton Dent in the Badminton volume bestows a chapter on the subject
-of ‘Mountaineering and Health.’ Here we have an authoritative summary
-of the physical qualifications required by the mountaineer, and of the
-bodily ailments he may possibly incur. A perusal of the chapter will
-convince the reader of the suitability of a mountainous region such
-as our own country can offer for preliminary training before the high
-Alps are approached. There is much less likelihood of over-strain;
-snow-blindness, frost-bite, and mountain sickness are rarely met with
-here.
-
-Climbers are absolutely incapable of any sustained effort when they
-reach certain altitudes, and the limit depends on the individual. It
-is the misfortune of some to feel an uncomfortable perturbation of the
-heart when once a definite level is passed. They are well enough able
-to exert themselves below that level, but can hope for no pleasurable
-exercise above it. With every desire to climb, with muscle and mind
-enough to excel in the sport, they are nevertheless debarred from
-enjoying the high Alps. Let them therefore make the best of our British
-hills for a while, and then perhaps proceed to the Dolomites in the
-Austrian Tyrol for fuller applications at a safe low level of what they
-have here learnt.
-
-Solitary scrambling is universally condemned. Most climbers of
-experience have learnt something about it, and are unanimous in their
-unfavourable judgment. Nothing teaches the scrambler so quickly, if
-his nerve is sufficiently strong; but the penalty paid for slight
-mistakes is often extreme, and the risk is too great for him to be
-justified in deliberately choosing the single-handed venture. A party
-of two makes the strongest combination for most of the ordinary
-Cumberland climbs; three are generally better for the severest courses.
-Any beyond that number will to a greater or less extent increase the
-difficulty of the ascent and the time spent in effecting it.
-
-A rough classification is here appended of over a hundred well-known
-courses judged under good conditions. They are divided into four
-sets. The first are easy and adapted for beginners, the second set
-are moderately stiff, those of the third set rank as the difficult
-climbs of the district, and the last are of exceptional severity. Some
-attempt has been made to arrange them in their order of difficulty,
-the hardest ones coming last; but the variations of condition of each
-due to wind, temperature, rain, snow, or ice are so extensive that
-no particular value should be attached to the sequence. But even if
-only approximately correct, the lists may help men in deciding for
-themselves where to draw the line that shall limit their own unaided
-performances. As for the items in the fourth class, they are best left
-alone. Mark the well-known words of an expert (Mr. C. Pilkington): ‘The
-novice must on no account attempt them. He may console himself with
-the reflection that most of these fancy bits of rock-work are not
-mountaineering proper, and by remembering that those who first explored
-these routes, or rather created them, were not only brilliant rock
-gymnasts but experienced and capable cragsmen.’
-
-
-_Easy Courses._
-
- Deep Ghyll, by the west wall traverse.
- Cust’s Gully, Great End.
- Traverse across Gable Crag.
- ‘Sheep Walk,’ Gable Crag.
- D Gully, Pike’s Crag.
- Broad Stand.
- Needle Gully.
- ‘Slab and Notch’ Route, Pillar Rock.
- Great End Central Gully (ordinary ways).
- South-east Gully, Great End.
-
-
-_Moderate Courses._
-
- West Climb, Pillar Rock.
- C Gully, Pike’s Crag.
- A Gully, Pike’s Crag.
- Bottle-nosed Pinnacle Ridge.
- Westmorland Crag, Great Gable.
- Penrith Climb, Scawfell.
- Scawfell Chimney.
- Old Wall Route. Pillar Rock, East Side.
- Deep Ghyll (ordinary route).
- Scawfell Pinnacle (short way up).
- Dolly Waggon Pike Gully.
- Raven Crag Chimney, Great Gable.
- Crag Fell Pinnacles, Ennerdale.
- Gable Crag Central Gully (ordinary way).
- Black Chimney (High Stile).
- Pendlebury Traverse Route, Pillar Rock.
- Combe Ghyll.
- Fleetwith Gully (easy way).
- Arrowhead Branch Gully
- Smoking Rock, Great Doup, Pillar Fell.
- Professor’s Chimney.
- Needle Ridge, Great Gable.
- Pillar Rock, the Arête.
- Arrowhead Ridge, by Traverse from East Side.
- Eagle’s Nest Ridge (ordinary way).
-
-
-_Difficult Courses._
-
- Deep Ghyll West Wall Climb.
- Great End Central Gully (chimney finish).
- Pillar Rock by Central Jordan.
- The Doctor’s Chimney.
- Shamrock Buttress.
- Pillar Rock by West Jordan.
- Kern Knotts Chimney.
- Little Gully, Pavey Ark.
- Great Gully, Pavey Ark.
- Gable Crag Central Gully (direct finish).
- Oblique Chimney Gable Crag.
- Gable Needle.
- Arrowhead Ridge (direct climb).
- Pillar Rock Far West Jordan.
- Gimmer Crag Chimney.
- Doe Crag, Great Gully.
- Pillar Rock by the Great Chimney.
- The B Chimney, Pike’s Crag.
- Scawfell Pinnacle, by Steep Ghyll.
- Pavey Ark, Crescent Climb, and Gwynne’s Chimney.
- Keswick Brothers’ Climb.
- Pillar Rock, West Jordan Crack.
- Doe Crag Buttresses (ordinary routes).
- Sergeant Crag Gully (ordinary way).
- Mouse Ghyll.
- Pillar Rock (by north face).
- Smuggler’s Chimney, Gable Crag.
- Rake End Chimney, Pavey Ark.
- Moss Ghyll (by branch exit).
- Bowfell Buttress.
- New West Climb (Pillar Rock).
- The Brothers’ Crack, Great End.
- Sergeant Crag Gully (direct).
- Keswick Brothers’ Climb (variation finish).
- Stack Ghyll, Buttermere.
- Bleaberry Chimney, Buttermere.
- Deep Ghyll (by various routes).
- Collier’s Climb, Scawfell.
- Raven Crag Gully, Glaramara.
- Moss Ghyll (by direct finish).
- West Jordan Gully, Pillar Rock.
- Shamrock Chimneys.
- Fleetwith Gully (direct).
- Shamrock Gully (left-hand route).
- Kern Knotts West Chimney.
- Shamrock Buttress (Route II).
- Shamrock Gully (ordinary route).
- Pisgah Ridge, by the Tennis Court Ledge.
- Iron Crag Chimney.
- Engineer’s Chimney, Gable Crag.
- Eagle’s Nest Ridge by Ling Chimney.
-
-
-_Exceptionally Severe Courses._
-
- Doe Crag, Intermediate Gully.
- Scawfell Pinnacle, High Man (direct from Deep Ghyll).
- Gimmer Crag, B route.
- The Abbey Buttress, Great Gable.
- Screes Great Gully (direct).
- Doe Crag, North Gully.
- Gimmer Crag, A Route.
- Toreador Gully, Buttermere.
- Birkness Chimney, Buttermere.
- Warn Gill, Buttermere.
- Haskett Gully, Scoat Fell.
- Doe Crag, Easter Gully, O. G. Jones’ Route.
- Scawfell Pinnacle _viâ_ Low Man by Deep Ghyll, Gibson’s Chimney.
- Scawfell Pinnacle by Deep Ghyll, O. G. Jones’ Route.
- Kern Knotts Crack.
- North Face Pillar Rock, by Hand Traverse.
- Doe Crag, Easter Gully, by Hopkinson’s Crack.
- Doe Crag, Central Chimney.
- Eagle’s Nest Ridge, Great Gable.
- Doe Crag, Easter Gully, by Broadrick’s Crack.
- Walker’s Gully.
- C Gully, the Screes.
- North West Climb, Pillar Rock.
- Scawfell Pinnacle (direct from Lord’s Rake), O. G. Jones’ Route.
-
-In every expedition the party should be provided with a sufficient
-length of rope--varying from twenty to fifty feet for two men, thirty
-to eighty feet for three--according to the character of the climb and
-the lengths of its individual pitches. It is very unwise to dispense
-with the rope, even on simple courses; the fact is patent in the Alps
-that amateurs take a long time to learn how to look after their portion
-of the rope when busily engaged on rocks; they are apt to leave all
-such details to the guides in front or behind them, and would do well
-to practise regular independence in that respect.
-
-Ice-axes are generally necessary during the colder months of the year.
-They are inconvenient to manipulate on very difficult rocks, whether
-the climber is going up or down. But in the rapid descent of easy
-crags, face outwards, they are invaluable as aids to balancing; and
-steep grass or scree can undoubtedly be descended better with their
-assistance. The Cumberland crags are too smooth to make _scarpetti_
-(_Kletterschuhe_) worth trying. These are rope-soled shoes that grip
-better than nailed boots when the texture of the rock-surface is
-sufficiently rough, but our expeditions are best made without them.
-
-
-
-
-ROCK-CLIMBING
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-_PIKE’S CRAG_
-
-
-The Pikes of Scawfell are bold and picturesque, but their precipices
-are slight and climbers can find but little on them that needs the use
-of a rope. One genuine exception must be made in favour of Pike’s Crag,
-the rock that guards the Pikes end of Mickledore. Here a good deal of
-practice may be obtained, and although in comparison with Scawfell
-Crag over the way we may feel that everything is in miniature, yet the
-quality of the work is good and some of the pitches really severe. Few
-people seem to have troubled to examine the detail of the cliff until
-September, 1894, when Messrs. Fowler and Wilberforce spent a few days
-on it, and prepared the effective diagram of the lines of route that
-they subsequently transferred to the Wastdale book.
-
-The crag is visible from the road near the head of Wastwater, and its
-three chimneys show up as black recesses of inviting steepness and
-difficulty. These retain their interesting appearance all along the
-walk up Brown Tongue, and it is surprising that at Hollow Stones
-everybody turns off to the right towards Deep Ghyll, when straight
-ahead they cannot but observe the opportunity for novelty that Pike’s
-Crag can offer them.
-
-Between the Pulpit rock that overlooks the Mickledore screes and the
-main mass of the Pikes is a little _col_ or neck that can be reached
-with ease from either side. A gully runs up to it behind the Pulpit
-from the Mickledore screes, with no difficulties whatever to obstruct
-the walker. Another (D) leads to the same spot from the Lingmell side,
-starting near the foot of the great buttress of the Horse and Man rock,
-and boasting of two pitches. Between D and a scree gully well away to
-the left lie the three chimneys, A, B, and C, and the best climbing of
-these crags is here concentrated.
-
-It is true that we can get some pleasant scrambling up the outside of
-the Pulpit. A grass gully shows well in the illustration, close to
-the right-hand edge of the picture. The square tower of rock to which
-its left branch leads overlooks the D gully and offers fair sport.
-There are probably a few interesting problems in the short gullies
-leading from D towards the Horse and Man ridge. But to cover the best
-ground in a single expedition I can recommend the ascent of A and
-descent by C, then the direct climb up the right branch of B and a
-return down the two pitches in the D gully. Such was an afternoon’s
-work that I was advised to undertake when inquiring of those who
-knew best how to gain a general knowledge of Pike’s Crag. My companion
-was unacquainted with Lake District climbing; it was his first day in
-Wastdale, and during our walk homewards, after following as rigidly as
-we could the directions given us, he was reluctantly compelled to admit
-that Cumberland climbing had good points that he had never hitherto
-attributed to it.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PLATE I.
-
-THE PIKE’S CRAG GULLIES.
-
-AA is about 300 feet high.
-
- _a_ Initial Variation in the A Chimney.
- _b_ Left Branch of the B Chimney.
- _c_ Great Pitch in the C Chimney.
- D Easy Gully between E and F.
- E Horse and Man Rock.
- F Pulpit Rock.
- G Easy Grass Gully.]
-
-We bore up from Hollow Stones directly towards the A chimney, over
-a good deal of rough ground and an occasional snowslope. It is the
-longest climb of the three, and the hand-and-foot work commenced at
-once. A block at the bottom, some fifteen feet in height, was turned
-by a vertical crack on the left, with excellent holds on the side
-wall. An easier way is by the right, up a series of steep, wet, and
-mossy ledges. This block was crowned by long tufted grass, and more
-moss in the bed of the gully indicated clearly that we were not on a
-much frequented route to Scawfell Pikes. A few feet higher we noticed
-a grass terrace stretching across the face of the crags to the right.
-There proved to be several such terraces on the same buttress between
-us and the B chimney, and we concluded that it would be possible to
-climb up from one to the other and so avoid the chimneys altogether.
-Soon our route became steeper and careful clambering was necessary.
-The gully was narrow and its walls smooth, and no chance of further
-side-exit was open to us. Then came the first genuine pitch, in three
-portions of increasing severity, though the hardest is not in any way
-difficult or dangerous. We worked first over a small boulder, then
-a bigger one followed, and we were brought to a standstill at the
-entrance of a narrow cave. We decided in favour of the right wall,
-which showed good holds up near the level of the roof. It looked a
-bad bit to surmount, but when once the right leg of the climber had
-been swung on to a sloping ledge on the wall, it was only needful to
-edge along towards the jammed boulder and step off into the bed of
-the gully again. The whole pitch is about thirty feet high. Walking
-up the scree that now presented itself, we were rather disagreeably
-impressed by the appearance of the second pitch that confronted us.
-It was a mossy wall about ten feet high, and water streaming down it
-gave us but little hope of continuing the climbing beyond it with dry
-garments. Nevertheless the reality was not so objectionable. The wall
-stretched from side to side of the gully and offered many routes up.
-Taking a course to the right of the middle, we found small footholds
-beneath the moss that gave the chance of using the fingers and toes
-only. Clammy embracing we avoided, and our satisfaction on reaching the
-top was altogether disproportionate to the actual difficulty we had
-overcome, and will be unappreciated by those who tackle the gully in
-drier weather. It seems to be still better to work up the left corner.
-
-Forty feet higher we could see the third and last pitch. The gully is
-now very much more open. We made a digression on the right again, and
-peered inquisitively down the hole at the top of the B chimney--the
-hole that was said to discriminate nicely between a thin man and a
-thick. The buttress was considerably broken about here, and offered
-admirable scrambling of a heterogeneous description; but we had yet one
-more stage in our own direct course, and returned to finish it. Several
-boulders had combined to form another cave, whose interior appeared
-to be rather complicated--judging by the number of times I knocked my
-head in exploring its upper regions. We tried hard to force a route
-up the right wall, but after twenty minutes had been wasted in futile
-attempts we decided to take the regulation route to the left, and leave
-the variation for another day that might find us there with an ice-axe.
-The left wall is sufficiently provided with holds to make the climb
-easy; but at the top there were several stones to be passed that report
-said were in a shaky condition. We were not troubled by them, and after
-passing over, a glance at the screes that remained above gave assurance
-that the presence or absence of a few loose stones at the head of the
-pitch would be quite fortuitous.
-
-After a short halt called for photographic purposes we made for the
-head of the C gully, the next to the west that actually reaches
-the sky-line when viewed from below. It was nearly all scree at a
-steep angle, and we had good reason to be thankful that no exploring
-parties were further down. There were two or three places passed in
-our descent where the craggy bed of the gully jutted out through the
-layer of loose stones, and at such spots, though no actual climbing was
-necessary, the danger of one man bombarding the other with projectiles
-made us both proceed with an excess of caution. The one difficulty in
-the gully, which we were now preparing to descend, is by far the finest
-looking pitch on Pike’s Crag. A large boulder with square edges roofs
-in a cavern thirty feet high; a stream of water pouring down the gully
-spreads over the boulder, and forms a thin curtain of spray stretching
-from side to side of the cave entrance. The two walls of the gully are
-black and glistening, the floor of the cave is slippery, and slopes
-steeply down to the foot of the ghyll. The only safe way up or down the
-pitch is by a series of ledges in a square recess on the left, well
-marked in the opposite illustration.
-
-We were ignorant of the character of the climbing here, but there was
-no resisting the conclusion forced upon us by a peep over the edge of
-the pitch, that the recess on our right offered us the only chance of
-descent. The ledges were tufted with thick grass that now and again
-threatened to give way. But on the whole we felt very safe, and when
-the actual corner of the recess was reached, the difficulties vanished
-and we had a simple traverse back towards the waterfall. The descent
-of six or eight feet to the foot of the fall was partially under the
-spray, but haste on such slippery ground was out of the question, and
-we moved one at a time with a solemn indifference to the damping
-influences around us, that might have argued a whole day’s previous
-exposure and the absence of a vestige of dry clothing. We had a steep
-slide down the snow banked up at the foot of the gully, and then picked
-a way across to the B chimney, the centre of the series and the most
-attractive.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE PIKE’S CRAG GULLIES]
-
-A and C may be reasonably called easy. They are not too hard for
-muscular novices, and are comparatively safe. But the central chimney
-is decidedly stiff, and should not be indiscriminately recommended with
-the others. It is very narrow all the way to the jammed stone at the
-top; it is about as difficult to get out, when half-way up, as it is to
-continue the direct ascent, and suitable belaying for the leader or his
-followers cannot be found at the hardest parts of the climb. I tried
-the chimney once when there was a considerable quantity of water coming
-down, and was compelled to give it up: it is probable that even with a
-second man to help me I could not have managed it.
-
-We found our way safely to the entrance of our chimney and started up.
-Almost immediately we passed the branch gully on the left. It looks
-very formidable, and indeed its first pitch is undoubtedly hard. It
-consists of a two-storied cave, the first floor composed of three
-jammed stones, which are passed by backing up the crack and traversing
-outwards. The second pitch is of a simpler character, consisting
-of a cave that can be passed on either side. We had no designs on
-this variation, and were contented to throw a casual glance towards
-the lower obstacle as we proceeded up the rocky bed of our central
-chimney. Our field of view soon became very limited, for the clean-cut
-parallel walls on either side were scarcely five feet apart, and the
-average slope of the gully exceeded forty-five degrees. During the
-first hundred feet the work was distinctly safe and easy, but a glance
-backward at the point whence we had started, seemingly the first
-stop in the event of our falling, made us both inclined to imagine
-dangers in our way. The side walls in intense gloom formed a fitting
-frame to the narrow picture of the distant sunlit fells. The general
-aspect of the situation closely resembled that of the upper half of
-Collier’s climb on Scawfell, and of the Oblique Chimney on Gable Crag,
-though in each of those cases the chimney is at a considerable angle
-to the vertical, whereas here the fissure in the rocks is almost
-perpendicular. We were a little perplexed by some ice that had frozen
-in large rounded knobs to a thickness of eight or ten inches over a
-steep six feet of the gully. An axe would have summarily disposed of
-any icicles of doubtful security, but we had not expected any such
-evidences of cold and were unprovided. The ice was not absolutely
-continuous; here and there we could kick out levels for our feet, and
-to our relief the trouble was passed in a few minutes. Then came the
-worst bit of the ascent--the scene of my discomfiture eighteen months
-before. First came a vertical wall stretching across the gully, and
-rising twenty feet above our somewhat insecure standing. Beyond that
-the gully sloped evenly to the dark recesses of a cave, the jammed
-boulder of which almost appeared vertically above our heads. We mounted
-an upright block at the foot of the wall, and prospected for holds.
-None were visible. I peered at the sides in search of scratches, which
-would show whether the earlier party or parties had backed up the
-chimney. No! they had not availed themselves of that process. Then,
-with the conviction that an indirect way must exist, we examined
-the walls a few feet below the pitch, and at last hit upon a way of
-mounting higher. I was belayed by a rope passing round the upright
-block already referred to, and proceeded to walk along the horizontal
-edge of a thin crack on the right wall, leaning across to the other
-side of the gully for general support on the hands. I had implicit
-trust in the rope and the man at the other end of it, or the manœuvre
-would have given me agonies of apprehension. Just as the second step
-was being made along the crack, its thin edge broke away under my foot
-and I slipped a few feet down the gully, till the rope tightened and
-brought me to a stop. A second attempt was more successful. The edge
-was followed till it expanded into a respectable foothold, and then,
-holding myself straight, I was able to reach good ledges for the hands.
-It was now easy to stride across to the left wall and climb directly
-upwards along its crest to a platform large enough for both of us;
-hither my companion followed me, adopting almost the same tactics and
-taking but half the time. We were now virtually out of the gully, and
-found the sunshine pleasant after so much darkness. But the joy that
-might have attended our remaining efforts in working up to the head of
-the chimney was marred by the reflection that we had not conquered the
-chief difficulty; we had only avoided it. This is right and proper for
-snow-climbers, but distinctly unorthodox for cragsmen. Our doubts grew
-as we advanced, and at last I proposed to descend again and settle them
-finally. This suggestion was met with a very prompt approval, and ten
-minutes later found me at the foot of the vertical wall again. It did
-not look any easier, and I am not prepared to say how narrowly I missed
-a second failure. After leaving the upright block the scanty holds soon
-disappeared, and with some desperate struggling I found myself backing
-up the chimney with the feet thrust hard against the left wall. Both
-sides seemed dangerously smooth, but cautious wriggling for a distance
-of two or three feet brought a handhold within reach, and the top of
-the wall was gained. The only other ascent known to me was by a man
-with a singularly long reach, and in some marvellous way he managed to
-climb the wall without any backing up.
-
-Thence to the cave was fairly easy after a few mossy loose stones
-had been flung down, and the finish was effected by a neat little
-ledge along the left wall, passing out just at the edge of the pitch.
-The hole through the cave is not so small as the first investigators
-imagined; the trouble in passing through is due to its crookedness,
-but the name of the chimney is generally supposed to indicate with
-proper remoteness the garment that is here threatened with a complete
-inversion.
-
-We hurried across the top of C gully and round the Horse and Man to
-the Pulpit rock. The D gully had a great deal of snow in it, and we
-indulged in sundry glissades. The snow was not too hard nor the angle
-too great, otherwise ice-axes would have been necessary. The upper
-pitch was passed on our left with perfect ease. Then further snow
-led to the lower pitch, a much more imposing sight. Two sharp-edged
-boulders of immense size formed a cave. On the side of the Pulpit rock
-there seemed to be no chance of passing it. The other side, though
-mossy, might easily be made to go. In our descent we kept a little
-further away, and came down ledge after ledge with excellent holds to
-the foot of the pitch. Then more glissading brought us down to the open
-fell again. We spent a quarter of an hour watching with much interest
-a party coming down Scawfell Pinnacle by Steep Ghyll, and having seen
-them safely into the lower part of the ghyll, where the steady click
-of the leader’s axe intimated slow progress over ice-covered rocks, we
-turned our backs to the fell and moved leisurely homewards.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-_DEEP GHYLL. THE GREAT CHIMNEY AND PROFESSOR’S CHIMNEY_
-
-
-DEEP GHYLL.--This will remain for long a favourite resort of
-climbers, partly because the two pitches are always interesting and
-may be turned in so many different ways, partly because the gully
-gathers annually a big snow drift, which can generally be relied upon
-between Christmas and Easter to afford some practice in the use of the
-ice-axe, and partly because the rock scenery is of the finest character
-throughout. The ghyll has been familiar to the visitors of Scawfell for
-many years. It was first ascended in March, 1886, by Messrs. Geoffrey
-Hastings and Slingsby, and an interesting account of the expedition
-appeared in the ‘Alpine Journal.’ It had been descended twice before,
-in 1882, by Messrs. Mumm and King, with heavy snow blocking the
-pitches, and in 1884 by Mr. Haskett Smith. The quickest way of reaching
-the foot of the ghyll is to walk up Brown Tongue till within a couple
-of hundred feet of the level of Hollow Stones. It is here unnecessary
-to keep straight over towards the centre of Mickledore, for a shallow
-depression to the right of Brown Tongue may be traversed obliquely
-upwards, and the scree struck close to the well-defined edge of the
-lower crags of Scawfell. Thence it is best to keep close under the
-cliffs, following an easy gradient up to the Lord’s Rake. This is the
-large scree gully passing up to the right, under the main mass of
-Scawfell. The scree forms at the foot of the Lord’s Rake the usual
-fan-shaped talus, which here stretches down towards Hollow Stones. In
-summer it may occasionally be worth while making directly up the centre
-of the scree.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-DEEP GHYLL, FIRST PITCH]
-
-Just opposite the corner round which one turns into the Lord’s Rake
-a rather slightly marked gully starts up from the side of the rake.
-It becomes better defined a few yards higher, and leads directly
-into Steep Ghyll. Almost at the same spot a ledge is to be noticed
-passing round to the left of the huge wall fronting us at this corner.
-This is the start of the Rake’s Progress, the happy name given to
-the well-known terrace leading to Mickledore. We shall have further
-occasion to allude to this ledge, but we now pass up the Lord’s
-Rake till in a few feet we come to a magnificent gully on our left,
-recognizable under any conditions except the most snowy by the cave
-at its foot. A fine View of Deep Ghyll and its surroundings may be
-obtained by scrambling up to the low ridge that faces us as we look
-outwards from the cave. The ridge is somewhat broken up, and the
-terrible accident that caused the death of Professor Milnes Marshall
-at this spot must be a warning to any who wander up without thought of
-danger.
-
-The orthodox route up the first pitch in Deep Ghyll is by the cave and
-chimney. It is the most interesting way, and probably in dry clean
-weather it is the easiest. When the chimney is cased with ice the route
-may become impossible. In that case a recess in the right wall (right,
-of course, when looking up at the climb) is often taken as a winter
-emergency exit; for although the holds are slight in summer, loose
-stones well bound up make it quite feasible in frosty weather.
-
-The hardest way up the pitch is by the thin cleft between the big
-boulder and the left wall.
-
-Passing up for about 150 feet we find a steep slope of rock occupying
-the left half of the gully. The scree in the other half leads up into a
-cave whose black rectangular aperture may have been observed from the
-Lord’s Rake ridge. The cave is formed by the ubiquitous jammed boulder,
-and no through route can be effected. A thin chimney cuts between the
-rock slope and the huge vertical left wall that rises with scarcely a
-break to the Low Man on the Scawfell Pinnacle. This chimney constitutes
-the easiest and safest route over the second pitch. On the right face
-an irregular ledge leads to a larger chimney (Robinson’s), which with
-some trouble can be followed till a level about twenty feet above the
-top of the cave pitch is reached. Thence a small terrace offers an easy
-promenade to the upper bed of the gully. A third way of taking the
-difficulty has been found; indeed, it is the most obvious way, though
-much the hardest. It is to climb the left wall of the cave entrance,
-and then wriggle up between the rock slope and the cave boulder.
-
-There are many pleasant reminiscences of parties in Deep Ghyll. The
-hardest struggle I ever had with the first pitch was on Christmas
-Day, 1897. The rocks were badly glazed, and though we had no trouble
-in penetrating to the inmost recesses of the cave, we could find no
-easy way of getting higher. We were loth to try, seeing that one of
-our party had, with a mistaken philanthropy, loaded his rücksack with
-preserved fruit, prunes, and Carlsbad plums, and proceeded forthwith
-to dignify our primitive lunch with these unwonted luxuries. A halt
-called to consume a beef sandwich may be quickly terminated--and
-that, moreover, without a sense of sorrow, unless the beef is very
-bad--but those who know Carlsbad plums will realise how easily we were
-demoralised by their seductiveness, and how much we preferred to sit in
-our cave and argue on complicated topics with the plum-box open. But
-the owner was a man of some resolution, and heroically vowed that we
-should see no more of the plums till we reached a small recess at the
-top of Moss Ghyll, where we should ensconce ourselves after climbing
-the gully. So we made a start at once. The back way out of the cave
-promised well at first. It showed no trace of ice, but on emerging
-from the chimney (at the spot where the lower figure is shown in the
-View facing p. 12), and looking straight down to the entrance of the
-cave, it was found that a thin sheet of ice covered all the rocks.
-Generally speaking it would be better to let the rocks alone on such
-an occasion--in fact always, unless Carlsbad plums are at stake. Then,
-perhaps, the second man may be held firmly by the rope from behind
-while he gives the leader a shoulder. This help is of no use unless
-the leader can venture to trust the icy handhold above him, by which
-he is to swing round the awkward corner to the right. Some such scheme
-our party devised, after many futile attempts to fix an axe firmly as
-a foothold, and the leader dragged himself up the glazed surface to
-the deep snow above. In the ordinary state of things, be it remembered
-that where the climber emerges from the hole, he has first to stride
-round to a small ledge on the right. He can use as a take-off the
-rough surface of the boulder, and can reach a rigid handhold of small
-dimensions but good shape. Thence to the top of the pitch is easy
-scrambling, though care is needed.
-
-The snow in the gully was in grand condition for kicking steps, and
-after the last man had been brought up the pitch in safety we marched
-to the upper cave and discussed the question of route over the second
-pitch. The direct way was ruled out of court at once, for its largest
-ledges are but half an inch wide, and ice on these rendered them
-useless. With a keen recollection of our trouble down below, we thought
-of the Robinson Chimney on the right, which is quitted by crossing
-on to a slabby rock that slopes down towards the centre of the gully.
-With ice on this an attempt to force the way up would more likely find
-us shooting over to the foot of the cave. Such a finish to our little
-day would no doubt exactly coincide with the anticipations of our more
-sanguine relatives and friends, but for the moment we had to consider
-each other’s feelings and I suggested the easy way up. There was a
-smiling unanimity of agreement in the party which pleased me far, very
-far more than a hundred strictly impossible ascents. We descended the
-gully again to the foot of the rock slope, and rounded into the little
-chimney. Things went very well for a few feet. But as we rose the ice
-became more troublesome, until it was necessary to chip it away from
-each diminutive ledge, and to proceed upwards with the utmost caution.
-The first part finished with a little snow patch twenty feet above the
-top of the cave boulder and the bed of the ghyll. Some years before,
-when first I visited Deep Ghyll, we had found it impossible to climb
-directly upwards from this point, and a man was let down by the rope
-into the ghyll. He cut steps up until he had obtained a higher level
-than the others waiting, and then induced them to traverse out a bit
-and jump into the snow below. The process was possible only with a long
-rope. Here we could all rest and contemplate the rock slab opposite
-which finishes the Robinson Chimney. Forty or fifty feet higher we
-could see, well marked out by the snow, the upper traverse that enables
-a careful walker to pass up Deep Ghyll without any hand-and-foot work.
-It is readily accessible from the Lord’s Rake, a few feet higher than
-the ordinary entrance to Deep Ghyll, and leads at an easy angle to a
-point in the main gully some hundred feet above the second pitch.
-
-Looking up at the left wall of the Ghyll we could see that our slender
-chimney was but the beginning of a long crack that cut obliquely into
-the wall, and curled upwards in a fine sweep of eighty feet towards the
-summit of the Low Man. The curtain of rock that closed in the crack
-on its right hand made our next few yards rather troublesome, for it
-encroached on our ledge and rendered the work too open. Facework is
-always more trying than chimney climbing, especially when ice is about.
-But the leader’s recollection of the ease with which this part could
-be overcome in summer time divested it of all its fancied terrors and
-perhaps of some of its real dangers, and he had therefore a better time
-of it than his companions, whose extremities were somewhat benumbed
-by their patient waiting in awkward places, and whose activities were
-confined to their vivid imaginations. All actual danger was over when a
-horizontal ledge was reached well above the centre-level of the gully,
-which we followed with ease to the broken rocks that almost form a
-third pitch for Deep Ghyll.
-
-Here the pleasantest way of finishing the day was to cut steps in the
-snow up the central gully, the angle gradually steepening from 35° to
-55° at the top. That way we therefore took, and were soon enjoying
-the plums. But a rise of a few feet will show the Professor’s Chimney
-immediately to the left, cutting deeply into the rock between the
-Scawfell Pinnacle on the left and Pisgah on the right, and terminating
-at a fine-looking notch, ‘The Jordan,’ in the sky-line. Exactly
-opposite, on the right-hand side of the ghyll, is the Great Chimney, a
-black and formidable square-walled recess crowned by a jammed boulder.
-This was for a long time regarded as impossible and scarcely ever
-attacked, but at last it yielded to the combined ingenuity of Messrs.
-Blake and Southall, and has since shown itself to be very amenable when
-approached with due precaution.
-
-_First pitch, New route._--The Christmas Day of 1896 was very windy and
-cold. Our party had fought continually against the weather all the way
-to Deep Ghyll, and inasmuch as we had only the previous day arrived
-at Wastdale our limbs were scarcely fit for such a desperate grind.
-I had the pleasurable responsibility of guiding a lady, Mrs. H., who
-had been persuaded to accompany her husband on a winter excursion. We
-had a great deal of very soft snow to get through on our way up, and I
-was looking forward to a long halt in the lower cave, where we should
-at least be protected from the wind and snow. Great was our distress
-when we found the entrance completely blocked up by a huge drift. It
-must have been fully twenty feet deep in front of the cave, and the
-prospect was most disheartening. In disgust I clambered up the wall
-immediately to the right of the boulder, and at last managed to reach
-the aperture leading into the cave from above. It was festooned with
-huge icicles, and at first the entrance looked effectually blocked.
-Smashing down the ice with the energy of despair, the tremendous
-clatter suggesting to my friends that of a bull in a hardware shop, I
-discovered that the chimney was only iced at its entrance, and that the
-upper storey of the cave could be reached. Some of the others quickly
-followed, and we found ourselves in a spacious chamber into which the
-great heap of snow had scarcely encroached. This was delightful. We
-threw ourselves into the drift that blocked the main entrance, and cut
-away at it with vigour till at last we had tunnelled through to the
-daylight. The biggest man of the party yet remained outside and we
-persuaded him to insert his legs into the aperture. Without giving him
-time to change his mind we seized his boots and hauled hard. For one
-dread moment we thought him jammed for ever, but immediately afterwards
-we found ourselves lying on our backs in the cave with a yawning
-opening in the snow-drift, the while our massive friend measured his
-diminished circumference with a loop of rope. The others then came in
-and made themselves at home on ropes, ice-axes, and other people’s
-cameras. We were a party of ten, large enough to be a merry one.
-Our surroundings were weird and savage, unlike the British notions for
-a Christmas Day, but I remember that we behaved like civilized people
-in perhaps one respect. We discussed the year’s literature. Fancy
-Troglodytes discussing ‘Trilby’! Then it occurred to us that our feet
-were very cold, and that we should not have much daylight for climbing
-if we waited longer. Our intention had been to climb Deep Ghyll in
-two separate parties, by the ordinary way. But the drift suggested a
-trial of the crack up the left-hand side of the first pitch. The snow
-would serve as a high take-off, and also a good cushion to soften the
-fall if the leader were destined to fail. The first difficulty was to
-get safely into the crack; then it was found that the holds were very
-scarce, and the recess somewhat too constricted to allow any bracing
-across from one side to the other.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-SCAWFELL PINNACLE AND THE PROFESSOR’S CHIMNEY]
-
-Think of a foothold; double it. Put your whole weight on to it as
-you straighten out. Take away the hold you thought of, and you will
-find yourself wondering how you got there. In some such vague way are
-very bad bits climbed, and while gasping for breath at the top the
-climber usually feels that it was the worst place he has ever been in.
-Seriously, however, this route is severe at all times. In summer the
-drift is absent, but with rocks slightly wet, as they usually are in
-that corner, the effort of working upwards is extreme. It is probably
-best to keep one’s back to the boulder all the way up.
-
-My section of the party came up first. We were very cold, and some
-fear that Mrs. H. would have frost-bite prompted us to change our minds
-concerning Deep Ghyll, and to traverse away to the left towards the
-foot of Steep Ghyll. The others came up the pitch by our route, led in
-good style by Mr. H. V. Reade. They expressed regret at our untimely
-departure, and worked laboriously up the ghyll. It was ungenerous of us
-that evening to gloat over the fact that they had had a terribly cold
-time of it higher up.
-
-Our route out of the ghyll was known to Mr. Haskett Smith in 1882.
-It is not often used, and, indeed, in winter it offers certain risks
-of its own. Starting from the top of the pitch we bore directly down
-towards the entrance to Lord’s Rake, and when within a reasonable
-distance of the snow, jumped down to it, sinking in up to our necks.
-Hurrying down to Hollow Stones as fast as our limbs would carry us, we
-endured the pangs of returning circulation in our hands and feet, and
-finished the descent in exhilaration, and with a sense of having well
-earned our share of the Christmas festivities.
-
-_Second pitch, Variety routes._--A description of the direct way over
-the second pitch is scarcely necessary. The leader must start just at
-the entrance to the cave, and work up the corner to the recess between
-the jammed stone and the cave boulder. The holds are minute, and the
-necessary stress on the finger tips excessive. He should try it first
-when there is snow below him, and with his second arranged to pay
-out twenty feet of rope from the innermost corner of the cave. If the
-leader is destined to slip, it will take place at the point where the
-slope suddenly becomes easier, for then his fingers are fatigued, his
-centre of gravity wants for the first time an onward as well as an
-upward motion, and his foothold will fail him at the crisis. Therefore
-his centre of gravity will describe the ordinary parabola back into
-the snow, and the tremendous jerk on the rope will make the man wonder
-whether the remains of his centre of gravity are worth retaining.
-Supposing that he has safely rounded this awkward edge, the utmost
-caution is necessary for six feet till the scree is reached. Then comes
-the trouble of manipulating the rope without shaking down stones on
-the next man who is to pass up. If the leader wants the rope to be in
-actual tension on his account, he has a hard task in bracing himself
-firmly without dislodging the scree from under his feet. This trouble
-of course is minimised when good firm snow can be cut to supply him a
-footing.
-
-On the whole this direct route over the second pitch may be regarded
-as too risky, except under the best possible circumstances--such, for
-example, as existed when Messrs. Robinson and Creak found the two
-pitches in Deep Ghyll entirely covered with snow, and an easy route
-available straight up the middle from bottom to top. Then there was no
-second pitch!
-
-The chimney on the right is excellent, but is not a course open to
-beginners. It is in two parts. At the two places where it must be
-quitted the route lies up the buttress on the left. I recall the remark
-of an unenterprising follower as he looked up at the vertical walls
-above him; he had been in difficulty down below and was inquiring
-my intentions. His patience had been all but exhausted, and he said
-so, adding: ‘It is not merely steep parts that so upset me. They can
-be borne, but I don’t like this infernal dangling.’ The discussion
-was diverted into a side issue, as to whether the adjective was
-permissible, but in justice to his memory--he never visited the Lakes
-again--be it said that very few climbers like the sensation of suspense.
-
-
-THE GREAT CHIMNEY.--The position of this has already been
-defined. Its ascent affords the best finish to the Deep Ghyll climb if
-snow is absent from the gully and the screes are wearisome. The aspect
-of the chimney is most forbidding from below, and there is probably
-but one way of vanquishing it. I had been told how the first party had
-proceeded up it, and had also heard an account of their defeat at a
-second attempt. There is much likelihood of defeat even when one knows
-the way, by reason of the awkwardness of the corner that needs careful
-negotiation, and I am bound to admit that a first ascent rapidly
-accomplished may help the climber very little in his second attempt. At
-the time of my visit the rocks were warm and dry, our party of three
-had just come up Collier’s Climb, and were keen on completing their
-knowledge of Scawfell by making for the only chimney with which they
-were unacquainted. We all gathered together high up in the recess,
-and then, when the rope had been satisfactorily arranged for a long
-run out, I started working up the right wall by some small but strong
-ledges till the roof of the cavern was approached. Then it became
-necessary to work out of the cave and round by the jammed stone. Just
-outside was a ledge within reach for the hands; but to work the body
-up the corner so as to kneel on the ledge was very awkward, the main
-trouble arising from the depressing effect of the corner of the jammed
-stone which forced head and shoulders almost to the level of one’s
-feet. The prayerful attitude realized, I could anchor myself a little
-by looping the rope round a stone in the roof and had then only to
-stand up and clamber between the boulder and the living rock, trusting
-to footholds on the latter. A few feet landed me in safety and the
-others came up like smoke, carrying my cap that the gymnastics round
-the corner had shaken down to them. A short scree and a few easy rocks
-completed the gully, which both in regard to the aspect from above and
-to the form of its one great difficulty reminded us of the Shamrock
-Gully over in Ennerdale. The main differences in these two pitches are
-that the Shamrock Gully pitch looks easier but proves to be harder,
-also that it has less cave and more boulder. Neither pitch is suitable
-for beginners.
-
-By walking across to the foot of the lower part of Professor’s
-Chimney--a name, by the way, given first to the easy exit on the right
-of Pisgah--a pitch of some severity can be taken or left, as fancy
-dictates. The platform above this pitch leads well into the chimney and
-the climb again gets stiff. A direct ascent of the pinnacle is probably
-feasible from this level, but the first thirty feet will need the
-utmost enterprise on the part of the daring aspirant to fresh honours
-in this well-explored region.
-
-THE PROFESSOR’S CHIMNEY.--This looks almost as difficult as the
-Great Chimney opposite, but is more a test of style than skill, the
-only trouble being that of loose rocks. Though unworthy of perfect
-confidence at all times, it may become most friendly in times of frost;
-many loose stones occur that can be safely _pressed_ though dangerous
-to _pull_, so that with a slight modification of style they are
-rendered highly useful. Then of course two loose stones may share one’s
-weight when one cannot take it.
-
-The introduction of all this elementary practical mountaineering is
-due to my recollection of a huge stone that came away near the top of
-the Professor’s Chimney when my party were coming up it. I was out of
-harm’s way on the Jordan above, but in wrestling with the last part of
-the chimney, a portion that slightly overhangs, the second in the party
-pulled away the rock. It bounded down, ricochetting from side to side,
-and for a moment placed the startled climbers in imminent peril.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-SCAWFELL CRAGS FROM THE PULPIT ROCK]
-
-In conclusion, just a word to pedestrians who have come out to climb
-only by telescope. The ascent of Scawfell from the Lord’s Rake may be
-safely and rapidly accomplished by following its lead past the entrance
-to Deep Ghyll.
-
-The best plan is to keep as straight a course on the scree as the
-up-and-down nature of the Rake will permit, with the steep rocks
-immediately on the left. A pinnacle is almost at once passed on the
-right that in former times was oft mistaken by the unlearned for the
-great Scawfell Pinnacle, more especially because a cairn had been
-erected on its crest as a decoy, by the wily discoverer of the true
-pinnacle. Then it becomes necessary to descend a little, taking care
-not to slither down to the right with the loose _debris_. After a few
-yards the slope again rises for a while, and an easy gully shortly
-discloses itself on the left, following which the tourist will
-find himself in a few minutes on the stony plateau that at an easy
-inclination travels away westward to Burnmoor. In clear weather he
-will see the huge cairn that crowns the top of Scawfell, at a slight
-elevation above the top of the gully, and can safely make a bee-line
-for it. Climbers often descend by this route in bad weather when the
-Broad Stand appears to elude their anxious search.
-
-The quickest way down from Scawfell is to make for the head of this
-gully, and then, instead of descending, leave it on the right and
-follow the edge of cliff straight towards the head of Wastwater;
-where the edge is deflected to the left, a scree-run to the foot of
-Brown Tongue takes us over rough but safe ground to the diminutive
-footpath that starts at the stone wall. It should be learnt first in
-clear weather, if possible, as there is no royal road to safety for the
-befogged novice on the fells.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-_THE RAKE’S PROGRESS AND CERTAIN SHORT CLIMBS NEAR IT_
-
-
-THE RAKE’S PROGRESS.--This happy title dates from about 1881.
-The Progress is an easy ledge leading from the lower end of the Lord’s
-Rake to the point where the Mickledore ridge joins the main mass
-of Scawfell. It runs along the base of the vertical walls of this
-mountain, and though at a great elevation above the huge Mickledore
-hollow, is scarcely entitled to the thrilling adjective _vertigineuse_
-of the French climbing vocabulary. Yet it is capable of carrying one
-into the finest situations; and even the hardened expert, with his
-steady head and well-trained muscles, realises while on it that danger
-is hovering about him at every step, though it does not touch him.
-Years ago I read, in Freshfield’s ‘Italian Alps,’ of the Pelmo traverse
-in the Ampezzo Dolomites, and memory seized on the Rake’s Progress as
-the nearest approach to it that mountain experience had then afforded.
-Let there be no rise on the Mickledore; make the Progress thrice as
-long, and a little more rakish; change the rock from porphyry to
-magnesian limestone; let the drop below the ledge be a few hundred feet
-instead of a few score; make it necessary to crawl on all fours in one
-or two corners, and the resemblance will be perfect! In a few yards
-after the preliminary scramble on to the ledge, the crags are broken on
-our right by the short chimney entrances to Steep Ghyll and Moss Ghyll.
-These cannot be mistaken, inasmuch as they mark the last possible
-points of attack on these cliffs for one-half of the traverse.
-
-Passing the entrance to Moss Ghyll, to which we must return for the
-ascent of this fine gully, a steep rise marks the accomplishment of
-one-third of the course. A little further a thin cleft cuts obliquely
-up the cliff towards the left. It is wonderfully straight, and the
-slabs of rock on either side are hopelessly smooth. The crack widens
-higher up, but until 1897 the terrific simplicity of its lower portion
-had warned off all who examined it with the view of storming this side
-of Scawfell. The upper half, reached by an ingenious zig-zag route on
-the face, is now well known as one of the safest and best climbs on
-Scawfell. Shortly afterwards we reach a rectangular recess looking as
-though it had been quarried for a gigantic monolith. Here again the
-great difficulty of starting up is manifested at a glance, though in
-the same direction up above the recess is so much more deeply cut and
-the sides so much nearer to each other that one’s safety is assured for
-the second half of the climb. In this case also, the middle is reached
-by a slight detour on the left. A few yards further along the Progress
-are two thin cracks uniting at a height of twenty feet and leading to
-a platform ten feet higher. Thence a perfectly safe cleft passes
-directly up for another forty feet, till a grassy ledge, clearly
-visible only when marked by snow, takes one easily to the middle of the
-long chimney. To mount the chimney is an undertaking well within the
-powers of the average rock-climber, and with the additional merit of
-being perfectly safe for a party of three.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abrahams & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE ASCENT OF THE BROAD STAND
-
-(_Face page 30_)]
-
-Such are the Keswick Brothers’ Climb and Collier’s Climb, two of
-the best conceived problems of the district and worthy of their
-discoverers. The lower half of the latter is undeniably severe; even
-the best have failed at it, and I propose in a separate section to
-describe an ascent in detail, to point out the method our party adopted
-to eliminate the risk that the climber is popularly supposed to accept
-as inevitable, and to indicate how the Keswick Brothers’ route enables
-us to avoid the worst piece altogether.
-
-The next halt we make close to the Mickledore, within thirty-five feet
-of the end of the Progress. Here a thin cleft, known as Petty’s Rift
-for the last twenty years, leads to a square recess ten feet up, and
-marks the start of the North or Penrith Climb up the Scawfell crags.
-These are now only a few score feet above us. The illustration facing
-page 26 shows how the upper outline of the cliff and the Mickledore
-ridge approach to within a few feet of each other.
-
-Having reached the Mickledore ridge it is well worth while walking
-along it to its furthest end, and then bearing to the left on to the
-Pulpit rock, for the sake of the fine view of the climbs we have
-just been enumerating. The Eskdale side of Scawfell is terminated by
-an abrupt vertical cliff that seemingly offers no sort of route for
-the cragsman. Half way down to the corner of this cliff, a gully cuts
-deeply into the mountain, and passes upwards at an apparent angle of
-45° towards the tops of Moss Ghyll and Collier’s Climb.
-
-The gully--Scawfell Chimney or Mickledore Chimney, as it is sometimes
-distinctively called--has its own peculiar difficulties in wet or snowy
-weather, but when at its best it may be attacked by comparatively
-inexperienced men, if they are properly equipped and exercise ordinary
-precautions. On the other hand, the gully represents the drainage
-channel for a considerable area, and is usually wet.
-
-Undoubtedly the easiest way from Mickledore up to the ridge facing us
-is by the Broad Stand. The start is made in the cleft half way between
-Mickledore and the foot of Scawfell Chimney. Three short pitches, each
-less than ten feet, take us on to an easy slope that can be followed
-to the upper part of the chimney. To keep up between the chimney on
-our left and the steep cliffs to our right is an easy matter in clear
-weather, till Pisgah appears on our right, the descent into Deep Ghyll
-straight in front of us, and the cairn-crowned summit of the mountain a
-hundred yards away towards the left.
-
-This finishes the preliminary survey of the eastern face of Scawfell,
-during the perusal of which the reader is recommended to examine the
-diagram facing page 46.
-
-THE BROAD STAND.--My first climb in the Lake District was up the
-Broad Stand. Dr. S. and I had planned a week’s walking tour over the
-Cumberland fells, guided by Baddeley and Jenkinson, and ignorant of the
-existence of any regular rock practice hereabouts. We walked up from
-Langdale one Sunday morning in heavy snow to the top of Rossett Ghyll,
-and then studied the guide book for information concerning the small
-tarn that lay a few feet beneath us. ‘Deep and clear, and good for
-bathing,’ we read; so we bathed. It was long ago, and neither of us has
-bathed during a snowstorm since. Our feet got benumbed standing on the
-snow while we were dressing ourselves, and we had much ado to restore
-circulation. Then as the day advanced and the air cleared a little,
-it seemed possible that we might find a way up Scawfell Pikes, which,
-we had read, was the highest point in England. With much ploughing
-through soft snow, loaded with heavy knapsacks, and supported by but
-one broken walking stick, we reached the topmost cairn in perfect
-safety and realised the height of that Easter ambition. Then it was
-that Dr. S. read aloud to me a thrilling description of the Mickledore
-chasm, which presented an almost impassable barrier between the Pikes
-and Scawfell, a terrific gap that only hardy cragsmen of the dales were
-able to traverse. The ice-cold bath on that Sabbath morn had done much
-to quench our spirit, but we had partially recovered ourselves, and a
-burning desire to scale the majestic peak opposite flamed up in each
-of us simultaneously, and drove us down towards the Pulpit rock that
-sentinels the Mickledore. The guide-book was not wanting in detail.
-There were three Ways of attacking Scawfell from Mickledore; first
-the Chimney, then Broad Stand, and then the Lord’s Rake. I believe we
-guessed the position of the chimney correctly, for after all there is
-something to show for the name; but we were hopelessly at sea with
-the other two. Dr. S. argued that Lord’s Rake sounded so much worse
-than Broad Stand that we were bound to go for it wherever it might be
-and however easy its aspect. Nobody at home would believe us if we
-described a Broad Stand as a vertical wall hundreds of feet in height,
-glistening with ice, and guarded above by overhanging boulders ready
-to pulverise the bold invader. On the other hand, the Lord’s Rake
-seemed remotely to suggest Jacob’s Ladder, and offered the imagination
-a goodly choice of adjective and epithet. Where, then, was the Lord’s
-Rake? We had little time to consider, and rapidly decided that the
-Broad Stand was away down in Eskdale on the left, and the Lord’s Rake
-straight up from Mickledore. Wherein we were wrong, as the previous
-pages may show the reader. Then we tried to get up the wall just where
-the Mickledore ridge strikes the cliff, but the cold soon drove us to
-seek some easier start lower on the left. Thus it was that fate took
-us to the actual Broad Stand, up which, inexperienced though we were,
-we could scarcely help finding the correct route. Place a man at the
-right starting point, and he will easily find the upward line of least
-resistance, though not so swiftly as he would trace out the downward
-line if he slipped.
-
-Twelve yards down from the Mickledore we came to a deep recess in
-the mountain side, large enough to penetrate if one is not burdened
-with a knapsack. (A confirmation of the right spot is supplied by a
-thinner crack six feet lower down the screes.) Wriggling up into the
-recess and then out on to the slightly sloping platform above it was
-a matter of only a few seconds, and we then found facing us a wall of
-from eight to ten feet in height offering very little hand or foothold
-for a direct attack. But by descending the sloping grassy ledge at its
-foot we could see some iced ledges (clear rocks show the marks of many
-boots) that suggested the circumvention of the difficulty. To these we
-in turn trusted ourselves, and by passing round the somewhat awkward
-left-hand corner of the wall we found an easy though steep route to
-its flat top. Then a smaller wall of about seven feet barred the way.
-It was easier than the last, though in those days the frost had not
-scooped out the hollow on the edge, and by the help of my comrade’s
-shoulders I reached the summit. The difficulties were obviously over;
-we could walk up by the right on to the snow slope, above which, as our
-early inspection from the Pulpit rock showed, there was an easy route
-to the top of Scawfell. Unfortunately my friend was not up the last
-step. I could not reciprocate his kindness and offer him my shoulders.
-We had no rope, and the rocks were all glazed. I had not intended to
-mention our ropeless condition, but the truth will out sooner or later;
-neither had we nails in our boots. But apparently we had sense enough
-to realize that an accident might happen if we tempted Providence any
-further, and with some sorrow we decided to descend again. We found
-our way down the Mickledore screes and Brown Tongue to Wastdale, and
-there learnt that we had tried conclusions with the Broad Stand at
-its worst. We also learnt that from the top of the third step which I
-had reached the route lay up the snow slope to the broken rocks, then
-slightly to the left until the easy part of the chimney could be looked
-into, then obliquely up to the right over rough ground to the small
-cairn overlooking Deep Ghyll. Many times since then, rattling down the
-Broad Stand when the rocks were dry and our party well acquainted with
-every inch of the ground, have we recalled that Easter Sunday and our
-first essay of the Broad Stand. There have also been many occasions to
-remember the golden rule in the descent of these crags. First find the
-top of the Scawfell Chimney; keep it on the right till its one pitch is
-just below. Then bear to the left down the grassy slope and hunt for
-the notch in the top step of the Broad Stand.
-
-The usual thing in a fog is to find oneself down in Eskdale. I remember
-a photographic friend once leaving his camera at the foot of Deep Ghyll
-while he went for an hour’s round of Lord’s Rake, Scawfell Cairn, and
-the Broad Stand. The dense mountain mists gathered about him at the
-top, and rendered useless his efforts to steer the true course. That
-night he discovered himself at Boot, and three days elapsed before he
-found his camera, suffering from the effects of over-exposure as much
-as himself.
-
-THE NORTH CLIMB.--This starts at Petty’s Rift, already
-referred to on page 31, about twelve yards from Mickledore along the
-Rake’s Progress. From a distance it looks as though the climb would
-necessarily include the funnel-shaped gully below the Progress, and
-the whole aspect of the work is somewhat forbidding. Nevertheless the
-difficulties are concentrated in the first six feet. When once the
-climber can get a foot on to the floor of the little square recess, his
-safety is assured. In the photograph facing page 40 the positions of
-the three members of the party indicate sufficiently well the course
-usually taken. The last man is taking off with his left foot, and has
-his right hand at the edge of the recess on to which he intends to
-climb. The face is very exposed in wintry weather, and several stories
-are told of parties who have suffered here from frostbite. It is not a
-safe place to descend when ice is about the rocks.
-
-The following account of the North or Penrith Climb is taken from Mr.
-C. N. Williamson’s article in ‘All the Year Round.’ Introducing, as it
-does, Mr. Seatree’s original description, I make no apology for quoting
-it in full: ‘There is yet another and a more direct way of climbing the
-Scawfell cliffs from Mickledore, which, for want of a better name, we
-may christen the “North Climb.” The route is known to very few. It was
-discovered for himself in 1874 by Mr. George Seatree.... Major Cundill
-had already climbed it in 1869.
-
-‘From the ridge we traversed a ledge of grass-covered rock (the Rake’s
-Progress) to the right until we reached a detached boulder, stepping
-upon which we were enabled to get handhold of a crevice six or seven
-feet from where we stood. To draw ourselves up so as to get our feet
-upon this was the difficulty. There is only one small foothold in that
-distance, and to have slipped here would have precipitated the climber
-many feet below. Having succeeded in gaining this foothold, we found
-ourselves in a small rectangular recess with barely room to turn round.
-From here it was necessary to draw ourselves carefully over two other
-ledges into a small rift in the rocks, and then traverse on our hands
-and knees another narrow ledge of almost eight feet to the left, which
-brought us nearly in a line with the Mickledore ridge. From here all
-was comparatively smooth sailing.
-
-‘The detached boulder may be identified with certainty by noticing
-that it is imbedded in the Rake’s Progress close to the top of a
-funnel-shaped grassy gully about ten or twelve yards from Mickledore.
-None but experienced climbers should attempt the North Climb from the
-Mickledore.’
-
-SCAWFELL CHIMNEY.--A year after our first sorry attempt on Broad
-Stand Dr. S. and I were being shown the merits of Cust’s gully on Great
-End as a school for step-cutting, by an enthusiastic wielder of the
-ice-axe, Mr. C. G. Monro. Neither of us knew much about the subject,
-but it was pleasant to be well instructed, and on reaching the summit
-of Great End we wondered where we could cut steps next. Monro suggested
-an adjournment for lunch at Mickledore and a subsequent passage up the
-doubtless snow-filled chimney: to which we all agreed.
-
-On reaching the chimney, Monro took the lead and hopefully ploughed
-through heavy wet snow as a preliminary. Unfortunately, the snow became
-softer and deeper as we advanced, until at last we were up to our
-waists in slush, and wet through. The pitch was not very far to seek.
-We saw long dripping icicles barring our direct route onwards. Both
-sides of the gully were heavily glazed with wet ice, and we foresaw
-an anxious time of waiting while the leader prospected. At the time
-we were not aware that the usual exit was upon the right-hand side of
-the pitch, by a couple of easy broad ledges. Nor could we see that the
-pitch was in two parts, cave upon cave, with a large resting-place
-between; for the icicles hung in an impenetrable curtain. Monro
-attacked the icicles valiantly. Twice he succeeded in working half
-way up between the centre and left wall, but twice he was repulsed
-vigorously, and found himself landed in the snow below. I was getting
-cold and impatient. Monro was willing to take a breathing space. I
-unroped and made for the left wall. Cutting little steps for hands and
-feet in the ice that covered the wall, and using the fingers for all
-they were worth, in some ungainly fashion I reached the level of the
-top of the pitch and traversed on to the snow above. The axe had been
-used, I suspect, more like a croquet mallet than anything else, and
-introduced its own particular dangers. But it was of no consequence,
-the pitch was climbed, and the shivering pair below tried to fling up
-the rope to me. This was a matter of much difficulty, placed as we
-were, but by approaching each other as far as we dared, a happy fling
-brought the end of the rope to my hand, and I responded by throwing
-down, to their extreme peril, the ice-axe that they needed to effect
-their ascent. We managed the rest badly. My position was insecure in
-the upper snow of the gully, or at any rate it seemed to be so. The
-others were benumbed with cold and wet, unable to feel the holds or to
-rely on getting any help from me. We certainly were not a strong party,
-and there was no possibility of mutual aid. The only consolation was
-in the fact that all danger was absent; a fall could only result in a
-plunge into ten feet of soft snow, but we never afterwards spoke with
-pride of that afternoon’s work. The other two decided to give it up,
-and go down to Mickledore again. My own feelings were not consulted,
-but what matter? The Broad Stand was somewhere about. I might descend
-that way and shout when in trouble. We joined again at Mickledore, and
-rather gloomily glissaded to Hollow Stones.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE PENRITH CLIMB FROM MICKLEDORE]
-
-That evening at Wastdale we hunted out Williamson’s reference to the
-Scawfell Chimney. ‘It is impossible to get straight up the chimney,
-as the way is blocked by an overhanging slab, and escape must be
-effected either by the right-hand wall near the top, where handhold is
-miserably inadequate, or by the “corner,” forty feet up the chimney.
-The passage of the corner is a matter of stride and balance, as there
-is no positive hold for the hands. There is a bad drop into the chimney
-behind, and a slip in rounding the corner would end in broken limbs, if
-not a battered skull. A man essaying the corner must apply himself like
-a plaister to an unpleasantly projecting rock, and then by shifting the
-weight from one foot to the other (for the legs are stretched widely
-apart) he can creep round.’
-
-The chimney has not often been climbed by that variation of mine since
-then. In dry weather it is perfectly safe to ascend or descend direct
-by the pitch. In the ascent both sides of the gully may be used at
-first; then comes an awkward crawl over the first jammed boulder, into
-the secondary cave. Then, taking care of a few loose stones, another
-jammed boulder forming the roof is overcome--it is only a few feet
-high--and a passage out on the right is made possible. A long stretch
-of scree next fills the bed of the gully, the right wall of which is
-here broken away almost entirely, so that the climber generally makes
-an exit, and passes straight up to the Deep Ghyll cairn. But a pitch
-still remains to terminate the scree, and must be climbed by him who
-would assure himself of having explored the gully in its entirety.
-
-THE PARSON’S GULLY.--An easy way of descending to upper Eskdale
-other than by the Mickledore route was pointed out a few years ago by
-the Rev. T. C. V. Bastow. It is by a short gully with two pitches,
-due south of the summit cairn. When drift snow lies about it, it is
-generally possible to walk or glissade down the whole length of the
-gully on to the screes below.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-_MOSS GHYLL, COLLIER’S CLIMB, AND KESWICK BROTHERS’ CLIMB_
-
-
-MOSS GHYLL.--There are accounts of explorations of this famous
-gully as far back as 1889. It was styled Sweep Ghyll by Mr. R. C.
-Gilson, partly for euphonious grouping with Deep Ghyll and Steep
-Ghyll, and partly as a suggestion of ‘the probable profession of its
-future first climber.’ In June, 1889, a strong set of four managed to
-penetrate upwards into its recesses a yard or two beyond Tennis Court
-ledge, 300 feet above the Rake’s Progress, and almost exactly half way
-from start to finish. Here the explorers saw the great jammed boulders
-apparently barring all further progress, and decided to return the way
-they came. Then, a few days later, another party went round to the top
-of the gully and descended to the lower edge of the small scree that
-so quietly terminates the high and difficult last chimney. Here they
-firmly anchored themselves, and let down an adventurous member on 160
-feet of rope. He descended in this way as far as the upper portion of
-the great obstacle in the middle of the gully, but saw no way whatever
-for an ascending party to circumvent or attack successfully the immense
-barrier. He apparently realized that the upper chimney could be fairly
-climbed, though of course it would tax the resources of the best of
-cragsmen; but the jammed boulders he judged to be insuperable, and
-returned to tell his companions the melancholy news. They left Moss
-Ghyll with the conviction that it would never be climbed, and until
-December, 1892, everyone else who came and saw turned back with much
-the same impression.
-
-On the 27th of that month Messrs. Collie, Hastings, and Robinson made
-a determined attack on the ghyll. The winter was exceptionally fine
-and the rocks were clean and dry. They easily reached the Tennis Court
-ledge, and thence traversed into the gully. Penetrating the cave below
-the big pitch, Dr. Collie, who was leading, climbed up to the roof
-and out by a small window between the jammed boulders. Thence, by the
-ingenious expedient of hacking at a thin undercut plate of rock, he
-exposed a small foothold on the wall that enabled him to traverse out
-from the pitch and into a place of safety beyond. Thence to the top of
-the pitch was an easy matter, and the remaining members of the party
-quickly followed him. It has since been discovered that the hardest
-part of the gully was yet before them. They, however, had practically
-solved the main problem, and were contented to work out of the gully by
-steep ‘mantelshelf’ climbing up to the left. The honour of the first
-strict ascent of Moss Ghyll fell to Dr. Collier a few days later,
-who climbed the ghyll from beginning to end under the impression that
-the previous party had done the same. Dr. Collier was accompanied by
-four others, and was emphatic in his opinion that the final chimney
-represented the hardest part of the climb. Two days later he took
-up Professors Marshall and Dixon, and from the former I obtained
-sufficient information to start off one morning on my own account to
-learn for the first time what Moss Ghyll was like.
-
-It was distinctly a day of adventure, and I learnt a great deal
-concerning the ghyll. The passage across the Collie step appeared
-to me the most difficult, but the loose slabs over which one has to
-walk adroitly were then covered with fresh snow. The famous step was
-invisible, and I had to stoop and scrape in order to determine its
-exact shape and position. At the first attempt on the traverse I
-slipped, and fell into the snow-bed of the gully below. The result
-was scarcely surprising, though eminently uncomfortable. But the
-falling was, under the circumstances, almost part of the programme,
-and a rope had been fixed in the interior of the cavern, passed out
-through the ‘window,’ and then attached to my waist, to eliminate the
-danger of plunging some 400 feet down to the foot of the gully. The
-second attempt was successful, though I confess to a feeling of lively
-apprehension as the critical point was being passed.
-
-Thence to the parting of the ways was easy travelling, and an exit
-was made by the left-hand route. I returned two days after to fetch
-axe and rope, that had been left at the big pitch, but it was not
-until the Whitsuntide of 1896 that a suitable opportunity occurred of
-visiting Moss Ghyll at its best, for the purposes of comparison and of
-exploration of the direct finish. During that interval the climb had
-been repeated many times, and Moss Ghyll was by way of becoming ‘an
-easy day for a lady.’ Hot-headed youths would arrive fresh at Wastdale,
-inquire for the hardest thing about, and at the mention of Moss Ghyll
-would straightway fling themselves into the breach and by hook or crook
-wriggle themselves up and out in triumph. Others were unsuccessful,
-and it was always amusing to learn where the stupendous difficulty
-had arisen, where no mortal man could have gone further. The personal
-equation was always in evidence, both in the actual climbing and in the
-history thereof.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PLATE II.
-
-SCAWFELL FROM THE PULPIT ROCK (p. 26).
-
-The height of Pisgah above the Lord’s Rake is about 520 feet.
-
- _a_ Scawfell Chimney.
- _b_ Broad Stand (p. 30).
- _c_ Penrith or North Climb (p. 40).
- _d_ Collier’s Climb.
- _e_ Keswick Brothers’ Climb.
- _f_ Moss Ghyll.
- _g_ Dr. Collie’s Variation-exit.
- _h_ Steep Ghyll.
- _j_ Pinnacle Climb from Lord’s Rake.
- _k_ Low Man.
- _l_ Scawfell Pinnacle (pp. 69 and 76).
- _m_ Pisgah.
- _n_ North Ridge of Pinnacle (p. 83).
- _p_ Lord’s Rake.
- _q_ Easy Terrace into Deep Ghyll.
- _r_ Great Chimney.
- _s_ Entrance to Deep Ghyll (p. 12).
- _t_ Rake’s Progress.
- _v_ Mickledore Screes.
- _w_ Mickledore.
- _x_ West Wall Climb (App.).]
-
-My companions at Whitsuntide were Messrs. W. Brigg and Greenwood.
-Neither of them had been in the ghyll before, but both were very keen
-to make its acquaintance, though so far as reading could take them the
-smallest details of the climb were perfectly well known. We separated
-off from a larger party on the Rake’s Progress, and at the entrance
-to the gully, which I have already defined in position, we roped up
-and began the rock climbing at once. There are a few small and stiff
-pitches that may be taken as they come in the first fifty feet of
-ascent from the Progress; but we were quite willing to make the
-usual divergence to the right from the entrance to the first cave. This
-led us up easy grass and rock close to the gully, which soon dwindled
-into utter insignificance by reason of its right wall being almost
-entirely cut away. Keeping out in the open until the slope suddenly
-steepened, we made a traverse into the gully, and walked up the screes
-until stopped by a long and awkward-looking grass-crowned chimney. Then
-we were hemmed in on both sides, and my friends were invited to define
-the nature of the next move. They knew something of the locality;
-we had to climb up the right-hand wall on to a level platform some
-eighteen feet higher, and then work back into the ghyll by a slightly
-upward traverse. The platform was the well-known Tennis Court ledge,
-and its vertical wall was one of the chief difficulties of former days.
-When in 1893 I had first occasion to climb the wall, there was much
-ice about and it was easiest to work some way up the chimney before
-stepping out on to the wall. The second attempt, two days later, was
-in worse circumstances, and I preferred working directly upwards to
-a still higher level before diverging. On that occasion it seemed as
-though the simplest plan would have been to avoid the Tennis Court
-ledge altogether and keep to the chimney. But Mr. Kempson has since
-pointed out that the grass holds at the top are unreliable except when
-frost holds the earth together. With Brigg and Greenwood I should
-have been loth to leave the Tennis Court unvisited. So we clambered
-directly up to it. The holds in the lower part of the wall were slight
-but very firm. The surface was rough and reliable. Two-thirds of the
-way up we found a little spike of rock that offered an admirable hold,
-sufficient to belay the rope safely while rounding the top edge of the
-wall and drawing up on to the platform. The others then came up with
-ease, and we halted a moment to look at the view.
-
-The ledge is scarcely large enough for tennis, it might be eight feet
-long and two or three feet wide; the name is just the overflow of the
-pretty wit of some early explorer. Above us rose threateningly the
-vertical rampart that separates Moss Ghyll and Steep Ghyll. We could
-see the jammed boulders a little higher up in our ghyll. They appear
-small from Hollow Stones, but from our ledge each looked almost as
-large as a church. Wastdale Church we had in mind. The opposite wall of
-the ghyll looked hopelessly inaccessible, and we were little surprised
-that so many before us had been content to look and return. The
-traverse into the ghyll again was not so easy. If the leader slipped it
-would require clever management of the rope on the part of the others
-to avoid an unwilling follow on, though I believe a party was once
-tested here in that manner--and survived the test.
-
-It was necessary to pass round a small buttress on to the scree bed
-of the gully. The first two steps were upwards, with just a steadying
-hold above for the hands. It was not desirable to keep too high,
-an unnecessary lengthening of the _mauvais pas_ that some climbers
-recommend. The footholds are not perfect; they are large, but slope the
-wrong way. When dry, the friction is ample to prevent slipping. Where
-the rocks are glazed, as I have good occasion to remember, the passage
-is distinctly dangerous, especially the return from the gully to the
-Tennis Court ledge.
-
-Thence, when all had rounded the corner safely, we walked up scree into
-the large cavern formed by the two jammed boulders. The one would of
-itself have formed a bridge across the gully, with a recess between it
-and the steep bed of the gully; the other, which is much larger, has
-fallen on to the first and roofed over the recess. When well within the
-cave we could see the ‘window’ high up between the two boulders, the
-one weak point by which the pitch could be attacked. I clambered up
-the interior of the cave and on to the window-sill. One of the others
-followed me, the third staying below to anchor the rope more firmly.
-From the window we could see the smooth steep wall on our right by
-which we were to traverse outwards. A couple of feet below our level
-we could observe that the rock formed a sharp horizontal edge six feet
-long, below which it overhung considerably. Just along this edge we
-were preparing to walk, using two steps that were sufficiently large
-for our needs. The first was the step cut by Dr. Collie. The second
-was at the further end of the short promenade, and was just capable
-of holding the toes of both boots. Starting with the right foot on the
-first step, the further end of the second step was taken in a long
-stride with the left. The right was then brought up to it, and the left
-reached round the corner at the end on to a respectable and satisfying
-foothold. The trick of balancing was not very difficult, providing of
-course that the body was kept as nearly as possible vertical. A tumble
-when no snow was about would be painful even with a rope to limit its
-freedom, so we moved with deliberation and with a due sense of the
-difficulties of the place. After passing the dreaded _pas-de-deux_,
-I reached in about ten feet of ascent a satisfactory recess, where a
-‘belaying pin’ was to be found. It is an excellent projection of rock,
-sometimes overlooked by climbers, behind which the rope can be slipped,
-and held with firmness in the event of a fall. It is a little awkward
-for the leader to pass directly up into the ghyll again before the
-second man moves away from the window. Such a course would require a
-long rope. Using the belaying pin we found that a sixty-feet length
-of rope was ample for the party of three, and no time was lost in
-unroping or re-adjusting. When our second man reached the pin I quitted
-the recess to make room for him, and mounted into the gully while he
-played up the last man. A few feet of easy scree brought us into the
-large open portion of the ravine which marks the only spot where it is
-possible to break away to the left from the gully. The final crags in
-front rose abruptly up for another 200 feet, and were deeply cut
-by the vertical Collier’s Chimney, which starts almost at once from
-our level. The skyline trended downwards by the left, so that the open
-route to the top was not so long in point of distance as the other.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-COLLIER’S CHIMNEY, MOSS GHYLL
-
-(_Face page 51_)]
-
-It certainly was easier to work up the wall to the left. It rose at
-a steep angle, and was columnar in structure, with long, porphyritic
-slabs crowned by small levels of tufted grass. The leader would often
-be unable to help his followers with the rope, but the successive
-ledges could be so chosen that no great distance would exist between
-the resting-places. Such open work is often more trying for the nerves
-than harder chimney climbing, but it is always admirable practice when
-the ledges are reliable.
-
-I had quitted the gully by this variation three years before, and
-wanted both on my own account and that of my friends to work out the
-alternative route. I started up the right wall, at first steadied by
-the left, but soon found myself too far out of the chimney to feel
-at all comfortable. Thirty feet up was a jammed stone blocking the
-narrow way, apparently very effectually. But we had heard of a possible
-wriggle behind the jammed stone, and with a reprehensible lack of
-daring I made a traverse to the chimney again, and began working up
-it with back and knee in the orthodox manner. The situation was safe
-enough, but the effort of lifting oneself inch by inch was supremely
-fatiguing, and when I discovered the hole behind the boulder to be
-about half my minimum sectional area I began to regret the scheme. But
-it was too late to return, and with a dread fear of closing up the
-‘through’ route for ever, I straightened out one arm above my head and
-thrust it through the hole. Fortunately I had no camera sack to hold
-me back, a frequent source of annoyance in a tight place. Here we were
-all travelling light, and I had nothing to thrust through the aperture
-but a limp body that was at every moment lessening its rigidity. As
-soon as both shoulders were well in, the rest followed more easily
-by vigorous prisings with the elbows, which are so useful in upward
-thrusting. Dragging myself into a standing position on the jammed
-boulder, I called on the others to follow. They chose the outside
-course, making two little détours out and back on the vertical wall,
-probably the exact plan adopted by Dr. Collier in the first ascent. My
-position in this little ‘sentry-box’ was secure, and the rope could be
-manipulated with all necessary care till the three of us were gathered
-close together in the tiny recess. Then we had a somewhat easier
-scramble up the next vertical portion of the chimney, to pass some
-small jammed stones twenty feet higher. We used the same wall and found
-the footholds in it more obviously arranged for our convenience. The
-first climber had surely a bad time of it on this wall, seeing that it
-was all moss-covered, and required an immense amount of preliminary
-clearing before the holds could be discerned. But moss has had no
-chance of growing there for the last four years, and we had none to
-trouble us. A couple of minutes carried us from the sentry-box to the
-top of the next pitch. The slope of the ghyll suddenly became easier,
-scree led to a short and easy rock pitch, somewhat spoilt by loose
-stones, and then a walk to the top brought us in contact with friends
-and the commissariat.
-
-THE PISGAH BUTTRESS.--In the second chapter mention was made
-of the small pinnacle of Pisgah that flanked the Professor’s Chimney.
-Viewing the crags from Mickledore, it will be seen that this pinnacle
-is the culminating point of the ridge between Moss Ghyll and Steep
-Ghyll. It is convenient to introduce here a brief account of the first
-ascent of this ridge directly from the ‘Tennis Court.’ Messrs. G.
-and A. Abraham had repeatedly assured me that their inspection from
-neighbouring points of view had been favourable, but it was not until
-April 22, 1898, when ascending Scawfell Pinnacle by the Low Man, that
-I examined the Pisgah ridge with the object of attacking it. The same
-afternoon these two friends awaited my arrival on the ‘Tennis Court.’
-I came along the Mickledore towards the Pulpit Rock to enjoy a rest
-and the society of a party of friends, but was disappointed of both
-by a call from the Ledge. In ten minutes from the Mickledore I joined
-them, and while recovering breath, was interested to hear of their
-attempts to reach the Ledge by other ways than Moss Ghyll. Then,
-disposing the rope properly, we went to the extreme right corner and
-started the real business. I had a vertical crack about twelve feet
-high to surmount. It led to a small platform similar to the one from
-which we began our climb, and presented the usual difficulties--no hand
-or foothold. A shoulder was given me, then probably a head, then a
-steadying hand for my struggling feet, the left arm being thrust well
-into the crack and the right doing as best it could on the wall, until
-it could reach the grassy edge of the platform above. Once on this the
-prospect was pleasing, and we dubbed the spot a ‘Fives Court.’ Thence
-a steep chimney rose directly towards the ridge. I mounted some twenty
-feet and debated whether the others might safely come up and help.
-There seemed to be a fair chance of entering an overhanging chimney
-away up to my left, or of following the direct route to the ridge. The
-first course attracted me a yard or two along a narrow ledge, until the
-way was barred by an immense poised block. It trembled as I touched
-the horrible thing; so did my friends down below, and they besought
-me to play the straight game, and aim for the arête instead of aiming
-at them. They were perfectly just in their choice, and it is as well
-that their advice was followed, for we should have had a terrible time
-working the overhanging chimney. Ten or fifteen feet of rather careful
-scrambling brought me to the edge of the buttress, at a point where I
-could descend a little on the Steep Ghyll side and belay the others
-with absolute security while they mounted.
-
-The point we had reached was on a level with the top of the Slingsby’s
-Chimney on the Pinnacle. Another party of climbers were operating over
-there, and gave us some useful information as to the work we had above
-us. Our rock was not altogether firm and reliable, so that the next bit
-of vertical ridge in front was discarded in favour of a slight détour
-on the left face. Belayed as he was by the others, the leader ran very
-little risk, and employing a succession of moderately firm, tufted
-ledges, he dragged himself steadily up for another twenty feet before
-his companions quitted their belay and joined him. Then we unroped
-and walked up the remaining hundred feet with no trouble whatever,
-astonished to find that our difficulties had been so few and so rapidly
-overcome. In an hour from the ‘Tennis Court’ we were swinging down the
-Broad Stand ledges.
-
-COLLIER’S CLIMB.--For many years it was currently supposed
-that any attempt to scale the precipice between the North Climb at
-Mickledore and Steep Ghyll round by the Pinnacle, ranked the daring
-enthusiast as one _quem Deus vult perdere_, and, moreover, that the
-gods would not give him the chance to finish his undertaking. But
-with the advent of a greater number of experienced climbers, coming
-to Wastdale with recollections of the stupendous rocks in the Swiss
-Alps or the Austrian Dolomites, a reaction gradually set in. To many
-nothing seemed impossible with a party of three and an Alpine rope.
-But a line must be drawn somewhere to separate the possible from the
-impossible, and some try to draw it by their own experience. These
-constitute what is called the ultra-gymnastic school of climbing. Its
-members are generally young and irresponsible. With years will come
-a desire to depart this life in one piece, after the common joys are
-realized that life is able to offer. The quick-burning fever for wild
-adventure dies away with the approach of workable theories of life.
-Whatever the mental phenomenon may be, I am convinced that the physical
-is vestigial--a trace of our former savagery, a suggestion of the
-lively past, when the struggle for existence involved more muscle than
-mind.
-
-Wherefore let live the ultra-gymnasts, if indeed they can pass through
-their March-madness without coming to grief; nor should we attempt to
-inoculate them with some harmless sport, for the result is to render
-the sport dangerous.
-
-To return to the separating line that suggested this digression. Those
-who have sought to define it theoretically have been of the foolish
-ones, for it has no absolute position for mankind. Each individual
-possesses a line of his own, and at first in looking for it he causes
-it to re-arrange itself. What was once impossible for him becomes easy.
-But his search is more rapid than its advance, and a time comes when
-he realizes that he is perilously near; and in wisdom he vows evermore
-to keep at so many feet or centimetres (according to his choice of
-units) from its nearest point. The nearer he habituates himself to
-approach, the oftener does he discover some obvious retreat of his
-line. Those who live far from it find that it can narrow its limits.
-Which things are an allegory, for this line is a closed curve and
-limits us in all directions, only one of which leads to rock-climbing.
-
-Our walk along the foot of the Scawfell wall by the Rake’s Progress
-showed three breaks in the cliff after we left Steep Ghyll. The first
-marked Moss Ghyll, the second Keswick Brothers’ Climb, the third
-Collier’s Climb. The history of Moss Ghyll and its gradual yielding to
-the persistent attacks of active parties has been recorded in the first
-section. The news of its ascent came as a surprise to all who knew
-the place, so great a surprise that no room was left for wonderment
-when Dr. Collier a few months later proved the practicability of his
-route. But whereas Moss Ghyll became popular in a week by reason of
-the writing-up it immediately received, Collier’s Climb was almost
-untouched for three years. The unknown is always the most terrible, and
-the brief note in the Wastdale climbing book recording its first ascent
-left much to an anxious imagination. Queer tales were told round at the
-inn of men who were flung back over the Rake’s Progress after rising
-only ten feet. Even Dr. Collier was reported to have said he never
-wished to see the place again. Report was inaccurate, but that made no
-difference. I candidly admit that there seemed little chance of ever
-getting up such an awful wall. It was not till I found myself twenty
-feet up the crack that the attack seemed in the least degree hopeful.
-
-It was just after Easter in 1896 (April 22), and my party had been
-climbing well on the Screes and in Deep Ghyll. The rocks were in
-marvellously good condition, perfectly dry and warm to the touch. G.
-and A. were with me, their last day before returning home. I thought
-it imprudent to take their votes, and announced that we were going to
-look at the first part of Collier’s Climb, and to ascertain where its
-difficulty lay. Fortunately they were both sanguine, and placed their
-heads and shoulders at my disposal as footholds. We made straight for
-the right spot in an hour and a half of easy going from Wastdale. There
-could be no possible doubt of the place. A thin crack rose direct
-from the Progress, overhanging for the first ten feet, then leaning
-back a trifle towards the left. A yard or two to the left of this a
-square corner led directly up so as to join the crack just below a thin
-chimney, that started some twenty feet above our heads. To get to this
-chimney was the difficulty. Either the cleft or the corner should be
-taken. Which was the easier?
-
-I first tried the cleft, but it overhung so seriously that I dared not
-venture further. Equally futile was the attempt up the corner. Was it
-possible that we had mistaken the right take-off? To gain time and
-recover our spirits we walked over to the other side of Mickledore
-and prospected the climb. There could be no doubt that I had actually
-started on the correct way. Thirty feet up we could plainly distinguish
-a grassy platform that promised us temporary safety. If we could get
-as high as that we had Dr. Collier’s authority that the remainder of
-our chimney offered no such difficulties as those we had overcome.
-Even if it had, we could as a last resource fix an axe in the chimney
-and descend on a doubled rope in the usual Alpine fashion. In this
-manner, assuring ourselves that we had the worst immediately before
-us, we returned with some little courage to the attack. This time we
-decided to take the corner. A. was to stand on a small ledge about
-a foot above the Progress, and brace himself firmly enough to hold
-my weight. G. acted as a sort of flying buttress for his brother,
-and paid out my rope with extreme care. From A.’s shoulders I could
-just reach a high handhold with the left. But one grip at that height
-was useless, as the body had to be lifted up on to the rib of rock
-separating the two clefts. A. then padded his head with a handkerchief
-beneath his cap, and begged me to stand on it. However steady a young
-man may be, there are times when his friends think him weak in the
-head. Such a time was this, and I anxiously asked him if he could hold
-it perfectly still while I used it. ‘You may do anything except waltz
-on it,’ was the encouraging rejoinder, and I promptly placed my left
-foot on his parietal. ‘That’s all right,’ the tough young head called
-out, ‘you may stay there all day if you like.’ This was reassuring,
-but I had come out to climb and meant to move on. Yet for the life
-of me I could not see what to do next. The left foot required a lift
-before the high handhold could be employed, and there was nothing for
-it to rest against except the square corner of the recess. Two or
-three times I tried hard to grip the corner with the toe of my boot,
-but ineffectually. Then A., seeing my trouble, reached up a hand and
-held my boot on an infinitesimal ledge. It felt firm, and I trusted to
-it. With the first movement upwards my right hand felt a charmingly
-secure depression in the rib above, and swinging clear from A.’s head
-I dragged up on to the buttress and felt that the game was half won
-already. The rib was easy to ascend for a foot or two, till indeed it
-terminated at the small chimney above. But caution was the instinct
-uppermost in my mind, and the climb to the grassy platform above might,
-in spite of appearances, prove nasty. Casting around for some means
-of anchoring on my own rope, I saw that in the crack to my right a
-bunch of small stones were firmly jammed, and that daylight could be
-seen behind them down a hole that pointed through to the Progress,
-fifteen feet below. Here was a chance that, if we had known of it at
-first, might have been used to conserve our strength and nerve from
-the start. The others were as yet unroped. Calling to them to let go
-the rope, I drew up the free end by my teeth and my ‘unemployed’ hand,
-and let it fall straight down the hole to them. If a fall occurred now
-in trying the next few feet I could only tumble three or four yards,
-and should not pass over my friends’ heads and the Rake’s Progress.
-But the chimney into which a few moves brought me was of no high
-order of difficulty; the situation was certainly a trying one, for a
-downward gaze could only take in the rib of rock immediately below and
-the distant screes 200 feet beyond. I flung some loose stones far out
-into space, and could only just hear a faint clatter as they touched
-the scree. Now was the time to appreciate the joy of climbing, in
-perfect health, with perfect weather, and in a difficult place without
-danger, and I secretly laughed as I called to the others that the
-outlook was terribly bad and that our enterprise must be given up.
-But they also laughed, and told me to go higher and change my mind,
-for they knew by the tone that my temper was unruffled. A few feet
-more and I drew up to the platform. It was about a yard wide and three
-yards in length, reminding us strongly of the Tennis Court ledge, a
-similar formation half way up Moss Ghyll. Between the ledge and the
-wall rising above it a fissure cut down into the mountain. It still
-held some old winter snow, and its depths were cold as a refrigerator.
-Shouting to the others to rope up at a distance of thirty feet apart,
-I sat down on the grass with my legs dangling in the frigid fissure,
-bracing myself to stand any jerks that might be given to the rope by
-a sudden slip of the second man at the rounding of the rib. G. came
-up second, using his brother’s shoulders and head much as I had used
-them. When he reached the ledge he helped me to haul his brother. A.
-was unable to stand on his own head as we had done, though we reminded
-him of Dent’s famous climber’s dream, and he hung on to the rope with
-both hands while we pulled. It must have been rather an unpleasant
-sensation that of swinging away from the rocks, but he bore it like
-a philosopher, and caught cleverly on to the rib and so up to us. I
-am afraid our satisfaction was now somewhat premature, but we were
-certain of a safe descent whatever the remainder of our climb might
-involve. But there was no sign of failure in store. The chimneys above
-us looked steep, but they were deeply carved and therefore safe. Also,
-they cut obliquely up the vertical wall, and were not likely to involve
-any inch-by-inch wrestling against gravity. These surmises all proved
-correct, though we were astonished at the ease with which the remaining
-difficulties were overcome. It was now two o’clock in the afternoon,
-and we had been half an hour getting up the first thirty feet. The
-remainder only took us an equal time, though five times the height, and
-consisting of genuine rock-climbing all the way, as the following notes
-testify.
-
-After a short lunch and a few minutes spent in erecting a diminutive
-cairn, we moved on. Dr. Collier had climbed into the upper part of
-the next chimney by a traverse of some difficulty from the right. I
-started the same course, but A. had descended a little to look up
-the direct route, and called out that it was safer, though perhaps
-awkward. Therefore we all descended and entered the chimney, which
-is practically a continuation of the crack up which our climb had
-started. It sloped slightly to the left, and offered just a sufficiency
-of holds, without demoralizing us with a superfluity. In fifteen
-feet its difficulties were over, and a few yards higher we reached
-another grassy ledge, more protected than the former but giving an
-equally grand view of the neighbouring precipices. There then followed
-a vertical pitch of twelve feet, simple enough with the help of a
-shoulder--or without it, for that matter--and an easy step from the top
-towards the right led to the beginning of the upward grassy traverse
-that so strikingly marks the break in the continuity of direction of
-Collier’s Climb. Many people have expressed doubts as to the safety of
-this traverse; on the other hand, these many have not all been there
-to see. The route is perfectly safe; there are corners on the Rake’s
-Progress that are intrinsically as hard, though perhaps the sublime
-situation may have its effect on some susceptible organisations.
-Possibly in wintry weather the traverse may have its difficulties, but
-if ever it were dangerous the first pitch would be impossible.
-
-We found the first part of the final chimney slightly moist. Probably
-it is very rarely dry. As the diagram facing page 46 indicates, it
-slopes up towards the left and is very deeply cut. The first piece was
-practically a walk up a steep incline, using tiny ledges that were
-disposed along the slope in the most suitable places. It ended with a
-magnificent pull up with the arms over a projecting edge on the left.
-
-Then came the pleasantest part of the whole, the negotiation of
-twenty-five feet of smooth, slabby rock by faith in friction and
-occasional reference to the overhanging side of the gully. Collier had
-rightly made special mention of this part, but to his account I should
-like to add that with dry rock and rough garments all will go well.
-Even a slip on the part of the leader will not be serious if he is
-carefully watched and fielded at the bottom of his slide.
-
-At the finish of this exciting portion we saw the sky-line a few feet
-in front of us, and with a spurt we ran up and reached the summit
-breathless.
-
-Since that time I have descended by the same route with a different
-party. We had just come up Moss Ghyll, and my two friends were well
-contented with their day’s work; for Moss Ghyll had been the limit of
-their ambition, and they were willing to rest contentedly on their
-laurels. To tackle Collier’s Climb had never entered their heads
-before--like the death-dealing pebble for poor Goliath--and they shyly
-suggested that we had climbed enough for one day. But with the sense
-of possession of a trump card up my sleeve--that handy rope-hold at the
-bottom pitch--I succeeded in rousing their enthusiasm sufficiently,
-and we started downwards. They were perfectly safe men to accompany;
-this had been proved in Moss Ghyll, and it was perhaps not so very
-wrong to indulge in a harmless exaggeration of the excitement that
-the finish had in store for them. But they climbed extremely well in
-spite of forebodings, and gratified me immensely by agreeing that for
-beauty of surroundings Collier’s Climb has no equal in all the gullies
-of the Lake District. The descent was rather easier than the ascent--a
-state of things so often experienced in difficult climbing work--and
-we reached the lowest grassy platform in half an hour. There we found
-the little cairn I had erected a few months before, and were cheered
-to see a couple of friends approaching from Mickledore to give us any
-aid necessary near the finish. I let down the first man by the rope;
-he went well till within ten feet of the Progress, and then, slipping
-away from the hold, was left for an uncomfortable moment dangling in
-mid-air. Lowered a yard or so his legs were seized by the men below and
-he was pulled to their level in safety. There he unroped, and thus also
-descended the second man. But he came on the middle of the rope, and
-before reaching the spot where he was destined to quit the rocks he was
-instructed to slip the lower end of the rope through the safety-hole.
-On reaching the Progress he also unroped, and with the united strength
-of the party holding me through the jammed stone I also was willing,
-when my turn came to let myself hang and be lowered gently down like a
-bale of goods into a ship’s hold.
-
-To descend alone, without adventitious aid of this kind, it would be
-better to take to the crack.
-
-KESWICK BROTHERS’ CLIMB.--This occupies a position between the
-two chief routes already described in this chapter, but chronologically
-it comes last, and on that account we find it best to treat of it after
-the others. The brothers Abraham and I had independently arrived at
-the conclusion that the Scawfell face offered a feasible route between
-Collier’s Climb and Moss Ghyll, of which only the lower half required
-any elaborate planning. In the summer of 1897, before I had a suitable
-opportunity of trying my fortune there, came the news that my two
-friends had succeeded with their design, considerable assistance having
-been given them by the preliminary scrambling of Mr. J. W. Puttrell at
-the lower end of the course.
-
-On Christmas Day, 1897, I was one of a large party exploring the new
-route and its environs. An attempt to work directly up the long crack
-marked by the top _e_ in Plate II. was thwarted at a height of forty
-feet or so above the Rake’s Progress by the smoothness of the rocks,
-and by the presence of ice in the crack. It will probably go some day
-when conditions are more favourable. I managed to traverse to the edge
-of the buttress on my left, but the prospect round the corner was
-not a bit more attractive. A descent was therefore effected and the
-ordinary route tackled forthwith. It was interesting and remarkably
-safe. We started close to the foot of Collier’s Climb, and, working
-along a nearly horizontal cleft, arrived without trouble at the corner
-of the rectangular recess of which mention was made on page 30.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE KESWICK BROTHERS’ CLIMB
-
-(_Face page 66_)]
-
-Thence we had a steep bit of edgework for thirty feet before the leader
-could ask his second to advance from the Progress. This part admits
-of a little variation, but the main fact to be grasped is that the
-long chimney in which Collier’s Climb finishes is retained close on
-our right for fully ten yards, until it suddenly narrows, and a grass
-platform extends away to the left with ample accommodation for a score
-of people. This platform, in fact, is part of the same grassy ledge
-that forms the first resting place after the troublesome introduction
-to Collier’s Climb; and since that date I have frequently taken friends
-up and down the latter course by this variation. The expedition is one
-that can be strongly recommended for moderately good parties, both for
-its beauty and its sustained interest throughout. That day, however,
-our course was ordered differently. We had first to follow the original
-line of ascent for fifteen feet up an awkward chimney with its best
-hold insecure. Then on reaching an upper grass corner there came an
-open movement across the face of rock to our right, working gradually
-upwards and aiming for a narrow cleft that partially separated a small
-pinnacle from the face. The view of this pinnacle from the middle
-of Collier’s Climb is simply exquisite, well worth showing to an
-enterprising camera.
-
-From the pinnacle a slight descent gave an inspiring view downwards
-of the long smooth corner that I had unsuccessfully attacked a short
-time previously. At our level the crack had expanded into a respectable
-chimney, that could be easily entered twenty feet higher after a
-brief clamber on the buttress. It was disappointing to find then that
-something very like a scree gully, with only moderately interesting
-scrambling, was to finish our work in the great cleft. Rather than
-close the operations so quietly the majority voted for an attempt on
-the slightly-indicated branch exit thirty feet to the right; and their
-enterprise was rewarded by the conquest of a particularly neat pitch at
-the top.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-ATTITUDES ON SCAWFELL PINNACLE
-
-(_Face page 69_)]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-_SCAWFELL PINNACLE_
-
-
-ORDINARY ROUTE.--This magnificent pinnacle offers the finest bit
-of rock scenery in the Scawfell _massif_. It rises up some 600 feet
-from the foot of Lord’s Rake in steep and almost unclimbable slabs of
-smooth rock, forming the left-hand boundary of Deep Ghyll and the right
-of Steep Ghyll. The latter, and the Professor’s Chimney springing up
-out of Deep Ghyll, cut it away to some extent from the main mountain
-mass, from which it is separated by a narrow _col_ or gap familiarly
-known as the ‘Jordan.’ Unfortunately this gap is too high, and the
-top of the pinnacle is reached therefrom by a couple of minutes’
-scrambling. If only the gap were impossible to reach from above, the
-climb of Scawfell Pinnacle would necessarily involve some splendid
-work, and it could almost claim the suggested name of the Little Dru of
-the Lake District.
-
-From a higher point of view Mr. Williamson’s comparison is very apt.
-‘The most conspicuous object at the upper part of Deep Ghyll is a
-pinnacle rock with some slight resemblance, from certain points of
-view, to the celebrated Pieter Botte, in Mauritius, except that the
-stone on the top is much smaller than the knob which forms the summit
-of the Mauritius mountain. The Deep Ghyll Pinnacle is perhaps best
-named the Scawfell Pillar, for on examination it will be found to
-have several features in common with the Ennerdale Pillar. Both have
-a Pisgah rock and a Jordan gap, both have a High and a Low Man, and
-both have a slanting slab in similar positions. So inaccessible does
-the Scawfell Pillar appear, that it is probable no one ever thought of
-making an attempt upon it till Mr. W. P. Haskett Smith, whose climbs on
-the Ennerdale Pillar were referred to in a previous article, looking at
-the rock with the eye of a genius for climbing, thought he could see
-a way to the top. He made the attempt alone in September of this year
-[1884] and successfully reached the top, being the first man to set
-foot on the summit of this ‘forbidden peak.’
-
-But the gap can be reached easily from the summit of Scawfell. If we
-walk over to the top of Deep Ghyll we may look across to the pinnacle
-on the right and notice the black out made by the Professor’s Chimney
-that separates it from us. The knob of rock to the right of the Jordan
-gap is appropriately called ‘Pisgah’; it is almost exactly of the
-same height as the cairn on the pinnacle, and is barely thirty feet
-away from it. By rounding Pisgah to the right, and carefully skirting
-the head of Moss Ghyll, we reach the Jordan, and find ourselves on a
-narrow ridge with extremely steep plunges on either side. The short
-climb that faces us begins in an awkward way, for we have to get up a
-few feet of overhanging rock before the slope eases off, and a slip
-backwards of an unroped man would inevitably result in a fall down the
-Professor’s Chimney or down Steep Ghyll. The firmest rope anchorage
-for the leader is at the top of Pisgah, but with more to follow him
-the usual plan is to descend to the gap and loop the rope over a large
-boulder that lies on the crest of the _col_. He need not worry about
-the danger of the pitch if the rocks are in good condition. When Mr.
-Haskett Smith first found this way up on September 3rd, 1884, a few
-days before he reached the top by way of Steep Ghyll, large quantities
-of moss had to be removed, and the finger-holds cleared of earth before
-they could be estimated and safely utilized. Not a particle of moss
-remains here now; nay, more, a decade of gymnasts have removed much
-rock by dint of scraping with their nailed boots, and have made obvious
-the safest route to the summit.
-
-It starts a yard or two to the right of the gap, where a sloping
-foothold in the overhanging wall shows traces of considerable wear and
-tear. The hands can find a sufficient bearing pressure near the edge of
-rock above, but it is unwise to place them too high up on the sloping
-slab. Then, straightening out on the foothold for a moment, the left
-hand can find a thin crack good enough for a hold while the body is
-being levered up over the awkward edge. Then the crack can be followed
-up the slab to the left till it ends near a little chimney, up which
-a scramble of six feet brings the climber within touch of the cairn.
-Formerly a small tin box held many visiting cards, and an ancient
-pocketbook with the names of the early climbers of the pinnacle. It
-was almost a breach of etiquette to pay a call here without leaving a
-card, but the polite old days are past, and men come and go now without
-this ceremony. A year ago I hunted in vain for the box and fancied that
-some curiosity-monger had feloniously appropriated it, but since then I
-believe it has again been seen there. It may easily slip down between
-the loose stones.
-
-This little climb is dangerous in icy weather, and should not then be
-undertaken. For there is no particular fun in it when the rocks are
-glazed, when bare fingers are necessary for the diminished holds, and
-the slow going inevitably involving benumbed hands.
-
-The long routes up are impossible except when conditions are favourable.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-SCAWFELL PINNACLE AND DEEP GHYLL--WINTER
-
-(_Face page 73_)] ]
-
-The first long way up the pinnacle was climbed on September 20th,
-1884, by Messrs. Haskett Smith and John Robinson. They made the ascent
-of Steep Ghyll, and then, emerging on the right, climbed up a steep
-_arête_ to the pinnacle, where they left their names in a glass bottle.
-Descending again to the upper portion of Steep Ghyll, they passed over
-to the Jordan and so on to the mountain. With but slight variations,
-these were the only ways known until 1888. In July of that year a
-party led by Mr. W. Cecil Slingsby succeeded in climbing out from the
-lower part of Steep Ghyll on to the north-east face of the pinnacle.
-By a long and difficult chimney in this wall they reached the Low
-Man, as the nearly horizontal crest of the first huge buttress is
-called. Thence a sharp ridge took them direct to the final rocks, which
-were sufficiently broken to make the finish easy. This route at once
-commended itself to the better climbers at Wastdale as being safe and
-sound. The rocks throughout are excellent, and indeed enthusiasts like
-to compare the finish with the famous ridge of the Rothhorn from Zinal.
-The chief objection to be urged against the climb is the exposure to
-wind and cold. I remember once starting up with Mr. Robinson one wet
-day in August. He led as far as the foot of the difficult Slingsby
-Chimney, and then resolutely refused to budge an inch further because
-of the wind, which he asseverated would blow us away to Hollow Stones.
-I am inclined to believe him now, but at the time we wrangled all the
-way down to the Lord’s Rake, where some damp but enterprising tourist,
-pointing up to the vertical crags down which we had been dodging our
-way, inquired in a feeble tenor voice: ‘Is there a road up there?’
-
-It was not until December 31, 1893, that I made my first complete
-ascent by this route, accompanied by M. and C., the latter leading
-all the way up. We crossed the foot of Lord’s Rake, and made for the
-slight suggestion of a gully that serves to mark the beginning of the
-ordinary Steep Ghyll Climb. It was quite easy to follow, and rapidly
-deepened as we rose. In a hundred feet we were in view of the enormous
-cleft of the ghyll, with its black and glistening walls apparently
-almost meeting each other a hundred feet over our heads. None of us
-were attracted by that climb, which is never quite free from hazard,
-and we looked about for the spot where our route diverged to the right.
-Here the side of the ghyll was very steep for thirty or forty feet
-up, but was cut about by ledges and clefts quite good enough for us
-to mount the wall safely. Then we bore up a little towards the left,
-so as to approach the smooth outer face of the Low Man. Advance was
-only possible in one direction, our course taking us out on a nose or
-pinnacle of rock separated from the main mass by a deep fissure.
-
-The position was very exposed. It could only be approached from one
-direction, that of Steep Ghyll. A glance down the fissure beneath
-us revealed the lower half of the tremendous wall to which we were
-clinging, and though we had plenty of room to sit down and rest
-ourselves, there was a sense of coming peril in the next move. The
-illustration facing page 73, taken off the wall from the Lord’s Rake
-ridge, shows the pinnacle and the fissure that partially separates it
-from the face. Standing on the highest available point, C. had next
-to draw himself up on to the little shelf by means of the smallest
-of holds and the use of his knees. We were able to guard against his
-slipping back, and were glad to see him clamber up easily to the
-beginning of the Slingsby Chimney. This begins very awkwardly; it would
-be proof of unusual agility and nerve for the leader here to manage the
-first six feet without assistance from below. But an unaided ascent
-is not impossible, and careful examination will generally cause the
-climber to discount much of the terror that he is pretty sure to have
-invested in the spot after reading the early literature of the subject.
-We hoisted C. up on our shoulders; without hesitation he crept well
-into the crack vertically above our heads, and wriggled his way out
-of sight. When we had paid out forty feet of rope, he shouted out to
-M. to advance, and I was left to speculate on a possible variation of
-the ascent by the left of the chimney. In due course M. was firmly
-fixed, and my turn came. The steepness of the first fifteen feet was
-rather appalling, but it was so simple a matter to wedge firmly into
-the chimney that there was no sense of insecurity. After the vertical
-bit, the chimney sloped back at an easier angle, and though some
-distance had to be climbed before a man might be of much help to those
-behind he would be perfectly capable of looking after himself. When
-we reached this level the aspect of the remaining rocks was very much
-less threatening. It was still a matter of hand-and-foot work, but we
-could all forge ahead together instead of moving one at a time. The
-slope eased off again when we reached the Low Man, and by preference we
-kept to the ridge on the right as much as we could. This was for the
-sensational view down into Deep Ghyll, though that day we saw little
-but the rolling mist above and below us. The rock was firm and rough
-to the touch, and we could well appreciate the comparison with the
-best parts of the Zinal Rothhorn. Leslie Stephen’s frontispiece in the
-‘Playground of Europe’ might have been drawn on our ridge. There was a
-sense of perfect security out there as we sat astride the sharp ridge
-or clasped the huge blocks with a fraternal embrace. My only regret was
-that the _arête_ was all too short--we arrived at the pinnacle much too
-soon. I proposed to descend to the Jordan and down by the Professor’s
-Chimney, but my companions pointed out that the latter would be damp
-and rickety, and such a change from our recent sport that we could get
-little fun out of it. I reluctantly yielded to the vote of the majority
-and went off to a halting-place in the hollow at the head of the Moss
-Ghyll variation exit.
-
-SCAWFELL PINNACLE, DEEP GHYLL ROUTE.--In October, 1887, a strong
-party led by the brothers Hopkinson found a way down the outside face
-of the Scawfell Pinnacle, to a point on the ridge within a hundred feet
-of the first pitch in Deep Ghyll. There they built what is now known
-as the Hopkinsons’ cairn. In April, 1893, Messrs. C. Hopkinson and
-Tribe worked up the left wall of the ghyll from the second pitch,
-and reached the main north _arête_ about sixty feet above the cairn.
-They were apparently unable to force a way directly up the ridge, and
-managed instead to descend it for a few yards and then to climb up the
-face of the Low Man by the 1887 route on the east side of the _arête_.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE LAST HUNDRED FEET ON THE SCAWFELL PINNACLE
-
-(_Face page 76_)]
-
-They thus succeeded in reaching the summit of the pinnacle from Deep
-Ghyll, and an examination of the illustration facing page 83 of the
-great wall that they climbed will prove that the performance was an
-unusually brilliant one. (The photograph shows the north ridge twenty
-feet to the left of the leader, who is about forty feet above the
-second man.)
-
-Very little was generally known of that day’s work, the note in the
-Wastdale climbing book being of the briefest description; and it cannot
-be counted unto me for originality that in a climb made in 1896 that
-was intended as a repetition of the above our party left the older
-route at a point eighty feet up the Deep Ghyll wall, and reached the
-Low Man by a new line of advance.
-
-We were a party of three. Messrs. George and Ashley Abraham were very
-keen on trying the new route, and equally anxious to get some good
-photographs of the great wall. We climbed up the first pitch in Deep
-Ghyll by the crack on the left, and took the second in the ordinary
-way. Just where the traverse commences fifteen feet above the top
-of the central obstacle, a crack starts up the left wall, with a
-prominent jammed block guarding its entrance. Traversing over a leaf
-of rock on to the jammed stone, I was steadied for the first twenty
-feet of ascent by the rope, and could not have come to much harm in
-the event of a slip. But there was scanty room for a second, and I was
-compelled to rise with an ever lengthening rope below me. The crack
-was followed closely, though it soon became so thin and so erect that
-there was nothing to do but keep on the face of the mountain just to
-its left, every now and then gripping its sharp edge for handhold. It
-seemed to be a virgin climb, though this part had really been visited
-two or three times before. Stones had to be flung down, and grit
-scraped from the tiny ledges. But on the whole that first sixty feet
-was not very difficult, though markedly sensational, and I went on
-slowly to a little niche in the wall.
-
-The eighty-feet length of rope just reached to the crack from which
-the start was made, and getting George to tie himself on at the lower
-extremity, I mounted to a higher and larger niche while he cautiously
-climbed up the crack. The situation was very novel. Some may remember
-the _firma loca_ in Mr. Sanger Davies’ account of the Croda da Lago.
-This grass-floored hermitage of mine was truly a _firma loca_, and
-sitting down comfortably in it I took out a biscuit from my pocket and
-tried to realize all the view.
-
-It was every bit as appalling as a Dolomite climb. Direct progress
-upwards seemed quite impossible; a feasible traverse over some
-badly-sloping moss-covered ledges to the right led to the sky-line
-at a spot where the _arête_ made a vertical spring upwards for forty
-feet. A descent would have been seriously difficult, but it was the one
-thing we did not want. I could hear another climbing party finishing
-an ascent of the pinnacle by the ordinary route, their voices echoing
-down the ghyll and cheering me with a sense of neighbourliness. My
-companions were holding an animated discussion below on the subject of
-photography. The light was excellent, and our positions most artistic.
-The cameras were left in the cave at the foot of the ghyll. Ashley was
-afraid I meant to go up without him; but his professional instinct got
-the better of his desire to climb, and, shouting out to us to stay
-where we were for five minutes, he ran round to the high-level traverse
-on the other side of the ghyll, and down the Lord’s Rake to the cavern.
-
-George had the tripod screw and could not hand it to his brother; so,
-asking me to hold him firmly with the rope, he practised throwing
-stones across the gully to the traverse. Then, tying the screw to a
-stone, he managed to project this over successfully. We composed our
-limbs to a photographic quiescence. Ashley had a splendid wide-angle
-lens, which, from his elevated position on the traverse opposite, could
-take in 400 feet of the cliff, showing the entire route to the summit.
-It was his turn to take the lead. ‘Mr. Jones! I can’t see you, your
-clothes are so dark.’ I apologized. ‘Will you step out a foot or two
-from that hole?’ I was in a cheerful mood and ready to oblige a friend,
-but the platform was scarcely two feet square, and to acquiesce was to
-step out a few hundred feet into Deep Ghyll. For this I had not made
-adequate preparation and told him so. ‘Well, will you take off your
-coat?’ That I could do with pleasure, and for a while his instructions
-were levelled at George.
-
-He was in an awkward place and was much cramped in ensuring safety,
-but Ashley was dissatisfied and insisted on his lifting the left leg.
-This gave him no foothold to speak of, but in the cause of photography
-he had been trained to manage without such ordinary aids. He grumbled
-a little at the inconvenience but obeyed, resolving that if he were
-living when the next slide was to be exposed he himself would be the
-manipulator and his brother the centre of the picture. The ghyll had
-become rather gloomy and we had a lengthy exposure. I was glad to slip
-on my jacket again and draw in the rope for George’s ascent. When he
-reached the smaller platform just below me, we tried the traverse over
-the slabs to the north ridge, and found that it went well enough. We
-were delighted to find traces of the previous party on the rocks at
-the corner. They were made by the Hopkinsons three years before (April
-2, 1893) in their attempt to mount by the ridge. Their cairn was fifty
-feet further down, and we now had the satisfaction of seeing for
-ourselves how to connect the Hopkinson cairn directly with Deep Ghyll.
-
-Then came the question of getting our third man up. We tried to
-throw the rope-end to him, but it persisted in clinging to the face
-vertically below us and would not be caught. I had to return to the
-_firma loca_ and throw the rope from there. Ashley now reached it
-safely, tied himself on, and hastened up to our level, having left his
-camera on the traverse below. In this way we found ourselves together
-again, on the corner of the _arête_. The others fixed themselves to a
-little belaying-pin while I attempted to swarm up the vertical corner.
-A couple of feet above their heads I found that the only available
-holds were sloping the wrong way. They could be easily reached, but
-were unsafe for hauling, and after clinging for some minutes without
-advancing an inch I was compelled to descend and reconsider the
-problem. I thought of Andrea del Sarto:
-
- Ah! but a man’s reach should exceed his grasp
- Or what’s a Heaven for?
-
-and wondered whether Browning meant this to apply to the crests of
-climbing-pitches as well as to other objects in life.
-
-At the time we did not know the exact history of the early attempts on
-the _arête_. As far as we could judge our corner might be inaccessible
-except with the help of a rope fixed above us. Certainly the scoring
-of bootnails on the face was scanty. The earlier party three years
-before might have planned to avoid the bad bit. With doubts like
-these, I craved permission to look up a chimney on the Deep Ghyll side
-of the ridge. The other party of climbers had now reached the top of
-the ghyll, and were watching our manœuvres with interest. Seeing my
-hesitation they called out to inquire whether we should like a rope
-from the Low Man. We were grateful for the suggestion, but there was
-no peril our position, and we asked them to wait for awhile at the top
-of the gully, and see the issue of our next attempt upwards. Then,
-traversing over a buttress, I looked up and down the chimney.
-
-It was what is generally called hopeless. To speak definitely, it was
-much worse than the _arête_, and seeing no alternative I returned to
-the corner and prepared for another attempt. This time Ashley gave me
-a shoulder at a slightly lower level on the ghyll side of the ridge.
-A trying drag upwards with very scanty fingerholds brought my knees
-on to a satisfying hollow in a little ledge, and steadied by the two
-side faces of the sloping slab I stepped up and on to it. The cheers
-of the observing party told us that our _mauvais pas_ was practically
-overcome. The other two men came up with a little assistance from
-the rope, and we cleared away the loose stones from our platform. It
-shelved badly downwards and offered no guarantee of safety in case
-I fell from the next vertical bit. But George sturdily rammed his
-brother close against the wall and intimated that the two would accept
-the responsibility of fielding me if necessary. I mounted their
-shoulders, and reached up at arm’s length to a sharp and firm edge of
-rock. A preliminary grind of my boot into a shoulder-blade and then a
-clear swing out on the arms, a desperate pull-up with knees and toes
-vainly seeking support, and at last the upper shelf was mounted. But we
-were all breathless.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-ASCENT OF SCAWFELL PINNACLE FROM DEEP GHYLL
-
-(_Face page 83_)]
-
-The lower edge of the broken crest of rock that marks the Low Man was
-now close at hand. Close by was the fine cairn built when the pinnacle
-was first climbed from Lord’s Rake. A few yards off to the east the
-edge of the cliff was cut by the top of Slingsby’s Chimney, and before
-us remained the magnificent ridge up to the summit.
-
-Boot scratches were now numerous, both along the ridge and by the left.
-We took the finish hand over hand, and reached the pinnacle cairn in
-five minutes. Our time up from Lord’s Rake had been slow--something
-like four hours--but much had been spent with photography and in
-reconnoitring. Another day, two years later, I managed it in less than
-half the time.
-
-A party of three should have 150 feet of rope, or else our awkward
-tactics in letting the rope down to the ghyll would have to be
-repeated. Perhaps the long run out for the leader will prevent this
-route ever becoming popular. It is a great pity that there is no
-resting-place half way up the wall. With icy conditions it would be
-criminal to attempt the open face. Yet the climb is one of the very
-best in the district, and I shall always look back with pleasure to my
-first introduction to this side of Scawfell Pinnacle.
-
-We hurried down Deep Ghyll by the traverse above both pitches. One of
-us rushed down too jubilantly, and ill repaid the kindly attention of
-the other party, now below us, by a profuse shower of stones. With
-thoughts of all the possible consequences of this indiscretion, we
-picked up our cameras and strode more sedately down to the others and
-to Wastdale.
-
-SCAWFELL PINNACLE FROM LORD’S RAKE.--A very fine expedition
-was undertaken in December, 1887, by Messrs. C. Hopkinson, Holder, H.
-Woolley, and Bury. Their note on the day’s sport is quoted almost in
-full: ‘Three of the party, led by Hopkinson, made an attempt on the
-Deep Ghyll Pinnacle from the entrance to Lord’s Rake. They succeeded
-in climbing 150 to 200 feet, but were stopped by a steep slab of rock
-coated with ice. From this point, however, a good traverse was made
-to the first gully, or chimney, on the left. They forced their way up
-this gully to the top of the chimney. At the top there was a trough
-of ice about 30 feet long, surmounted by steep rocks glazed with ice,
-which brought the party to a stop. They descended the chimney again and
-returned to Wastdale, unanimously of opinion that the day’s excursion
-had afforded one of the finest climbs the party had ever accomplished.’
-
-So we may well think, and it is a great pity that the icy conditions
-of the rock prevented their direct ascent into Slingsby’s chimney. The
-gully they entered and almost completely ascended, is marked plainly in
-the general view of the Scawfell Crags from the Pulpit, and at first
-sight appears to run up continuously to Slingsby’s chimney. Actually,
-however, it finishes on the side of the nose or pinnacle of rock a few
-feet lower down, and I believe this pinnacle could be ascended from
-it by either side. What this earlier party found impossible in the
-Winter of 1887, Mr. G. T. Walker and I in April, 1898, favoured by the
-best of conditions, were just able to overcome. We had spent a long
-and exciting day in the neighbourhood, and were descending Slingsby’s
-chimney late in the afternoon, when we were suddenly struck with the
-idea of descending the fissure behind the nose and prospecting the face
-of rock between it and Deep Ghyll. A rough inspection of the first
-fifty feet below us proving satisfactory, we hastened down Steep Ghyll
-and traversed across to the top of the first pitch in Deep Ghyll. In
-spite of the late hour I could not refrain from a trial trip on the
-edge of the great Low Man buttress. At the point where the earlier
-party found the direct ascent barred by smooth ice on the wall, and
-decided to traverse off to the gully on the left, we had a council
-of war. It resulted in my throwing down my boots to Walker, and then
-crawling up fifty feet of, perhaps, the steepest and smoothest slabs
-to which I have ever trusted myself. This brought me to a tiny corner
-where I essayed to haul in the rope attached to my companion. But he
-also had to remove his boots and traverse to a point vertically below
-me before he could follow up in safety. We were now some distance to
-the left of the edge of Deep Ghyll, and straight up above us we could
-distinguish the crack where our new route was to terminate. Getting
-Walker to lodge firmly in a notch somewhat larger than mine, six feet
-away on the Steep Ghyll side, I went off again up another forty feet
-of smooth rock, aided by a zig-zagging crack an inch or so in width,
-that supplied sufficient lodgment for the toes, and a moderate grip
-for the finger-tips. After both had arrived thus far, we were able,
-with extreme care, to reach the side wall of the nose itself, and at
-a point, perhaps, fifty feet from its crest we turned round its main
-outside buttress and found ourselves in a spacious chamber with a flat
-floor and a considerable roof, the first and only genuine resting-place
-worthy the name that we found along our route. We could look straight
-down Hopkinson’s gully, and would gladly have descended into it
-and ‘passed the time of day’ with a little speculative scrambling
-thereabouts. But darkness was coming on apace, and we had yet a most
-awkward corner to negotiate before finishing our appointed business.
-Standing on Walker’s shoulders I screwed myself out at the right-hand
-top corner of our waiting-room, and started along a traverse across
-the right face of the nose. The toes of the feet were in a horizontal
-crack, the heels had no support, and the hands no grip. It was only
-by pressing the body close to the wall, which was fortunately a few
-degrees away from the perpendicular, and by sliding the feet along
-almost inch by inch, that the operation could be effected. It was with
-no small sense of relief that the end was reached in a few yards, and a
-narrow vertical fissure entered that gave easy access to the top of the
-nose. Then we put on our boots again and hurried.
-
-It is thus possible to reach the summit of the Scawfell Pinnacle by a
-route up the buttress quite independent of either of the great ghylls
-that flank it. A good variation that has yet to be performed in its
-entirety, though I believe that every section has been independently
-climbed, is that of the Hopkinson’s chimney, the nose, and Slingsby’s
-chimney. Further, that evening’s climb has convinced me that we could
-have safely reached Hopkinson’s cairn on the edge of Deep Ghyll, and
-that there is in consequence a most thrilling piece of work possible
-in the direct ascent of the buttress, the whole way up to the High
-Man from its base. Slight divergences are, probably, unavoidable in
-the lower half of the climb, but permitting these there now remain
-only about forty feet of rock hitherto unascended. It is worth while
-inspecting the view on page 73. The top of the nose is there plainly
-seen in profile 4⅜ inches from the bottom; our climb was roughly
-speaking up to the nose, by a vertical line drawn an inch from the
-left edge of the picture--somewhat less as it approached completion.
-
-UPPER DEEP GHYLL ROUTE.--Three days after the ascent recorded
-in the last section, I found that the sharp ridge between the Low Man
-and the summit of the pinnacle could be reached from the foot of the
-lowest pitch of the Professor’s Chimney. The suggestion is due to Dr.
-Collier, who told me some years ago that the only real difficulties
-are concentrated in the first thirty feet of the ascent. The climb is
-almost in a straight line, running obliquely up the Deep Ghyll face
-of the Pinnacle, and is best inspected from the west wall traverse.
-The first part overhangs considerably, and the holds are of the same
-character as those on the long slabs of the Low Man buttress, with a
-sort of absent look about them. But the rocks were dry and warm, in
-the best possible condition, and two minutes of deliberate movement
-led me out of danger. There is great variety just here, but the
-simplest course was to make for a slight chimney in the sharp ridge
-above my head. In twenty minutes the High Man had been crossed, and
-the starting-point reached by way of the Professor’s Chimney, but if a
-companion and a long rope had been vouchsafed on that occasion it would
-have been a pleasing undertaking to have tried the traverse along the
-wall to the _firma loca_ of the second section in this chapter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-_GREAT END AND ITS GULLIES_
-
-
-As we walk up towards the Styhead Pass from Wastdale we may see well in
-front of us the long ridge of the Pikes monopolizing a goodly portion
-of the sky-line. The high dependence at the head of the valley we are
-skirting is Great End, a reasonable enough name for the north-east head
-of the range. It sends down a buttress towards the Styhead Pass that,
-at a closer view, is shown to be well separated from the main mass by a
-deep gully of some architectural merit. This is Skew Ghyll. It twists
-its way up to the ridge, and offers a pleasant variation route over
-to Sprinkling Tarn, whence a steep rise brings the tourist to the Esk
-Hause, the lowest point between Great End and Bowfell. The climber’s
-interest will be concentrated in the view of the long northern face of
-Great End, well seen from Sprinkling Tarn, and his experienced eye will
-notice at once that the face is marked by various gullies that invite
-approach. The whole ground has been thoroughly well examined from time
-to time, with the result that several gullies which from below or above
-appear to promise continuous climbing have proved to be deceptive in
-this respect. Yet there remain two that are always interesting, and a
-third that is at any rate popular as a winter course.
-
-Seen from the tarn there are two gullies that cut the full height of
-the precipice from top to bottom. The lines of fresh scree that trail
-down from their lower ends show up plainly on the older _débris_ that
-marks the decay of this mountain wall. They both slope downwards
-towards the left when seen from this point, and are both obviously
-provided with variation exits at their upper extremities. That to the
-left was formerly called Robinson’s Gully, but is now generally known
-as the South-east Gully. There has always been a lack of originality
-in the nomenclature of such places, and with several routes on the
-same mountain the christener’s wits seem driven to all points of the
-compass. The second gully is a hundred yards to the right of the first,
-and has long been known as the Great End Central Gully. It divides half
-way up into two well-marked portions, the right-hand route constituting
-the main bed of the gully, and terminating at a huge notch in the
-sky-line. The left-hand branch as seen from below appears to terminate
-blindly in the face, but actually it leads to a deep and narrow chimney
-cutting into the top wall within a hundred feet of the main gully.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE GREAT END GULLIES SEEN FROM SPRINKLING TARN
-
-(_Face page 90_)]
-
-Far away to the right, where the cliff has shrunk to but one-third of
-its full height at the Central Gully, a black cleft may be descried
-that leads from scree to sky-line. This is Cust’s Gully, indifferent
-as a summer climb, but always beautiful in the richness of its rock
-scenery, and especially interesting in winter, when drift snow offers a
-royal road to the top. Every one has a kind word for Cust’s Gully. It
-is only called the Cussed gully by ignorant novices who inquire whether
-Skew of Skew Ghyll fame was a member of the Alpine Club. When it is
-marked out by snow we can from the path just distinguish the great rock
-bridge or natural arch across the upper part of the cleft.
-
-GREAT END CENTRAL GULLY.--This wonderful ravine offers some
-special feature every winter. Its individuality changes so completely
-under the mask of snow, or ice, or rain, that an attempt to describe
-the gully by an account of any one expedition must of necessity be only
-partially successful.
-
-One fine winter morning a year or so ago we had a large party
-at Wastdale, and for once in a way were all of the same mind as
-to our day’s plans. The walk up towards the Styhead Pass--the
-Schweinhauskopfjoch of the Swiss travellers among us--would just suit
-our conversationally-minded fraternity, to whom Brown Tongue or the
-Pillar Fell or the Gable-end offered gradients too steep for words. We
-sallied forth from the inn with many axes and great lengths of rope,
-and lazily worked our way along the valley. The lower path, entirely
-obliterated by the snow, took us across the stream to the right on to
-the low slopes of Lingmell. Piers Ghyll stream was crossed without
-notice, for here the gorge is not at all in evidence and requires
-closer examination to reveal its magnificence. Then, rising a few feet,
-we crossed the hollow of Grainy Ghyll and made towards Spout Head and
-Skew Ghyll. The snow gave us some glorious effects on the hills around.
-The Mosedale amphitheatre of noble mountains towered above Wastdale,
-and mutely questioned us as to the accuracy of the surveyors who could
-give them not even three thousand feet of elevation above us. Nowadays
-theodolites are taken to the mountains and misused with great effect;
-why should not the Pillar and Red Pike benefit similarly to the extent
-of a thousand feet or so? There above us on our left was Great Gable,
-a White pyramid cutting into a dark sky, at least ten thousand feet
-of mountain beauty between us and its snowy crest. Who could believe
-that the summit was only 2,900 feet above sea level? But the engineer
-among us calmly reminded me of an interesting aneroid observation I had
-once taken of the top of Moss Ghyll on Scawfell, making it a hundred
-feet higher than Scawfell itself. Was I to rank myself as a truthful
-scientist and be contented with the ordnance survey records, or as
-an artist who should represent heights, shapes, and colours as his
-imperfect senses make them? We closed the discussion in favour of the
-artist and then sloped (without slang) up to Skew Ghyll.
-
-This was in splendid condition; the snow was deep and hard, and out of
-sheer pleasure in step-cutting, three or four enthusiasts carved their
-own staircases up through the ‘narrows’ and away towards the little
-pass above us. It was to be noticed that the steps gradually converged
-to one line as the leaders felt their muscles wearying, and they were
-willing to fall in with the caravan now trailing up in single file
-like the elements of a kite’s tail. At the top of our little pass we
-could see straight down Borrowdale. Skiddaw and Blencathara formed the
-distant background. Derwent-water reflected a dark sky, and by contrast
-with its snowy shores looked of an inky blackness. Styhead Tarn was not
-very beautiful; ice had formed on it a week before, but had since been
-broken up by the wind, and the great flakes of crystal unevenly crusted
-with drift snow gave a sense of roughness and of incompleteness out of
-keeping with the finished beauty of the surroundings.
-
-We stayed up here for a few minutes, and then contoured along the side
-of Great End in the direction of Esk Hause. The ground was rough; here
-and there the snow required cutting. But no difficulties were met with
-until the narrow entrance to the Central Gully suddenly disclosed
-itself in the precipitous wall on our right. The gully points down
-towards the eastern corner of Sprinkling Tarn. It begins where the
-cliff stands nearest to the Esk Hause path, and is not to be mistaken
-for the South-east Gully that points directly towards the sharp bend in
-the little stream rattling down to Borrowdale.
-
-At the entrance to our climb we stopped to consider the question of
-roping up. ‘Union is strength’ only within certain narrow limits, when
-the bond of union is an Alpine rope. It often involves loss of time.
-
- Down to Gehenna or up to the Throne,
- He travels the fastest who travels alone,
-
-and his speed is inversely proportional to the number of his followers.
-We decided to split up into three equal parties of four, my men to
-lead up the main gully, the engineer to convey the second set up the
-middle course, and the more substantial residue to bear to the left, up
-a slighter branch that contains a very creditable cave pitch half-way
-towards the summit ridge.
-
-Our work was easy at the outset. The gully was narrow and steep, but
-the snow was good, and small ledges on either side were utilized
-whenever the little icicle-clad pitches were too slippery for direct
-attack. Where the gully widened a little we could see the first
-serious obstacle in front of us--a vertical wall with a ragged
-ice-curtain flung over it in a most artistic way. It would perhaps
-have been possible to cut directly upwards, but the crowd of eager
-climbers behind could not be expected to fight against frostbite for
-an hour or so while the leader amused himself, and the obvious method
-of circumventing the difficulty had its own merits. The right wall
-slightly overhung; close below was a glazed rib of rock leading up at
-an easy angle to the top of the pitch.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PLATE III.
-
-THE GREAT END GULLIES (p. 90).
-
-The height of BB is about 450 feet.
-
- A Holmes’s (or Brigg’s) Cave Pitch.
- B South-east Gully.
- C The Central Gully.
- D Cust’s Gully.
- E Head of Skew Ghyll.
- F Sprinkling Tarn.
- c Left Branch of the Central Gully.
- d Difficult Chimney.]
-
-Steadying myself against the wall, I started cutting slight steps up
-the thin ice on the rock, keeping as near to the corner as possible.
-Now and again the foothold felt insecure, but for the most part the
-ascent was safe, with slight probability of a slip into the snow below.
-The second man followed close up, and steadied my feet occasionally
-with an ice-axe. Then came a more gentle snow-slope, up which we could
-kick steps without effort; and while the second party were busy with
-the difficulties that we had just overcome, we reached the second pitch
-and hastened to leave it behind us. This was rather a harder task than
-we had yet undertaken. The gully was more open and its ice covering
-less extensive, but the pitch was higher and involved our climbing up
-to the centre from the right-hand wall, so as to reach the base of
-the big boulder that crowns the pitch. All this would have been easy
-with the rocks clear and dry, but we had to make our footholds on the
-flimsiest rags of ice, and the traverse to the middle demanded some
-long stepping with scarcely a hand to steady. On reaching the boulder I
-was compelled to crawl on all-fours round its front to the slope on the
-left-hand side of the gully, and then by cutting a dozen steps or so in
-the hard snow found myself in the wide part of the gully at the foot of
-the great divide. The others of my party followed on rapidly, and we
-shouted adieu to our companions beneath.
-
-Here we had the finest view of the climb. Below, the beauties of the
-two pitches were greatly increased by our own elevation. They looked
-very difficult, and the picture offered its living element in the
-cautiously advancing parties now just in the interesting part of the
-climb. Above us rose the huge buttress that divides the gully, and on
-either side the most fantastic drapery of ice well-nigh frightened us
-with its appearance of impregnability. We advanced carefully up to
-the right, congratulating ourselves on having taken the lead, for our
-friends were not pleased with the battery of hard chips of snow that
-our step-cutting gave them. The buttress was rounded, and we gained a
-full view of the troubles in store for us. Immediately on our left a
-smooth rock-shoot led straight up to the top of the buttress. Between
-the vertical pillar on the right of this shoot and the opposite side of
-the gully rose a sheer wall of ice, like a frozen waterfall twenty-five
-feet in height. So far as we could see at first, there was no chance of
-forcing a quick way up this obstacle, and it was obvious that slowness
-would introduce the risk of frostbite. During the previous summer my
-fingers had been rather badly frostbitten in the Alps, and there was
-some chance of their still manifesting a susceptibility to cold. We
-almost turned back to follow our friends up another way; we could
-trust each other to exaggerate the terrors of this bit, which honestly
-enough was a trifle too stiff for a cold winter day. But while mentally
-framing an excuse for the return, I had advanced up to the left-hand
-edge of the ‘ice fall,’ and started the ascent of its spiky edging of
-rock. From below the spikes had appeared fragile and untrustworthy.
-Actually they were too well frozen into place to become detached with
-one’s cautious drag. This discovery altered the prospect for us all,
-and the chilly watchers below warmed up with the returning enthusiasm.
-In fact they needed reminding that I might yet come down suddenly to
-their level and sweep them off their feet unless they were prepared to
-receive me. When ten feet up, the axe was called into requisition to
-cut a few steps in the fall itself. These were useful just so long as
-the left hand could utilise the rocks, but they tended to carry me away
-from my comparatively safe corner, and I soon decided to keep away from
-the fall as far as possible. The corner where the gully sloped back
-was very exciting, for implicit trust was reposed in the benumbed left
-hand that had been thrust, well gloved, into a thin and icy crack in
-the wall, and held there by frost and friction. It offered no sensation
-either of security or of danger, but it could not very well slip out,
-and we hoped for the best. A few moments’ struggling landed me safely
-on the steep slope above the pitch, and a vigorous handling of the
-ice-axe on the bed of the gully fully restored circulation to my hands.
-Then followed my cold companions, who had been shivering spectators for
-a long twenty minutes. They were thus handicapped from the outset, and
-found the pitch very severe, notwithstanding the gentle suggestion of
-safety that the rope offered.
-
-We had some careful work still before us. The bed of the gully led
-steeply up to another large and slightly overhanging boulder that
-blocked the direct route, and our only possible method of getting above
-it was to cut steps away on the right, trusting to sundry very insecure
-grass holds. But these were much better than usual by reason of the
-frost. In fact the whole climb is perfectly sound in winter, though
-rendered very difficult. In summer it is often easy but dangerous.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-TOP OF THE CENTRAL GULLY, IN WINTER. GREAT END]
-
-From the steep right-hand side of the gully we could traverse with care
-to the main bed again, just above the boulder; whence to the top of
-the gully, looking from here like an Alpine pass, was a broad stretch
-of unspotted snow. There we joined the second party, who had come by
-the steep grass ledges of the central route. Their labours had been
-great--or else, indeed, they would easily have managed to get ahead of
-us--but not so much from the intrinsic difficulty of their route as
-from the need of continual caution in the more open portions of the
-climb. They had reached a ledge that overlooked the right branch, and
-were proposing to descend to our snow slope and cut steps up with us.
-We were nothing loth to give them a chance of showing their skill with
-the axe, and for a while halted to enjoy the grand prospect behind
-us, looking straight away towards Sprinkling Tarn and Borrowdale. But
-we found ourselves frequently buffeted by strong gusts of wind that
-swept furiously down the gully. The whirling snow at the little
-_col_, now so near, warned us of an approaching _tourmente_ on the
-ridge. Our section soon decided to start again, and just below a small
-cornice that crowned the gully we forged ahead, and plunged through the
-powdery fringe of overhanging snow. We sank in up to our waists, and
-had to wrestle mightily against the hurricane to find a firm footing on
-the wind-swept rocks beyond. It was no joke standing about there with
-the sharp, cold, drift snow from the Pikes blowing into our smarting
-faces. We could not hear ourselves speak, it was almost impossible
-to see the correct course; but there were two or three among us well
-acquainted with this ridge in its bitterest moods, and to these the
-others trusted. We floundered down to the right towards Esk Hause
-across the wilderness of blocks strewn over the great plateau, and in a
-hundred yards came to a boulder large enough to possess a lee side of
-its own. Here we halted for a chilly half-hour, waiting for the third
-section to arrive. I possessed their luncheon in my knapsack, a most
-regrettable circumstance from our point of view, inasmuch as it tied
-us to Great End so long as it pleased them to amuse themselves down
-there on the leeside of the mountain. We quickly demolished our own
-share of the provisions, and with an unselfishness rarely present in
-the great latterday mountaineering expeditions, decided to leave them a
-few sandwiches and to cloy the hungry edge of our remaining appetites
-with tobacco. We were not all smokers, but everybody present assisted
-in lighting the first pipe, such a labour was it to keep a match
-burning. We waited there in a close bundle until our feet were half
-frozen and our faces stiff with icicles. Then we became rather nervous
-about our missing friends, and debated whether they meant to reach the
-top that day, or whether they had turned their backs to the lunch and
-made for Sprinkling Tarn. The latter course seemed at once the most
-expedient for them and the most convenient for us, and gladly we acted
-on this assumption. It was just as well we did so, for the frost had
-sharply nipped some of us, and it was long before my heels gave me any
-sensation but that of a pair of snowballs in my boots. We slung round
-the Esk Hause, and had some fine glissading to the hollow of the hill
-below the crags.
-
-When well opposite our climb at the point whence we had started some
-five hours earlier, our united shouting brought back an answering call
-from the gully. Soon we could see the burly form of their greatest
-member slowly descending the crags at about the same spot where we
-had long before left him. Having distinguished him as a preliminary
-landmark easy of recognition, the three others were one by one made
-out. We were relieved to observe that they were all coming down in a
-normal condition; no broken limb or sprained ankle had occurred to
-spoil their pleasure and stop their climbing. After a few minutes’
-waiting we learnt their story. The left-hand route had begun in
-a vertical ice-sheet twenty feet high that took them two hours to
-surmount. Then, when with sighs of relief, or hyperbolic language, or
-eloquent silence, that marked each individual’s satisfaction at the
-happy completion of a difficult pitch, they had cut their way over the
-edge of this wall and rounded the traverse that dominated it, they were
-aghast to meet a wall of ice in every respect similar to the first,
-but magnified! This was heart-breaking, but they made a bold bid for
-success, and started afresh on the new task. But the daylight was
-already within an hour of vanishing, and a night on those rocks would
-have been too much for even the sturdiest of them.
-
-So with a wisdom not often met with in such cases where an element of
-competition enters into the day’s work, they resolved to retire and
-join us below. There we met again, and they received their lunch. I
-was censured to a slight extent, but blame is pretty sure to be the
-portion of him who carries the provisions. He that shoulders the bag is
-a responsible individual, and the condition of good training that it
-induces is moral as well as physical.
-
-Then let me insist on the value of such physical training. The
-photographer who takes his camera to the High Alps is often too fond of
-his apparatus to give it up to a guide or porter; he frequently decides
-hurriedly to take a shot, and soon learns that it is best to carry all
-for himself. Economy may often preach the same precept. Now to lift his
-own weight is a labour he at first fancies will tax all his strength,
-but a little practice in carrying a well constructed and well packed
-rücksack on small expeditions will teach him something different. The
-weight of the whole equipment for half-plate photography--camera,
-three lenses, tripod, and other accessories--is so small a fraction
-of his own weight that its mere lift is a negligible consideration.
-His pace will be diminished and his back often uncomfortably heated.
-But supposing the burden well arranged, many a climber could habituate
-himself to it. One of our greatest Alpine climbers is said to train
-in Cumberland by carrying a rücksack filled with stones. Without
-attempting to persuade any one but a geologist so to burden himself
-on principle, I strongly advise the man who hopes ultimately to climb
-without guides to get early into the habit of carrying loads on smaller
-ascents. It will always be a joy to travel free when occasional
-opportunity offers, and then he will assuredly improve his pace. On a
-really stiff pitch the sack may have to be raised independently by the
-rope, a cause of serious delay when the rope is rigid with frost and
-the party inexperienced in tying knots or reliable loops. It should
-be remembered that the sack has more than once protected the climber
-from serious injury by falling stones, and that a pound or two of extra
-luggage carried up to an Alpine hut may mean all the difference between
-a night of misery and a comfortable rest before an arduous expedition.
-
-I have mentioned that the middle route up the Central Gully leads by
-easy stages to the upper portion of the right-hand branch. Some three
-years ago a strong party effected an ascent of the chimney that points
-directly up to the top of the cliff from the high ledge between the two
-routes. We found the main difficulty was in traversing over an open
-slab on the right of the foot of the chimney. The slab was split by a
-narrow fissure, but the handholds were slight and rather insecure. To
-have trusted to one alone would have been dangerous, and I recall with
-amusement the spread-eagle attitude of the leader as he endeavoured to
-distribute his weight equally on four rickety points of support. The
-position was good enough in itself, but to move involved a dangerous
-increase in the stress on one of the supports. Fortunately the second
-on the rope was able to offer an axe-head as additional security, and
-the passage to the left was effected in safety. The chimney was narrow
-and its sides smooth, but with the exception of a loose stone near the
-finish, which rattled down and tended to disturb our wedging, nothing
-seriously interfered with our advance.
-
-But there was one amongst us who, in expectation of falling stones,
-had thrust his head and shoulders into the little cave at the foot of
-the chimney. When the leader shouted to him he did not hear, and the
-accompanying pull on the rope resulted in the hitching of his shoulders
-firmly in the cleft and the elevation of his legs only. The previous
-evening we had been having a heated discussion as to the futility of
-naming the sides of a gully or cave after the manner of the banks of a
-river--_i.e._ of calling the ‘true’ right side of a gully its left and
-_vice-versâ_. Professor M., who was with us now, had been a listener to
-the discussion. Looking down from the top of the chimney and observing
-the unusual method of our friend’s ascent, he called out, ‘It’s all
-right, Jones, he is coming up well enough--the “true up.”’
-
-SOUTH-EAST GULLY.--This in summer time can often be accomplished
-in half an hour if the climbers are few and in a hurry. Before
-December, 1896, I had not made a winter ascent; moreover, I had
-forgotten much of the detail. Thinking of climbing notes, I persuaded a
-small Christmas party to join me in exploring the gully under these new
-conditions.
-
-We were only a band of three ultimately, though at Kern Knotts, which
-we visited _en route_, our number was considerably larger. The other
-two were both experienced Alpine climbers, one a very tall man, the
-other very short. I was anxious to determine the advantages and
-disadvantages of size and weight, and to that end took the lead myself
-and placed the tall man second on the rope. We had but little wind, and
-the temperature was slightly above freezing-point.
-
-The climbing began almost at once, for in five minutes from the foot
-the gully walls were close together and were encrusted with thawing
-ice. The narrow bed was broken up into easy pitches, but to avoid the
-stream of water that came down beneath the soft covering of snow it was
-necessary to use small ledges on either side, and span the gully like
-diminutive colossi--here I am referring only to myself and the little
-one. Now and again we would plunge up the gully for a short distance
-in loose snow. Occasionally the crystals became more compact, and two
-of us could manage to creep over its surface without slipping through.
-Rarely was this the case with our middle man--a sixteen-stone Teuton
-with a scientific training. If snow could be crushed he crushed it.
-He became so indifferent in the matter after awhile, that he made no
-attempt to distribute his weight evenly over the surface according
-to the rules laid down by Badminton. The little one, coming last,
-naturally suffered by this indifference, and was plaintive over what he
-called the ‘fallacy of the undistributed middle.’
-
-The first pitch of any size occurred within 200 feet of the foot of the
-gully, a perfectly vertical rise of twenty feet in the bed level with a
-slender waterfall interfering with our direct progress. The retaining
-walls were the least bit too far apart for the utilization of both
-simultaneously, and the right side commended itself to us as the easier
-to attack. Our only trouble again was the glaze on the rocks, a black,
-shiny veneer too thin for axe operations, too thick to be trifled with.
-Such ice always interferes more with the hands than with the feet,
-for sharp boot nails can roughen the surface of an ice ledge enough
-for a foothold, whereas the hands can make no impression. If the ice
-is very cold, gloves must be worn as a protection against the frost.
-They have the merit of adhering slightly to the ice when pressed, and
-often in that way give the climber a safe-enough grip. With wet ice
-such regelation will not occur, and if the work is hazardous I prefer
-to climb with free hands, trusting to friction to restore circulation
-wherever an ‘easy’ may be called.
-
-Making slowly up this wall to a snowy ledge at the top level of the
-pitch, I called on the others to follow, and then worked back into
-the gully. Here we found ourselves facing the ‘divide,’ a high and
-narrow rib of rock that cut down into the gully and gave us a choice
-of routes. Our way lay up to the right, which a distant view from
-Sprinkling Tarn had shown us to be really the main line. The other
-branch ends somewhat abruptly out on the face, and involves a traverse
-into the main again. A few yards further up, and a very imposing pitch
-rose before us. It was in three portions, the gap between the second
-and the third blocked by a huge stone that bridged the gully. As on
-the lower fall, so here the water kept us off the centre-line of the
-ravine, and drove us to seek diversion on the right. On the first part
-we had the difficulty of snow and wet ice. Without comment I noticed
-the little one carefully wipe out a handhold with his handkerchief
-when it was his turn to mount. By the same manœuvre he had some
-three years before shown me how to scramble up a small boulder in the
-Engelberg valley that I was forced to admit I could not climb. It was
-interesting to observe how little space he needed for his fingers. On a
-wall with diminutive ledges that might easily pass unnoticed, he could
-show us all what ‘walking up’ a face of rock really meant, though his
-short reach naturally handicapped him now and again very seriously. I
-believe a short man generally does best on rocks. His hands are as a
-rule stronger in proportion to his weight. The long climber can reach
-further but is often unable to utilize the distant grip to which he has
-stretched, if it is small or badly rounded. Moreover, he often finds
-himself in the attitude of a looping caterpillar, a pose that demands a
-firmer handgrip and that rapidly exhausts the muscles.
-
-We all reached the first ledge safely. Then came the passage of the
-bridge. If we passed under it we should get terribly wet and cold,
-though there would be no particular difficulty in getting through to
-the final chimney. Every inch of the boulder was glazed, and it offered
-very few excrescences to hang upon. But it had the making of an edge
-at its crest, and I gradually worked up the outside till I could reach
-this and pull up. There is one advantage of a glaze--possibly its only
-one--it offers no friction to one’s body in an arm-pull.
-
-Thence it was an easy step over to the final chimney. A small spout
-of water as thick as one’s wrist was jetting from the top against
-the right wall, and we were inevitably in for a wetting in spite of
-the circumvention of the bridge. I essayed to finish the pitch before
-the others started from their ledge twenty feet below. A fairly good
-lodgment for the right foot was utilized and passed. The body had to be
-jammed across the chimney, the fingers seeking for a crevice high up
-on the right wall. When a slab is streaming with water and handholds
-can be found within easy reach, it is a good plan to keep ‘thumbs down’
-as much as possible; for then the water will drain off by the thumbs,
-and run clear of the coat-sleeves. The strain is too great to operate
-in this way with arms at full length above the head. That was manifest
-in my trouble on the wall. The ice-cold water trickled down my arms
-and body, making me wet through in a few moments. But the horror of
-it came with the realization that I was unable to move backwards or
-forwards. The situation was almost critical, but not an unusual one
-for winter climbing in Cumberland. I could at any rate give it my cool
-consideration, and decide whether to call up the big one to help me
-or to try an independent descent. The men below saw me in trouble and
-made a move upwards towards the pitch. Then it occurred to me that the
-big one would not be able to force a way under the bridge, and that he
-might be a long time working over it, longer than I could manage to
-hold out. That decided me, and I started wriggling downwards. Luckily
-the hands were not yet benumbed, and by entire disregard of the main
-water-supply down the central line of flow, which now included the back
-of my neck, I managed to reach the platform again. Until my second
-came up it was useless to make another attempt, and indeed it was now
-eminently desirable that everybody should get wet. I am not an advocate
-for monopoly in such cases. With some slight inducement suggested by
-the rope, the big one pulled himself over the bridge and came up to
-the platform. Here he was invited to hold himself firmly against the
-wall, and give me his shoulders and head for elevating purposes. He was
-immediately drenched before I had effected a start up his mighty back,
-but there was a sense of perfect security now; it would be impossible
-to fall past him. As for the effect of cold and wet on him, we could
-neglect so small a consideration. In any case he would not feel it till
-the trouble was over. I thought of the old dynamics problem beginning:
-‘Let a fly of mass m be crawling up the trunk of an elephant, whose
-mass may be neglected,’ and realized for the first time that there was
-some sense in the quaint hypothesis. Once on his shoulders I reached up
-to a dry ledge, dragged myself on to it, and thence strode across to
-the top of the pitch.
-
-The third man had managed to reach the platform during these
-operations, and now nobly offered his little all as a foothold for
-the giant. My heart sank when I heard it graciously accepted, but it
-rested with me to share the responsibility and let the rope take up
-some of the stress. The big one came up grandly with these small aids,
-and we hurried the little one to send along my camera sack and then
-himself. This pitch was the hardest part of the day’s work, and showed
-itself to vary much with existing circumstances. I can just remember
-enough of a former expedition to add that it needs care in summer time,
-though it cannot, rightly speaking, be called difficult.
-
-We then went upwards again over snow at a gentle angle till the third
-pitch was reached. This was of a simple design, just a cave formed
-by a fallen boulder, and no doubt it could be taken in many ways. We
-climbed up a six-feet wall on the right from the entrance to the cave,
-and scrambled easily into the snow-bed beyond. Thence to the top was
-a matter of only ten minutes, the single hindrance being a pile of
-boulders that were climbed by an easy tunnel that led to the crest
-of the left-hand wall of the gully. We walked out at the top just as
-twilight set in, after some two hours’ gentle excitement. We were
-naturally still damp, and felt no inclination to stay about on the
-ridge, so hurrying round towards Esk Hause we glissaded rapidly to the
-path and walked home.
-
-The left-hand variation in the gully is often taken, but is scarcely
-as interesting. Just after passing the divide we find another buttress
-of rock cutting the gully into two sections. Here the buttress is not
-much thicker than an ordinary brick wall; it is sometimes called the
-‘curtain.’ There are pitches on each side of it, that on the right
-being more definite and more interesting. It leads up a steep chimney
-to the crest of the curtain, which is crossed to the left. The climber
-is then in the left-hand branch, and has no difficulty in ascending the
-gully till it dwindles down to nothing, and he finds himself looking
-into the main south-east gully just above the third pitch. It will be
-best, then, to climb down and finish by the usual route.
-
-CUST’S GULLY.--The climbing in this is of the slightest
-character in summer time, there being but one short pitch beneath the
-natural arch, and very little in that. But with hard snow about there
-is scarcely a pleasanter way of playing at Alpine climbing above the
-snow-line than by taking Great End viâ Skew Ghyll and Cust’s Gully.
-The snow slope will alter in inclination from about 30° at the bottom
-to 70° at the top. If the pitch is but thinly covered, there is
-the fun of tackling a pitfall, and of bringing to bear on the safe
-crossing all the science that glacier crevasses may have taught us in
-Switzerland. Nor let any think that it is all make-believe and that
-of difficulty there is none. I have had grand times in Cust’s Gully,
-where we were actually tired out with the labour of cutting steps.
-The snow when fresh is soft and yielding. Give it a week or two to
-settle down, and it will bind together so as to offer firm support
-on scraped footholds. But let cold rain fall on hard snow and the
-temperature then fall below freezing-point, the surface will become icy
-and every step will require careful making. Then should the picturesque
-attitudes of step-cutting depicted in Badminton be imitated in all
-seriousness, and the axe wielded with the scientific swing. It has
-happened more than once that a bad axe has proved its worthlessness
-when tested on the Cumbrian fells in a winter expedition--a much less
-dangerous discovery than if it were taken new to the Alps and there
-found wanting. The difficulty in the latter case is that our axes are
-so rarely used for hard work, if we are led up the great peaks by
-competent guides. They delight in removing every obstacle in our way,
-and it may be that long usage of the axe has really been but a test of
-the _bâton_, not at all of the pick. Then comes a time when the leading
-weapon is broken, or carelessly dropped, or still more carelessly
-pitched up to a ledge of only suppositious safety. Do not imagine that
-these things never happen, for each has been within my own experience
-during the last three years; and woe to the party if the untested axe
-is a weakling when emergency calls on it!
-
-The upper part of Cust’s Gully when the snow is at its hardest may
-almost be regarded as a test of nerve for the novice. I once was
-starting to cut down the gully in such a state, with a young man of
-limited Alpine knowledge, who diffidently suggested that step-cutting
-was rather slow and that he would prefer a glissade if I did not
-mind. I shuddered at the vision his naïve suggestion conjured up, of a
-species of chain-shot shooting viciously down the tremendously steep
-slope, ricochetting from wall to wall of the gully, and scraped very
-bare by the sharp-toothed icy surface. That novice had no nerves, and
-my remarks are not intended for him. The contention is that an amateur
-party cutting up the steepening slope, and forging a way through an
-incipient cornice of overhanging frost crystals at the top, will learn
-much of the genuine safety of an ice-slope, and will see how to divest
-it of its imaginary dangers. There are many Alpine climbers positively
-afraid of harmless slopes, that are not nearly so bad as they appear,
-and still less formidable than they show up in photographs. Such men
-have never led up steep snow.
-
-Near the foot of Cust’s Gully a branch passes up to the right, of less
-altitude and gentler inclination; its rock scenery is not so fine, and
-the place is rarely visited.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-_GREAT GABLE. THE ENNERDALE FACE AND THE OBLIQUE CHIMNEY._
-
-
-Great Gable takes high rank among the hills of Britain for grace of
-form and for the beauty of the views it offers to the climber. It is a
-square pyramid in shape, and shows nearly its full height (2,949 feet)
-from the Wastdale level. It stands at the head of the valley, and when
-seen from the shores of the lake appears completely to shut off the
-valley from all approach by the north end. Its four main ridges offer
-fairly easy walking to the summit. The north-east ridge runs down
-towards Green Gable, Brandreth, Grey Knotts, and the Honister pass, a
-little _col_ marking the lowest point (2,400 feet) between the peak and
-Green Gable. A moderate path leads the pedestrian from Borrowdale up
-by way of Aaron Slack towards this little pass, which is known as Wind
-Gap, and then bears up towards Great Gable. The pass may be crossed
-into Ennerdale and a rough descent taken to the Liza stream.
-
-The north-west ridge leads down towards Kirkfell. The broad depression
-between the two mountains is known as Beckhead (2,000 feet). It is
-often marshy in the neighbourhood of the diminutive Beckhead Tarn. A
-wire fence that adorns the summit-ridge from Kirkfell can be followed
-for some distance up Gable. Thence to the summit is somewhat craggy,
-but not difficult for pedestrians.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-WASTDALE AND GREAT GABLE
-
-(_Face page 114_)]
-
-The south-west ridge is called the Gavel Neese (Gable Nose), showing
-from Wastdale Head as a rounded grassy shoulder leading directly
-towards the peak. Up this shoulder we may make the shortest ascent of
-Gable from Wastdale, avoiding the easy crags of White Napes that face
-us where the upper limit of the grass is passed, by skirting round the
-screes on the left. An ancient path with the strange name of Moses’
-Sledgate leads up Gavel Neese till the level of Beckhead is nearly
-reached, and then bears away on a traverse over the screes round to
-the middle of the Ennerdale side of the mountain, there to lose itself
-in the wilderness of stones that are bestrewn all over that desolate
-region.
-
-The remaining ridge to the south-east is scarcely definite enough to be
-worthy the name, though from Wastdale it seems to be at least as well
-marked as Gavel Neese. It leads towards the Styhead pass (1,579 feet)
-and offers a quick route to the top. Mr. Haskett Smith suggests ‘half
-an hour’s rough walking,’ but that pace is too severe for most walkers.
-
-Of the four faces of the pyramid the north and south are precipitous,
-the west offers very little scope for the cragsman’s skill, and the
-east absolutely none. The north or Ennerdale face is practically a
-single, exposed section of some 400 feet of rock, seamed with traverses
-and split with numerous gullies and chimneys. The south face is of a
-complicated design. Springing up from the 2,000-feet level, the Great
-Napes appears in the centre of the south face as a great rock screen
-belonging to the main mass of Gable. In reality it is well separated
-off by deep hollows cutting behind it to right and left. The highest
-point of the Napes is connected with the upper crags of Gable by the
-crest separating these two hollows, either of which may be followed
-down in safety by benighted wanderers who are past all wish to avoid
-screes, and whose one desire is to reach a low level in some inhabited
-valley.
-
-Let us more happily suppose for the present that we are upward bound
-and desirous of circumventing Great Napes. We can observe from Wastdale
-Head the line of lighter scree that comes down either side of the
-Napes. That to the left leads through a beautiful natural gateway
-between White Napes and Great Napes, and thence trends to the right up
-to the summit ridge connecting the latter to the final crags of Gable.
-The streak of reddish scree to the east leads up through larger portals
-into the very heart of the mountain, penetrating round to the back of
-the Napes, and thence up by the left to the same summit ridge. This
-hollow is floored with small red scree that glows with a marvellous
-richness of colour in the sunlight.
-
-The passage between the foot of the Napes and a rock pinnacle at the
-entrance to the hollow is called Hell Gate. Philologists may be led to
-connect the name with the colour of the scree, for the primitive mind
-of the namer would have naturally associated redness with an infernal
-intensity of heat. The White Napes offers a little scrambling, but
-the Great Napes precipice gives us the best climbing to be had on the
-Gable; and if, after reaching the crest of this wall, we bear slightly
-downwards across the upper part of Hell Gate screes, we can finish our
-climbing by some excellent rocks that lead to the large Westmorland
-cairn close to the highest point of the mountain. These Westmorland
-crags, as we presently find it convenient to name them, are irregularly
-continued away towards the south-east and the Styhead pass, by Tom
-Blue, Raven Crag, and Kern Knotts. The last named are in two tiers, the
-lower being close to the Styhead path, and only some 1,200 feet above
-Wastdale Head. The upper Kern Knotts offer climbing of great interest
-and perhaps exceptional severity, and are rapidly becoming popular
-among the climbing fraternity.
-
-THE ENNERDALE FACE.--Looking first to the north side of Gable
-it is a matter of regret that no satisfactory inclusive view may be
-obtained of the whole width of this mountain wall. Seen from the
-slopes of Kirkfell the face recedes in such a way that very little of
-its climbing can be prospected. From the ridge between Scarth Gap and
-Brandreth we have a front view of the crags, but they are much dwarfed
-by distance, and their northern aspect is unsuitable for long range
-photography.
-
-From Kirkfell we can readily mark the Oblique Chimney which cuts deeply
-into the upper half of the centre of the face, and terminates at a
-right-angled notch in the sky-line. Some distance to the right we may
-with a good light identify the Great Central Gully that cuts the face
-from top to bottom. To the immediate right of this is an easy scree
-leading the whole way to the top of the crags. Near the foot of this on
-the right there used to be a slab pinnacle some fifteen feet in height
-that has since been completely disintegrated by rain and frost. A year
-or two ago the freshly exposed rock that bore witness of the recent
-departure of the pinnacle could be clearly recognised by contrast with
-the older face. This climb is now reported to have been exceedingly
-difficult; such will probably be the future reputation of the fast
-disappearing Stirrup Crag on Yewbarrow. A little higher up this scree
-slope, on a small platform out to the left, the remains of an old
-stone-walled enclosure could once be distinguished. It may have been
-the haunt of whisky smugglers or the hiding place of some miserable
-outlaw. It is to be regretted that the remains are now in too bad a
-state of repair to be recognised as artificial. Between the Oblique
-Chimney and the Central Gully lies the easy route or natural passage by
-which a mountain sheep of ordinary powers ‘might ascend’; though it not
-infrequently occurs that the perplexed climber roundly declares that
-the mountain sheep of average mental capacity is not so foolish as to
-venture into such a bewildering region of small grass traverses, steep
-stony slopes, and ledgeless walls.
-
-Immediately to the left of the Oblique Chimney is the climb that leads
-past the Bottle-shaped Pinnacle and up the huge retaining buttress
-of the chimney. Further towards Wind Gap the sky-line suddenly drops
-at the upper level of Stony Gully--an easy, though rough, passage up
-broken boulders and loose scree, by which the crags can be outflanked.
-The wire fence that leads over Wind Gap to Green Gable and Brandreth
-begins here, and is a useful landmark in misty weather. Mr. Haskett
-Smith found in 1882 a ‘high level route’ across the face at about
-two-thirds of the way up. It is an excellent ramble, and full of
-strange surprises, passing along exposed ledges, in between towers of
-rock and the great upper wall, offering a peep into the black recess
-of the Oblique Chimney, and an easy digression up to the Bottle-shaped
-Pinnacle. It finishes close to the foot of Stony Gully, and can be
-recommended for a preliminary survey of the more difficult routes up
-the Ennerdale face.
-
-OBLIQUE CHIMNEY.--From a few notes added to a sketch of the
-known routes up the Ennerdale face, which Mr. John Robinson inserted in
-the Wastdale Climbing Book, April, 1890, I derived my first impressions
-of the Oblique Chimney: ‘This has, I believe, not yet been climbed and
-is not very safe, owing to the jammed stones in it being loose, and
-the clean-cut walls on each side making these stones of consequence.’
-This description was realistic though brief, but I thought little of
-the place till the Christmas vacation of 1892-3, when I learnt that Mr.
-R. C. Gilson had proposed to attack the chimney one fine day, but was
-forestalled by Dr. Collier’s party. These latter took the precautionary
-measure of partly descending the chimney, so as to clear away the
-_débris_ and loose stones that hovered over the edge of each pitch;
-they then returned to the foot of the chimney and forced a way directly
-up to the top. The important jammed stones required for the middle
-portion were quite firm enough for safe holding, and the party returned
-with a fuller praise of the beauties of the chimney than any one had
-anticipated. I was given an account of the expedition a day or two
-later, and was glad enough to get the opportunity of trying conclusions
-with the crags on that side of Gable, which till then was unexplored
-country for me.
-
-My companion that Christmas was a learned classic, weary of brain work,
-whom I had induced to take a little climbing in Cumberland as a tonic.
-Some people cannot take quinine, others apparently cannot benefit by
-rock-climbing. This latter I found to be the case with my friend, whose
-struggle with the _confracti rudera mundi_ made him despondent instead
-of inducing a healthy exhilaration. The sore limbs and torn clothing he
-never seemed able to forget, far less to enjoy. Yet the ruling passion
-of phrase-making was strong even _in extremis_, and he longed to put
-his sufferings into words. Sometimes on the rocks I might casually turn
-to see that he was coming up well. His eyes would be gazing at nothing
-and his lips moving as if in prayer. But it was not prayer, it was a
-Greek or Latin quotation, preferably the former because of its rich
-vocabulary for description of scenery. On the whole he was enjoying
-the new experiences hugely in his own melancholy way, and I felt no
-compunction in insisting on his joining K. and A. when we planned our
-excursion up Gable by way of the Oblique Chimney. The day was rather
-cloudy and snow threatened, but we took plenty of provisions, and K.
-carried a pocket compass. We started somewhat late in the morning,
-and walked leisurely up Gavel Neese and round the Beckhead by way of
-Moses’ Sledgate. But on reaching the wire fence we found that the
-mist completely enveloped the Gable crags and gave us no chance of
-identifying our climb from below. Then we skirted along the base in the
-vain hope of a momentary disclosure of the chimney by a parting of the
-mist, but no such chance offered, and we reached Stony Gully without
-making a start up. Here we saw the ‘rake’ or traverse that has been
-described as passing along the face about two-thirds of the way up.
-It was an obvious course to take, inasmuch as it led to within a few
-feet of the foot of the Oblique Chimney--so near that even the dense
-mist could scarcely prevent our striking it. Here the classic assured
-us that he would much prefer ascending by Stony Gully to the top of
-Gable, and that it would give him extreme pleasure to carry our lunch
-up to the cairn and wait for us there. We let him go, and promised that
-we should join him again by three o’clock in the afternoon. Thus did
-we lose our lunch, not to find it again for another week. There was
-much ice and fresh snow plastering the rocks, and the so-called ‘easy’
-traverse wanted all our care. K. was an expert Alpine climber, his
-friend A. a plucky young Harrovian with plenty of nerve and endurance
-in him, but at that time with next to nothing in the way of experience
-of the mountains. He came along well enough, but our pace was
-necessarily very slow. Three o’clock found us still working westwards
-on the traverse, but without a sight of the Oblique Chimney. I think
-in one place we must have descended too much. At any rate, we found
-ourselves in difficulties on a sloping slab of glazed rock that gave me
-serious pause. A. slipped on this, and started slithering away rapidly.
-Luckily he held his axe tightly, and was brought up by the rope with a
-jerk. Shortly after this, he pointed to some blood on the rocks, and
-solicitously asked me whether I had cut myself very badly. It turned
-out, after a hasty glance at my hands, that he himself was the wounded
-one. My little complaint was a slight frostbite in the finger-tips, my
-gloves having been worn threadbare by much scraping with the hands.
-
-At last we reached a pinnacle that promised us variety. We tried to
-climb up it by the outside edge, but found the ice too troublesome.
-Then, when resting on the shoulder half way up, we saw a deep and
-narrow cavern in the mountain wall behind the pinnacle. Surely that
-must be the object of our quest and our pinnacle the redoubtable
-‘bottle-shaped.’ Eagerly we scrambled over the shoulder and down a
-slight gully on to the scree that issues from the mouth of the cavern.
-It was getting dark, and we were very hungry. My jacket pocket still
-held the crumbs of a pulverized biscuit that I had taken up Snowdon
-the week before. These and a fragment of chocolate we scrupulously
-shared, and then began the attack in earnest. The conditions had much
-changed since Dr. Collier had effected his ascent, and though the
-gully overhangs too much to permit any drift snow to settle in it, the
-smooth walls of the gully were black and shiny with ice, and the damp
-cold of this dark hole tried our endurance to the utmost. It must be
-admitted that my ascent of the first part was slow and ungraceful. I
-had started with my back resting against the left wall, bracing my feet
-as firmly as the ice would permit against the diminutive knobs on the
-opposite side. Now in this position the back cannot be worked up an
-overhanging wall unless the hands have something definite to thrust
-against. The process went on fairly well for about twenty-five feet,
-working outwards as well as upwards, but then the two sides of the
-chimney became perilously far apart and the smooth left wall commenced
-to overhang.
-
-Then ensued a few moments of awkward suspense, an uncertainty as to
-the best method of transferring one’s weight to certain small ledges
-against which the feet were now pressing.
-
-The process of ‘backing up’ is excessively fatiguing, the thrust
-necessary to hold oneself firmly _in situ_ being as a rule much greater
-than the equivalent of one’s weight, and the whole of this thrust being
-at every slight lift transmitted through the arms. He who fails to
-realize the attitude I am describing may easily perform an experiment
-that illustrates the mechanical principles involved, by sitting down
-across a doorway or narrow passage, and attempting to work upwards by
-pressure of the feet against one side and back against the other. If,
-when some three feet from the ground, he waits a minute or two and
-then attempts to move again, either up or down, he will perceive that
-the simple holding in place has tired his muscles and made advance or
-retreat equally difficult.
-
-Our doorway had already extended up for twenty-five feet and yet
-another five remained before a comfortable halting-place could be
-reached. The cleft forming the chimney was so much undercut that the
-view vertically downwards included the scree some distance below the
-entrance to the cavern, and anything that I might have let fall, myself
-for instance, would have dropped some feet further out than the two
-men waiting below. The halt was a mistake; there was only one course
-open, and that should have been taken at first. It was to work inwards
-until the doubtful jammed stones could be reached with the left hand,
-and then, trusting mainly to the footholds, hoist the body over to
-that side of the gully and thrust the hand into the recesses between
-the stones. K. shouted up some suggestion to this effect from below.
-How he managed to discern the proper place through the dim twilight
-I never was able to ascertain. But I resolved to try it, and in some
-strange way the cramped muscles that had appeared incapable of further
-effort were in a second or two relieved by the change of attitude, and
-the pull over to the right side that I had dreaded as the severest tax
-on my strength proved to be easy enough. With fists in two convenient
-little holes clenched to prevent the hands slipping out, I was able
-to take a momentary survey of the slightly rickety ladder of jammed
-stones that led to safety. The passage of these few feet was not at
-all pleasant. Had ours been the first climb of the chimney we might
-have reasonably decided to brave the perils of descent and return again
-by daylight, rather than fumble about in the dusk pawing at wabbly
-boulders that threatened to fall out with us at even a caress, much
-more promptly at a cross word.
-
-But the knowledge that others had tried them, and had learnt the
-futility of these threats, gave me some degree of courage, and, taking
-heart of grace, I, walked up the ladder and out of the first great
-difficulty. A. came up next, and as the hour was late and we were all a
-little anxious to finish, he did not scorn to use the rope at the bad
-corner just below the ladder. K. came up remarkably well, and I felt
-that if he had led us we should have mastered the pitch earlier.
-
-We were now able to walk towards the roof of the upper portion of the
-gully, which was as completely closed in as the cave below. The left
-wall everywhere overhung so much that there was no chance of climbing
-out by its aid. The right wall was nearly parallel to the left and
-showed a few more possibilities.
-
-Looking backwards we could see the two walls projecting several yards
-out, apparently a little nearer together at their extreme edges than
-they were in our upper chamber, which was now much too wide for any
-opportunity of backing up. But we knew that the second pitch was not
-so bad as the first, and started prospecting. I crept up as high into
-the cave as possible, and then felt round the edge of the roof for a
-firm hold. This came to hand almost at once, and with a step out on to
-the sloping wall, and probably a steadying hand from below, I worked up
-between the roof-stone and the right side. This led to a steep little
-snow-slope, evidently covering loose stones that might prove excitable
-in dry weather, and thence a few yards of broken rock extended to the
-summit of the crags.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE ENNERDALE FACE OF GREAT GABLE]
-
-In five minutes we had assembled there, and decided that we were still
-distressingly hungry. I felt in my pocket for more crumbs, but only
-brought out stones. We hurried up to the cairn at the highest point
-of the mountain. It looked a picture of Alpine solitude. Not a trace
-of the classic, no hope of our lunch. Fresh snow had fallen during
-the last hour or two, and had obliterated all signs of his visit.
-Nay, worse, we had not that implicit confidence in his knowledge of
-the district to feel certain that he had found his way safely down to
-Wastdale, for he had never been on the mountain before; nor was he
-quite so familiar with the mountain mists as we proud climbers of the
-Oblique Chimney. But he had the laugh of us that night! We expressed
-sorrow for the poor man, and then with a sigh turned to consider our
-own position. It was a trifle unpleasant to be on the summit of Great
-Gable after six p.m. on a snowy winter’s night, with something of a
-wind blowing through us and very little to obstruct its free passage.
-But for all that we were happy enough, and arranged elaborately to
-steer by compass direct for White Napes and Gavel Neese. South-west by
-west was our direction. K. was positive of that fact, and offered to
-lead. Some twenty yards behind him came young A., still going well;
-then I followed at an equal distance behind him, just able by the
-reflected light from the snow to distinguish the leader and keep him in
-the straight line he was marking out for us.
-
-By the light of a match that we kept flaming for a sufficient time
-in an improvised tent of coats, he examined the pocket compass he
-carried, and was confident that ten minutes’ good going would carry us
-down to the grassy shoulder below the White Napes. On we went steadily
-downwards, and I wondered whether, if we took to running when the
-boulders were passed, we might get down in time to start dinner at the
-usual hour. Happy thoughts in this connection kept me from attending
-particularly to our route and its details, but when we got to a thicker
-mist I looked about for a landmark. Nothing could be recognised. The
-ground sloped rapidly down on the right; the left seemed to rise most
-oddly to a sort of ridge. But the strange thing was that there seemed
-to be another mountain fronting us. K. was at a complete loss, and took
-out his compass again. We erected the tent once more, and all crowded
-over the instrument to determine our fate. Alas, we had been travelling
-towards the north! K. had mistaken the two poles of the magnet. The
-mountain mass looming ahead was the Green Gable, and we were within a
-few feet of the Wind Gap. Our dinner was at least two hours further
-away than ever, and we were still hungry. There was nothing to be
-done but walk round the mountain by way of the Styhead tarn and pass.
-We had no lantern, and it would have been a legbreaking business to
-attempt to skirt the Ennerdale face and strike off the Moses’ Sledgate
-in the dark. The snow was soft all the way down Aaron Slack. I have
-often come down in daylight since and wondered what we could have
-found to tumble over that night; we were always slipping through snow
-pitfalls into water, or tripping over boulders and on to our heads
-in snowdrifts. Now and again we would find ourselves sitting side by
-side in the stream, the leader’s tumbling having been too sudden to
-permit of any warning to the others. Such occasions we generally seized
-on as suitable opportunities for halting, only to be ended by sleepy
-realization that the water was both damp and cold. And all the time the
-inexperienced classic was enjoying his dinner and his phrase-making in
-princely luxury and comfort at the inn.
-
-At last we reached the shores of the frozen tarn and turned wearily
-up to the right. The path was in a shocking state, and on arriving at
-the cairn at the top of the pass we found a continuous glaze of ice
-along our route. So, at any rate, it seemed to be that night--my first
-experience of crossing the Styhead in the dark. It was nothing less
-than actual hand-and-foot work in many an awkward corner. Subsequent
-opportunities of climbing down the path in the dark have often been
-given me, but that first night was the worst. How we managed to avoid
-broken limbs has ever been a mystery. We would suddenly slip over on
-the ice, and slide furiously down the path and into some obstruction
-below. We had tried to smoke, but pipes were too dangerous to hold
-between the teeth during these unpremeditated rushes. But time ends
-all things. By ten o’clock we were anointed with Vaseline and massaged
-with Elliman, with the prospect of substantial fare to follow. The
-classic slippered into the dining-room to report himself. He had waited
-on Gable cairn till half-past three, and then had returned by the way
-he had come. Our lunch he had left under a stone, and as a guide to
-our finding it had stamped the snow down and drawn with his finger
-several arrows or asterisks or other marks of reference in the snow.
-It was very clever, but the fresh fall thwarted his ingenuity only too
-effectually.
-
-The Oblique Chimney rapidly became popular, and has since been visited
-by many climbers. But it can never be regarded as an easy ascent.
-
-Some time during the summer following I looked down it to see how
-a descent might be managed. The loose stones at the top were most
-uncomfortably unstable, and the clamber down towards the entrance of
-the upper cave required great care, without being exactly perilous. A
-friend was with me who counselled waiting till we should find ourselves
-up there again with a rope, and ultimately his advice prevailed. Some
-eighteen months later, in January, 1895, a large party of Wastdale
-Christmas revellers made for the Oblique Chimney top. The crags were
-approached from the scree below, a few feet to the north of the
-entrance to the Central Gully. We took to a little chimney at once,
-and then up a grassy slope to another chimney that brought us to steep
-grass and scree with frequent outcrops of rock.
-
-Thence we made up towards the entrance to the Oblique Chimney then
-visible, and before reaching it clambered up an incipient gully on the
-left wall that bounds the scree just there. It led over the sharp crest
-of the buttress that supports the bottle-shaped pinnacle, and thence we
-had a steep but fairly easy descent of ten or twelve feet to a ledge
-that led round to the other side. The rocks were dry and very free from
-snow, so that each member of our party found himself able to pull up
-easily from ledge to ledge in the little gully till the notch between
-the pinnacle and the main wall was reached.
-
-Thence the leader turned up to the left, and recommenced a similar
-series of ledge-climbing operations, of which only the first from the
-notch could be called in any sense difficult. We had a magnificent view
-down the face, which is particularly steep just here, and the frequent
-halts rendered necessary by the size of our party afforded plenty of
-time to admire the huge slabs that separated the ‘sheep walk’ from
-us. A small stone-man marked our point of arrival at the summit of
-the crags, and after adding a block or two as our contribution to the
-cairn we turned right, and in a few yards had reached the rectangular
-entrance to the Oblique Chimney.
-
-The main difficulty in the descent was to prevent stones sliding on to
-the heads of men lower down, who were in the direct line of fire and
-rarely able to raise a protecting arm for themselves. The upper ones
-were continually cautioned by those in peril to keep an eye to the
-rope, and prevent its dragging over the bed of the gully. All passed
-down safely, but I remember making a mistake when descending the great
-overhanging pitch at the bottom, in assuming that it was an easy matter
-to climb down with a camera sack on my back. I had descended part of
-the ‘ladder,’ but then found the need of a back pressure, and hesitated
-about crushing in the contents of my sack. The rope is of no use to
-the last man in a place of that kind, and I therefore was permitted to
-untie the knot round my waist and fix on the sack instead, letting it
-down gently to the others by the left hand. The right was needed to
-hold on firmly to the ladder, so that the teeth were in requisition for
-the tying. The descent offers another instance of the ease with which a
-chimney that is exceptionally severe in the ascent may be traversed in
-the reverse direction. Where gravity helps the motion we have only to
-consider the best means of opposing it. During an ascent much strength
-is spent in the mere lift, to say nothing of the extra force needed to
-prevent slipping.
-
-At the foot we joined up again and traversed round to the ‘sheep
-walk.’ This was easy to discover but hard to describe. The route bore
-obliquely upwards towards the right, always well out in the open,
-giving us pleasant hand-and-foot work the whole way. We reached the
-top in safety, and then proceeded homewards by way of White Napes.
-
-Mr. Haskett Smith says that the top of the easy passage bears 23° east
-of north when viewed by prismatic compass from the highest point of
-Great Gable. It probably means magnetic north, and the fact is of value
-to benighted climbers who know which end of the compass is the north
-pole.
-
-On April 3, 1896, a new variation route was found into the upper cave
-of the Oblique Chimney by Messrs. C. and A. Hopkinson and H. Campbell,
-who worked up a slightly marked gully in the great wall to the left
-of the sheep walk, and then, after an ascent of fifty feet, traversed
-round by the left into the chimney.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-_THE ENNERDALE CENTRAL GULLY AND TWO LITTLE CHIMNEYS_
-
-
-There is no royal road to learning, and the converse proposition is
-equally true. There is no learning along a royal road. Some years
-ago I went up the Central Gully of the Gable behind an experienced
-climber, when conditions were at their best. It was a royal road to me,
-and I came away with but a vague notion of its difficulties, without
-having learnt anything. It is the leader that can give the truest
-description of an easy climb. Where the one man can do all the work,
-his followers go up without a thought beyond their rope’s length. When
-difficulties are shared discussion is necessary, and the memory is
-assisted by subsequent references to faulty moves or to troubles that
-all were instrumental in overcoming. It is astonishing how few men can
-recall the details of a rock climb to the extent of recapitulating
-the successive pitches in, say, two hours of gully work. And yet the
-faculty is well worth cultivating, inasmuch as it accentuates the
-pleasures of retrospection and may be called into active service by the
-inquiries of others wishing to follow. Indeed the best introduction to
-guideless climbing is to ascend rock peaks that we have afore-time
-accomplished with guides in front of us, where we shall find our
-memories taxed now and again in the effort to recall the route taken
-previously. To lie in bed and remember every foothold on the Matterhorn
-may require more ascents than one; but however wicked it is for a
-Zermatt guide to indulge in such a pastime, the average amateur may
-well envy him his accomplishment.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PLATE IV.
-
-THE ENNERDALE FACE OF GREAT GABLE, Showing about 400 feet of Cliff.
-
- A Wind Gap.
- B Stony Gully.
- C The Oblique Chimney.
- D The Bottle-shaped Pinnacle Ridge.
- E The Sheep Walk.
- F The Ennerdale Central Gully.
- G Scree Gully.
- H The Doctor’s Chimney.
- K An Easy Scree Gully.
- L Gable Crag Traverse.
- X Engineer’s Chimney.
- _d_ The Bottle-shaped Pinnacle.
- _f_ Chimney Finish of F.
- _g_ Smuggler’s Retreat.]
-
-Quite recently I had the opportunity of joining a party up the Central
-Gully. We had come over to Gable Crag after an hour or two on the
-Eagle’s Nest _arête_ and the neighbouring rocks. Our plan was to get
-up the chief pitches in the gully, and then, instead of bearing up to
-the right at the foot of the final wall, to take to the narrow vertical
-chimney that passes up its centre and leads to the highest point of the
-crags--to treat it as an old friend with a new face.
-
-But before taking to the gully there was another little chimney to
-visit, that had been recently ‘invented’ by Dr. Simpson and Mr.
-Patchell, on their way to the Great Central. It is a singular thing
-that this remarkably interesting way up Gable Crag should have so
-long remained undiscovered. The reference in the Wastdale book is as
-follows: ‘A walk of a hundred feet along a grass ledge from the point
-where the wire fence from Beckhead touches the rocks of the Gable,
-followed by a hundred feet of scrambling up a wild and much broken
-gully, leads to a small cairn which marks the foot of a chimney on
-the left. This runs up in a direction parallel to the face of the
-cliff, and so is not clearly seen except at close quarters. It is very
-straight and narrow, especially in the middle pitch, and makes an
-interesting climb of about eighty feet.’
-
-We worked round the scree and broken rock from the top of the Napes to
-Gable Crag. Then by keeping fairly low down we arrived at the end of
-the wire fence from Beckhead, and were in a position to profit by the
-description already supplied. The fence ends abruptly on the face of a
-crag that is somewhat separated from the main mass of Gable. Between
-the two a scree gully runs downwards in the direction of Brandreth, and
-the Doctor’s Chimney is found to spring from a point a hundred feet
-up from the foot of this gully. The crag interferes with the view of
-the chimney from the neighbourhood of Beckhead, though from the nearer
-slopes of Kirkfell the little climb is almost as well marked as the
-Oblique Chimney.
-
-The hand-and-foot work begins on the right side of the recess, and
-the climber makes directly up to a little pinnacle about thirty feet
-above him. There is no need to back up the chimney at first. The
-pinnacle offers comfortable standing-room for one only, but the leader
-can manipulate the rope for the second until the latter is within
-a foot or two of the platform. Then by passing a few coils of rope
-round the top of the pinnacle he can make the second safe while he
-effects the rather awkward passage back into the crack. Both hands
-seize an excellent hold on the opposite wall, perfectly safe but a
-trifle remote for a man with a short reach, and then the foothold is
-quitted and the body dragged into a good jamming position. The crack
-is very narrow, and extensive slipping is almost an impossibility.
-It now becomes necessary to wriggle up inch by inch with slight hold
-for the extremities and too much for intermediate excrescences. A
-few feet higher and the chimney is at its narrowest. Here follows an
-uncomfortable rearrangement of the system. The handholds have hitherto
-been best on the left wall, and the climber has accordingly faced
-that way. But now the holds dwindle down to nothing on that side and
-others appear on the right. We may either climb out of the crack and
-on to the buttress, or preferably effect a half-turn of the body and
-so get to face the right wall. This is most safely accomplished by
-working outwards a bit before twisting. A small stone is half jammed
-in the crack and may be used for a foothold, though too insecure
-for any hauling purposes. The struggling now becomes a little less
-irregular. The ledges are excellent for the hands, and in a few feet
-we reach the level of the floor of a little cave roofed in by a
-couple of overhanging blocks. This place again is only large enough
-for one cave-dweller to inhabit, and the leader has his choice of
-procedure--either to run out another twelve feet before the second man
-comes up, or to wait till his follower reaches the narrowest part of
-the crack. To avoid the trouble of re-arranging the rope, the latter
-plan is better, though it involves a little risk of peppering the crack
-man with small stones that are only too willing to lower their present
-level at the roof of the cave.
-
-The last move is moderately easy. By pulling up on to the horizontal
-ledge on the left buttress the loose stones are almost avoided, and
-then some easy steps land the leader in safety a few yards from the
-upper edge of the crags. When all are up, a traverse of about fifty
-yards to the right discloses a rough but quick route down to the scree
-gully and the wire fence, or the same traverse continued along the
-contour-line leads to the Westmorland crags and the beginning of the
-ordinary scree descent towards Gavel Neese.
-
-The Doctor’s Chimney deserves to be popular. It is a perfectly safe
-climb, and offers excellent practice for the arms. On the whole it is
-probably a little easier than the Oblique Chimney, especially when
-descended, for it is so narrow that there is little need to seek
-footholds until the level of the pinnacle is reached. It has the
-advantage over its more famous rival of being easily hit off in misty
-weather; for a scree gully is then less mistakable than a rocky sheep
-walk, and a wire fence than a ‘bottle-shaped’ pinnacle.
-
-Such, then, was our digression before making for the foot of the
-Central Gully. Another party of friends had comfortably ensconced
-themselves in various corners on the small crag opposite the chimney,
-and were interested observers of our performance. They smoked
-cigarettes and offered advice freely; their day’s work was done, and
-to watch others still hard at it was perfect luxury. When we emerged
-panting from the top they threw away their cigarette ends and strolled
-down to Wastdale for tea. It required much moral strength to refrain
-from joining them, but there was the Great Central still on hand, and
-that other little chimney to prospect. If it were as difficult as
-report said, then we were bound to stay and climb it. So we worked
-round to the end of the wire fence and looked for our gully. Its name
-perhaps suggests a great gap in the mountain side, visible for miles
-round, and as unavoidable by the wanderer on this side of Gable as the
-Edgware Road is said to be by the Frenchman in London. But if this
-be so the name is misleading. Many people fail to find the gully in
-bad weather. Its entrance from below is narrow and its exit above is
-ill defined. A short distance to the east of the Doctor’s Chimney the
-scree-walk up the crag, that leads past the relics of the smuggler’s
-inclosure, insures a safe passage to the top of the cliff. This scree
-gully faces Kirkfell, and but for the usually poor light on this north
-face of the mountain it might be easily recognized from that side.
-Scarcely a hundred yards away from the end of the fence the narrow
-opening of the Central Gully may be found; from Beckhead it appears
-in profile, and is not-always manifest. Walking eastwards along the
-scree beneath the crags, it is the first really obvious passage into
-the heart of the mountain after leaving the Doctor’s Chimney; the easy
-scree walk is not much impressed in the face, and in a mist it has
-often been entirely overlooked. Even in cloudy weather the first pitch
-of our gully can be discerned a few feet above us, and identified by
-the buttress that partially divides it, the chock-stone in its right
-branch, and the fine-looking ‘jammed-stone pinnacle’ that shows up a
-little higher on the left.
-
-The first clear account of the gully appeared in the Wastdale book: ‘In
-the great gully are found two pitches near the bottom. The top part may
-be varied by crossing a grass slope and joining the easy scree route,
-or the climb may be continued by going straight forward. This looks
-very hard, but on close inspection the difficulty entirely disappears;
-for the climber is able to pass behind a square tower of rock, and in
-this way to enter on the final bit of grass and rock that brings him
-out at the top.’
-
-We were a party of three, and managed comfortably with eighty feet of
-rope. The first pitch was easy, what with dry rocks and warm weather.
-Our guide started up the buttress that divides the gully, and at a
-convenient opportunity stepped back on to the loose stones in the bed.
-A few feet brought us to the second pitch, a trifle harder than the
-first. Again the leader worked up a buttress on the left of the gully,
-but this time well in the hollow. Near the top of the obstruction the
-left leg had to take the place of the right, a good handhold above
-serving to insure the safe transfer, and then a ledge could be reached
-by the right foot. The body was next swung over to that side, and so to
-the crest of the pitch.
-
-Here the gully looked very attractive. On the left rose the
-jammed-stone pinnacle, an easy chimney leading up to the cleft that
-separates it from the mountain. Two big boulders bridge the cleft near
-the crest of the little passage, the higher one offering a safe way
-to the summit of the pinnacle. It is from here that the progress or
-‘rake’ can be made out across to the foot of the Oblique Chimney and on
-towards Stony Gully at the east end of Gable Crag.
-
-Just above us a third pitch barred the way. The gully was much
-wider here, and greater diversity of method was now possible. The
-guide counselled the direct attack of the short crack in front. The
-philosopher prudently suggested that time was an object and the crack
-a hard nut; we ought to take the easy corner on the left. The friend
-that completed our trio gave the casting vote in favour of overtime
-and ten hours’ work per day during holidays. The crack was certainly
-awkward. It was at first easiest to face towards the right and work up
-nine or ten feet. Then when the foothold was of the fanciest of orders
-it became desirable to effect a half-turn of the body so that the other
-side of the crack might be faced. Once the turn was accomplished, a
-fine hand-hold made the rest easy; we could pull up the corner and walk
-out at the top, some twenty-five feet above the foot of the pitch. Our
-friend was thinking evidently of his casting vote when he followed the
-guide; for at the turning-point a slip cast him on to the rope and
-gave him an extra turn that he scarcely appreciated. But the leader
-was safely ensconced above, and the poor fellow hastened up to assure
-himself that the rope really had been held tightly. The philosopher
-eschewed the cause of this momentary retrogression, and came quietly up
-the grass and rock corner well to the left of the gully.
-
-We were now almost out on the face of the mountain. Very little
-remained of the gully as such. The ordinary walk away towards the right
-was perfectly plain. Mr. Robinson’s route upwards, described in the
-extract just quoted, was a little to the left, but not at all easy to
-locate, for the square tower of rock blocked the direct view of the
-climb. Straight up above us we saw a wall of about a hundred feet of
-apparently sheer rock, down the centre of which passed the crack or
-chimney that we were to take for our finish.
-
-Loose earthy steps led to the foot of the wall, and for a moment we
-thought with some apprehension that the first part was going to be
-seriously troublesome. At a height of twenty-five feet or so some
-narrow splintered boulders completely filled up the crack and overhung
-considerably. Just below them the climbing was obviously awkward,
-by reason of the footholds that were not there, if the ancient
-Hibernianism may be tolerated, and the necessary leverage on the
-boulders when we were using them for all they were worth would imperil
-their stability and our own. But after mounting the first twelve feet
-with, perhaps, more case than we had anticipated, a narrow ledge showed
-up on the right wall for about ten feet, and we noticed with relief
-that at its further extremity another traverse led back to the crack
-in a slanting direction to a point just above the critical spot. This
-diversion we promptly accepted, and found it altogether satisfactory.
-The lower ledge was just wide enough for the feet, and handholds just
-good enough for the balance of the body during the transfer. At the
-further end it was easy scrambling to the upper ledge, which showed
-itself as a broad and safe path to a little niche where the crack was
-somewhat enlarged. The floor of the niche was formed of loose stones
-supported on the larger jammed blocks that had affrighted us below,
-and was sufficiently commodious for all the party to place themselves
-securely thereon. Probably the next part of the climb was the hardest.
-That, at any rate, was the opinion of those who had recommended the
-route to us, and after their kindly advice we were gratefully prepared
-to accept anything from them in the way of opinion. The chimney was
-vertical and its two walls almost holdless.
-
-Direct progress seemed barred by three thick plates of rock wedged into
-the crack and projecting outwards some three or four feet. Over these
-we had to make our way, and if their edges proved to be unsatisfactory
-for the fingers to grip or the arms to clasp, then we should have to
-return with the ignominy of defeat. On the one hand appearances were
-against us; the pitch looked impossible. But on the other we knew it
-had been climbed once or twice before, and assuredly under no better
-conditions than were vouchsafed to ourselves. Far away down at the
-foot of the gully we noticed a couple of men who had been walking
-Wastdale-wards after a hard day, but were gazing up at us in some
-curiosity to know how we were going to tackle our problem. It would
-never do to go back now.
-
-And thus, after sacrificing such time and small reflections to the
-reputed difficulty of the place as its admirers would have claimed
-of us, we turned our gaze upwards and climbed the pitch. It went off
-pleasantly enough. An easy clamber led to a second platform immediately
-below the jammed plates. A foot or two higher, and a ledge on the left
-could be used for the one hand, the edge of the lowest overhanging
-block with the other, while the left leg was swung up on to a shelf.
-The attitude was awkward just for the moment, but with both arms
-clasping the plate of rock, which was perfectly trustworthy, there
-could be no thought of falling for the leader, who had only to thrust
-himself forward into an upper recess and wriggle into safety.
-
-Here he discovered another level platform, neatly turfed and obviously
-constructed as a climber’s resting place. It would have been easy to
-stay there and negotiate the rope for the other men below, but the next
-pitch was only ten feet higher up, and led to a still better corner.
-Therefore he went on by straightforward hand-and-foot work, and climbed
-the pitch by its left-hand branch. The chimney is here about eight feet
-wide, divided into two by a long and narrow boulder.
-
-The right-hand branch is just possible, but the sense of insecurity at
-one spot almost demands help from below. On the left a deep recess is
-floored with splintered blocks that threaten to break away but cannot
-easily manage it. The boulder offered enough assistance in the way of
-holds, especially a sharp edge at the top, and when overcome showed
-itself to be the last genuine obstacle in our course. We were soon
-all gathered together at the little notch that marks the top of the
-chimney, and after adding a stone to the cairn that stands there, we
-marched up some thirty feet of solid buttress and broke at a plunge
-through the thick cornice of old snow that yet remained as a token of
-the hard winter that had come and gone.
-
-The easy finish to the right of the last vertical wall passes up scree
-from the top of the third pitch, and takes us on to a ridge of rock
-above the Smuggler’s Retreat. Here it joins the Scree Gully, and we
-have a small piece of hand-and-foot work before it narrows, then curves
-away to the left, and finally ends on a ledge of broken rock close to
-the highest point.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-_THE GREAT NAPES AND ITS GULLIES_
-
-
-It has already been explained that the Great Napes rises like a huge
-screen out of the southern slopes of Gable. Its crest runs from
-north-west to south-east. It is possible to travel along the whole
-length of the ridge from Hell’s Gate (called Deep Gill on the Ordnance
-map) to the White Napes scree at Little Hell Gate, and this route,
-religiously followed without divergence on to either face, will be
-found to offer many interesting pitches. The outside face of the Napes
-is cut by the Needle Gully, the Eagle’s Nest Gully, and the Arrowhead
-Gully, taken in order from east to west.
-
-The Needle Gully has two separate branches leading to the crest of
-the Napes, neither of them particularly difficult or interesting.
-The Eagle’s Nest Gully is in summer time little more than a scree
-walk. So likewise is the main Arrowhead Gully, which, however, has
-a branch up to the left leading to a fine-looking chimney and out
-on to the open face two-thirds of the way up towards the ridge. To
-the west of the Arrowhead Gully the Napes is much less imposing, and
-though small gullies cut it up considerably they are too indefinite to
-particularize.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-GREAT GABLE FROM LINGMELL
-
-(_Face page 146_)]
-
-The chief _arêtes_ on the face are, taking them in order from east to
-west, the Needle ridge immediately to the right of the Needle Gully;
-the Eagle’s Nest ridge between the Eagle’s Nest Gully and the Needle
-Gully; and the Arrowhead ridge between the Eagle’s Nest Gully and the
-Arrowhead Gully. All these _arêtes_ offer most enjoyable climbs. The
-Gable Needle (or Napes Needle) is a sharp pinnacle rising vertically
-from the lower part of the Needle ridge. It is a climb for experts
-only, with steady heads. The Bear rock is a smaller pinnacle a few
-yards to the west of the foot of Arrowhead Gully. Its ascent is a
-simple problem in rock-climbing--a pull up with the arms from the notch
-at the back--but it is worth visiting on account of its singular aspect.
-
-THE ARROWHEAD GULLY is almost entirely devoid of interest.
-It has not often been visited, for the reason that its material is
-loose, its one pitch is easy, and the neighbourhood is very rich in
-more inviting climbs. A large party went up it last April and were
-exceedingly unhappy so long as a single member remained in it. Our
-interest had been concentrated on the Eagle’s Nest ridge, and after
-some considerable time had been spent about the crags, we found
-ourselves at the foot of the Arrowhead Gully, afflicted with the
-unanimous desire to reach the summit of the Napes by a way that none of
-us had attempted before. There remained to us this gully and its branch
-up by the left. It soon became manifest that we should have to divide,
-for the place was too small to hold us, and too narrow to permit free
-passage of loose stones that the higher members almost immediately
-began to dislodge. We lunched a few feet up the left branch, and were
-decidedly uncomfortable during our hasty meal. The ledges that we had
-chosen were so uncertain and the scree below so steep that all were
-glad when the sandwiches were finished and preparations commenced for
-roping-up. My own section of the party elected to follow the branch
-to its abrupt ending out on the face. The others kept to the main
-gully, and were busy chimney-sweeping most of their time. Their one
-pitch was straightforward, but loose blocks abounded and required
-careful treatment so long as their fall might endanger the safety of
-any one. Over would go a boulder as soon as the last man had passed
-it, smashing from side to side, and we in our gully vaguely wondered,
-at each successive bombardment of the Arrowhead, whether it would not
-be fair to give the next comers the credit of trying a new climb;
-the old gully was rapidly altering, and the change in its ancient
-landmarks testifying to the influence of man as a geological agent. But
-in spite of their extensive quarrying operations they reached their
-destination before us. We found that our variation involved some good
-climbing, spoilt, however, by a plentiful supply of dangerous _débris_
-on all its available ledges. I was leading, and therefore safe from
-bombardment; but those below me were now and again peppered, and my
-feelings hurt by their objurgations. Those who read this book as a
-literary production will, no doubt, sympathise with the writer in his
-difficulties with so limited a vocabulary as climbing affords. That
-words of primary importance are few is a fact patent to all students
-of the “Alpine Journal.” But in moments of excitement the climber is
-urged to expand his limits, and to call on other sciences (notably the
-theological) for suitable expressions that will relieve his feelings.
-
-We started by working up on the right to a ledge at the foot of the big
-pitch. Then followed a traverse across to a short chimney on the other
-side. This chimney was obviously a possible route, but for greater
-safety and in order to avoid a lengthening of the rope between the
-second man and myself, I worked up for a few feet and then rounded
-the buttress into the central portion of the gully, where a second
-crack started upwards. Six feet higher this crack terminated at the
-same level as the left-hand chimney, and some dangerously loose grass
-holds helped me to drag up into a small cave where moderate anchorage
-could be obtained. Unfortunately a block as large as my fist managed
-to escape past me and to attack deliberately the unlucky member of
-our party. He, poor man! has the reputation of never being missed by
-a vagrant stone, and on this occasion he was hit rather badly on the
-head. It was no use hurrying, but we feared a faint, and when two of us
-were squeezed well into the cave, the wounded man was engineered up
-to our level. He was a bit dazed, but on the whole seemed moderately
-jubilant at this latest proof of his case-hardened condition. When
-reassured as to his welfare we wriggled clumsily out of the narrow
-cave, feet foremost, and made our way easily by the left wall to the
-roof of the cave and the top of the pitch. The rest of the gully was
-little more than mere walking, and a few minutes later we joined our
-friends on the crest of the Napes.
-
-THE NEEDLE GULLY has rather a bad reputation. My personal
-experience of it has not been altogether pleasant. I tried it in
-January, 1893, with the enterprising classic referred to in my account
-of the Oblique Chimney, and found the soft snow so troublesome in its
-steepness and want of tenacity that we decided to leave the gully for
-some more auspicious occasion. The opportunity came in the following
-August, after an ascent of the Needle, and with it came the conviction
-that in dry weather the gully possesses no interest to the climber pure
-and simple, if such an anomaly exists, but that it should be visited by
-those who take pleasure in rock scenery. The Eagle’s Nest ridge is a
-marvellously fine sweep of clean-cut rock bounding the western wall of
-the gully. The jagged outline of the Needle ridge on the eastern side
-is scarcely inferior in grandeur.
-
-We found two easy pitches to begin with, taking us to about the level
-of the Needle summit. Then a vertical wall interposed itself directly
-in our way. We scrambled in or near a slight cleft on our right,
-using rather treacherous grass-covered ledges, and distributing our
-weight over as many points of support as possible. That portion of
-the pitch was only about three feet high, and then came a momentary
-‘easy’ before another steep little bit of eight feet. The resting
-place is just large enough for one man. At the top of the second piece
-a ledge led round by the left past an awkward corner that seemed to
-alarm our more substantial members by its narrowness, and then two
-or three steep grass steps had to be taken directly upwards. There
-we found a projecting knob forming a convenient saddle for each to
-anchor as he manipulated the rope for the man below, a deep crack
-offering itself in the right position for belaying the rope. A foot
-or two higher, and we were able to traverse back into the bed of the
-gully, and thence find an easy way up screes and short rock slopes to
-the top. The climb along the ridge itself to the highest point of the
-Napes was pleasantly varied. We could readily distinguish the points
-of articulation of the chief buttresses, for the general angle was too
-steep to disguise the contours. When close to the connecting ridge
-between Napes and the Westmorland crags we bore down on to Hell’s Gate
-screes and crossed over to the opposite rocks to hunt out the little
-climb up to the Westmorland cairn. This was not so easy to find, and we
-wasted much time in attempting an attack by some smooth slabs too high
-up the scree. At last we found that the climb began in a small gully
-some distance down, which bore upwards a little to the right till a
-short pinnacle was reached. Then from the neck behind the pinnacle we
-traversed across the face to the left for a few yards, before climbing
-hand over hand to the summit ridge. It came as a surprise that the
-ascent had such neatness; and we were all at the end willing enough
-to indorse the favourable opinions expressed in the climbing book.
-Be it remembered that the cairn at the top was built by the brothers
-Westmorland of Penrith, not for the purpose of indicating the finish
-of a climb, but to mark the coign of vantage for one of the finest
-mountain views in the country. Remember also that proposition of a
-well-known mountaineer that the view from a summit is much the same
-whatever be the route taken to get there; and apply it by visiting
-Westmorland cairn to look at the Napes, even if the expedition involves
-no troublesome climbing.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE RIDGES OF THE GREAT NAPES
-
-(_Face page 153_)]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-_THE RIDGES OF THE GREAT NAPES_
-
-
-THE NEEDLE RIDGE is usually taken from the foot of the Needle
-itself. It was explored first in 1884 by Mr. Haskett Smith, who then
-made a general survey without actually completing the climb. Two
-years later he effected a descent of the whole route; and in 1887 Mr.
-Slingsby’s party made the first strict ascent, and were emphatic in
-their praise of its fine character.
-
-The introductory few feet from the notch behind the Needle are
-difficult, the problem being to climb up a steep slab of six feet or so
-to the foot of a slight grass chimney that slopes upwards to the right.
-Three fingers of the right hand can be inserted in a curious pocket in
-the slab; rather poor foothold is all that can be found for steadying
-purposes, and for the rest just enough will manifest itself to enable
-the climber to cautiously drag himself up to a small ledge, and thence
-to the foot of the chimney.
-
-This takes him easily to about the level of the top of the Needle.
-There a poised block is passed on the left, that used to give trouble.
-I once saw my leader attempt to climb directly over it. When in the
-very act of pulling himself on to its upper surface it slowly swung
-round, as if pivoted at each extremity. Fortunately he was not tempted
-to let go, and it readjusted itself in a firmer position without
-quitting its niche. My friend led no more that day, and we afterwards
-solemnly warned folks against the boulder variation. The stone is yet
-there and is still insecure, but climbers pass round by the right and
-then work back on to the edge of the _arête_ and up to the foot of
-the vertical wall that begins the second part of the climb. It is not
-unusual for the first part to take so long a time in severe weather as
-to convince a prudent party that it is expedient to utilize a grass
-traverse into the Needle Gully that here discloses itself on the left.
-This ledge takes them safely to a point in the bed of the gully above
-the chief pitch, and within a few minutes’ easy scrambling of the top.
-
-The first part of the Needle Ridge may be neatly varied by climbing the
-buttress up from the gully, or by working across to the same buttress
-from the Needle notch. These variations are a little harder than the
-usual climb, but both are safe in dry weather.
-
-As illustrating the way not to use a rope, an amusing story is told
-of the first difficulty on the Needle ridge. Two young fellows had
-walked up to the foot of the gully with another party of climbers, and
-had lazily discussed their lunch and their plans for the day while
-the others were busy on the Needle. After deciding that they knew the
-Needle too well to learn anything by climbing it, they went on to
-examine critically, from a distance, the Eagle’s Nest opposite and to
-point out the way that they would insure their own safety in an attack
-on it. They scoffed at its reputed severity, and would really have then
-and there shown the neatest method of vanquishing it. On the other
-hand, it was a warm day, and they felt a little slack. Perhaps the
-Needle Ridge would tickle their jaded appetites a bit. Yes! they would
-walk up the ridge and get some fresh air 400 feet higher. Then they
-tossed up for leadership, and tied on their forty feet rope--one man at
-each end. Away went the leader from the notch, over the slab and up the
-chimney. When at the end of his rope it occurred to him to look back
-and see what his companion was doing. The poor fellow had stuck at the
-slab, and was in imminent danger of falling backwards. ‘Good gracious,
-man, what are you thinking of?’ shouted the indignant leader. ‘I am
-not going to be pulled down for any one!’ and promptly began to unrope
-himself. Then the man who tells the story hurried up from below, and
-fortunately arrived in time to prevent a catastrophe. Such an aspect
-of the utility of the rope need scarcely be commented upon, but I was
-not surprised a day or two after hearing the story to be characterized
-by a non-climbing acquaintance in town as a desperate venturesome
-individual, one who went about climbing mountains _with a rope_. By
-non-climbers a rope must indeed be regarded as a source of danger.
-
-The plainest view of the upper platform of the Needle and the awkward
-corner that rises from it is to be had at the expense of a few minutes’
-digression from the ridge. It is best to climb from the top of the
-grass chimney over to the right, and then down a steep and loose recess
-to a grass platform. A photograph of the Needle from this point of view
-has been published, and is an interesting one to study.
-
-The second part of the Needle Ridge begins with a vertical wall of
-rock that from below appears very formidable. With ice about it is
-certainly difficult, and the traverse to the gully on the left is the
-wisest course to pursue under such conditions. But on close inspection
-a square corner discloses itself in the wall, and the fifteen feet of
-scrambling in the cleft are perfectly straightforward. At the top of
-the wall the ridge is broken up in a wonderful way, and huge blocks are
-distributed along the route in great profusion. The climbing becomes
-very easy, though retaining its interest to the finish at the top of
-the Napes; and the whole ascent may be disposed of summarily in half an
-hour from the Needle notch.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE UPPER PART OF THE NEEDLE RIDGE
-
-(_Face page 156_)]
-
-THE EAGLE’S NEST RIDGE was climbed on April 15, 1892, by a
-strong party of cragsmen. They were led by Mr. G. A. Solly, who was
-well backed up by Mr. Cecil Slingsby. They left a record of the
-expedition in the Wastdale book, and let the climbing fraternity
-decide for themselves as to whether the ascent was worth repeating.
-No exception can be taken to the rocks, which are perfectly sound
-and reliable, but an inspection of the ridge from the Needle shows how
-little hold there is for hands or feet. Moreover, the hardest part
-is so situated that a safe descent from it is well-nigh impossible
-for the unlucky leader who finds his strength or skill inadequate to
-cope with it. Nevertheless, I have recently discovered that with an
-exact knowledge of the available holds, and with the best conditions
-of the rocks, a man may safely tackle the ascent if well supported
-by a sturdy second. The situation is terribly exposed for the first
-140 feet, and will try the nerves of even experienced mountaineers.
-Dependence is often placed on small footholds that slope slightly to
-the climber’s disadvantage; and on such ledges good nailed boots and
-perfect confidence are essential. The fact is that the ridge is not
-to be recommended; and its virtue is that there is no deception about
-it. The clean sweep of the sharp nose of rock from the green platform
-at the foot up to the patch of grass where the slanting chimney begins
-scares everybody away, tyros and experts alike. That almost vertical
-buttress looks impossible, and to nearly everybody it is so.
-
-It was a felicitous discovery of Mr. Solly’s, a day later, that the
-worst part of the _arête_ could be avoided by taking to a chimney a few
-feet away to the left. Looking up at the ridge from the grass platform
-at its foot, the appearance presented is that of a vertical face of
-rock out by two chimneys each about a hundred feet long. The right of
-these is shallow and open, with tufts of grass interspersed with smooth
-slabs. Whether it can be climbed or not I have never ascertained. But
-the left chimney or gully is deeply cut into the wall. Its aspect is
-ferocious, but its disposition gentle. It can be easily reached and
-comfortably climbed. Solly’s original route was up the strict _arête_
-to the right of both chimneys. The _arête_ to the left of both was
-investigated at Easter, 1895, and manifested an inclination to yield to
-the attack of a party. But the party has not yet preferred the attack,
-and the suggestion may be taken at its worth. Our gully is rather
-earthy for the first forty feet, and care must be taken by the leader
-to avoid dislodging stones on those below him. Then the rockholds
-change in character just above an outstanding pinnacle on the left, and
-there is an interesting passage into a niche at the back of the gully,
-a sloping and well-worn hold for the right foot offering the safest
-support as the body is dragged over into the corner. Hence the route is
-up the crack for a few feet and across a long slab to the right-hand
-wall, care being taken with a loose splinter that is generally seized
-as the handiest grip available. The rest of the gully is of grass
-and small scree, and at the top a view may be obtained down into the
-Arrowhead Gully. But for the ridge climb a divergence is made to the
-right almost immediately after the chimney pitch is passed.
-
-A split is noticed in the _arête_, forming a small and sharp pinnacle,
-just below which the shallow, grass-tufted chimney finishes in sorry
-fashion. The climber passes through the cleft, utilizing a large block
-that is not quite fixed. On the other side he finds the junction with
-the original ridge route, ten feet below the finish of the curdling
-part. His next move is awkward, over a smooth rock with unsatisfactory
-sloping footholds, but there is no real danger with the second man at
-the cleft, and the leader reaches the grassy recess where, in the words
-of the first explorers, the difficulties moderated. It is large enough
-for two men to brace themselves firmly, and manipulate 150 feet of rope
-for an enterprising third man who may wish to come up by way of the
-outside edge.
-
-This route to the recess we shall now briefly describe, suggesting at
-the same time that no man should attempt to lead up it who has not
-already explored the ground with the safeguard of a rope from above.
-From the horizontal grass platform at the foot of the climb a narrow
-cleft runs up to the ridge in such a way as to separate off the first
-fifteen feet from the main mass. The cleft is mounted with facility
-by aid of numerous holds of first-rate quality. At the top we find
-ourselves on the strict ridge, but after mounting ten feet the holds
-disappear entirely, and the verticalness of the next seven or eight
-feet makes a slight divergence absolutely necessary. On the face of the
-ridge that bounds the Needle Gully below us two parallel cracks run
-up steeply about a yard apart. They are so closed, and they run so
-obliquely up the wall, that good foothold is impossible in either, and
-handhold of even moderate quality requires much seeking. Nevertheless,
-they are both of immense importance, and are capable of giving all
-the required aid. The leader should here be joined by the second, and
-should belay himself to the highest effective part of the broken rock
-below him. His companion should be belayed independently. Then his next
-move is to work up for three feet on to the right-hand crack, with his
-fingers gripping the other, until the latter is felt to be good enough
-for a pull towards the ridge. The transfer of the right foot into the
-crack on the left is critical. I prefer to effect the passage without
-boots, as the toes can feel so much better where the crack is deepest.
-Then the outside edge a yard away to the left is within reach of the
-hand, and the leader, cut off from further assistance below, must
-manage very carefully to climb on to the ridge.
-
-His holds are obvious; the difficulty is not so much in finding the
-way as in keeping to it. Fortunately a little flat platform is now
-reached, on which he can sit in comfort and recover his strength
-before attacking the next part. It is at about the level of the top of
-the Gable Needle, and Mr. Slingsby tells me it is the spot that the
-first climbers named the Eagle’s Nest. It is just visible against the
-sky in the view facing page 153, 3-1/2 inches from the foot of the
-illustration. The awkward part first ascended is scarcely twelve
-feet high, but is exceptionally severe if the leader takes it without
-the assistance of a second.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PLATE V.
-
- THE ARROWHEAD RIDGE. THE EAGLE’S NEST RIDGE. THE NEEDLE RIDGE.
- From the South-east. From the South-east. From the North-west.
-
- _a_ Eagle’s Nest.
- _b_ Easy Chimney Route.
- _c_ Finish along the Ridge.
- _dd_ Severest Portion.
- _e_ Ling Chimney.
-
-THE GREAT NAPES RIDGES.]
-
-The consequences of a slip in the next portion of the climb are more
-serious, but probably it is technically less difficult than the lower
-bit. The Eagle’s Nest is barely large enough for the leader to brace
-himself firmly when helping the second man up on the rope, and he may
-naturally prefer to mount higher without assistance rather than peril
-the safety of both for the sake of a helping shoulder up the next
-piece. There are no belaying pins, and traversing to either side of the
-buttress is seemingly impossible. If he cannot be certain of holding on
-to the rope when a slip occurs to his follower, he had better decide to
-advance another fifty feet before the second man moves from his secure
-position below. The first ten feet above the Nest are remarkable for
-steepness and smallness of holds. If the rocks are cold and the finger
-tips benumbed, the holds cannot be appreciated at all, and the place
-becomes horribly dangerous. Yet there is a sufficiency of grip for
-hands and feet, and bootmarks can now be detected on the chief ledges.
-With perfect coolness and the exercise of his best judgment, the
-solitary leader will gradually mount the ridge step by step, and the
-tension on his nerves and muscles will be relieved when the level of
-the narrow pinnacle to the left is reached, and he notices the numerous
-scratches on the rocks of those who have climbed to the junction by
-the easy route. Mr. H. C. Bowen and I made the second strict ascent in
-April, 1898, with 100 feet of rope between us.
-
-At the foot of the slanting chimney it again becomes possible for
-the leader to obtain assistance from his companions, though he is
-not the sort of man to require it if he has come up by the difficult
-way. The climbing is now delightfully safe and interesting. The holds
-are good and the ridge varied. From the top of the slanting chimney,
-which can be ascended without trouble, the true _arête_ below looks
-desperately stiff. The remainder of the climb will be found to consist
-of alternating horizontal and vertical passages. It is often possible
-to pass down the grassy ledges on the left, but the ridge is much
-pleasanter, and in wet weather actually safer. The views down the
-vertical walls on the right into the Needle Gully are magnificent, and
-the Needle Ridge is seen at its best.
-
-The first party took two hours and ten minutes to accomplish their
-ascent. The ridge with the initial variation by the chimney has been
-climbed in half an hour by a party of three; hunger lent wings, for
-their lunch was waiting them on Gable.
-
-THE ARROWHEAD RIDGE derives its name from a very prominent crag
-a short distance to the west of the Eagle’s Nest Ridge. It offers a
-very fine specimen of rock architecture, though the artist photographer
-has been known to express dissatisfaction at its outline, and to claim
-artistic license in modifying his pictures to suit his theories. Many
-of those who have been attracted to the Great Napes in search of the
-original have been much perplexed at the discrepancy between the old
-photographs and the modern reality. Some in their wrath have desired
-to get the photographer and his camera below them in a rickety gully,
-where, as Dent puts it, no stone is left unturned in their struggle to
-reach the top.
-
-But if the artist cuts away a few thousand tons of rock from his
-negative with one fell stroke of his brush, if he commands the sun
-to stand still and the shadows to move on, if he subjects his angles
-to the influence of the personal equation of the climber instead of
-the mere observer, these weaknesses are not to be recorded against
-him. Mountaineering as a sport owes its advancement far more to
-the inaccurate descriptions of its literary devotees than to the
-simple statements of facts of the scientific, and its best pictorial
-advertisements have been those where art has assisted nature and
-laughed at science.
-
-This to some extent is what we all need, and what we all understand.
-From the top of the Kern Knotts’ crack the evidence of a freely
-hanging rope as to the direction of the vertical actually contradicts
-one’s best judgment. The Kern Knotts wall is perhaps 15° from the
-vertical, but looking down it one would judge it perpendicular. Yet
-we never fancy a foothold horizontal when it is at a slope of 15° to
-our disadvantage, else the Eagle’s Nest Ridge would lose much of its
-terror. Rather are we then inclined to magnify the angle, and the
-actual slope plus our own inclination make together something like the
-30° that would figure in a fancy sketch or a popular article.
-
-Education is a marvellously fine thing, and in mountaineering it works
-wonders. It enables men to interpret the barren truth in accordance
-with their own experience. Notes of new ascents in the ‘Alpine Journal’
-they can enjoy and assimilate; but, as in eating caviare, the taste
-needs cultivation, and many remain unequal to such food to the ends of
-their lives. Now because there are many false translations possible of
-the one true original, it must be easy with a knowledge of the truth
-to interpret it variously, and correspondingly difficult to get at
-the correct version from a bad translation. Even the mountaineering
-education fails to help us. All it does is to give us the taste for
-truth, and the sense of right to demand the genuine article. It might
-be printed in italics at the beginning of the chapter, like the usually
-inappropriate and obscure poetical references, and so isolated from
-the author’s personal exposition. This text and sermon notion has
-not, so far as my little library of Alpine books can tell me, been
-adopted by any popular writer on mountaineering, though the difficulty
-has been grappled with in other ways. Thus the Alpine historian or
-geographer may find the required facts neatly gathered together in a
-brief appendix, or still more briefly summarised in a letter published
-simultaneously with a review of the book in the ‘Alpine Journal.’
-
-The sale of caviare is strictly limited, and the demand for ‘Alpine
-Notes and New Ascents’ confined to the few. Hence mountaineering
-books intended to sell well are written for the uneducated many, not
-for teaching purposes, but for the satisfaction of their desire for
-tales of adventure. So long as climbers tolerate this professionalism
-introduced into mountaineering--and there is every reason why they
-should in all cases where the professional is recognized as such--they
-must necessarily give the artist a free hand, whether he writes or
-paints or takes photographs. Personally I should ask for information
-as to the treatment of any negative that has been employed for
-reproduction of pictures. ‘From a photograph by,’ nowadays suggests a
-bad camera, a shaky tripod, an amateur operator, a cunning artist, and
-a long purse. But ‘truth is mighty and will prevail,’ so we may as well
-get on to the Arrowhead.
-
-Viewing this Arrowhead from the easy ground near the Bear rock, it is
-seen to bear some resemblance to the Gable Needle (see Chapter XI.). In
-each case the rock forms the lower extremity of a Napes ridge, and its
-sides are remarkable for their steepness and smoothness. The outside
-edge of each is broken by a well-marked shoulder, and the head of the
-Arrow may be fairly well likened to the top overhanging boulder on the
-Needle. Here, perhaps, the resemblance ends. Certain parts of the
-climbing on the Arrowhead must be characterized as insecure, whereas
-the Needle is firm throughout. The former may easily be attacked from
-the notch behind it, the Needle cannot be similarly treated. The
-original climb up to the shoulder on the Arrowhead was by a recess on
-the east side, that up the Needle by a narrow crack on the west. (See
-photograph facing page 153.)
-
-The first ascent dates from April, 1892, when a large party attacked
-the rock on the lines just indicated. The lower part of the buttress
-was mounted by a steep and open recess on the western side, a good
-climb leading directly to the shoulder half-way up, where the route
-was joined by the upper end of a corresponding chimney on the other
-side of the buttress. Thence the climbing was straight up the corner.
-It was not very difficult, but at a point a few feet below the final
-bit the rocks were insecure and the situation alarming. The stones
-are better now than formerly, but great caution must be used. In 1893
-another party repeated the ascent, and showed that it was possible by
-passing round to the gap at the back to continue the climb along the
-ridge. The usual route nowadays is to reach the ridge by the scree
-gully between the Arrowhead and the Eagle’s Nest _arête_, climbing
-up the side wall to the notch, and so avoiding the Arrowhead itself.
-The wall is steep, but its ledges are conveniently disposed, and no
-trouble should be experienced in the ascent. Once on the ridge the
-climbing is delightful. The holds are good, and the narrowness of the
-crest along which we pass gives the spice of sensationalism that at
-all times offers an apology for easy climbing. The actual ascent of
-the ridge need take but twenty minutes, the descent about half an hour
-for a party of three, when conditions are favourable. There is one
-_mauvais pas_ of moderate quality: a wall of ten feet must be mounted
-to reach the crest of a tower on the ridge. Then follows a long stride
-across the gap on the other side, and it is sometimes amusing to watch
-the timid climber who fears that he may not be able to swing the hind
-leg over when in the colossus attitude half-way across. Above this all
-difficulties soon disappear; the gullies on either side rapidly rise to
-our own level, and the ridge ends shortly before the crest of the Napes
-is reached.
-
-The view facing page 153 shows the Arrowhead at the left-hand top
-corner, the Eagle’s Nest Ridge against the sky, the lower half of the
-Needle Ridge, and the Gable Needle itself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-_THE GABLE NEEDLE_
-
-
-The best-known rock problem in the district is offered by the Gable
-Needle. Its position has already been defined. As we walk towards
-Styhead from Esk Hause the Needle stands out from the west face of the
-Gable very plainly; but from Wastdale it is almost invisible against
-the background of the indistinguishable Napes rocks, and only those
-who know exactly where it should be are bold enough to say where it
-is. Very few people seem to have seen it before 1886, when Mr. Haskett
-Smith reached the top, though Mr. Wilson Robinson made a pencil
-outline-sketch of both the Needle and the Bear rock as long ago as
-1828. Many even who were acquainted with the crags of the Napes had
-not noticed it. The fact is that a face of rock is very apt to look
-flat and void of detail at a short distance; and it is the joy of the
-rock-climber to discover its thousand beauties when he engages with it
-at close quarters.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE GABLE NEEDLE
-
-(_Face page 168_)]
-
-The Needle is indeed a fine fellow as rocks go--just the sort of
-ornament for one’s back garden in town, a gymnasium in itself. It has
-now many admirers. The few footholds on the top boulder bear the
-marks of many nailed boots, even its smooth face is scored by futile
-scrapes of the nervous, but it retains its charm for the Wastdale
-enthusiast. In his dreams he takes a hammer and chisel, and chips away
-an important hold, and with the dreamer’s ease swarms up the rock
-unaided. Again a hold is chipped away confidently with the faith that
-removes mountains, and again he glides up and down; till at last its
-small top draws him up without effort and he hastens down to Wastdale
-to invite the attention of climbers to the new edition of the Needle.
-
-Mr. Haskett Smith climbed it alone in 1886 and left a handkerchief on
-the top. Those who have been once on the Needle will readily believe
-that this first ascent is one of the most daring things that have been
-done in the Lake District.
-
-He pointed it out to Mr. John Robinson one day when they were
-traversing the face of the Napes on to the Needle _arête_, and they
-both agreed that it had a future before it, that their successors in
-the field of climbing would make it their resort and perhaps even build
-a diminutive shrine on its crest to the discoverer. Nearly three years
-elapsed before Mr. Geoffrey Hastings made the second ascent. Then,
-in June, 1889, Mr. F. Wellford climbed it, and Mr. Robinson made the
-fourth ascent in August. In the following year Professor Marshall’s
-party attacked the climb, spending three-quarters of an hour in
-flinging a rope over the summit for the benefit of the leader. On that
-occasion Miss Koecher reached the top--the first lady, at any rate in
-modern times, to succeed in doing so.
-
-Dr. S. and I travelled down to Drigg one night. We breakfasted there
-early and walked the twelve miles to Wastdale, halting only for a
-plunge into cold Wastwater. After the manner of our kind, we inquired
-at once for the Climbing Book, to learn the latest news from the Fells.
-The ‘Pall Mall Budget’ article of June 5, 1890, on the Needle, had been
-inserted, and we read how it might be vanquished. In the afternoon we
-worked our way up to the Napes. Being the more enthusiastic, I found
-the Needle first, and was breathless on the top of the crack when Dr.
-S. arrived. He threw a rope up from the small platform (seen at the
-bottom of the picture facing page 168) and came after me. The crack
-up the face seemed difficult that first time; most people find it so.
-The first movement obliquely up to the left is easy, but the next part
-is a trifle too safe for the new comer. He gets his left thigh almost
-hopelessly jammed into the crack, and can move neither up nor down. The
-best plan is to work more with the left foot and knee in the crack,
-both hands on the edge of the leaf of rock, and the right leg getting
-general support by pressure outside, until the most constricted bit
-half-way up is passed. Then the leaf of rock can be swarmed up with
-much greater ease, and the climber soon finds himself looking down the
-other side of the crack.
-
-From here the route for ten feet is directly up the right edge. The
-holds are not numerous, but good enough when the rocks are dry, and
-we find ourselves on a platform or shoulder, very conspicuous in most
-aspects of the pinnacle, that serves as an excellent take-off for the
-last struggle. The terrors of the crack often scare off people from the
-final piece. They almost did our little party. I found my watch-chain
-broken--some links still remain in the heart of the Needle--and my
-watch badly dented. The ‘Pall Mall’ had promised us that the last bit
-was the worst, and we thought for a moment that a little preliminary
-training for a few days would be the correct thing. However, I took off
-my boots, for they had no nails, and, standing on a shoulder of Dr.
-S;, stepped on to the right end of the ledge on which the top block
-rests. This corner is difficult to climb alone and exceedingly daring
-work, for the climber drags his body on to it over a sheer drop of a
-hundred feet, and feels no certainty of safety till he is up. It is
-like climbing on a narrow mantelshelf five feet high, that is only just
-wide enough to allow standing room. An ice-axe offers a useful take-off
-in the absence of a sufficiently responsible shoulder. The disposition
-of one’s centre of gravity must be carefully considered, and there is a
-sense of alternate peril and safety in inspiration and expiration. Once
-on the ledge the game was evidently in our hands, and traversing along
-it to the left I found a rounded boss of rock eighteen inches higher
-that offered good hold for both feet. Then the left was brought well
-up to a little ledge nearly an inch wide, the right hand gripped the
-right edge of the boulder, and on straightening out the top edge could
-be grasped. An arm pull was helped by sundry roughnesses for the toes,
-and I sprawled half across the top triumphantly. In a couple of minutes
-Dr. S. was by my side. We had no intention of climbing higher that day,
-and willingly spent half an hour in examining the routes of the Napes’
-ridges, two of which are seen to advantage from this spot.
-
-We descended without serious difficulty, Dr. S. going first. I
-half decided to fix our rope round the top block and use it for my
-own descent, but it would have been an awkward matter to detach it
-afterwards. Moreover, others had not found a fixed rope necessary,
-and we did not wish to have anything to reproach ourselves about
-subsequently. Dr. S. placed himself firmly on the shoulder, drawing in
-the rope as it came down. If I fell it would have been on to the rocks
-a few feet below him; he would experience no great shock, and could
-easily hold me in. The descent was by the exact route of the ascent. On
-reaching the crack again we re-adjusted our boots and slid down easily,
-the remembrance of the leg-clasping constriction preventing our jamming
-in the descent.
-
-Two or three days later we took other men up the Needle. It was like
-introducing an old friend. Though I had lost no respect for him, he was
-easier to manage and offered new features for inspection.
-
-The side of the Needle facing Lingmell exhibits an obvious alternative
-route to the shoulder. The climbing is twelve or fifteen feet longer,
-and rather more interesting. Facing the Needle at its foot with our
-backs to Lingmell, we bear to the right into a square corner. We pass
-up this on the left to a little level platform, reached best by an
-armpull and a foothold well away on the buttress. I have seen good men
-in much trouble on this corner. From here the route is straight up
-the wall, with a halting-place ten feet higher in a huge slit on the
-right. Then we climb the same cleft whose other side constitutes the
-first part of the old route. This side, however, is wider, and contains
-sundry jammed stones for convenience of passengers. The old route is
-joined without difficulty, and the shoulder reached as before.
-
-To effect the ascent of the top boulder without help it has always
-appeared to me easier to start by standing on the small shelf just
-under the left-hand end of the overhanging part--the shelf, in fact,
-that is occupied by the sitting figure in the view facing page 168.
-Practice on ordinary strong mantelshelves enables one to mount up this
-corner with a certainty of success, the right hand being thrust into a
-thin horizontal cleft rough enough to offer some friction for the back
-of the hand as well as the palm.
-
-If people are at the Needle and wish to explore it, they may like to
-know that Mr. W. H. Fowler has shown that the ‘outside edge’ can be
-followed from bottom to top. Also, that it is not so difficult to work
-from the foot of the ordinary route round to the other side of the
-cleft that splits the Needle. To photograph the Needle we usually get
-up the other side of the Needle Gully at the foot of the Eagle’s Nest
-_arête_. Indeed, this grass ledge is so popular for the observation of
-a performance that it is known as the ‘dress circle.’ One photograph
-exists of the Needle in which nearly all the climbing details are
-masked by a crowd of daring maidens swarming up it. Two have reached
-the top, and are supporting a terror-stricken man, who, poor fellow,
-had rashly undertaken to lead up. The picture suggests the old problem
-of the mediæval theologians--how many angels can balance on the point
-of a needle?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-_KERN KNOTTS_
-
-
-KERN KNOTTS CHIMNEY.--This is one of the prettiest things in the
-neighbourhood, and it photographs well. The small bunch of hard rock
-that crops out of the wilderness of scree on this side of the Gable was
-at one time rarely visited, though so near the actual Styhead path. Its
-name was almost unknown. I confused it with the Tom Blue crags higher
-up on the fell. Nowadays the good quality of the chimney attracts many
-visitors, and several come to see it who do not actually climb. The
-Knotts are in three parts--Raven Crag, and Upper and Lower Kern Knotts.
-The middle part is the steepest and longest. A prominent nose or
-buttress springs down its centre, and is visible in profile at a great
-distance. The buttress is split off from the main mass by a vertical
-crack extending from side to side, varying in thickness from three or
-four inches to a foot.
-
-The chimney had been inspected by earlier climbers before I had ever
-heard of it. The uninitiated of Wastdale often lament the secretiveness
-of those who know where new things exist but who keep the knowledge
-to themselves. Nestor is very reticent, and it is to be counted unto
-him for righteousness that one Christmas week, after bad weather had
-deprived us of all the ordinary climbing, he announced to the engineer
-and me that there was a fascinating little thing, the fancy of an ‘off’
-afternoon, lying conveniently close to the hotel, that he would show us
-how to climb. I was lying on the billiard table just then thinking of
-the different kinds of nothing. ‘Where is it?’ I asked. ‘In Tom Blue’
-was the reply, and as this was yet but a name to me I wondered whether
-Tom’s blueness measured his difficulty. The engineer was enthusiastic,
-and declined to allow me to remain longer on the billiard table after
-hearing this news. So in the gentle rain we marched out of the inn
-that afternoon, and worked our way up the Styhead path till we had
-passed the little spring that crosses it near the zig-zag. There we
-saw the great rocks looming up on the left and were told that Tom Blue
-awaited us there. The steep slope leading up to our climb was strewn
-with huge boulders in chaotic confusion. We could either keep to
-these or else make for an interesting crack in the Lower Kern Knotts
-that stood directly in our way. To give us a foretaste we took to
-the crack, finding as usual that its aspect from a distance gave no
-clue to the wealth of useful detail in the shape of handholds. Then a
-few yards more of mercurial skipping from boulder to boulder and we
-reached a little terrace at the foot of the fine wall of the Upper Kern
-Knotts. Since that day a huge cairn has grown up on this terrace at an
-astonishing rate of development, to mark the beginning of the climb.
-Perhaps by the date of publication of this volume the cairn will have
-grown to rival the crags in height, the climb may be _viâ_ the cairn,
-and Kern Knotts Chimney blocked up for ever. But for the sake of the
-afternoon strollers from Wastdale we pray that this may not be. The
-ascent is apparently in two portions, the lower one being the easier.
-Actually there is a third pitch, the one of perhaps greatest intrinsic
-difficulty, starting at the top of the split buttress and quite
-unnoticeable from below. For this reason the climb must be regarded as
-deceptive; it is one thing to struggle up the middle pitch with the
-impression that the worst piece is being tackled, and quite another
-to find a part of exceptional severity higher up. With that portion
-impossible the only alternative is to descend again, and that does
-not commend itself to many men who climb more for amusement than for
-instruction.
-
-To return to our narrative, we roped up with hopefulness and took to
-the lowest chimney. The rocks were streaming with water which rapidly
-discovered that its line of quickest descent was along our arms and
-bodies, with only a slight delay at the boots while they were filling
-up. The chimney was sufficiently well provided with small ledges, first
-in the middle, then on the right-hand side, to enable us to draw up
-easily. Then we worked round to the foot of the second pitch on a level
-platform large enough for us all to rest ourselves comfortably. The
-chimney now became much narrower, just sufficiently large to receive
-the right thigh. With dry rocks the slight holds on the left wall now
-facing us would have been ample for the pull up to the level of a
-jammed stone in the crack; but they were now doubtful, and the obvious
-course was to insert the right hand beneath the jammed stone and
-utilize the grip it afforded. A loose block thus handled from within is
-much less liable to come out than when held by its projecting parts.
-In a climb where every jammed stone has been tested scores of times,
-sundry small precautions such as this may be omitted; but a new route
-should always be attacked with respectful caution, otherwise it may
-exact a speedy vengeance, and promptly repulse the careless climber.
-
-Just above the level of this useful block, which was immediately proved
-to be safe enough, the footholds were a short way out of the crack on
-the left wall, and were not particularly good in the heavy rain. The
-next ten feet appeared to be very hard, for the only hold was to be by
-the grip of the right thigh in the crack, and the next jammed stone
-(on which a climber is standing in the opposite illustration) seemed
-insecure. It was desirable to pass this without clinging to its outer
-edges, and to test it when its dislodgment could do no harm. The motion
-upwards in such a case is rather slow; the leg that does the work
-must not be thrust too far into the recess, or else the business of
-balancing is awkward, and the lift at each ‘stroke’ is insufficient.
-The unemployed foot, as the skater calls it, can often help by a
-momentary purchase on a minute ledge; even the width of an eighth of an
-inch will suffice to steady the lift.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-KERN KNOTTS CHIMNEY]
-
-The jammed stone offered a fair grip underneath, but the ledges were
-now on the right wall, and the turn towards them was difficult under
-the circumstances. If we had known that the stone would hold we could
-have pulled straight up over it; but, out of desire to play the
-scientific game, I swung round by the hands so that the left leg was
-in the crack and the upper handholds visible just above my head. Next
-a pull-up enabled me to get the left knee well on to the stone, and
-finally to ensconce myself safely in the recess above it. Then our
-Nestor came up in splendid form, but with some anxious thought for the
-upper part of the climb. He asked me to mount up to the bridge above
-and see whether the remainder were feasible, for if not the best plan
-would be to descend at once. We disagreed over this, but being grateful
-for the introduction to ‘Tom Blue,’ and not knowing that it was Kern
-Knotts, I clambered up to please him while he was negotiating the
-engineer’s rope, and committed myself to the opinion that it was ‘all
-plain sailing from there.’
-
-From the jammed stone which Nestor was now testing, the route was out
-over the right face of the chimney, and round again to the left where
-the top figure is shown in the photograph. A big block forms a bridge,
-beneath which meet the two chimneys from the opposite faces of the
-buttress.
-
-We all reached the top of the bridge, and examined the final ridge that
-springs up for another hundred feet. The angle is not an easy one at
-first, and there is a scarcity of holds. The stylist who works only
-with fingers and toes would have much difficulty in getting up, even in
-dry weather. We one by one surmounted it by offering as many points of
-contact as possible to the rocks. They were streaming with water, and
-in a much more slippery condition than we should have preferred for a
-first ascent. The leader accepted a shoulder at the start, but he felt
-rather insecure till he was about twelve feet up, when a fine hold was
-found on the right. From that point the ground is more broken, and easy
-scrambling led to the top of the crags.
-
-I have been told since then that it is easier to work round to the left
-from the bridge, and then up to the right; but a recent visit convinces
-me that both ways have their difficulties when the rocks are wet. Both
-are safe in dry weather. The direct route up from the bridge has lately
-been simplified by an artificial step, evidently cut with a chisel. It
-is a pity the timid mason did not go round another way.
-
-To reach the main shoulder of Gable from here we may keep on towards
-Raven Crag and strike up a short chimney in its centre. It is not
-difficult, but its exit from the top takes time if the climber attacks
-the problem incautiously. Thence to the summit of Gable is a glorious
-walk.
-
-From the ledge at the foot of the Upper Kern Knotts there rises another
-buttress a little nearer the Styhead. Between the two buttresses a
-short gully is found which offers a satisfactory route of descent
-from the crest of these crags. The entrance to the gully is difficult
-if tried from the foot of the buttress, but easy and suitable for
-beginners if taken on the left. It was from this spot that our party
-had the first view of the ‘crack’ that was to offer such sport a year
-or two later. Nestor with his characteristic caution vetoed the whole
-affair, and vowed he would never speak to me again if I attempted to
-climb it. The engineer, on the other hand, thought that it could not be
-much worse than the chimney which we had just climbed in safety, and
-that it might be a good thing to keep in mind for settled weather.
-
-In December, 1895, I went up the chimney with Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Hill.
-The rocks were slightly damp, the weather misty and unpleasant. On
-the natural bridge I halted, and looked down the smooth wall of rock
-facing the Styhead. The crack was straight beneath, and Hill nerved me
-to the sudden resolve to descend by the rope and prospect the middle
-portion of the climb. We had only sixty feet of rope, but I was let
-down carefully and at full distance found myself in a splayed-out
-portion above the first pitch. The bit beneath looked very awkward,
-so awkward indeed that it seemed impossible to effect a descent on
-to the boulders below. There was only one course available, that of
-climbing up again. This was not so hard as I had fancied it would
-be, for with the sense of the perfect security in the rope that Hill
-carefully manipulated, came freedom of movement and a bolder style.
-This is the reason why many Alpine climbers who know not the joys of
-leading are entirely ignorant of their own powers; they as often err
-in underestimating as in overrating their skill; they can gauge their
-strength only by practice without rope from above. Emerging from the
-crack I joined up on the rope again and finished the rest of the climb,
-wondering the while whether a chance would ever come of penetrating the
-crack from below.
-
-Before leaving the ordinary chimney, let it be added that the climb
-may have an initial variation by pulling up the vertical rocks to the
-west of the foot of the nose; the distance to the first big platform is
-increased about fifteen feet, but the way is pleasanter thus.
-
-KERN KNOTTS CRACK.--One fine morning in April I started off
-for Keswick, grieved to leave Wastdale and feeling strong after a
-fortnight’s scrambling. Surely if the crack could be done at all now
-would be the time, with weather and physical fitness corresponding. Our
-party was small; two men were coming with me to look at Kern Knotts,
-and subsequently to exploit the Oblique Chimney, the where-abouts of
-which had puzzled them the previous day. It was a bargain between us
-that they should help me in the crack and I should lead up the Oblique
-Chimney afterwards. The advantage was thus all my own, and their
-brotherly kindness drew me to them. It was in the preceding winter
-that Hill had let me down from the top of the crack for a distance of
-fifty feet to a small loose platform of rock, and I had with extreme
-effort managed to return without tugging the rope. Since that time
-there had been opportunity to reflect and decide that if I could get up
-to the platform from below and then help another to the same level, we
-could jointly manage the ascent of the crack without further aid. If
-the platform could not hold two, it would be a case of ascending the
-worst part of the crack, the splayed-out portion some twelve feet high,
-without assistance.
-
-On reaching the spot things looked cheerful enough. The rocks were
-dry, and I found that imagination had somewhat magnified my early
-impressions of the wall. But the reality is bad enough. The wall is one
-side of a buttress about one hundred feet in height, and marvellously
-smooth to look at. It is out down from top to bottom by a clean-edged
-slit passing right through the buttress and forming on the other side,
-as I have already explained, the now familiar Kern Knotts Chimney. At
-a height of thirty feet or so from the foot is the little platform,
-the niche at the back of which looks as though carved out for the
-reception of a piece of statuary. The portion of the crack that leads
-up this first part has a slightly different outlook; it is more open,
-and is provided with holds of a shaky description. Getting a companion
-to hold himself in this, I mounted his shoulder and felt about with
-the hands. There was nothing at all that seemed firm. So I called for
-the axe, and, remembering certain tactics in an awful rock climb in
-Northern Italy some years before, I rammed the axe longitudinally into
-the crack and endeavoured to use it as a hold. The plan is sometimes
-effective; it is not sufficiently often adopted _in extremis_; but on
-this occasion it would not act; the loose stones in the cleft were
-simply levered out of place, and I had to pass the axe down again.
-Then ensued a few moments’ fatiguing suspension from one arm with but
-poor foothold to ease the strain. It was no go this time; I had to let
-myself down and rest awhile. Next we sat on a boulder opposite the
-wall, and stared at it silently for a space. Surely that must be a
-foothold ten feet up on the edge of the crack. If, while I mounted his
-shoulder, the second man could hold the ice-pick in a minute fissure in
-the face, I might manage to step on to the axe-head and reach the edge
-of the platform. It would at any rate prove safer than the crack route.
-The plan commended itself to all, and we placed ourselves in position.
-It turned out that the axe was scarcely necessary, for with a little
-delicate balancing I reached the top hold with both hands and dragged
-up to the lower step in the ledge. Thence to the platform was an easy
-matter, and we all began to breathe freely.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-KERN KNOTTS CRACK]
-
-It never occurred to me that I had made no mental note, in my previous
-ascent of the crack, of the method of getting up the next part. It was
-certainly a stiff struggle that Christmas, but I was then out of form,
-and might reasonably hope to succeed more easily now. Nevertheless,
-when it came to the test I found it impossible, three times in
-succession, to get my head above a certain projecting block at the top
-of the niche. Each time it caught me by the back of the neck, and would
-not release me till in desperate extremity I let myself down again--no
-easy matter with exhausted arms. After the first try my two friends
-went round to the other side of the buttress, and hastily climbed
-the chimney so as to be ready to help me. I could hear their every
-word through the fissure, and rather surprised them by making a quiet
-remark. On a small scale we were having the Funffingerspitze incident
-repeated. Neruda was climbing that famous Dolomite, the scene of his
-tragic death in 1898, by a new route and heard another party ascending
-by the older way on the other side of the mountain.
-
-My pockets had been emptied out before the start. After these failures
-I flung away my coat and tied on to the rope that had been let down
-from above. With renewed confidence the fourth attempt was successful.
-When the first twelve feet were passed I found two wedged stones a
-short distance above my head. These forced my body out of the crack
-altogether, but they offered respectable holds during the process.
-Above these the next pitch involved a process of backing up, though the
-chimney was much too narrow to brace firmly across from side to side.
-
-I joined the other men at the top after a few more struggles,
-breathless and exhausted. Resting a few moments we descended the Kern
-Knotts Chimney and went down to lunch near the spring. Later on, when
-I effected the ascent without a rope, a rapid passage of the worst bit
-left me with enough reserve strength to climb up the rest of the way
-comfortably. The eighty feet and the descent by the chimney on the
-other side were then disposed of in seven minutes.
-
-The remaining passage upwards from the cave is by the _mauvais pas_ of
-the ordinary route.
-
-The account of this crack has been given in much detail. It is the sort
-of thing for a strong party to climb on their way out of Wastdale, or
-some afternoon after a wet morning’s imprisonment in the hotel. The
-danger of the first pitch can be minimised for the leader by holding
-him with the rope from the right-hand recess of the wall. In fact there
-is a pinnacle in this recess at about the level of the niche, which
-could be utilized as a holding-place. A shoulder to start from and an
-ice-axe support in continuation are certain to be appreciated. Messrs.
-Reade and McCulloch have lately shown that the niche can be reached
-by the crack. On the worst bit which immediately follows I expect a
-steadying hand from below will be generally necessary.
-
-When a man can go up this without assistance from above he may well be
-regarded as fit for the Grépon crack. This latter is of the same length
-and general character. It is easier, but harder to enter, and it comes
-after more climbing; moreover, there may be ice in it to create trouble.
-
-KERN KNOTTS, WEST CHIMNEY.--A note may here be added concerning
-the only remaining chimney on these crags that can claim to be a
-distinctive feature visible at a distance. It is about sixty feet to
-the north-west (or Wastdale side) of the ordinary route, and is plainly
-discernible from the lower part of the Styhead path. A diminutive cairn
-now marks the foot of the chimney; another stands on a flat ledge a
-couple of yards above the narrowest and hardest portion of the climb.
-
-There are two or three ways of reaching the foot of the main difficulty
-in the ascent, all converging to a point about twenty-five feet above
-the lower cairn. Here a vertical crack rises abruptly, varying from
-ten inches to nothing in width, and terminating ten feet higher in a
-right-angled corner of the rocks that will on no account permit any
-‘backing-up.’ For some distance the recess looks as difficult to tackle
-as the corner of a room, and it is only when the climber gets to a
-height of fifty feet that his troubles appear to moderate. One wet day
-some twelve months ago our party could make nothing of the ascent, but
-shortly after last Easter (1897) I made another attempt on it. To help
-me on the difficult pitch a second man was persuaded to scramble up to
-the foot of the crack, as I anticipated the need of a sturdy shoulder.
-But the platform on which I was waiting proved to be much too small
-for two, and when, by elevating myself a few feet, it was safe for him
-to follow, I was too high to use his shoulder and had to manage with
-his encouraging suggestions and the little excrescences on the right
-wall. The first pull up the crack was by an excellent hold for both
-hands on the left, using a narrow ledge with the inner side of the
-left foot, and the crack itself for the right thigh. It then became
-desirable to turn round so that the outer edge of the left foot should
-grip it without losing its support during the process of turning. This
-accomplished, the method of ascent became obvious. Small holds for
-hands and feet were distributed regularly up the right wall, perhaps
-three ledges for a rise of ten feet. During the latter part the left
-hand sought support in the grassy corner of the chimney, which here
-began to open up again. Then a long pull with the arms brought me up to
-the flat ledge that marks the finish of the difficulty. There a cairn
-was built with the loose stones that needed shifting, the second man
-coming up like a lamplighter to help in the operation.
-
-Thence our route was partly up the buttress, by rather exposed
-ledges, and partly in the chimney. The rocks were excellent and the
-open mountain side was reached in another fifty feet. The climb is
-worthy of Kern Knotts. It is more risky than either the chimney or the
-‘crack,’ but with a steady party and dry rocks it will go perfectly
-well. Nevertheless, I am far from willing to give it an unqualified
-recommendation. A slip of the leader on the awkward part would almost
-certainly cause the second to be pulled away from his hold, and the two
-would have an objectionable fall over twenty-five feet of steep rock.
-But the striking appearance of the difficult pitch is enough to keep
-away all weaklings.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-_THE WASTWATER SCREES_
-
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE SCREES AND WASTWATER]
-
-Wastwater, the deepest lake in the district, occupies a flat-bottomed
-depression in Wastdale. It is just three miles long, and its very
-regular shores somewhat detract from the prettiness of its scenery. But
-the wild character of the hills that inclose it gives it a grandeur
-that is not possessed to an equal extent by any of the other lakes in
-the country. Its direction is north-east and south-west; Upper Wastdale
-is at its northern end. The road up the valley from Strands runs close
-to the lake along its north-western side, and is good enough for
-driving or bicycling as far as Wastdale Head. There it terminates as
-a driving-road, but paths lead to the north over the Black Sail Pass
-and eastwards over the Styhead. As we walk up the road, Buckbarrow
-towers in steep crags a mile away to the left; then on the same side
-we skirt the gentler slopes of Middle Fell, and after crossing Nether
-Beck, Yewbarrow exhibits a singular change of outline, from that of
-a steep and narrow pyramid to a long level-topped grassy ridge with
-no architectural pretensions whatever. On the other side of the lake
-is the ridge of the Screes, one of the most singular mountains in
-Britain. Its highest point is by no means striking to look at, a matter
-of 2,000 feet above the sea. For a length of three miles the ridge
-is broken away in a line of cliff of almost uniform height, towering
-1,500 feet over the lake. The character of the rock, and perhaps also
-an unusually great exposure to weathering influences, has caused an
-enormous wear and tear of the face of the cliff. Thus it is that huge
-screes have been formed that flow straight down into the lake. The
-action is still going on. If we take a walk along the edge of the
-cliff, and this way of enjoying the round of Wastwater may be strongly
-recommended to tourists, we cannot help noticing that at the heads of
-the big gullies which indicate the regions of maximum erosion, slight
-preliminary landslips have already occurred. The grassy ridge is marked
-in many places by curved terraces, showing definite subsidence and
-taking the general shape of the gully head. A few years ago a great
-mass of rock detached itself from the top of the cliff near its highest
-point, and thundered down towards the lake. It happened at night and
-nobody was there to see, but the terrific noise gave serious alarm to
-the inhabitants of the valley. It has been estimated that the volume
-of rock that broke away was as great as the Manchester Town Hall, but
-the comparison is perhaps worth little, for to many a north-countryman
-there is nothing greater than the Manchester Town Hall, and the
-expression may have been used merely to denote that the rock-fall was
-very big. The scar may still be seen on the face, if one knows where
-to look for it; the scree below it appeared fresh for many months. The
-rich colouring of red and yellow in the rocks has caused the scree
-itself to assume an astonishing variety of tints, and when viewed in
-sunlight the effects are most remarkable.
-
-From the climbing point of view this continual weathering is altogether
-unsatisfactory. The rocks are too uncertain, and in most cases the
-gullies are too much occupied by scree. But towards the lower end of
-the lake we find that certain different conditions obtain. The rocks
-are firmer, there is less scree at their base, and it shows plainly by
-its grass covering that the fresh supply is strictly limited.
-
-The last great bastion of the high ridge rises opposite Wastdale Hall.
-It is cut off from the crags on the left by the Great Gully, which
-runs up to the sky-line through a height of a thousand feet. On the
-right a slighter gully practically indicates the end of the precipitous
-portion of the face. Cutting deeply into the centre of the bastion
-itself is a third gully that is continued straight on to the sky-line;
-if anything it is a few feet shorter than the Great Gully, though much
-more difficult to climb. I propose to describe these two only. From all
-accounts it would appear that they represent fully the satisfactory
-routes up the Screes. The sketch in Haskett Smith’s book shows them as
-B and C (the reader can let B stand for ‘big’ and C for ‘central’).
-That which is marked A in his sketch is no climb at all. It is just
-a gully and nothing more, but it was not quite so worthy of being
-labelled as the next great one to the left.
-
-The B gully was first climbed in the winter of 1891-2 by Messrs.
-Collie, Hastings, and Robinson, and an interesting account of
-the ascent, contributed by Dr. Collie, appeared in the ‘Scottish
-Mountaineering Journal’ for January, 1894. A year later Mr. Mummery
-made the second ascent. Not so long afterwards Robinson showed me the
-way up with a large party of enthusiasts, whose strength and nerve were
-pretty well exhausted by the time we dragged ourselves over the last
-pitch.
-
-Concerning the early history of the attempts on the C gully I have
-not been able to gather much information. Many parties have started
-up it with the impression that they were undertaking the Great Gully,
-but they never succeeded in finishing it. On April 19, 1895, Messrs.
-Lawrence, Simpson, and Patchell, made a magnificent assault on it,
-and by the merest accident they had to give in almost at the moment
-of success. They climbed seven pitches, the gully getting harder at
-each successive pitch. Then, when worn out with fatigue and exposure
-to wet and cold, they misjudged the difficulty of the ninth pitch. It
-is certainly most formidable to look at from below the eighth, but
-on closer examination its difficulties vanish. That is to say, they
-become insignificant for a party that can get over the seventh pitch.
-They saw two more huge obstacles looming above the ninth, and were
-completely disheartened. There happened to be an easy exit on the left,
-and they took to it. Once or twice since that date others have tried
-the gully again, but without effecting any further advance. In April,
-1897, Mr. H. C. Bowen accompanied me from Wastdale in an attempt.
-Circumstances favoured us throughout, and the gully yielded to our
-attack. I believe it is one of the hardest climbs that either of us has
-yet effected in Cumberland, but that may be because it is one of the
-most recent. Before attempting it visitors to the district should see
-first if they can comfortably manage the B gully.
-
-THE GREAT GULLY OF THE SCREES (B).--The usual way of reaching
-it from Wastdale Head is by the road as far as the second field beyond
-Wastdale Hall. There a path across the bridge can be found, and the
-course of the stream followed up to the lake side. The foot of the
-gully is reached in fifteen minutes by bearing obliquely upwards
-across ancient scree. Its aspect is such as to directly face the small
-peninsula across the water a trifle to the left of the Hall. The right
-edge of the gully extends further downwards than the left, and a small
-stream of water is usually finding its way down the rough scree bed.
-
-A few feet up we reach the first obstacle, in the shape of a broken
-waterfall altogether about thirty feet high. It is usual to take to
-the steep grass on the left, a route that looks easier than it actually
-is. When the soil is damp the earth comes away like sand, and there is
-little reliability in the holds all the way up. We step with relief
-into the bed of the gully again, and look up to see what the prospect
-is. An easy slope leads towards a second waterfall, considerably
-higher than the first. Ordinarily there is no chance of surmounting it
-directly, but a way of avoiding it discloses itself as we approach. The
-gully divides into two, the main portion being to the left, and a fine
-branch passing up to a height of 150 feet on the right. We start by
-climbing the first pitch in the branch gully--a narrow vertical corner
-in the wall down which a vigorous spout of water jets like a hydrant.
-There are a few ledges on the left side which enable us to avoid some
-of the water, but if there has been much rain before our expedition it
-is impossible to keep dry during the ascent.
-
-It was here that I saw a sinful act of revenge that grieved me much
-at the time. My companions had been with me up the Scawfell Pinnacle
-by the Deep Ghyll route on the previous day, and one had kept the
-others in painful attitudes on the cliff while he leisurely proceeded
-to photograph us. The partner of my woes vowed vengeance, and exacted
-it here on the Screes. His turn it was to manipulate the camera, and
-his wicked malice prompted him to insist on taking a photograph when
-his brother was half-way up the corner. We had given him the right of
-choosing his subject and could not complain, especially as he was loud
-in his praise of the view and in his grief at his brother’s cramped and
-drenched condition. But he was in good humour for the rest of the day,
-and that was worth paying for.
-
-The position now is that a buttress separates us from the main gully.
-We have to clamber a few feet up this, next along a shallow, sloping
-scoop as far as it goes, and then traverse across to the head of the
-big fall. The leader is not able to derive much help from the rope
-in case of a slip, but it is as well for the second man to climb
-thirty feet up the right wall of the branch gully, so as to be higher
-than the pioneer. The buttress looks much broken from below, but the
-general slope is to our disadvantage, and the final traverse is along
-a crumbling ledge of earth and grass. Frost occasionally makes the
-climbing easier, by binding the earth firmly to the rock.
-
-The view across the lake from the top of the waterfall is very
-beautiful. The rich dark green of the pines that grow down to the
-water’s edge on the other side form a striking contrast to the gaunt
-and barren walls of black rock that close in the view. Buckbarrow fills
-up the background, the severity of its seamed precipices softened by
-distance.
-
-The branch gully, it may here be mentioned, has never been climbed
-throughout. It ends on the bastion at no great height above us, and is
-probably not very stiff. I tried it one Christmas Day with Messrs.
-Robinson and Fowler, but we rose no higher than the little notch on the
-thin curtain of rock that forms its right boundary. We got soaked in
-the little waterfall, and the bitter cold drove us back unsuccessful.
-We had difficulties with the awkward chimney above the narrow corner.
-
-Keeping up the main gully, an easy stretch takes us to the third pitch.
-It is a water-slide, and we must hurry up quickly if dryness is still
-any consideration. The best way is on the left. There are many holds
-under the water, and our efforts to prevent its trickling down our arms
-will be futile if we get flurried by nasty remarks from those behind.
-Almost before we can gain breath again we are confronted by a similar
-difficulty. The water-slide here is taken first on the right, until a
-slanting crack leads across to the other side. The climbing is rather
-stiff near the top, and careful search should be made for the safest
-footholds.
-
-The fifth pitch that we now approach is generally regarded as the
-hardest. It is undoubtedly difficult when taken by the route first
-discovered. A long wet slope of rock divides the gully into two parts.
-On the right there seems little likelihood of finding a way up. The
-great overhanging slabs are fifty feet high, and water is continually
-pouring down them. On the left the chance of success is greater. A
-slanting crack lies between the rock slope and the side wall. It leads
-straight up to a hole underneath a huge overhanging boulder that
-dominates the pitch. There we can see a choice of route. The way first
-adopted is to wriggle up the chimney between the boulder and the left
-wall; but it is preferable to crawl out of the hole to the right and
-make an exit over rounded boulders to the top of the obstacle. The
-chimney is extremely stiff, the main difficulty being to make a start
-from the hole. If the cave had a level bottom the difficulties would
-be much moderated. There are no holds on the boulder itself and very
-few on the side wall, but those few make it worth while starting with
-the face to the wall. Six feet higher, when the climber is in the most
-exposed situation, he must turn half round and use both sides of the
-chimney. If the leader cannot get into the crack unassisted, it is
-a good plan for the second to hitch himself to a jammed boulder at
-the back of the cave and proffer a shoulder as a take-off. The first
-explorers had ice to contend against and proceeded in a still more
-cautious manner, all three combining their strength at the awkward
-corner. I have three times seen men swing off on the rope when half
-way up the chimney, and am bound to admit that there is too much
-touch-and-go for the way to suit any but very strong climbers. The
-easier way out of the hole--first taken, I think, by Messrs. Whitaker
-and Thorp--seems to reduce the difficulty considerably, and will
-probably become a favourite exit.
-
-Above the fifth pitch we step out into a huge amphitheatre of rock.
-It is difficult to decide which is the main gully, and many men are
-willing to conclude that there is no more hard work in front, and that
-a speedy passage out of the hollow will conduce most to their happiness.
-
-The real gully passes up on the left. A branch starts pleasantly
-enough to the right, but after one or two fairly easy pitches we are
-confronted by a blank, wet wall. The sides are steep and spiky and
-rotten; it was a most miserable hour I once spent getting over forty
-feet of this dreadful _cul-de-sac_, and ever since I have solemnly
-warned others from any such attempt to shirk the final part of the
-Great Gully. If they wish to get out, they should keep still more to
-the right, over steep grass and occasional slight rock. Traversing in
-a westerly or south-westerly direction, they pass across the heads of
-several gullies, above the worst portion of the C gully, and then out
-on the fell side, whence an easy run takes them down to the bridge.
-
-The three or four pitches that must be overcome in mounting to the head
-of the true Great Gully are short but difficult. The ghyll is narrow
-and wet and it is almost impossible towards the finish to avoid a
-drenching by the slender stream that monopolizes the direct route. The
-last pitch is ordinarily circumvented by passing up the nasty wall of
-loose earth and rocky _débris_ on the left. This diversion leads on to
-an easy broken buttress from which we can walk into the gully again and
-up its scree finish to the crest of the precipice.
-
-On the occasion of my first ascent we were four and a half hours in the
-gully. A second expedition to the top of the fifth pitch took three
-hours; and half that time was spent at photography.
-
-THE CENTRAL GULLY (C).--Bowen and I had been climbing together
-for some days last Easter (1897), and were reserving an attempt on the
-C gully for the latter end of our holiday, to give ourselves the chance
-of getting into good form and the place an opportunity for drying up.
-
-One fine morning we heard that another party were driving down the
-valley on their way to the Great Gully. They offered us seats in their
-wagonette. We gladly accepted, and had a pleasant drive along the
-lakeside as far as Wastdale Hall. The walk round to the foot of our
-climb occupied us the best part of half an hour, and we then left our
-friends to continue their journey, arranging to look out for them at
-the top of the Screes a few hours later.
-
-The gully was easy at the outset, but far up above us we could see
-difficulties in plenty, and we began the scramble with a sense of
-future bliss that rather detracted from our present enjoyment.
-
-We passed up on the left-hand side of the first pitch at 11-18, over
-fifteen feet of steep grass and rock. The holds were fairly good beside
-the waterfall. A few feet further on the gully narrowed at a second
-pitch--a steep gutter down which the stream endeavoured to smooth a
-way. We could use ledges on either side, and at the top a tree-stem
-that has lain there for some years gave us assistance. The pitch is
-about twenty-five feet high.
-
-Then there followed two easy ten-feet bits before we found ourselves
-compelled at the fifth pitch to quit the bed of the gully. This
-obstacle sent us off to the left up a steep grass bank before we could
-traverse back into the narrow chimney at an assailable spot. We were
-obliged to use our knees for wedging safely in the V-shaped corner, and
-thus had our introduction to the water-way. The ledges were few and
-slippery. Ten feet up the corner a jammed stone and a slippery slab
-guarded the head of the pitch. We reached the former actually behind
-the water, and hastened out to the left with but slight steadying holds
-for the hands.
-
-Then we halted a little and looked about us. We had gone through the
-preliminaries, and realized that our gully was now getting stiff. The
-view upwards showed the great seventh pitch, but nothing higher. Far
-below we could see the end of the lake. The prospect was not nearly so
-fine as that from the Great Gully; the rocks were not so boldly carved
-out, nor the outlook so fair.
-
-The next obstacle was formed by a jammed boulder thirty feet high,
-impossible to climb direct. It would perhaps have been best to take
-it on the right, but we advanced tentatively up the other side, and
-then, seeing that it would just go, kept on to the top. Our route lay
-up the narrow crack between the boulder and the side wall. A shoulder
-was useful for the leader at the start, but he had a bad six feet just
-above. The only hold for the right hand was obtained by clenching the
-fist inside the crack so as to form a wedge. A far-away notch in the
-wall gave an oblique push-off for the left foot, the struggle being
-mainly to keep close to the crack.
-
-The difficulties now became almost continuous, and we were unable
-to define exactly the beginning of the seventh pitch. Some twenty
-feet of steep climbing up the bed of the ghyll first followed and we
-reached a little platform whence a branch gully of steep grass led out
-on the buttress to our left. The main gully was thirty feet across,
-narrowing a little higher up. An almost vertical rib of rock some six
-feet thick divided the gully into two parts. That on the right was a
-wide recess roofed in by a great stone nearly a hundred feet overhead.
-From our little platform we could see the water streaming over the
-edge of the roof, and forming a thin veil at the entrance to the cave.
-The left-hand side of the rib was a narrow crack sloping back at an
-angle of about 45°, but after the first thirty feet continuing to
-the top perpendicularly. The route we chose lay first up the crack,
-then across the rib and into the cave. A second start being made from
-there, we proposed to climb up the vertical rib, taking to the crack
-on its left whenever the difficulties became extreme. At the level of
-the roof of the cavern we were to traverse across on to it and make
-directly up its smooth slope and round by the left of a higher jammed
-block that overhung the finishing portion of the pitch. I think the
-route differs a little from that of the first party, who were somewhat
-assisted by a jammed stone then in the crack. In fact one member
-considered the stone essential for a successful ascent, and that its
-untimely removal closed the upper half for ever. But there can be no
-doubt that in a dry season the obstacle can be overcome by a moderately
-strong party, and that in the normal ‘streamy’ state of the gully the
-climber needs but the knowledge of a route and the nerve to follow it
-without hesitation and without regard to dryness.
-
-[Illustration:
-
-
-I. PLATE VI.
-
-THE WASTWATER SCREES (p. 191).
-
-The height of CC is about 1,000 feet.
-
- A An Easy Gully.
- B The Great Gully (1891).
- C The Central Gully (1897).
- D A Minor Gully, not very difficult.
- _b_ The Curtain.
- _c_ The Easy Traverse.
- _d_ Descent from Traverse.
-
-
-II
-
-THE PAVEY ARK GULLIES (p. 208).
-
-The height of BB is about 400 feet.
-
- A Little Gully (1886).
- B The Great Gully (1882).
- C Easy Scree Gully.
- D Jack’s Rake.
- E Stickle Tarn.]
-
-We found the way easy up to the cave. There Bowen braced himself firmly
-amidst the bright green ferns and endeavoured to reconcile himself to
-the prospect of a long wait. He could not trace out my route upwards,
-for the curtain of water was between us, but now and again when
-troubles were thickest he would inquire feelingly after my condition.
-
-It was straightforward climbing out from the cave and up to the
-vertical buttress. But the absence of suitable holds in the crack on
-the left made the next twenty feet very severe, and I was glad to find
-at last a series of ledges across to the top of the cave. The holds
-were wet and my fingers benumbed. If the ledges had been anything but
-satisfactory the traverse would have been highly incorrect, not to
-say immoral. Then the rope had to be lengthened out and the wait was
-unpleasant. But the rock slope was a much simpler matter than it had
-appeared to be from below, and the rest of the pitch was scarcely more
-than a walk. I drew up over the last block with much relief, and paused
-to recover warmth and feeling before drawing in the rope for Bowen. He
-climbed with great rapidity and practically left out the traverse; it
-was rather vexatious to find that he emerged fresh and comparatively
-dry. It was now 12-34 P.M., and so far we had advanced rapidly.
-
-A few feet in front was a long thin crack, looking easy but proving
-awkward at close quarters. We found it best to traverse up the smooth
-slab on the left and then crawl along a rickety ledge of grass and
-rock back to the gully again. Were we nevermore to find an easy
-piece? Almost at once a ninth pitch faced us, looking somewhat like
-the eighth. The gully suddenly narrows to a V-groove which springs
-up vertically for twelve feet, then slopes away at 45° for twenty
-feet, and finally is blocked by a few boulders before widening out
-again. Just before the constriction occurs, the walls of the ravine
-slope outwards at an easy angle, and the tangle of thickly-matted
-grass disguises the treacherous character of the rock underneath.
-This has been splintered and loosened by frost and sturdy vegetation.
-Great masses in many steep places are ready to fall at a touch,
-and scrambling is robbed of its pleasures by the sense of possible
-insecurity of every available hold. I tried at first to keep up the
-crack, but just at the corner where it trends obliquely upwards the
-difficulties of holding on proved too great and a cautious descent
-had to be effected. Then we looked to the left up a steep little gully
-fifty feet high. It ended abruptly in the main wall of the ravine,
-but a great splinter of rock at the highest corner gave us a chance
-of belaying. Bowen clambered gingerly over the broken ground and tied
-himself to the rock. Then, slipping my rope round it, he prepared to
-hold me during the next move. Our plan was to clamber up the loose
-face on the left of the awkward pitch and traverse into the gully
-twenty-five feet higher. My rope was dragging along the wall, and would
-have dislodged a good deal if suddenly called upon to break my fall.
-The worst bit was the last six feet of traverse, which I very much
-loosened during the passage. The gully was then bestridden and both
-sides used for the finishing portion of the pitch. When Bowen came
-along, the traverse broke away at his touch, and it was rather alarming
-to see him start falling backwards. But the rope was tight above him
-and he simply swung round into the gully; it was the most expeditious
-mode of entering, but he bruised his leg a little at the final bump. We
-afterwards agreed that the second man ought to take the whole obstacle
-direct. Trying to repeat the ascent again in April, 1898, by exactly
-the same manœuvres, the slight remnant of traverse broke away with me
-and I had a bad fall. I was saved, of course, by the rope. The direct
-ascent of the watercourse has been proved to be possible, and is now
-much the better way.
-
-Such was the ninth pitch, probably the one misjudged by Dr. Lawrence’s
-party on April 9, 1895. They had taken four hours to climb to the
-eighth, remarkably good going when one considers the bad condition
-of the gully during their ascent and the amount of new ground they
-managed to cover. We had mounted in a little less than an hour and
-three quarters; but we were only a small party and the circumstances
-very favourable. They saw a hundred-feet pitch following on a few yards
-higher and endeavoured to estimate its difficulties. From below the
-aspect is terrifying, and after a slight survey they decided to work
-out of the ravine by an easy exit up the left wall. Thence they saw a
-few more pitches higher up beyond the tenth, and were convinced that
-they had done right. But they were mistaken, as our experience proved.
-
-A little direct scrambling up the bed of the gully took us to the foot
-of the great obstacle. A water-shoot splashes on to the left wall
-eighty feet up, and is deflected into the cavernous depths of a black
-recess formed in the gully by a long buttress that divides it into two
-parts. The climb up through the splashing water appears to be almost
-hopeless, and a view from above of the last twenty feet shows that the
-risk would be extreme if the pitch were attacked on that side. But the
-buttress will be found on inspection to close in a sort of chimney on
-the right, fairly easy to reach and most comfortable to follow up to
-its finish three feet above the level of the top of the waterfall.
-This branch chimney is safe and dry. There are no loose stones about,
-and the occasional glimpses of the furious shoot over the way are very
-pleasing. They were so to us, at any rate, who had been in fear and
-trembling lest we should be compelled to attack the pitch through the
-waterfall. We were surprised at our good fortune, and none the less
-on seeing that the difficulties above were insignificant. A short
-scree and an easy twelve-feet obstacle brought us up to the well-known
-traverse across the face of the mountain.
-
-We could hear occasional shouting of our friends in the Great Gully.
-It tempted us to work over to them and finish on the final chimneys
-of their climb. But we felt constrained to keep straight up, lest any
-further pitches should linger unclimbed. The C gully was to acknowledge
-itself vanquished from beginning to end, and we set ourselves to finish
-the task. Little actually remained. A steep climb of thirty feet,
-using both sides of the gully, with poor holds near the top, virtually
-brought us to an end of its interesting and extended series of pitches.
-A scramble up the last water-slide and a muddy slope led to the long
-scree finish, and we emerged at the summit shortly after two o’clock.
-The walk home over Ill Fell took an hour and a half.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-_PAVEY ARK_
-
-
-The Langdale Pikes form a beautiful group of hills four miles to the
-east of the Scawfell Pikes. They lie at the head of Langdale, and
-the highest point, Harrison Stickle, is a prominent object in many a
-favourite landscape.
-
-Harrison Stickle is splendidly shaped, and manages to give an
-impression of much greater height than it really possesses (2,401
-feet). Half a mile to the west is the Pike of Stickle or the Sugarloaf.
-It has a little climbing on the west face. Mr. Gwynne writes of it
-thus: ‘The Sugarloaf itself is a very fine peak, that, viewed from the
-valley, has very much the appearance of the Mönch. It runs down towards
-the Stake Pass in a spur, which must be the starting-point of most of
-the climbs on this mountain. There is a curious gully here, which is
-worthy of the climber’s attention. It does not run from top to bottom,
-but suddenly begins about the middle of the crag. The difficulty is
-to get at this gully, and some pretty climbing can be obtained in the
-attempt.’
-
-Somewhat south of the mid-point between Harrison Stickle and the
-Sugarloaf is the summit of Gimmer Crag. It overlooks the old hotel of
-Dungeon Ghyll, and offers in dry weather a considerable amount of
-indiscriminate scrambling.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE PAVEY ARK GULLIES FROM STICKLE TARN]
-
-One of the finest little tarns of the district lies 900 feet below
-the summit of Harrison Stickle, on its north-east side. Stickle Tarn
-is almost as solitary as Easedale, and its surroundings are decidedly
-finer. It is about an hour’s walk from Dungeon Ghyll, by a small
-footpath keeping close to the stream that is fed by the lake waters.
-The view across the tarn is a delight to climbers’ eyes. The great
-cliffs of Pavey Ark, rising 700 feet above the lake, are darkly
-reflected in the still waters. They are deeply cut by two gullies
-that immediately arrest attention. Each marks a little notch in the
-sky-line. A third notch further to the left indicates the head of a
-slighter indentation in the face of the cliff, which, so far as I know,
-has not yet been explored. The right-hand ‘Great’ Gully was first
-climbed by Haskett Smith in the summer of 1882. The left, called the
-‘Little’ Gully by way of antithesis, the same climber explored in June,
-1886. A lady ascended the Great Gully in 1887, and later years have
-seen a steady succession of visitors to these crags.
-
-Well towards the north end of the cliff is a wide scree gully with a
-square notch at its crest. Near the foot of this a safe natural path
-may be followed obliquely across the face. This is the well-known
-Jack’s Rake. It starts rather steeply, but soon assumes a gentle,
-uniform gradient. It crosses the Great Gully a hundred feet below the
-top; there then follows a rather awkward bit for the walker, who will
-need to scramble up a corner to get on to the last portion of the
-rake. It crosses the Little Gully within fifty feet of the Summit,
-and ends on the buttress just beyond. Two chimneys spring from the
-level of Jack’s Rake to the north of the Great Gully, which both look
-interesting. Our pleasant scramble is thus described by Gwynne: ‘This
-ledge [i.e. Jack’s Rake] offers a multitude of good opportunities
-to the climber. It runs obliquely across the face of the precipice,
-but it need not necessarily be followed throughout its length by the
-mountaineer who wishes for something a little more exciting. About
-half-way up there runs on to the ledge a chimney which--when it is
-not a small waterfall--forms a pleasant climb to some broken rock
-above, whence the summit is easily reached. If, however, the water in
-the chimney makes it uncomfortable and unpleasant for the climber, he
-may still arrive at the top of it by choosing a long bit of steep,
-smooth rock on the left. There are two clefts which afford fairly good
-hand-and-foot holds, and from there the top of the chimney is attained.’
-
-THE LITTLE GULLY.--Some six years ago I paid my first visit to
-Pavey Ark. The accounts of the Great Gully were very enticing. One
-visitor spoke of it as having only one pitch, ‘but that was severe.’
-Another, commenting on the first, remarked: ‘Yes! it has only one
-pitch, but that one lasts all the way up!’ Then a celebrated climber
-had estimated its height at double the actual amount, which was a
-testimonial to its good qualities all the more acceptable because it
-was given unconsciously.
-
-There were tales of a leader pawing about for half an hour on the
-second man’s head and shoulders, in search of holds. Gloves and sticks
-and other impedimenta were understood to lie in profusion at the foot
-of the stiffest bit, left there by those who could climb no higher,
-or those who sadly expected that after their despairing attempts had
-failed they would have no further need for such articles. In short,
-there was a good deal of pernicious exaggeration concerning the Great
-Gully, and I went for it expecting great things. It was rather a long
-walk from Wastdale, over Great End and Bowfell. The descent to Dungeon
-Ghyll was taken for the sake of a look-in at the waterfall, and for
-the next half-hour hurrying up to Stickle Tarn, I felt to the full the
-futility of having run down from Bowfell to Langdale to save time.
-Arrived at the small dam that holds in the waters of the lake, I saw
-the two gullies on the other side, and concluding that the left-hand
-one looked harder, skirted the lake, and made for its foot. It was a
-foolish mistake, thus to confuse the two routes. The Little Gully was
-ascended that day, and until Haskett Smith’s book came out three years
-later, describing the locality in some detail, I fondly imagined that I
-knew the best thing on Pavey Ark.
-
-The gully is narrow at first. Its walls are red in colour, and a film
-of water generally covers them. The holds are not particularly good,
-and the steepness of the gully renders extreme caution necessary.
-Both walls are used, and our advance is after the fashion of a man
-on a ladder. Then the gully widens, and the difficulties come in
-successive steps till a great overhanging boulder blocks the direct
-ascent. Here the right wall is sufficiently broken to offer a method
-of circumventing the pitch, but in wet weather the place is bad.
-Just above this I found a stick, conclusive evidence to the simple
-mind that the hard bit of the Great Gully was now being approached.
-It looked as though it had been there for years. The view backwards
-was most impressive, the tarn appearing almost beneath my feet. The
-second obstacle was now to be considered. The gully narrowed to a thin
-vertical corner plastered over with wet green moss. The take-off was
-earthy and disagreeably loose. The only holds were on the right wall
-near the corner, and were few and far between. I hesitated below for a
-long time, scarcely knowing how best to start operations. A big jammed
-stone came away in my hands as I made a first attempt, and crashed down
-the gully from side to side. At last I rammed the left knee tentatively
-into the wet corner, and edged up a few feet with the aid of sundry
-slight supports for the right foot. Ten feet higher an excellent
-hold was reached with the hand, and the chief trouble was over. Huge
-boulders were piled overhead confusedly, but they gave plenty of
-opportunities, and no longer had the smooth, almost shiny surface that
-characterized the rocks further down. The top of the gully was reached
-three quarters of an hour after starting. It was half-past five, and
-snow was beginning to fall; I thought it desirable to hurry, and a
-steady trot westwards round the head of Langdale Combe and the further
-side of Black Crags brought me in three miles to the path at the Angle
-Tarn and the foot of the up-grade towards Esk Hause. Thence a steady
-two hours’ walk in the dark brought me safely to Wastdale, in happy
-ignorance of the fact that I had only visited the Little Gully. But to
-this day I think it as hard as its neighbour.
-
-THE GREAT GULLY.--Shortly after Easter, 1896, I begged some
-friends to come over and climb the Great Gully with me. It was my
-last day at Wastdale; I was due at Coniston the same evening, and the
-Langdale Pikes offered a pleasanter walk to the Old Man district than
-is given by the Eskdale and Cockley Beck route. My friends stipulated
-that we should call a halt at Kern Knotts on the way out and attempt
-the ‘crack.’ This we managed with expedition, and continued the journey
-betimes over the Styhead and Esk Hause.
-
-The three miles from Angle Tarn to Pavey Ark are rather tedious, though
-the view of Bowfell and of Pike of Stickle relieves the monotony. It
-is a wild open moor that we have to cross, and its gentle slope is
-very deceptive. For a long time the sky-line in front of us, after
-rounding Langdale Combe at the top of the Stake Pass, recedes as we
-advance, and it is not till the grassy ridge of Thunacar Knott is
-gained that we begin to see the upper crags of Pavey Ark. Nevertheless
-it is much better to approach the crags in this way from the Wastdale
-direction than to descend first towards Dungeon Ghyll. The great rocks
-strewn about the crest of the cliff are most singular in character.
-Their surface is as rough as that of the magnesian limestone in the
-Dolomites. If only the whole face of Pavey Ark were of this formation
-we should have a fine opportunity for practice with the scarpetti or
-rope-soled shoes used by the Tyrolese rock-climbers.
-
-We descended towards the tarn by an easy slope between the cliff and
-the north-east ridge of Harrison Stickle. Then at the level of the base
-of the crags we crossed a water-course, and traversed over the scree
-to the foot of the Great Gully, passing the entrance to the other on
-our way. The remarks already made, and reference to the diagram on page
-203, will perhaps give sufficient indication of the place at which we
-now found ourselves. In misty weather the locality can be identified by
-the branch gully to the left, that starts at once and loses itself 200
-feet higher up.
-
-The lower part of the climb very much resembles the corresponding
-portion in the other gully. The side walls are close together, the
-rock is steep, and hand-and-foot scrambling fairly continuous for
-about 150 feet. When the rocks are wet some special care is necessary
-at a place thirty feet from the starting-point. Then comes the first
-pitch, a remarkably fine piece of rock scenery. An enormous boulder
-completely blocks the way, projecting at least fifteen feet at its
-upper part. The left wall is practically hopeless, but the other side
-shows a series of small ledges that enable the climber to work up to
-the flat corner between the boulder and the right wall. Formerly this
-bit was grassy. Only a few small tufts now remain, and the holds are
-therefore more obvious. A pleasanter way lies through the cave and out
-by a narrow tunnel in the roof to the same flat corner, which is just
-discernible from below. That way our party followed. The dripping water
-from the roof was a trifle unpleasant sometimes, but there was a great
-sense of security in adopting the through route. The tunnel required
-careful going until one’s eyes got accustomed to the darkness. Then the
-handholds could be distinguished and the platform reached in safety.
-
-The view outwards was most brilliant. Sunlight on the distant range
-of Fairfield and Helvellyn, the serpentine Windermere appearing here
-and there far away to the south; Langdale in all its loveliness,
-with the watch-tower of Harrison Stickle at its head; and the gloomy
-Stickle Tarn 500 feet beneath us. Our own situation was sufficiently
-striking for the recollection of this pitch to remain impressed on
-our memories. We stood (one at a time, by the way) on the very edge
-of the overhanging eaves of the huge cave beneath. The side walls of
-the gully seemed to cut us off from all communication with the world.
-We could only realize the solid platform and the enduring rock to
-which we hung; all the rest might have been a fantasy. Even the bold
-fisherman down by the shores of the tarn, slowly manipulating his rod
-as he cautiously waded knee-deep in the water, seemed to belong to
-another species. It was incredible that I should be crossing London
-within twenty-four hours; and the thought of it only stirred slightly
-in my mind, without actually shaping itself until this present time of
-writing.
-
-The difficulty was not quite passed. To reach the top of the pitch we
-had to haul ourselves up a tight little corner between the boulder
-and the side wall. Formerly the headroom was so limited that it was
-necessary to keep out a little, and effect a rather sensational haul
-over the front of the boulder. Since the first ascent a piece of rock
-has fallen away, and the corner is easier. There is no actual danger
-for the leader, as his rope can be securely held in the interior of the
-cave. In fact, he may, if he chooses, obtain any desired assistance
-from the second man properly belayed on the platform. The corner is
-only ten feet high and the rocks are very good.
-
-Almost immediately after the first pitch the gully undergoes a great
-change in appearance. It still remains narrow, but the bed has
-alternately vertical and horizontal stretches of wet and slippery
-rock. The hardest piece is generally regarded as the second pitch. It
-consists of a long slab thirty feet high, constituting the true bed of
-the ghyll and the only available way up. It is set at a steep angle,
-and appears to be singularly devoid of useful holds. On the occasion of
-the first ascent it was ‘lubricated by a film of fine mud,’ and our own
-observations gave strength to the conviction that such was its usual
-condition. Loose gravel is being continually washed down the incline,
-lodging in a most annoying manner on the best holds. Small wonder that
-this ‘brant and slape’ part gives pause to many climbers. Yet it has
-been climbed even when ice is about, thanks no doubt to good nails and
-cool judgment. We treated the pitch with the utmost respect, carefully
-clearing away the grit from each little ledge and working as close to
-the corner as the holds would permit. Fifteen feet up we passed the
-worst spot, ugly to look at but not bad enough to turn us back. Then
-the slope eased off and we could walk up grass and scree on to Jack’s
-Rake, a hundred feet above the pitch. The rake really terminates the
-gully. To the left is a small chimney forming a genuine little obstacle
-to an advance along the rake. That was certainly no suitable finish
-to our climb. A few yards to the right showed what we wanted, a gully
-that should lead out to the top of Pavey Ark. We found the rocks
-there presented the rough surface that characterised the boulders up
-above. There were several great slabs blocking our way at first, but
-it was a real delight to get over them. A short and narrow chimney
-followed, with such gripping powers that our clothes clung to the sides
-tenaciously. As Haskett Smith remarks, ‘it would be quite difficult to
-make a slip on them.’ Then we walked out to the top, three-quarters
-of an hour after entering the gully, and while leisurely coiling up
-my rope we discussed the question of tea. Should the others accept
-my invitation to Dungeon Ghyll and then return to Wastdale at dusk,
-or should they make straight for Wastdale at once? To my sorrow they
-objected to the suggested extension of their walk and strode off to
-the west. My own course lay first to the foot of the crags, where my
-rücksack had been left, and thence to Dungeon Ghyll and Coniston.
-
-THE RAKE END CHIMNEY.--Besides the third chimney described by
-Gwynne as running half-way up on to the ledge, there is a short but
-excellent route up the crags starting near the foot of Jack’s Rake. The
-following note was supplied by Mr. Claude Barton:--‘The climb is in two
-pitches, the first being broken up into places where you can play up a
-second man. The _mauvais pas_ is just at the top of this. A moss-grown
-wall and two jammed stones must be surmounted, and the leader may need
-some support. The second pitch is a fine chimney blocked by a large
-stone that is passed by the interior, and then used as a take-off for
-the final easy concluding portion. The climb is certainly harder than
-the Great Gully.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-_DOE CRAG, CONISTON_
-
-
-This happy hunting-ground for the rock-climber is within an hour’s
-walk of Coniston. It forms part of the range of hills that includes
-Wetherlam and the Old Man, but unlike these great neighbours it has
-hitherto been left untouched by miners and quarry-men.
-
-From the Old Man we may look westwards across the upper end of Goat’s
-Water, and see the summit of Doe Crag almost at our level, some 900
-feet above the lake. We are facing its grand precipices, and are in an
-excellent position to prospect the various gullies that cut deeply into
-the 500-feet wall of rock.
-
-The first of these, as we glance from left to right, causes the
-greatest impression in the sky-line, but is of the least interest to
-mountaineers. It is an easy scree gully, possessing a rotten pinnacle
-that was first climbed by Mr. Slingsby in 1887. The second is generally
-known as the Great Gully. It is much longer, and includes a fair
-amount of genuine hard work in its ascent. At a distance it appears
-to have a Y shape, by reason of the two branches that diverge from a
-point about half-way up. The Great Gully was first climbed in July,
-1888, by Messrs. Hastings, Haskett Smith, and E. Hopkinson, its first
-pitch being then taken by the ‘shallow scoop’ on the left of the great
-obstacle. Nearly a year later the brothers Hopkinson effected a direct
-ascent of the pitch by an ingenious utilization of the rope, to which
-we shall refer subsequently.
-
-To the immediate north of the Great Gully we see a huge buttress that
-springs further down the scree towards Goat’s Water than any other
-part of the crag. The lower 300 feet of this buttress exhibit a nearly
-vertical gully that may escape detection altogether unless viewed in a
-favourable light. In the view on the opposite page it is well marked
-by the deep black shadow of the rocks on its south side. Apparently it
-joins a sloping gully that leads up to the sky-line; but in reality it
-finishes abruptly on the face, at a small grass platform that stretches
-a hundred feet across the buttress. It is now known as the Central
-Chimney, and was first climbed in April, 1897, by Mr. Godfrey Ellis and
-myself. In the first edition of this book, the chimney was erroneously
-identified with one of Messrs. Hopkinson’s ascents of April, 1895. The
-route cannot be recommended except to experts, by reason equally of the
-genuine difficulties in the chimney and of the exposed nature of the
-awkward situations in it.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-DOE CRAG AND GOATSWATER
-
-(_Face page 220_)]
-
-The next gully to the right forms the northern boundary of the great
-central buttress. It is but slightly marked at the lower end and
-possesses serious difficulties in the first half. We shall call it the
-Intermediate Gully. It was first climbed in April, 1895, by Messrs.
-Campbell, and Edward, Albert, and J. H. Hopkinson, and described by the
-most experienced of their party as the severest climb he had done in
-the district. Mr. W. J. Williams and I went up it at Easter, 1898, when
-making a fairly complete survey of all these splendid, but practically
-unknown gullies.
-
-The Easter Gully now needs localization. It comes next to the preceding
-and is easy to identify. It has a huge cave pitch near the bottom,
-then from a great hollow in the crags a vertical chimney springs up
-over a hundred feet in a right-angled corner; above this the gully
-divides into two branches, both of which give good climbing until we
-are nearly at the summit-ridge. Careful inquiry enables me to say that
-this was first climbed by Messrs. Haskett Smith and Robinson in 1886;
-they avoided a considerable amount of the trouble, inevitable in a
-passage of the lower half of the direct ascent, by working up the great
-buttress on the right, and by traversing back into the gully when the
-opportunity disclosed itself. The first passage of the gully by the
-extremely difficult second pitch, and thence directly onwards, was made
-on Easter Day, 1895, by Messrs. Otto Koecher and Charles Hopkinson,
-who, however, circumvented the comparatively simple cave pitch at the
-foot. They thought they were on entirely new ground; so did I when
-on Easter Day, 1898, Mr. W. J. Williams accompanied me over the first
-pitch, up a zig-zag course to left and right of the long chimney, and
-then along the direct finish to the summit.
-
-The sixth and last great gully is known as the North Gully, to see
-which it is necessary to go well towards Goat’s Hause. Three huge
-boulders block up the middle and form the only pitch. The gully was
-formerly supposed to be Messrs. Haskett Smith and Robinson’s climb of
-1886; actually it is the place where Haskett Smith was let down on a
-rope, and gave tribute to the grandeur of the region by remarking on
-its ‘terrific aspect.’ In 1895 a party went up what they called the
-North Gully, but they encountered no difficulty during their ascent,
-and it seems more likely therefore that they climbed a slighter ghyll
-between the real North Gully and the Easter Gully. They traversed
-into the latter above its difficult chimney. It is hard to say what
-exploration has been made here. Mr. Williams and I descended the gully
-in 1898, and halted there sufficiently to convince ourselves of the
-feasibility of its ascent. But whether the climb has ever been taken
-upwards throughout its whole length is an open question.
-
-Climbers should visit Doe Crag more frequently. The rocks give
-magnificent sport, the scenery is more than ordinarily impressive
-even to the hardened cragsman, and there yet remains a great amount
-of exploratory work to be done. Only the gullies have hitherto been
-tackled. The buttresses are almost untouched.
-
-THE GREAT GULLY.--The satisfactory part of this climb is that
-its greatest difficulty confronts us at the outset. Once the first
-pitch is accomplished we are perfectly certain that the combined
-skill of the party is sufficient to insure a successful ascent of the
-remainder. There is no gradual increase in the technical difficulty of
-the subsequent passages, to vex the soul of the conscientious climber
-with doubts as to the morality of advancing, when a critical position
-might be reached where descent is dangerous and further ascent beyond
-his powers. The first pitch is severe, and perhaps a little risky for
-the leader, but the remaining four are easy, and the method of tackling
-them obvious. This species of gully is suitable for those who tire
-quickly, or whose impressions of the work before them depend on the
-height they have attained. On the other hand, there are climbers who
-like to feel that there is always something serious looming ahead, who
-want the troubles to last them all through their climb, and rejoice
-in a _bonne bouche_ at the most elevated situation. Such lingering
-sweetness they can find in the Central Chimney, but not here; it is
-not surprising that many men are satisfied with one visit to the Great
-Gully, and never make for it a second time.
-
-It takes us ten minutes to walk up from the lake to the entrance of the
-gully. Then a few yards of scree and broken rock lead into a cavern,
-below a chock-stone that offers much resistance to the direct passage
-up the pitch. A massive buttress encroaches on the left, and renders
-the gully almost narrow enough for both sides to be employed together;
-but close inspection shows that near the top of the pitch the walls
-are too far apart and the handholds too few. The climber does well to
-descend a few feet and prospect the buttress itself. This exhibits
-a safer route (see view on page 225). Close against the side of the
-vertical left wall the buttress shows a slight fissure, that starts
-from an easy grass platform and runs steeply up to a level some twelve
-feet higher than the top of the chock-stone. The difficulty lies in
-working up the corner, following the crack as much as possible, and
-taking sufficient care that the body does not swing away from the
-footholds. A stout individual is likely to feel handicapped at an
-awkward little ledge half-way up from the grass platform. The fissure
-can be followed straight up into the gully, but it is easier to contour
-round the buttress and on to the top of the true pitch. There is
-excellent belaying for an ascending party, the rope lying along the
-crack and gripping well at several points. It grips just too well for
-the safe belaying of the last man in a descent; he had better adopt the
-dangling method and work straight over the chock-stone. This latter
-direct route over the obstacle was tried once or twice before 1889, but
-without success. It was left to the brothers Hopkinson to show in that
-year that it offered a perfectly safe variation, though probably
-most climbers will agree that it needs more muscle than is wanted
-for the crack route. They clambered into the cave and thrust a rope
-through the small aperture in the roof. When a sufficient quantity had
-been poked up in that way, it fell over the front of the cave and was
-available for climbing. But it is very severe work to swarm up a thin
-rope; in this case there is slight assistance from the sides of the
-gully, and the transfer of hold from the rope to the rock comes when
-the arms are tired.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE FIRST PITCH IN DOE CRAG GREAT GULLY
-
-(_Face page 225_)]
-
-After this difficulty is passed, some yards of scree lead to the
-second pitch. The gully is narrow, and the block is produced by two
-boulders one above the other. There is no trouble in working through
-the cave and on to the lower block, whence an easy pull over the upper
-stone takes us again to a long line of scree of the impulsive variety.
-This part of the gully is pleasant only when snow is about, when the
-ankle-twisting propensities of the scree are not permitted full play.
-
-We are near the point where the gully opens out considerably, sending
-a branch up on the right. But before that we have to mount two small
-pitches, the first taken straight up, the second by either right or
-left wall.
-
-The branch exit on the right has no serious difficulties, but it
-abounds in loose holds that the climber may find hard to avoid. It
-leads on to the great middle buttress of Doe Crag, above all its
-dangerous parts, and within easy access of the summit. The direct
-ascent of the gully is interesting only at the last step, where a
-narrow chimney must be passed. Its right boundary is a long smooth
-slab, unusually deficient in holds. There are three or four wedged
-stones and the pitch is often wet, but by keeping close into the
-chimney and working up the right wall the trouble may be overcome. It
-is always possible, of course, to descend a little and climb out of the
-gully on the right.
-
-DOE CRAG CENTRAL CHIMNEY.--This climb is known to very few
-people. Many are aware in a vague manner that there is splendid
-climbing on the great buttress of Doe Crag, but only one or two
-cragsmen have learnt where to go for it. So far as my own experience
-is concerned it was almost a matter of accident that brought me soon
-after Easter, 1897, to the foot of the Central Chimney. The previous
-day had been spent with Messrs. George and Ashley Abraham on Lliwedd,
-in the Snowdon district, and a tiresome cross-country night journey
-to Coniston had not tended to put the keenest edge on my hunger for
-adventure. My companion, Mr. Godfrey Ellis, and I were really intent on
-ascending by the ‘intermediate gully of terrific aspect,’ down which
-Mr. Haskett Smith had climbed in 1888. The Central Chimney certainly
-looked terrific, more so than anything else we could find about there.
-It was also reasonably intermediate, and we came to the conclusion that
-our gully was found. Later investigation showed that we had made a
-mistake, for Haskett Smith’s chimney is at the north end of the crags.
-
-The Central Chimney attracted the attention of Mr. Slingsby in 1887,
-but apparently ours was the first ascent. Messrs. Broadrick have been
-up it since, and I have been advised by one of their party that the top
-of the chief difficulty is dangerously loose.
-
-We had heavy rücksacks to carry over to Wastdale that day, and decided
-to leave them at the foot of the climb, rather than suffer the
-inconvenience of dragging them up with us. We had eighty feet of rope,
-and needed it all near the top.
-
-Our work started easily. Three obvious courses led in about thirty feet
-to a broad, grassy platform, from which the chimney made its proper
-beginning. Each of the three ways involved scrambling; they started
-a few feet to the left of the lowest part of the crags, and formed
-between them a very fair presentment of a gully entrance. But a glance
-upwards showed that, for some distance at least, we should have very
-little of the nature of a gully to guide us. From the platform sprang
-up the vertical wall that gives the central buttress its appearance
-of inaccessibility, almost unrelieved for several hundred feet. Our
-chimney commenced as a thin crack in the wall from the platform, only
-large enough for a hand to be thrust in, and so sharp-edged that
-one’s fingers were badly cut in climbing the first five yards. Then
-the crack seemed to widen gradually until from below it appeared
-sufficiently broad for wedging. Appearances would have been comforting
-but for the curious absence of retaining wall on the right-hand side
-of the crack. The left was excellent; on that side the rock stood out
-from the corner and formed the finest part of the great buttress. But
-the right wall was out clean away, leaving smooth slabs that were sure
-to give trouble when we should find the chimney too shallow for further
-progress.
-
-I started up the thin crack, and found the strain very severe on the
-arms. When it became wide enough to support a knee it was possible
-to halt and prospect a little. The next ten feet up the crack were
-obviously most difficult, and a glance at the north side showed that it
-would have been easier to work up the right wall for twenty feet from
-the platform before traversing into the crack again. Ellis suggested
-that he should come up to my level by means of a slight fissure in
-the right wall, and steadied by the rope that I had flung over a
-small projection some six feet above his head, he managed to reach a
-shaky, sloping ledge of grass, and then to manœuvre the rope for my
-own passage to the same resting-place. We next worked upwards into the
-chimney, and kept close in it for twenty feet or so. There were good
-holds on the right until some small boulders and _débris_ formed a
-little platform, over the edge of which we were able to pull ourselves.
-
-The scenery about here was particularly impressive. Our resting-place
-was scarcely big enough for both, and a glance vertically downwards
-showed us the spot where we had commenced operations three quarters of
-an hour previously. The black depths of Goat’s Water formed a striking
-foreground to the view of Coniston Old Man across the valley, and it
-almost seemed as though the tarn could be reached by a stone falling
-from our tiny ledge. Up above us the crags loomed fearfully. They
-overhung considerably in places, and we saw that our only course was to
-follow boldly the line of our chimney till it abruptly terminated in
-the face. Fortunately the weather was good, the rocks dry and warm. To
-have attempted the chimney with much ice or water about would have been
-foolhardiness worthy of our wildest days.
-
-From the ledge we found the climbing splendid, keeping up the slight
-rib of rock on the right that formed the nearly vertical boundary of
-the chimney. The holds were just sufficiently large to give ample
-support, especially when the back could rest on the opposite side of
-the crack. ‘Backing up’ is usually a very constricted performance,
-with but limited views of the scenery around. Here on Doe Crag it
-seems as though most of the mountain is cut away excepting those parts
-of obvious utility to the climber. We crawled round the rib when the
-crack became too thin, and worked up several feet of slabby rock until
-the appearances seemed to indicate that an actual gully was now about
-to manifest itself and commence a fresh run up the wall. We therefore
-traversed again to the left into a large recess, and after a little
-scrambling upwards found ourselves brought to a stop by a dead wall.
-The bed of our recess was loose and steeply sloping. Its sides were
-slightly iced, and considerable care was needed in settling securely
-down to consider the situation.
-
-The wall was about twenty feet high and too smooth to climb. On each
-side of us were huge overhanging buttresses that projected considerably
-beyond the latter portion of our route. It was not manifest which of
-these would offer the best way of surmounting the wall, and it might
-be that neither was suitable. We could see that a traverse out of the
-difficulty might be made in the northern direction, but it was very
-exposed and it led too far away from our chimney.
-
-Ellis braced himself firmly at the highest corner of the recess, and
-manipulated the rope with special care. I started working up between
-the two buttresses in a manner that recalled to us both the well-known
-picture of the Funffingerspitze chimney in Sanger-Davies’ book. When
-some twelve feet above him, it seemed safe to quit the left-hand
-side altogether, and a stride effected the change of style. But the
-return was now almost impossible, and in the anxious five minutes that
-followed I had time to repent the sudden resolve. The top of the wall
-was within reach, but it was fringed with loose grass tufts that
-scarcely seemed secure enough to offer purchase in the upward heave
-that I wanted to give myself. However, the time spent in hesitation was
-sheer waste, for at the end the pull-up was perfectly safe and easy,
-and a little wriggling over rock and steep grass brought me to a long
-terrace, that naturally suggested a halt for the second man’s advance.
-In good time his head appeared above the grass tufts that formed the
-limit of my foreground, and a few seconds later he was sitting at my
-side and speculating as to the length of the difficult piece. The
-whole climb so far had been veritably one single pitch; we had had no
-interval of comparative ease, and were now eager to find some temporary
-freedom.
-
-That we found in perambulating our terrace. It was about a yard wide
-and fifty feet long, and gave evidence that our gully as such had
-practically terminated. We found it rather awkward clambering up the
-wall some thirty feet to another similar terrace. This stretched
-horizontally from the large ravine that now disclosed itself on our
-right, and across the face of the mountain towards the Great Gully.
-The former, we could see, involved some pretty climbing a hundred feet
-below us. At our level it was merely a scree-walk finishing at the
-highest part of Doe Crag.
-
-Our route lay up the rocks above the terrace. Two narrow clefts offered
-choice. We took the one to the right, about fifteen feet long and
-sufficiently tough to make us remember the place. Then followed easy
-hand-and-foot work till we could distinguish the branch exit of the
-Great Gully. Down this we carefully picked our way, and then returned
-to gather up our belongings and make tracks for distant Wastdale. The
-round had taken three hours.
-
-THE INTERMEDIATE GULLY.--We had a glorious afternoon for this
-climb. The previous night had brought us from town to Coniston, and
-we meant to give ourselves an easy day. But fearing that the weather
-might change we were tempted to seize the opportunity and start earnest
-business at once. Identifying the gully as the first to the right of
-the longest buttress of the crags, we entered it and began scrambling
-immediately. After five minutes of ‘staircase’ work, using both sides
-of the gully, we came to a point where the left wall overhung a little
-and the gully closed in. A flank movement was then effected on the
-right, over steep rocks and unreliable grass ledges, returning by a
-narrow traverse into the gully at a point forty feet higher. The second
-man came straight up, finding two pitches confronting him, both of
-which he thought we could have taken directly if time had allowed us
-to risk an attempt. We kept in the ghyll for the next two pitches,
-both of them fairly simple. A fine flat stone at the top of the second
-offered a good standpoint for the inspection of the overhanging wall
-that now faced us. The gully had shrunk again into the merest crack in
-the wall. My friend called it the extreme pitch of refinement. On our
-left a smooth right-angled corner that probably thought itself a branch
-gully led up to the ridge separating us from the Central Chimney. Again
-it seemed desirable to take to the right by a course that was at any
-rate feasible, although it took us away from our direct line of ascent.
-After fifteen feet of traverse the buttress looked accessible, but
-recollecting the poor holds that we had encountered in a corresponding
-situation lower down, we went further away still, descending slightly
-to a level platform where the leader could be belayed during his direct
-ascent of the wall. Fortunately the rocks were quite dry, as otherwise
-the work that followed would have been risky. At first the handholds
-were unsafe, but in ten feet our industrious cleaning away of the grass
-and earth disclosed an excellent cleft in the wall, safe and sound.
-Thence the way was pleasanter, swinging upwards towards the left again
-by immovable rockholds. We had several yards of a narrow ledge tilted
-upwards at 30° before entering our gully again, and arrived in it just
-below a little pitch of the type that tries the elbow.
-
-Great caution was now needed. Not that the climbing was difficult or
-dangerous, but the gully had dwindled into little more than a slight
-indentation in a vertical wall, and each man had to move with the
-utmost deliberation. Holds were numerous, generally better on the left
-wall, but they were all rather wet. Soon we were engaged in a violent
-struggle with a small angular jammed block that barred our way. It
-seemed loose at first, but we proved its stability that afternoon by
-many minutes’ hauling and wrenching from below and above. The chief
-difficulty was to get the shoulders firmly fixed between the sides
-of the cleft above the jammed stone; with only the block to hold
-and no rest for the feet this manœuvre was very awkward to perform.
-Above this a few steps led to a narrow cave, which we climbed by its
-right edge and found to be a trying piece of arm work. Here the gully
-expanded into a large scree-bedded ravine with only two moderately easy
-obstacles between us and the top of the crag. To our left we could see
-the ledge that marks the end of the Central Chimney. Our own gully,
-looking backwards, seemed to be a vertical plunge straight down to the
-bottom, and as usual we caught ourselves wondering whether anything
-else could be called difficult after this.
-
-We reached the summit in two hours from the start, and then skirting
-the lower edge of the crags from Goat’s Hause, we made note of each
-gully as we passed its foot. An easy scree shoot, followed by a
-buttress set back at a gentle angle, but with splendid practice on it;
-the North Gully with its awe-inspiring middle pitch like the great
-obstacle in Moss Ghyll; a branch gully leading into the North Gully; a
-second branch, looking rather interesting but lacking definition higher
-up; the Easter Gully with its double centre portion; the Intermediate
-Gully; the Central Chimney; and the Great Gully.
-
-THE EASTER GULLY.--The same party came two days later to
-examine this climb. The weather was very unsettled, and we were forced
-to the conclusion that the main central chimney was too wet to be
-approachable. The scrambling was easy up to the cave; then we worked up
-the vertical left wall by diminutive ledges till the level of the cave
-stone was ours, whereupon an awkward bit of traverse brought us safely
-out of the difficulty. We were in the great hollow, and were astonished
-to find that in addition to the main chimneys on the right and left
-centre, there were splendid branch gullies up to the ridges on either
-side.
-
-I started up the left central chimney. It was dry, but its holds were
-fragile. In forty feet it divided into two parallel branches; that on
-the left was overhanging, and held a bunch of long splinters of rock
-forming a dangerous _chevaux-de-frise_, ready to fall at the slightest
-notice. So we left it alone, and looked to the right branch. For twenty
-feet it went very well, and there, where one man might safely wedge
-himself, it became practically impossible to mount any higher. My
-companion, therefore, came up while I worked out on the open face to
-the right. Without much trouble a small platform one foot square was
-reached, from which we proposed to mount the buttress that separated
-us from the right central chimney. I hesitated a long while before
-venturing on it; the place was assuredly difficult, we were not certain
-whether the upper portion would be feasible, and the strong wind,
-swirling mist, and intermittent rain sapped our courage and strength
-the more we deliberated.
-
-The stiff work began with a scramble up into a grassy corner, fifteen
-feet above my platform. It was too small to enter, but from it sprang
-a narrow cleft to the right, very much like the well-known ‘stomach
-traverse’ on the Pillar Rock, but considerably harder to pass, and
-without an easy walk out at the further end. At its highest point the
-best course seemed to be up a vertical crack in the wall, and a stiff
-scramble here of ten feet brought me out on the head of the buttress.
-Here there was a chance of walking over to the right central chimney
-and finishing by the thirty feet or so that remained of its special
-difficulty. But that portion was naturally as wet as the lower part
-that we had purposely avoided, and we chose to cross the chimney and
-climb up its right wall.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-_COMBE GHYLL_
-
-
-Many a pedestrian walking down Borrowdale from the Styhead pass,
-looking backward at the fearful descent of some 1,100 feet of
-rough fellside, reaches a point in the valley where he experiences
-difficulty in recalling his track. For the valley between Gable and
-Seathwaite Fell is hidden, and his choice hovers between the combe
-below Sprinkling Tarn, walled in by Seathwaite Fell and Glaramara, and
-the upland valley that nestles between Thornythwaite and Rosthwaite
-Fells. His perplexity is increased when he notices that neither
-hollow satisfies the condition of background. The one is barred by
-the crags of Great End, the other by the steep wall of Raven Crag, a
-high dependence of Glaramara; whereas the Styhead pass as seen from
-Grange ought to show distant Scawfell as a background, and be easily
-recognised. One of these two hollows the climber will do well to
-identify.
-
-Combe Ghyll is the name of the course that drains the north side of
-Glaramara, the stream making its way down the little valley that has
-already been described as lying between Thornythwaite and Rosthwaite
-Fells. At about the 1,000-feet level in the valley the land is flat and
-marshy; with little provocation the stream could produce a respectable
-lake, and the tourist in wet weather feels that such absence of
-deception would be to his advantage. Above this level the mountain
-rises abruptly, and the ghyll has to acknowledge two sources. That
-which sends its supply straight down the centre of Raven Crag was the
-first to be regarded as Combe Ghyll. But the other is longer and more
-obvious. Looking up from the marsh the watercourse is very distinct
-away to the left, though the climb is equally in evidence on the right.
-When a short time since three curious cragsmen (including the curious
-writer) penetrated to the recesses of this almost unknown country to
-find the climb that Messrs. Robinson and Wilson had discovered and
-christened as long ago as September, 1893, we were compelled by that
-name to tackle the east branch, but vowed at the same time to go later
-to the west. Our conscientiousness was praiseworthy, though mistaken,
-but as events developed themselves our mistake had happy consequences.
-We managed both ghylls, and were probably instrumental in preventing a
-nasty accident to a couple of would-be mountaineers whom we discovered
-in difficulties.
-
-It was on a hot day in April. We had been disporting ourselves for
-photographic purposes in the Kern Knotts crack, and had sauntered
-down to Seatoller for some soda and milk to give grace to our jam
-sandwiches. Then we walked down the Rosthwaite Road as far as the
-bridge over the Derwent, and went across the opposite shoulder into
-the combe. It was very close down in Borrowdale, and we were glad to
-get out of the well of warm air and follow the water for a mile or so
-to the marshy upland. Here the walking was soft and pleasant. Water
-in our boots was no hardship, and we even hoped that there would be
-many waterfalls in our gully. Then came the dilemma and our decision
-to keep to the main stream. But the aspect of the Raven Crag gully on
-our right, as we skirted the boggy ground below us, was magnificent.
-Pitch rose above pitch apparently without any easy stretches, and the
-whole gully seemed to form just one vertical chimney in the rocks, five
-hundred feet high. Moss Ghyll itself is not grander than the Raven Crag
-gully as it appeared that afternoon to our longing gaze, and even now
-that the details of the latter climb are impressed vividly in my mind I
-can assure myself that it was one of the finest I have ever undertaken
-in Cumberland.
-
-We followed our watercourse right up to its beginning close to a
-little pass over towards Langstrath. In general appearance it somewhat
-resembled Piers Ghyll, with its slight gradient and short pitches,
-its rotten walls and unavoidable water. But in respect to the last
-consideration we were almost exempted from a wetting, for the ghyll was
-nearly dry, and only in the direct ascent of one pitch did we run any
-risk of a drenching. No doubt the normal state of the gully is very
-much worse than we found it.
-
-With hazy impression of a hundred-feet pitch we came provided with two
-eighty-feet lengths of rope, but managed our climb with one only. The
-first pitch was about fifteen feet high; the left wall was feasible,
-the direct climb involved the passage through a dripping cave and out
-by a hole in the roof, and the right side of the gully was of steep
-grass and insecure rock. We took to the latter, and with care managed
-the ascent without dislodging much that might help later climbers.
-Above this we had a view of a waterfall about fifty or sixty yards
-further up, and inasmuch as the rocks showed signs of nailed boots we
-were for some time prevailed upon to believe that we had really found
-our quest.
-
-The bed of the stream was rough but easy for a while. Two small pitches
-about six feet high scarcely gave us pause before we reached the
-foot of the waterfall that we had seen from the first pitch. It was
-about twelve yards high; the walls were four or five feet apart, and
-glistening with the wet. They did not appear to offer very excellent
-holds, but I found it possible to face the fall and utilize as
-footholds sundry diminutive ledges on either side. It was a case of
-spanning the gully and walking up. About twenty feet from the bottom
-the holds on the left wall were somewhat greasy, but a yard higher the
-ledges on the right had so much improved that it was a safe venture
-to pull over to that side and effect a traverse to the top of the
-double obstacle over which the water was falling. While the others
-were rapidly following, we were surprised to hear voices from above. I
-advanced a little, and discovered two young men perched precariously
-on the face of the steep wall to the right. Almost at the same moment
-a large stone fell from their feet towards us, and, in an ecstasy of
-fear lest they should bombard our last man, who was yet in difficulties
-bestriding the gully below, we shouted to them to stay still a bit
-and wait for us to advance to a place of safety. Then with all speed
-we clambered up to them, and let them down on the rope into the gully
-again. They were distinctly in peril; that side of the ghyll was as
-treacherous, with its loose splinters of rock and steep unreliable
-grass, as it could manage to be without falling by its own weight. The
-top was slightly overhanging, and could bear no extra pulling. The men
-were inexperienced; one of them had no nails in his boots; they had
-walking-sticks tied tightly to their wrists with string, and when we
-reached them they were tired out with the physical and mental strain.
-We reflected on our wonderful good fortune in choosing this gully, and
-thought with some bitterness that this was the way that the noblest of
-sports acquired its notoriety for great danger. It transpired that they
-had scrambled down into the gully at the side of the waterfall that we
-had just climbed, and saw no means of getting out of the hole excepting
-by this loose wall.
-
-We were now at the foot of a small pitch about twenty-five feet high.
-It was divided by a vertical buttress, and the water was flowing down
-to the left. The right-hand side seemed rather insecure, so I climbed
-some thirty feet up the wall of the gully again, and the second man
-clambered up the right-hand recess, confident in the support of the
-rope if his foothold gave way. He then traversed easily to the top of
-the pitch, and drew in my rope as I descended to his level and followed
-him. We asked the last man how were the passengers to be conveyed
-up the pitch. He replied, with perhaps just a touch of malice, that
-the direct passage through the water was the shortest, quickest, and
-cheapest route to the top, and we at the summit were of the same mind.
-Then our tourists were tied separately to the rope, and hauled up
-through the fall. It was very uncomfortable for them, but we got as
-wet ourselves later on. We hoped that their bedraggled condition would
-prompt them to a speedy descent and a relinquishment, for that day at
-least, of the joys of crag-climbing. That pitch was the last in the
-gully of any magnitude, and our friends were able to walk out easily on
-to the open fell and so down to Borrowdale. We ourselves gave one last
-look around for the hundred-feet fall that was to finish Combe Ghyll,
-and then, finding it not, we bore rapidly westwards across the mountain
-in search of the genuine article. [Illustration:
-
- PLATE VIII.
-
-PILLAR ROCK, EAST SIDE (p. 257).
-
-About 200 feet of Rock are shown.
-
- _a_ Left Pisgah Route.
- _b_ East Pisgah Chimney.
- _c_ Right Pisgah Route.
- _d_ Start of Slab and Notch Route.
- _e_ The Slab.
- _f_ The Notch.
- _g_ The Ledge.
- _h_ Pendlebury Traverse.
- _k_ The Curtain.
-
- A High Man.
- B Pisgah.
- C Low Man.
- D Jordan.
- E East Jordan Gully.
- F Great Chimney.
- G Savage Gully.]
-
-As we skirted the foot of the crags we passed two small gullies that
-rose steeply above us, and that for a moment made us stop to consider
-their qualifications. In twenty minutes from the top of Combe Ghyll we
-came to the first deep and well marked watercourse. It was our Raven
-Crag Gully, and when we peered up into its dark recesses we felt
-that good sport was at last before us. We finished the remnants of our
-lunch and drank a little water. It was not a tempting beverage, for
-the rocks just above were covered with objectionable vegetation, and
-the supply was so much below the average that the pools seemed almost
-stagnant. Also, I was haunted with the recollection of a dead sheep
-that we had passed in the other gully, lying on a ledge close to the
-stream. Mountain water is not always free from microbes, especially in
-those craggy regions where sheep come to grief.
-
-We started on the climb close by a little pool of water at the foot
-of a short and greasy pitch. It could have been taken direct, but
-we worked round the buttress on the left and entered the gully a
-few feet higher. Then, penetrating well into the recess, we were at
-once confronted by the first big pitch. A steep buttress divided the
-gully into two parts, the left-hand recess being cut deeply into
-the mountain and forming a long and narrow waterfall. This was the
-true bed of the gully. To the right of the buttress the recess was
-comparatively shallow, but its easier inclination somewhat compensated
-for its exposed position, and we found that the footholds were just
-sufficient to render a rapid advance possible. About forty feet up I
-craved the second man’s helping hand, but while he was advancing to
-offer assistance an easy way of swarming up the buttress commended
-itself; I found a resting-place at the level of the top of the pitch,
-eighty or ninety feet above the foot of the fall, where the second man
-could join me before I ventured on the traverse round to the bed of the
-gully. The traverse reminded us of the steps over the buttress from the
-Tennis Court ledge in Moss Ghyll, and was no doubt a place to respect
-in wet or icy weather. Our last man came up more directly, keeping on
-the inner side of the buttress for the first half of the climb and then
-working straight up the pitch. Excepting for an awkward bit of some
-three feet at the middle of the ascent, his route had advantages over
-ours. The rocks throughout were splendid, and their warmth and dryness
-made the scrambling easy.
-
-A yard or two further, over great boulders bestrewn in the bed of
-the gully, and we were brought up at the foot of the second great
-obstacle. Here the two side walls approached to within a distance of
-four feet of each other, and straight down the centre from a height of
-seventy feet dripped the weak promise of a second waterfall. Close to
-the water it was impossible to ascend, but some ten feet away from it
-suitable ledges on either side discovered themselves. These enabled me
-to use both walls in a directly vertical ascent for so long as they
-were within four feet of each other. Then I pulled over to a crack on
-the right and performed a safety wriggle to more open ground above,
-whence it was easy to clamber over the big boulders at the top of the
-pitch. The second man was asked to prospect the route on the other
-side of the left wall, and came up with the report that the traverse
-out of the main gully was easy and that the rest of the ascent, about
-eighty feet of solid rock, was just comfortable hand-and-foot work
-all through. While the third was adopting the same tactics which we
-afterwards remembered had been employed by a previous party from
-Keswick, I went on to inspect the next obstacle. It certainly was
-the worst-looking pitch in the whole ascent. A large cave was formed
-by two massive boulders jammed between the narrow walls seventy feet
-above our heads. The first-floor of the cave was fifty feet up, and
-from its roof dripped the inevitable water-supply to damp our daring
-ardour. The walls of the gully were close together and covered with
-wet moss. Holds were very scarce, and for a moment we considered the
-advisability of working out on the right as others had done before
-us, and traversing into the gully above the cave. But a tentative
-backing-up in the main chimney gave some hope of success in the direct
-attack; and abandoning all idea of making a final exit with dry
-garments, I cautiously worked up the inner face of a leaf of rock on
-the right wall, the others steadying my feet on sundry infinitesimal
-ledges so long as I was within reach, and then supporting me with words
-of encouragement and approval. When within six feet of the floor of
-the cave it became necessary to wedge well into the chimney, with back
-against the left and scanty hold opposite. Then a desperate wriggle
-gave me a lift of about eighteen inches and the handholds improved
-sufficiently for haulage. Leaving the left wall, I could just thrust
-my knee in a corner under the fall, and lever up to the opposite side.
-Next a few easy ledges brought me into the cave, and I paused to wring
-the moisture from my coat and cap before inviting the others to follow
-on. By regarding their manœuvres and subsequent criticism it impressed
-me as likely that I might have saved myself some exertion, and perhaps
-have better avoided the water, by keeping up the edge of the leaf of
-rock instead of attacking its inner face. But that course would expose
-the leader to a greater risk of slipping at a failing hold, and would
-demand more ingenious tactics.
-
-Our cave was large and airy; the water passed into it at the back, so
-that we could easily stay at the entrance and avoid the fall. High up
-above our heads were a couple of apertures in the roof, probably wide
-enough for our passage, but difficult to reach. The right wall of the
-gully was well broken up, and without ado we set ourselves at it and
-worked round the edge of the nearer overhanging block as a step to
-the other. Some thirty feet of my rope ran out before the second man
-advanced from the bed of the cave: not that the climbing refused to
-admit an earlier start, but that he was busy wringing out his clothes.
-I awaited his advance impatiently, for a bend in the gully prevented
-my seeing the next pitch above us--the last in the climb. But when he
-was firmly braced against the top boulder, hauling in the rope of the
-last man, I advanced to the end of my tether to steal an early glance
-at the pitch that report had spoken of so respectfully. Robinson’s
-account in the Wastdale book was succinct enough: ‘A return on to the
-floor of the ghyll was made near the top of the third pitch, when a
-little scrambling led to a very fine waterfall more than 100 feet high.
-Here climb in the water as little as you can; then diverge slightly
-on to the right hand of the ghyll just where the water spouts over a
-small recess; next traverse across a rather difficult slab into the
-cave under the final boulder, which is climbed on the left hand and
-is the last difficulty.’ The only part of his prescription that I had
-carried in my mind was the ‘climb in the water as little as you can,’
-and we had been applying it all day with varying success. The trouble
-always is to make any headway at all against a descending mass of cold
-water, and we had come to regard the advice as indicative solely of
-the fact that an available route was only to be found in dry weather.
-To climb in the water as little as possible meant to choose a dry
-season and to mount by the usual line of flow. Another account that
-may prove interesting was given me by Messrs. G. and A. Abraham: ‘Some
-enjoyable scrambling in the bed of the ghyll brought us quickly to
-the last obstacle and certainly the finest part of the whole climb.
-The climber is immediately reminded here of the great amphitheatre
-in the Screes Gully, for, although on a much smaller scale, we have
-the same gigantic buttresses and receding slabs, with three suggested
-exits. The most obvious way out here is up the waterfall as usual.
-This we attempted until the amount of water on the steep, slippery
-rocks forced us out on to the difficult right-hand wall, about seventy
-feet above the beginning of the pitch. Here we climbed straight
-upwards, and, traversing round a very awkward corner, landed right
-on the top of the pitch, the leader requiring considerable help for
-the last twenty feet.’ Our own experiences were a little different, a
-consequence of our fixed intention to force a route directly upwards
-without any traversing away on to the right wall of the gully. Also,
-we were relieved of the necessity of avoiding water, because it fell
-too diffusely to be avoided, and so small an area was left to any of us
-that could be affected seriously by further saturation. The first part
-of the pitch was perfectly simple. We could employ holds on either side
-and clamber up to a platform made by an un-jammed stone with rounded
-corners that had been caught in the cleft. It was safe enough for our
-purposes, and two men could lodge themselves conveniently above it.
-Straight up overhead was a formidable chimney that looked feasible in
-its upper portion but impossible to reach directly from below. A long
-block of rock twenty feet high, possibly part of the living mountain,
-prevented a passage up the pitch to the immediate right of the
-chimney; but between the smooth slabs of wet rock that formed the right
-wall of the gully and this long boulder a narrow crack wound its way up
-to Robinson’s cave, and it occurred to all of us simultaneously that
-the crack might be negotiated and the awkward slab-traverse thereby
-avoided. But the crack was as nothing to begin with, and from our
-rickety platform we could obtain but scanty notion of its safety higher
-up. I suggested advancing a little to prospect, craving a shoulder to
-start from, and a steadying hand for my completer confidence on the
-doubtful little ledges that we were calling footholds. The first ten
-feet went very well, but although I found the crack useful for the
-left knee, it was unable to accept the responsibility of my complete
-stability. I sang out for another steadying hand, and my most admirable
-second clambered on to the shoulders of the last man without a moment’s
-hesitation. They plastered themselves flat against the slab, and I felt
-my right foot cease its uncanny trembling as the outstretched hand held
-it firmly in the niche it longed to use. This was downright luxury, and
-in my sense of security there stole a moment’s shame at the thought of
-so much dependence on the others. But there! in climbing as in football
-the combination is everything in the highest developments of the game,
-and though success may now and again be due to the unaided efforts of
-one man, the full satisfaction that should follow victory will only be
-felt by the whole party when all have contributed something to the
-manœuvring. Be it remembered that in crag-climbing two heads are better
-than one, even if the second head is only used as a foothold. But
-there we were, three links in a chain that reached from the platform
-to the widest part of the crack that was to lead us to the cave. The
-position was not to be dwelt upon, and I hastened to relieve the others
-of their common burden. In the crack and at arm’s length above me was
-a well-secured angular stone round which the rope could be passed.
-Using it as a hold I was able to quit the precarious foothold on the
-right and thrust the left knee well into the crack. The position was
-one that could admit of no slip, the leg being sufficient to hold the
-body well in; and before quitting that favoured spot I untied the rope
-and slipped the free end through the hole at the back of the jammed
-stone before tying on again. The others had descended by this time to
-the platform and were taking in all the slack. Whatever the difficulty
-of the few remaining moves to the cave, I was insured against a big
-fall and could trust to the belaying of the little angular block that
-had so neatly adjusted itself to our needs. As a matter of fact the
-precaution was scarcely necessary, though eminently proper under the
-circumstances. The ledges above me were good and firm, and with the
-rope gently paid out from below I reached the cave without more trouble.
-
-The floor was sloping; but a comfortable and reposeful attitude could
-be indulged in, well at the back, far from the dripping eaves of the
-cave. But I had committed an error of judgment with the rope, threading
-the hole from above the jammed stone instead of from below, before
-tying the bowline round my waist. At the time the importance of that
-consideration had not occurred to me, but now in my ease, hauling up
-the slack between myself and the second, I felt a sudden jerk. The
-rope was wrapped completely round the jammed stone, whose angularity,
-that had before commended itself to the hands, now introduced so much
-friction that the rope would no longer slip freely round it. We were
-perplexed for a while, till our enterprising middleman, who had many
-times before offered a key to our difficulties, proposed climbing up
-as a leader, with the second rope attached to his waist, and the fixed
-rope above him used for steadying purposes whenever necessary. We knew
-that the jammed stone that fixed the upper rope could not be dislodged
-easily, and indeed I was able to hold on to my end and oppose any
-dangerous leverage. He climbed up with every confidence, and reached
-the crack safely. Then, repeating my movement with the left leg, he
-held on while disentangling my rope, tying himself to its lower end as
-soon as the complications were unravelled. A few moments more gave me a
-companion in the cave, and built, as it was, for two persons only, he
-mildly suggested my withdrawal for the benefit of the third man. Thence
-our method of advance was practically identical with Robinson’s. We had
-a little walk of six feet over towards the left wall of the gully, by
-ledges that lay on the very verge of a sheer drop of eighty feet to the
-foot of the pitch. Then the ascent was continued by a narrow crack that
-commenced in a somewhat sensational manner, not so much by reason of
-its difficulty as by the feeling of nothingness to fall back upon in
-case of a slip. The second was at my heels, and he was firmly braced up
-by the sole remaining tenant of the cave. Lifting the left leg as high
-up the crack as possible, and accepting a push from behind, I reached
-over a slab on the right and dragged up on to it. That was to be the
-last big effort; the final pitch was all below, and the gully eased
-away above me to its open finish. I shouted the tidings to the others.
-With all eagerness they followed, the last man claiming with pride the
-discovery of a grand foothold that he had unearthed or unmossed at the
-lower edge of the slab.
-
-Well! we had had a rare little fight; the gully had taken us an hour
-and twenty minutes of continuous work, and we voted it a piece of solid
-good business.
-
-There remained the long walk back to Wastdale and to dinner. I proposed
-getting there in an hour and a half, and started on the journey with
-a pipe in my mouth. We had about three miles of rough, high-level
-skirting along the 2,000-feet contour to Sprinkling Tarn, two miles of
-descent to the Burnthwaite level, and a mile of valley walking at the
-finish. The consequence was that very little smoking was enjoyed. We
-were a quarter of an hour behind time at Burnthwaite, a laudable spurt
-in the valley being abruptly terminated by the discovery of another
-climbing-party on the track. We had found that if two parties were
-late, dinner would await their arrival; hence our motive for haste was
-removed and we composed our gait and our thoughts for a more sedate
-entry into the hotel yard.
-
-NOTE: In the first edition of this book, I followed Mr. Haskett Smith’s
-nomenclature and located the climb in Eagle Crag. It seems that this
-shoulder of Glaramara goes by the name of Raven Crag, and I have
-changed the name of the gully accordingly. There are many Raven Crags
-and many Eagle Crags in the district, but climbers need only be warned
-against confusing the Raven Crag Gully on Glaramara with the Raven Crag
-Chimney on Great Gable.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-_THE PILLAR ROCK_
-
-
-Mosedale is closed in by Yewbarrow, Red Pike, Pillar, Looking Stead,
-and Kirkfell. These form a noble amphitheatre of dark mountains, a
-cordon through which it is not easy to break. Between the last two
-hills we can effect the passage of the Black Sail over into Ennerdale,
-which passes down behind the Pillar to the north-west. A more direct
-route to Ennerdale is by Wind Yatt (or Windy Gap), a pass 2,400 feet
-high, between the Pillar and the Red Pike. On the northern or Ennerdale
-side of the Pillar mountain is the famous Rock, beloved of climbers
-great and small. It springs up vertically from the steep fellside, with
-a north face like a cathedral-front 500 feet high. From the summit of
-the fell a descent of 400 feet of steep rock and scree will bring us to
-the nearest part of the crag. From the Liza River at the bottom of the
-valley we have 1,100 feet of grass and scree to tackle before reaching
-the lowest buttresses that support the great wall.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PLATE IX.
-
-PILLAR ROCK, NORTH SIDE (p. 271).
-
-The High Man is about 550 feet above the Nose.
-
- _a_ Shamrock Gully.
- _b_ Great Pitch in _a_.
- _c_ Great Bridge.
- _d_ Shamrock Chimney.
- _e_ Walker’s Gully.
- _f_ Savage Gully.
- _g_ The Nose.
- _h_ Easy route, North Climb.
- _k_ Cave Pitch.
- _l_ Stomach-traverse.
- _m_ Split-block.
- _n_ The Strid.
- _p_ The Hand-traverse.
- _q_ The Buttress-route.
- _r_ The Ordinary route.
- _s_ The Low Man.
- _t_ The High Man.
- _u_ The Great Chimney.
- _v_ Pisgah.]
-
-From below, the precipice is seen to be divided into two parts by a
-long, black chimney. This is Walker’s Gully, named after the young man
-who fell there in 1883. Its head is the point of convergence of
-sundry lines of scree from the upper fell. It suggests a funnel cut
-down along its centre-line, and scree frequently slides down the sides
-of the funnel and into the gully. This no doubt is the chief reason why
-Walker’s Gully has never been climbed until recently, when snow and
-frost diminished the risk from this cause. It would prove difficult
-under any conditions, and the risk of a battery of stones from above is
-too heavy a handicap for the cautious climber.
-
-The Pillar Rock itself is on the right of the gully, in our view from
-below. The crag on the left is considerably lower, and in fact scarcely
-rises high enough over the head of the gully to be visible from above.
-But from the east it presents an imposing appearance. Its outline
-partly suppresses that of the higher crag beyond, partly combines with
-it, audit is often mistaken for the actual Pillar Rock. Hence the name
-Sham-rock by which it has been known since 1882. It is a mere walk to
-reach the summit from the Pillar Fell. The climbing on the Shamrock
-is not quite so good as that on the neighbouring crag, but it cannot
-well be neglected. On the eastern side is the well-known Shamrock
-Gully, a magnificent looking cleft in the rocks, finishing with a huge
-V-shaped notch at the summit. A natural arch spans the gully
-half-way up, and an obstacle some few feet higher makes a pitch of
-unusual severity--‘one of the stiffest pitches in all Cumberland.’ It
-was first climbed by Mr. Geoffrey Hastings’ party in March, 1887, when
-a bank of snow below the pitch gave a little help. In December, 1890,
-the climb was repeated by a party with the same leader, without the aid
-of snow, and since that date various ascents have been made with and
-without snow. Among others a new route over the obstacle was effected
-in December, 1896, by the writer and three friends. It is probable that
-the pitch turns back fifty per cent. of the people who essay to climb
-it.
-
-On the same eastern face, a few yards further away to the north, is the
-Shamrock Chimney, a thin crack running somewhat irregularly upwards
-to the summit ridge. The credit of the first ascent belongs to Mr.
-John Robinson, whose keen eye and sound judgment made the ascent an
-accomplished fact, on September 23, 1894, within a few days of his
-discovery of the chimney. Shortly afterwards Robinson showed me the
-route, and I was convinced at once that in difficulty and extreme
-interest it was far superior to the Shamrock Gully, and equal to the
-best climbing on the Pillar Rock. The third ascent was made by Dr.
-Lawrence in April, 1895. Not many parties have been up it as yet, and I
-am hoping that the full account of its details here supplied will tempt
-others to attack it.
-
-I have said that the Pillar Rock lies to the right of Walker’s Gully
-when viewed from below. It is bounded on the other or western side by a
-broad hollow in the fell, down which a slender stream flows without
-any abrupt change of level till the foot of the precipice is reached.
-There the ‘Great’ waterfall disturbs the even tenor of its way, and is
-said to offer a formidable obstruction to our approach of the west face
-from below.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE EAST FACE OF THE PILLAR ROCK]
-
-From the Shamrock side we can get the best idea of the shape of the
-Rock. We have first the Pisgah rising out of the upper fellside, a
-pinnacle easily accessible and only forty or fifty feet high. Then
-to the right comes the actual Pillar Rock, the ‘High Man,’ separated
-from Pisgah by a narrow vertical cleft, the ‘Jordan,’ that renders the
-ascent from Pisgah almost an impossibility. At the Jordan two gullies
-meet; one up the east side, short and easy, the other up the west side,
-longer and more difficult.
-
-The outline of the rock is marked by a notch to the right of the
-summit, where the Great Chimney finishes, and a little further
-northwards it shows a sudden drop to the level of the Low Man, the
-immense buttress that from below hides the true summit altogether. A
-cairn has been erected on the top of this buttress, and the outline to
-the right of this falls in one vertical drop of 400 feet to the foot
-of the rock. This is the great north wall. It is supported at the base
-by a minor buttress, the ‘Nose,’ that stretches across the full width
-of the north wall, and along the top of which, immediately below the
-precipice, an easy terrace takes us across to the Great Waterfall
-from a point near the foot of Walker’s Gully. From the eastern end of
-the traverse rises the Savage Gully, a well-marked cleft with sundry
-branches, reaching to the top of the Low Man.
-
-On the western side the rock appears much more formidable. The chimney
-up to the Jordan looks black, and its crest is overhanging. The
-wall of the High Man itself is built up with long slabs of smooth
-rock, broken only by the smallest grass ledges, and its difficulties
-appear to increase near the summit. This side of the Low Man looks as
-inaccessible as the great north wall. Nevertheless a series of short
-gullies starting from the foot of the High Man lead obliquely up
-towards the left and offer a very easy route to the southern end of the
-Low Man, whence to the summit the climbing is but moderately difficult.
-
-The best ways of reaching the Pillar Rock are given in full detail
-by Mr. Haskett Smith. It will here be sufficient to remark that from
-Wastdale the usual course followed is to ascend by the path towards
-Black Sail Pass until about ten minutes beyond Gatherstone Beck, then
-to make for the ridge on the left leading over Looking Stead and up to
-the summit of Pillar Fell. Thence a descent of 450 feet in a northerly
-direction brings us to the Pillar Rock. Sometimes Mosedale is followed
-straight up, and the steep slope climbed that leads to Windy Gap.
-Thence the ridge to the right takes us in twenty minutes of easy
-going to the summit of the Pillar Fell. Both these routes involve an
-unnecessary ascent of 450 feet, and the ‘High-Level Route’ was designed
-to avoid this waste of time and energy. Looking Stead is reached as
-before from Gatherstone Beck, and the wire fence followed up for a few
-minutes as far as the head of Green Cove. Here a cairn marks the spot
-where a rough path starts down the cove. We descend only fifty feet or
-so, and then turn round to the left and skirt along the north-east side
-of the fell. It is unsafe to attempt the traverse for the first time in
-a mist, but with clear weather the various cairns that mark successive
-points on the route can be easily discerned, and a half-hour’s walk
-brings us to the wide scree gully running down by the eastern side of
-the Shamrock. To reach the foot of the Pillar Rock is a simple matter.
-The photograph facing page 271 was taken across this scree, and it
-will be seen that the route down to the Nose is only a walk round the
-foot of the Shamrock. A broad, sloping corridor in the lee of a steep
-rock-wall further up the fellside, enables us to steer clear of the
-Shamrock cliffs and to reach their head without any hand-and-foot
-scrambling. Thence across the scree descending to Walker’s Gully we see
-Pisgah and the High Man, and with care we can now make the traverse to
-the foot of the Jordan Gully. There we are in a position to start any
-of the ordinary short climbs on the Pillar Rock. The west route can be
-reached by turning Pisgah on the left and descending the west scree
-for 300 feet. The long climbs up the north face are started from the
-Nose.
-
-The Pillar Rock was first climbed by an Ennerdale cooper named
-Atkinson, who in 1826 ascended by the west side. The ‘slab-and-notch’
-route on the east side, starting from the upper screes above Walker’s
-Gully, was devised by Messrs. Conybeare and A. J. Butler in 1863,
-though it would seem that the same side was successfully attacked a
-year or two before. Matthew Barnes, a Keswick guide, found a route
-across the eastern face to the Low Man, and thence back along the
-summit ridge to the highest point. He was climbing with Mr. Graves, of
-Manchester. Mr. W. P. Haskett Smith found in 1882 a direct way up to
-the High Man from the Jordan, and a second route straight up the wall
-a few yards to the east of the first. Two years later he reached the
-summit by a particularly hazardous course still further to the east,
-passing up close to the buttress whose lower end marks the start of the
-‘slab-and-notch’ route. In the same year he made the first ascent by
-the Great Chimney on the east side. Mr. Haskett Smith named the first
-three routes the ‘West Jordan,’ the ‘Central Jordan,’ and the ‘East
-Jordan’ climbs respectively; the latter route is never undertaken, and
-the other two are often termed the ‘Left Pisgah’ and ‘Right Pisgah.’
-
-For many years Mr. Haskett Smith made visits to the north face,
-endeavouring to reach the summit of the Low Man from the easy ledge at
-its foot. On the right his course was limited by the almost seamless
-wall of rock that gives the Pillar Rock its appearance of hopeless
-inaccessibility from Ennerdale. On the left the Savage Gully cut off
-all chance of traversing to the eastern side of the rock. The space
-between was strictly limited, and it narrowed as he climbed higher.
-Within thirty feet of an easy scree gully that obviously led to the
-summit of the Low Man, the only available course had dwindled down to a
-slender rib of rock in a dangerously exposed situation, much too risky
-to attack without guarantee of its feasibility.
-
-In 1891 this climber, with Messrs. Hastings and Slingsby, succeeded
-at last in finding a way of descending into the Savage Gully at that
-point. Their leader then mounted its left wall and worked easily across
-to the foot of the scree gully. The others followed, and the ‘long
-climb’ up the Pillar Rock became an accomplished fact. No published
-detailed description of the route is known to the writer.
-
-SHAMROCK GULLY.--This is rather an unpleasant climb for those
-who dislike loose stones. The bed of the gully is very steep and
-narrow. It is followed straight up the centre, by using horizontal
-shelves on either side that now and again flake off in a most
-unexpected way. Extreme care is necessary on the part of the leader,
-for his followers cannot avoid any fragments that he may dislodge.
-The climbing is otherwise easy, and very little distance should exist
-between the separate members of the party.
-
-Half-way up the gully the bridge is passed, high above our heads when
-no snow is about, but occasionally completely blocked by heavy drifts.
-Next the bed of the gully runs up into a little cave, formed by the
-huge jammed stone that presents the only genuine obstacle in the ascent.
-
-The block is long and narrow. It leaves just enough room on each side,
-between the walls of the gully, for a thin chimney. That on the right
-is very difficult to enter but comparatively easy to follow up. The
-other is designed differently; it leads the climber by a temptingly
-easy beginning into a position twenty-five feet up, that will in many
-cases pound him most distressingly, and his descent will be uncommonly
-awkward. Hence it is that the right-hand chimney was for nine years the
-only course adopted.
-
-The process of backing-up is, as a rule, safe, though fatiguing.
-In the case of the Shamrock pitch, the leader will never find his
-attitudinising comfortable. If he starts from the shoulders of a
-companion, he can at any rate enter the chimney; but its walls are
-undercut, and he needs all his strength to brace himself firmly between
-them. A little higher and there is risk of jamming too well. Twenty
-feet up he has to turn towards the block and work up over a shelf on to
-the scree above the pitch. It is not easy for his companions to follow
-on, even with the aid of the rope.
-
-The left-hand route was climbed in winter. Sundry weak holds were
-frozen into position, but the rounded top of the great block was
-glazed completely, and the finish was of great difficulty. Dr. Collier
-had told me that he thought the upper portion just possible, and our
-party of December, 1896, decided to try it. I started up the first
-twenty feet and then found the glaze of ice too heavy for further
-advance. It was not very difficult to traverse out of the chimney
-into a wider gully on the left; but after rising a few feet in this,
-the great smooth slabs in front completely barred the way, and I
-attempted to return to the chimney. This could not be effected, and
-hitching the rope over two small excrescences on the wall I climbed
-down the retaining ridge and rejoined my companions. This was very
-unsatisfactory, though I was glad enough to be in safety again. We had
-a long discussion about the pitch, and referred to many engineering
-principles. At last I suggested that the lightest member of the party,
-weighing not more than nine stones, should take the lead, and that I
-should follow on closely as far as the difficult spot. There I proposed
-to brace firmly in the chimney and thrust him straight up to the frozen
-grass above. He looked at me apologetically and said that he would go
-up if I insisted on it, but would rather hear of some different plan
-that deprived him of the honour of leading. Then a bold but heavy
-man spoke up and volunteered to take his place. It was my turn to
-decline, and we felt completely at a loss. At last I went up again to
-the turning-point of the previous venture, and for the sake of safety
-threaded my rope through two or three jammed stones in the chimney.
-Then followed the longest member close behind me, likewise threading
-his rope. I climbed on to his head--it had been tested many times
-before--and then got him to steady my left foot on a frozen hold half a
-yard higher. An ice-axe was then passed up from the cave, and the pick
-rammed hard into the frozen grass above the boulder. The handle then
-offered enough stay to enable me to pull up over the smooth icy surface
-of the boulder, and the pitch was conquered. I cut steps up the snow to
-a safe place for belaying the others, and they then followed singly on
-a long rope. The rest of the gully was simple walking.
-
-SHAMROCK CHIMNEY.--This is shown very clearly in the photograph
-facing page 271, as a series of vertical pitches almost in a single
-straight line from top to bottom of the Shamrock. We take to the first
-set of easy rocks on the north side of the great gully, and for about
-160 feet climb over irregularly disposed crags interspersed with grass.
-These are usually wet and slippery, and they finish at the extreme
-south end of the grassy terrace crossing the Shamrock face.
-
-We keep straight up and enter the lower extremity of a narrow chimney
-thirty feet high. Its two pitches are scarcely separated, and require
-careful climbing up to the narrow cavern on the next grassy ledge. The
-first real difficulty now lies in front. Ten feet of steep smooth rock
-are to be climbed before we can enter the foot of the next chimney, and
-the leader will do well to accept a shoulder-up and a lift with an axe
-in tackling this wall. It is practically impossible in icy weather. The
-chimney is easy enough, with plenty of jammed stones for a distance
-of twenty-five feet; but it then dwindles down to nothing, and a very
-exposed bit of work follows for the leader, who has to crawl up some
-six or eight feet of rock without any respectable holds. This brings
-him to another small cavern just sufficiently large for him to take
-breath and recover his strength. He cannot see his party below, and
-in manipulating the rope for the second man he will need to shout his
-directions. Then follow a short traverse to the right, and an upward
-scramble over more broken ground to an interesting splayed-out chimney.
-
-Thence a steep grass slope takes us up to an open gully with a great
-overhanging boulder. It may be passed straight over or by a through
-route, and we are then at the end of the chimney climbing. A turn
-to the right leads to a splendid ridge that runs to the top of the
-Shamrock, and offers a finish as charming as that of the Scawfell
-Pinnacle from the Low Man. The work is over when a perched flat-topped
-stone is mounted; and then we walk to the summit of the Shamrock and
-down by easy ledges to the screes above Walker’s Gully.
-
-PILLAR ROCK, JORDAN CLIMBS.--Very easy scrambling from the
-upper fell will bring the climber to the summit of Pisgah. There
-is a short chimney on the east side that leads to the same spot; it
-is easy to enter, but the exit at the top is very stiff. The view
-of the near wall of the High Man is interesting, and there is ample
-opportunity for studying the two direct climbs before descending to
-the gap. They are both difficult, but the rocks are so much scratched
-by nailed boots that the difficulty does not consist in finding the
-way up. It is generally supposed to be impossible to descend into the
-gap from Pisgah, but inspection will show that there is a series of
-small ledges a little to the west, down which a safe passage can be
-effected. The Left Pisgah route starts up at once from the _col_. The
-holds are only moderately good for the first thirty feet, and fail to
-give satisfaction when wet or icy. Next it is possible to force the
-body into a narrow crack, and for a little while the climber can cease
-his strugglings and rest himself. Above this the rock is more broken
-and the holds are better. A thin leaf of rock is crossed and a downward
-view obtained of the Right Pisgah final chimney. Then the slope is
-eased off, and the cairn on the High Man is but a couple of yards away.
-
-The Right Pisgah route is generally started low down the East Jordan
-Gully. This offers pleasant hand-and-foot work, but no difficulty
-whatever up to the Jordan. But before reaching the gap a square recess
-on the right is entered, and then a passage is made over smooth rocks
-to a clean-cut right-angled corner forty feet high on the south-east
-side of the High Man. It is just possible to traverse round from the
-Jordan to the top of the square recess, and so up over the slabs to the
-corner, but the variation is not worth much.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-“ROUND THE NOTCH”--PILLAR ROCK. EAST SIDE
-
-(_Face page 267_)]
-
-The crack climb that now starts straight up the corner is one of the
-neatest things on the Pillar Rock. The right wall is used for steadying
-purposes when, half-way up, a jammed stone makes it necessary to emerge
-from the crack. Some of the holds have splintered away during the last
-few years, but there are yet enough to satisfy one’s needs. The finish
-is a splendid pull up with the arms on to the leaf of rock already
-referred to at the top of the Left Pisgah climb.
-
-SLAB AND NOTCH ROUTE.--The upper part of the Great Chimney
-offers no difficulty to the climber. Its southern boundary is a long
-narrow buttress called the ‘Curtain,’ stretching from the top of
-Walker’s Gully, to the summit of the High Man. Viewed in profile from
-the Pillar Fell, the Curtain shows three distinct notches two-thirds
-of the way up; they are about thirty feet above a slab set at an angle
-of thirty degrees, and attainable by rough scrambling from the foot of
-the East Jordan Gully. The easy route passes along this slab, directly
-upwards to the middle notch and thence round the Curtain to the bed of
-the Great Chimney. The walk along the slab is to some people a critical
-undertaking, for a slip would have very serious consequences. A thin
-crack on the line of march makes the course safer, unless ice or snow
-have filled it up, but it is not an unusual sight to see men tackling
-the walk on all-fours. The Curtain may be crossed at the lowest notch,
-the ‘Ledge,’ by good firm rocks, and the Great Chimney entered on
-the other side. Formerly it was the usual course to reach the bed of
-the chimney at the lower part of the steep grass by what was called
-the ‘Eight-foot Drop.’ But there is no need to drop at all; an easy
-traverse from either the Notch or the Ledge brings the climber above
-the steep grass, and virtually at the end of his cragwork. The chimney
-finishes with scree, and lands the climber within a few feet of the
-cairn on his left.
-
-VARIATIONS ON THE EAST FACE.--It is possible to make a way
-straight up the Great Chimney from its foot, joining the easy route
-about a hundred feet up. Haskett Smith took this course in 1884,
-commencing the climb on the stepped buttresses of the Curtain. Since
-then the rock has had time to loosen a little, and climbers very rarely
-enter the chimney that way.
-
-The _Pendlebury traverse_ is an excellent variation of the ordinary
-route, a popular scramble first indicated by Professor R. Pendlebury,
-of Cambridge. From the slab the way lies straight up to the notch in
-the Curtain, and then along a horizontal ledge in its south face as
-far as the corner where it meets the High Man. Thence up the corner is
-straightforward chimney-work, and on emergence at the top the cairn
-will be visible close at hand on the left.
-
-The traverse looks difficult until it is closely approached, when it
-will be found that handholds abound on the wall, and that the ledge is
-perfectly firm and continuous across the whole width of the Curtain.
-
-The chimney in the corner of the south side of the Curtain can be
-entered much lower down. From the slab a way lies straight up into it,
-but the grass holds are not particularly pleasant if wet, and the first
-thirty feet are severe.
-
-From the head of Walker’s Gully a way may be found to the Low Man,
-below the immense slabs that crown the north-east buttresses. It
-is best to climb the Shamrock first and prospect the route. Sheep
-occasionally manage to get across, and the _Old Wall_ was built many
-years ago to prevent their passage, but it is now ruined. Sometimes,
-ignoring Badminton, they still venture across without a rope, and their
-weaker members are liable to get crag-bound. Climbers can tell many
-tales of famished sheep found in appalling situations on the Pillar
-Rock. They are too weak to resist the slipping on of a rope, and are
-simply hauled or slung out of every difficulty till a safe pasturage is
-reached.
-
-THE WEST CLIMB.--This was the route first discovered. It is much
-longer than any of the ways on the south or east side, and possesses
-but few interesting details. It is more popular as a descent than as an
-ascent.
-
-It is seemingly impossible to climb directly up the west wall of the
-High Man, but in the walk down the west screes it will be noticed
-that the rocks of the Low Man are more broken, and that several short
-scree gullies sloping upwards to the left mark a rough route straight
-towards the Low Man cairn. The course is best examined from a distance,
-across the great western gully; it lies as close to the High Man as
-is possible without undertaking anything but gully scrambling. Not
-infrequently climbers find themselves astray on narrow grassy ledges
-too much to the right. I experienced the same thing myself when first
-attempting to find the way up, and found the ascent by no means so easy
-as report had credited the west climb.
-
-From the level of the Low Man the way lies very nearly along the
-sky-line to the highest point. The High Man is struck at the end of a
-square corner in the rock, and there is some excellent work for the
-arms during the next thirty feet of ascent.
-
-It is easier to turn over slightly to the east side, and up by the
-great jagged boulders on the crest of the ridge. The _Slingsby crack_
-is a short but rather stiff variation a little on the right or western
-side of this route and is particularly interesting. Formerly a loose
-block at its upper end gave the climber an occasional scare, but there
-is nothing unsafe now in the form of detached boulders, and the ridge
-can be followed with confidence to the High Man cairn. Nail marks are
-strongly in evidence all through the crag-work; the leader should not
-attempt the route if snow or rain prevents their recognition, unless he
-is already perfectly acquainted with the way.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE NORTH FACE OF THE PILLAR ROCK]
-
-THE NORTH CLIMB.--For several months after the first ascent
-it was difficult to learn anything of the details of the route up
-the Ennerdale face of the Pillar Rock. The only way was to persuade
-some one who had been up to take the lead and act as guide; for a
-complicated course that had taken Haskett Smith eight or nine years to
-work out was not likely to be mastered easily by any one who had not
-made a special study of the north face.
-
-My own chance came in the summer of 1893. Mr. John Robinson called for
-me at Buttermere one fine afternoon, and took me off to Ennerdale with
-another friend, Mr. F. W. Hill. We left the village at two o’clock,
-and were back again after a successful ascent by eight in the evening;
-whence it may be inferred that Buttermere is as good a starting-point
-for the Pillar Rock as Wastdale or Seatoller.
-
-Our guide led us rapidly by the shortest route over Scarth Gap, and
-across Ennerdale to the foot of the Pillar Rock. Then a fifty-feet
-length of rope made its first appearance; it had been hidden in a bag
-during our walk, lest we should alarm the folks about Gatesgarth. We
-tied ourselves up, and made for the eastern end of the terrace across
-the Nose.
-
-Robinson then started along the terrace, and in a few yards scrambled
-up to a shelf on the left, five or six feet high, which gave us easy
-access to the lower portion of the Savage Gully. This latter has never
-been climbed along its whole length. If the gully were moderately easy,
-the north climb would be far less complex. But for a great portion
-of its length the side walls are at right angles to each other; the
-corner is nearly vertical, and the only resting places are diminutive,
-grass-grown ledges placed too far apart for any safe employment of the
-rope. The right wall of the gully forms part of a conspicuous buttress
-on the north face, whose western side is much more broken and less
-dangerous to ascend.
-
-The route that was being shown us lay along the Savage Gully for about
-sixty feet, then across to the west side of the buttress and up a
-vertical branch gully with sundry small chimneys in it. Higher up,
-we were told, it would be necessary to round a cliff still further
-to the right, by means of the _Stomach traverse_, to render further
-ascent possible. We objected to the inelegant name, but were too far
-advanced to hesitate on the score of a faulty title. Above the traverse
-our climbing would be easier, until the course returned to the Savage
-Gully again. That was to be our _mauvais pas_, and after settling it
-the scramble to the Low Man, and thence to the highest cairn, would be
-scarcely more than a walk.
-
-So spoke our guide, and having delivered himself at some length, with
-an occasional appropriate anecdote thrown in, he concentrated his
-attention on the small pitch that marked our point of arrival at the
-Savage Gully. It was a wall seven feet high with indifferent grassholds
-at the top, and in scrambling up care was needed to avoid dislodging
-loose stones near the edge. It was then easy to clamber into a small
-cave somewhat to the left, and out again by a twisted tunnel at the
-back. Thence Robinson worked upwards over broken ground for a few
-yards, until the point was reached where we were to leave the gully.
-The direct route looked feasible for some distance ahead, but there was
-no questioning the fact of its severity, and we had not come out that
-day for exploration.
-
-A divergence was made along an easy traverse towards the right, to a
-short and narrow chimney that already bore traces of many previous
-struggles. Wherever the rocks were clean and free from scree, we could
-plainly see the scratches of nailed boots along the route. It was here
-that we were rounding the great buttress of Savage Gully, and after a
-little rough-ledge work we arrived at a square corner with a grassy
-floor. Straight up from this floor a cleft offered safe passage. It
-was plentifully supplied with holds, though some discrimination was
-necessary in selecting the firmest. The climbing was delightful, and
-zest was given to it by the magnificent situation. The corner was not
-so deeply impressed in the buttress as to prevent our recognition of
-the vastness of the cliff we were slowly ascending. The view downwards
-just included the little grass platform, and beyond that the wild and
-steep fellside at the foot of the precipice, already some hundreds of
-feet below us.
-
-We kept up the direct route so long as we were able. Then the cleft
-in the corner suddenly dwindled down into the thinnest of cracks,
-and it was obvious that a change of tactics would be necessary. The
-left wall was faultlessly smooth. The right for the most part looked
-just as inaccessible. The grass ledge on which we were standing really
-seemed to suggest finality, the end of our upward progress, and I
-turned to Robinson inquiringly with the impression that some wonderful
-engineering process with the rope was now to be explained to us. We
-knew that such was necessary on the climb, and were prepared by the
-situation to see its application immediately.
-
-But the solution of the difficulty was of the simplest character. A few
-feet from the corner the smooth right wall was split by a single crack
-that passed up at an angle of perhaps thirty degrees and terminated at
-a notch that broke the clean-cut outline of the rock facing us. From
-the notch it certainly seemed as though nothing could be done further,
-even if we got so far. Nevertheless, we were assured that when once
-we were there all doubts would vanish, and we should have the easiest
-hundred feet of scrambling in the whole day’s expedition. The crack was
-the famous _Stomach traverse_; it was reached as long ago as 1884 by
-Haskett Smith in his early exploration of the north face; and the name,
-which had only recently been given to it, was intended to show how the
-passage was supposed to be tackled. One of Willink’s illustrations in
-the Badminton, showing an intrepid cragsman crawling along a ledge
-from left to right, is sometimes criticised as an exaggeration of the
-difficulties that rock-climbers have to overcome. This traverse before
-us was not so easy as the one so cleverly depicted by the artist. It
-sloped upwards, and the ledge was not wide enough for the whole body.
-We were in no sense precariously placed, for the cleft enabled us to
-wedge with security; but the right half of the body was outside the
-leaf of rock on which we hung, and the right leg found no support on
-the vertical wall.
-
-Some twenty feet of wriggling brought us each in turn to the critical
-corner, and there to our amazement we had merely to get up and walk
-away. The wall we had passed was the last obstacle separating us from
-a long stretch of steep grass chimneys and broken rocks. These extend
-from the Nose at the foot of the crags up to the final difficulty,
-now only a hundred feet above us, and offer the easier route up the
-north face. Our own course by the Savage Gully was by far the more
-entertaining one, and under most conditions decidedly safer than the
-other.
-
-From the notch we could either walk straight up to the cave-pitch in
-the corner now facing us, or work easily round a rib of rock on the
-right and join the other route. We chose the former, and found the
-pitch decidedly stiff, the main trouble being to get satisfaction out
-of the diminutive hand-holds on the upper surface of the top boulder.
-However, it was time to be thankful for small mercies, and confidence
-carried us up safely.
-
-A party coming up the easy way would start from the terrace on
-the Nose, close to its highest point. Their route would be quite
-straightforward, though occasionally the question as to the safest
-movement might introduce a slight digression. The great wall of the
-Low Man on their right limits in the most definite manner all westerly
-climbing, and their only trouble would be in negotiating two narrow
-chimneys and some of the grass ledges, where the tufts are unpleasantly
-loose and the slopes very slippery. The fact is that this way is not
-much to be recommended; until it joins the other there is little merit
-to justify the variation. If parties are certain they can finish the
-second half of the ascent, they can assuredly climb the lower portion
-_via_ the Savage Gully and the Stomach traverse.
-
-We halted for a moment above our cave-pitch and looked around at the
-crags. From a distant survey, such as that indicated in the photograph
-facing page 271, it is impossible to realize that so large an open
-space of easy ground can exist on the north face. But our opportunity
-for advance was strictly confined to one direction. Further westwards
-we could not go; the great wall was unassailable. To the east we
-could have perhaps traversed away until progress was barred by the
-narrow branch of the Savage Gully, which we had utilized lower down.
-The northerly direction of course led down the easy route, and the
-southerly pointed to an uncompromising extension of the great wall
-towards the Savage Gully.
-
-We were led straight up the small scree to the _split block_, a huge
-boulder at the foot of the wall. The leader disappeared into a deep
-crack, and after a few moments appeared at the top of the block, having
-mounted by a secondary fissure that cut into the left portion of the
-boulder. The movement was quite unexpected, and Hill and I were rather
-startled at the aspect of things from the summit of the split block.
-It stood at the top of the narrow branch of the Savage Gully already
-referred to, and the view vertically down this branch was calculated to
-make us hesitate before taking the next step.
-
-This was the _Strid_. Close up against the wall that blocked the
-head of the gully, a long stride was to be taken across to a narrow
-‘mantelshelf’ on the other side. There was no difficulty in the step,
-but the consequences of any slip were so obvious that we were not
-surprised to learn how respectfully the Strid is usually regarded. The
-mantelshelf led us along under the wall for a few yards, and an upper
-ledge was mounted. We were now close to the Savage Gully again, and
-Robinson prepared to be let down into it on the rope. We were adopting
-the tactics of Haskett Smith’s party in the first ascent. Robinson was
-to climb down the wall of the gully by means of an irregular crack
-twenty-five feet long, using the rope to steady himself during the
-descent. At the foot of the crack he would be able to step into the bed
-of the gully, and thence, after mounting it for a few feet, effect an
-easy passage up the opposite side. He was then to unrope, and Hill was
-to let me down in the same way, there being plenty of friction between
-the rope and the rocks to enable him to hold my weight in case of a
-slip. When safely landed in the gully, I was to take the rope up to
-Robinson and wait the issue of events.
-
-These went off without a hitch. The crack was difficult, though not
-impossible for one man to descend alone; but I am convinced that a
-man attempting the climb single-handed would be running great risk if
-he proceeded without some sort of belaying with a rope. The little
-story is well known of the youth who could not understand why he as
-third and last man of his party had to be left behind on the ledge;
-he had examined the crack and was certain he could climb down safely
-without support from above. Nay more, he insisted on demonstrating the
-fact, and when three-quarters of the way to the bed of the gully his
-feet slipped and his handholds failed. Luckily the others were able
-to prevent a serious fall, and the young man’s ‘climbing down’ was
-strictly metaphorical.
-
-Robinson then rapidly swarmed up to the left of the gully, and, after
-mounting forty feet, traversed to the right into a long scree-shoot
-that ended abruptly some twenty-five feet vertically above our solitary
-companion on the ledge. Upwards the scree led straight to the summit
-level of the Low Man, and two of us were of course in a position to
-attain this point in a couple of minutes. But there was the third, to
-manipulate, and Robinson proceeded to take out a short, spare rope from
-his sack and expound the method of using the ‘stirrup.’
-
-He tied a loop on to one end of his spare rope, large enough for a foot
-to be comfortably slipped therein, and flung that end down to Hill. I
-operated with the other rope, sending an end down for Hill to tie round
-his waist in the usual manner. The object of the process was to get the
-third man up with the least expenditure of energy on our part; in fact,
-to make Hill do all his own lifting. The wall was not so complicated in
-design as to render it impossible to haul him straight up like a bale
-of goods. But neither he nor I had till then seen an application of the
-stirrup-rope, and we had come out to be educated. There are many places
-where the method is well worth employing.
-
-The operations commenced by Hill’s fixing a foot in the stirrup and
-lifting it a couple of feet as Robinson hauled up his rope. Then,
-with Robinson simply holding on firmly, Hill straightened himself on
-the stirrup, using it as a foothold, while I pulled up the couple of
-feet of slack in the waist-rope. Next it was my turn to hold hard as
-Hill raised his stirrup foot, and then Robinson’s to keep the foot
-firm while Hill lifted himself on to it. These two moves were repeated
-again and again alternately. All through the process the ropes were
-held as free from slack as possible, any upward movement of Hill’s
-engaged foot or body being responded to promptly by Robinson or myself
-respectively. It will be perceived, if the description is as clear
-as I want it to be, that all the actual lifting of Hill’s weight he
-managed himself during the straightening-out on the stirrup, and that
-we others were at most called upon to hold only his weight. Even this
-much stress on our hands we could avoid by partial belaying, though in
-that particular spot there were no entirely suitable projecting rocks
-that could be utilized as belaying-pins.
-
-Bit by bit Hill worked up the wall, till at last his head and shoulders
-appeared over the rounded coping at our feet, and he scrambled on
-to the scree. Then we all sat down and Robinson told us tales about
-that particular locality. Among others he gave us one to emphasize
-the practical lesson we had just been having on the use of the
-stirrup-rope. A famous climber, indeed he was sometime president of the
-Alpine Club, and in a vague, traditional sort of way years before he
-had fallen some hundreds of feet down a vertical gully hard by, without
-coming to any harm except that of finding his name ever afterwards
-associated with the gully; well, this famous climber was coming up that
-same wall by means of the stirrup-rope, and the zealous operatives
-above more than responded to his slightest movements. He lifted his
-foot a few inches, they hauled up the stirrup-rope a few yards, and
-anticipating that he might find the alternations a little laborious,
-proceeded to pull him up by sheer strength of goodwill. Thus his
-attached foot appeared first over the edge, and the remainder of his
-person followed in some confusion. So, at any rate, the story went.
-
-Sitting as we were with our faces towards Buttermere, the great wall
-bore away to the left, and our scree gully marked its eastern limit. A
-horizontal crack extended for several feet across the wall, starting
-from the top of the pitch below us. Only its end could be seen, but by
-carefully working down to the corner on the left, and looking across
-the face, we could see the way it cut clean into the rock. This was the
-notorious _hand-traverse_, by which it was just possible to reach our
-scree gully from the ledge below without the preliminary descent into
-the Savage Gully.
-
-A few minutes’ halt and we continued our course. There was no doubt or
-difficulty in reaching the Low Man, and thence following the ridge to
-the junction with the West Climb. A quarter of an hour saw us at the
-High Man cairn, and another five minutes at the foot of the Central
-Jordan. The ropes were stowed away again in the sack, and Robinson
-rapidly strode across the screes and down the corridor behind the
-Shamrock. In a phenomenally short time we were crossing the Liza
-stream, and, without being allowed to halt, a bee-line was drawn for us
-over to Scarth Gap by our untiring leader. Luckily for his followers,
-the name of this pass, which is sometimes called Scarf Gap, reminded
-him of a very good story concerning another famous climber who went
-to an evening party without a dress-tie. We were told the story and
-recovered breath sufficiently to continue our journey to Buttermere.
-I wish now that I had not been so fatigued, so that I might have
-remembered the whole anecdote and given it here in all detail.
-
-THE HAND-TRAVERSE.--Nearly two years after the ascent described
-in the previous section, Dr. Collier showed me a way of avoiding the
-Savage Gully in the North Climb by following a direct route to the
-upper screes. The plan is to work to the extreme east corner of the
-ledge that succeeds the ‘mantelshelf,’ and when a narrow overhanging
-chimney is reached, to swarm up the steep buttress on its left. It
-looks particularly dangerous, but there is an excellent hold for the
-hands just round the corner of the buttress, and when the first three
-feet of ascent are accomplished the rest feels comparatively easy.
-
-On the same occasion we each in turn ventured on the _hand-traverse_
-from above. The place has already been referred to; it was known for
-some time that the crack could be reached from the terrace below, and
-Mr. Solly showed in 1891 that it could be followed to its left-hand
-extremity at the scree gully. It is so named because the climber hangs
-by his hands, with no footholds at all for the greater part of its
-length, and traverses across the face by sheer strength of his arms.
-Collier and I were well satisfied concerning the security of the crack
-itself. We went to the further end and back again, without coming
-across any place where the holds were treacherous. They were probably
-more satisfying to the grip than an ordinary horizontal bar, on account
-of the acute edge of the rock. On the other hand, we had no opportunity
-of trying the ascent from the terrace, which promised to be rather
-fatiguing for the arms, and which might render them useless for the
-traverse itself.
-
-On Whit Monday, 1896, a chance came for tackling the pitch in this new
-way. It had been successfully accomplished once, and twice had the
-climber’s strength of grip failed him when half-way across. So, at any
-rate, we learnt by hearsay at Wastdale. Perhaps it ought to be added
-that in one case it was the leader of the party who fell off, and the
-rope saved him in a manner scarcely short of miraculous; in the other
-case the rope was held from the scree gully, and the climber only swung
-out on it. Our Whitsuntide party were willing that I should try, and
-carefully measured out just a sufficiency of rope for me to reach the
-crack. Then two of them stood together at the western extremity of the
-terrace, and shouldered me up the first bad bit. There was every reason
-to be quick, as resting-places were absent where the strain on the arms
-could be eased. In twenty-five feet I reached the crack and halted
-for a moment on a scanty foothold before trusting to the ledge. Then
-came the swing off and a hasty sliding of the hands along the sharp
-edge. The first bit was about eight feet long; then that particular
-crack terminated abruptly in the wall, and another, two feet higher,
-continued across in the same easterly direction. The lift of the body
-up to the second crack was trying, but beyond this critical point the
-movement was horizontal. It was somewhat clumsy--the scraping of the
-body along the rough surface of the rock, with the legs held clear; but
-my sole thought was to reach the end of the traverse twelve feet away,
-and no consideration of style was entertained. In a very short time,
-though it seemed far too long, the end of the wall was attained, and it
-only remained to drag myself up to the scree.
-
-The rest of the party preferred to mount the buttress by Collier’s
-route indicated in a previous paragraph. I think the hand-traverse
-has not been attempted since, and it is perhaps just as well. It is
-scarcely less than suicidal to try conclusions with this variation
-unless the climber has full confidence in his strength of grip, and
-unless he has already tested his powers of endurance of long-continued
-strain in the arms. But with the leader of the party already at the
-head of the pitch, no matter which way he got there, it involves no
-serious risk for the others to follow by this route. The last on the
-rope had better come up over the buttress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-_NOTES ON REMAINING CLIMBS_
-
-
-In this chapter it is proposed to deal summarily with a few remaining
-rock-climbs that have not yet been described. Some are rather awkward
-to reach, others are perhaps too slight to be worth the time spent in
-reaching them unless they actually turn up in the day’s march. One or
-two I have not visited, and am reluctant to accept the responsibility
-of guiding people up them. But
-
- What he thought he might require,
- He went and took--the same as me!
-
-is too general a motto among book-writers for me to hesitate long
-before incorporating other people’s notes, and the attempt will be made
-to acknowledge the source in each case.
-
-PIERS GHYLL.--This is a fine-looking ravine on the north side
-of Lingmell, occasionally visited by climbers. It has four or five
-comparatively easy pitches before the big bend, but at the point where
-the main gully is bridged by a great mass of rock the whole width of
-the ravine is occupied by a waterfall fifty feet high, and any attempt
-to force a passage up this pitch is peculiarly unsatisfactory unless a
-rainless season has much diminished the volume of water passing down.
-Such a season was that of 1893, and in April of that year Dr. Collier
-led the first party up the whole length of the ghyll. Even under those
-favourable circumstances the climb was very difficult, and no other
-party has succeeded in repeating the ascent. Dr. Collier tells me that
-the hardest bit is up the narrow pitch before reaching the great fall.
-The latter offers a choice of two or three routes.
-
-Piers Ghyll is conspicuous from a distance, and many a tourist knows
-the place. Hence it has a reputation of its own even as a climb, which
-it can scarcely be said to deserve. If, as Haskett Smith expresses it,
-it is in nineteen seasons out of twenty wholly impossible to get over
-the great obstacle, it cannot rightly be called a climb. The scrambling
-up to the bend is mostly unpleasant by reason of the water and the
-loose character of the rock. An exit can there be made up the wall on
-the right, but the friability of this wall makes its ascent positively
-dangerous except at one spot where a scree gully runs nearly to the top
-of the cliff.
-
-A most interesting account of the ghyll, giving certain of the
-adventures that explorers have encountered, may be read in ‘All
-the Year Round’ of November, 1884. It was contributed by Mr. C. N.
-Williamson; other parts of this article dealing with Cumberland
-climbing have already been referred to.
-
-HIGH STILE.--The north side of this mountain is precipitous, and
-two or three short but interesting gullies can be followed up to the
-ridge. Two of them can easily be recognised from Buttermere village.
-The central gully faces towards the north-west and is to the right of
-the highest point on the mountain. It has two well-defined pitches, the
-second being very severe. The writer climbed it in 1893 with Mr. John
-Robinson, before taking the chimney described in the next paragraph,
-but seemingly it has rarely been visited since.
-
-To the left of the central gully a wide black chimney can be seen,
-leading up close to the summit of High Stile. It offers a short but
-very difficult scramble; in pulling up over the edge of the great pitch
-care must be taken to avoid the loose stones. In the first ascent the
-leader had a bad encounter with three boulders that slipped over on to
-his head.
-
-A long, easy gully in the north-east shoulder of the mountain offers a
-pleasant route down from the summit to the shores of Buttermere.
-
-BUCKBARROW.--The side of this hill facing Wastwater has sundry
-attractions. Climbers who are not pressed for time, on their way
-from Wastdale to the nearest stations on the Furness Railway, can be
-recommended to visit the crag.
-
-The first main gully at the northern end was climbed at Easter, 1892;
-two short parallel chimneys terminate the ascent, that on the left
-being supposed to be the harder. Besides this route, there are a few
-ways of tackling the face further to the west; but details are not at
-hand by reason of the rarity of the visits to Buckbarrow.
-
-SERGEANT CRAG CHIMNEY.--This was first ascended by Mr. John
-Robinson and the writer in September, 1893. The crag itself is reached
-by walking up Langstrath from the village of Rosthwaite for about a
-mile and then bearing to the left. Close to the stream, at the point
-where we leave the track, is the Gash Rock, an isolated boulder that
-offers considerable resistance to any one attempting to climb it. It
-was climbed first by the writer in 1893. A good hold has recently been
-cleared at the critical point on the boulder. The scramble is said to
-be quite easy now.
-
-The gully in the crag is in sight half-a-mile below the Gash Rock, and
-is well worth the visit of a strong party. It was noticed in 1886 by
-Mr. Haskett Smith, but seven years elapsed before the first ascent was
-made. Curiously enough, the second ascent was effected a day or two
-later by Messrs. Phillimore and Anderson, in entire ignorance that the
-gully had so recently been overcome.
-
-Information embodied in the following notes of the successive pitches
-has been supplied by the brothers Abraham of Keswick, whose interesting
-photograph of the great pitch in the middle of the ascent is reproduced
-facing page 286.
-
-_First Pitch._--Chock-stone about fifteen feet high, passed to the left
-on the face of the rock. Good hand and foot holds.
-
-_Second Pitch._--Small chock-stone. Both hands are reached up to the
-top of the stone and a straight pull over effected with the arms. The
-obstacle is about nine feet high.
-
-_Third Pitch._--Sundry boulders forming a block, about fifteen feet
-high. The right-hand side of the gully is ascended until the leader is
-well wedged under the block. Then he can pass out to the left and over
-at the top.
-
-_Fourth Pitch._--This is the most severe of the whole set, and the
-direct climb up the left wall is probably as stiff a problem as can
-be found in the district. Two immense boulders, one over the other,
-separated by a gap of four feet, form the roof of a cave. The retaining
-walls of the gully form the sides of the cave, and the ascent is to be
-effected on the left. From a short distance this appears to be a smooth
-vertical slab; even on close inspection the holds it offers appear to
-be of the most minute dimensions.
-
-The second man on the rope should mount as high up the interior of the
-cave as possible. After climbing under the first boulder the leader
-takes a long step out to the left wall, on a sloping ledge. Then using
-side holds on the boulder itself, with his feet or knees against the
-main wall, he has to work up gradually to a little jammed boulder two
-feet above the lower one. This is an extremely fatiguing operation. On
-to this block he must lift his knees, and then he can cautiously drag
-up so as to stand on it.
-
-The upper boulder is then passed by throwing the left leg across to
-a slight foothold, whence a thrust forward of the body is effected
-through wet soil and tufted ferns. This is particularly unpleasant
-after rainy weather, and is probably at all times somewhat risky. The
-height of the pitch is thirty-two feet.
-
-A variation has been found which makes the passage of this obstacle
-much more feasible. It leads first downwards to a grassy ledge on the
-right, and then up by succeeding shelves until the upper level of the
-pitch is reached, when the return traverse back to the bed of the gully
-can be easily managed. Hitherto all parties, except the first and third
-in the chimney, have preferred to avoid the fourth pitch, and their
-preference is most reasonable.
-
-_Fifth Pitch._--This is an easy chimney twenty feet long, lined with
-grass and ferns, and marked at the summit by a fallen tree.
-
-_Sixth Pitch._--Two wedged stones one above the other form a pitch
-about twenty feet high. The route is first into the cave between the
-stones, then up a short chimney and over the upper boulder. The second
-on the rope should ascend as high as possible in the cave and, with
-splendid anchorage, pay out the leader’s rope carefully. Sundry loose
-stones are lodged on the right, and should be left discreetly alone.
-
-_Seventh Pitch._--This is a chimney thirty feet high containing many
-loose stones. It is crowned by a chock-stone. The ascent is directly up
-the first part, and then over loose and dangerous rock on the right
-for another twenty feet.
-
-Steep grass leads out to the top, 500 feet from the base of the cliff.
-
-BLEA CRAGS AND MOUSE GHYLL.--The Blea Crag climbs in Borrowdale
-can be reached from Grange in thirty-five minutes; a fine general view
-is to be seen from the picturesque bridge spanning the Derwent. There
-are three gullies of interest; one to the south is now known as Mouse
-Ghyll, climbed and christened in the autumn of 1897, by Mr. W. Cecil
-Slingsby’s party; a second less-defined gully leads up the centre of
-the crags; and to the north of this a third takes us by loose and
-rather unsatisfactory pitches to the summit ridge.
-
-Mouse Ghyll starts very narrow, with smooth walls running up to a great
-height on either side. An easy pitch of ten feet brings us to a little
-platform, whence a steep, double staircase, with good steps for each
-foot, gives safe access to a great cavern sixty feet higher. Here the
-real difficulties begin. The pitch is formed by two huge, overhanging
-boulders, one above the other, with a grassy ledge between them. The
-leader can be well anchored by his party, and makes a start up to the
-left from the top of the rib of rock that supplies the ‘staircase.’
-It is sensational work up to the grassy ledge, where again the leader
-requires anchoring, and perhaps also a helping shoulder for the next
-little chimney of some fourteen feet, between the upper boulder and the
-left wall. When the first party were here, a startled mouse sprang
-from the grassy ledge over the leader’s head, and dropped safely at the
-bottom of the staircase ninety feet below. May it live long enough to
-learn that the ghyll has been named in its honour!
-
-On emerging from the chimney three routes show themselves. The first is
-up two easy pitches that remain in the gully. To the right a chimney
-leads by an open buttress to the top of the crags, and can be ascended
-without trouble. But on the left a prominent chimney, succeeded by a
-narrow crack, gives seventy feet of extremely tough climbing. It was
-ascended by Messrs. George and Ashley Abraham, who made the second
-ascent of Mouse Ghyll.
-
-The central gully starts with a chimney, best taken on the right, and
-continues with short and easy pitches until some large boulders wedged
-in a vertical crack offer better fun. There are no further obstacles.
-
-I am indebted to Messrs. George and Ashley Abraham and to Mr. Slingsby
-for the information in this section. They assure me that the climbing
-in Mouse Ghyll is of a first-rate order, and the scenery of lake and
-fellside almost unsurpassable in the country.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX.
-
-
-WALKER’S GULLY, PILLAR ROCK.--The Christmas of 1898 at Wastdale
-was marked by heavy rain and unseasonable conditions. Several large
-parties of climbers had come to the hotel, and, after a day or two of
-smoking and grumbling, had departed; until, at the New Year, Mr. Jones
-and myself were the only climbers left there. To keep ourselves in
-training, we struggled up through the powdery snow of the Central Gully
-on Gable Crag, performed many rash feats on the end of the barn and the
-billiard-table, besides leaving a considerable quantity of our clothing
-on the ‘Mosedale Boulder.’
-
-Early in January we walked over to Keswick; and found, on returning,
-that another party had arrived, amongst whom was my friend Mr. A. E.
-Field. We greeted him as warmly as we could under such cold conditions;
-and when, later in the evening, we disclosed our intention to climb
-Walker’s Gully, he was quite ‘keen’ on undertaking the very necessary
-duties of ‘third man.’ Our party was now complete; but the heavy
-rain-clouds still rolled up from the sea, and the weather continued
-persistently bad. We were forced at last to the conclusion that,
-if Walker’s Gully had then to be climbed, it would have to be done
-regardless of bad weather and personal discomfort.
-
-As a result of this reasoning, the early morning of January 7th, 1899,
-saw the three of us trudging patiently up the Black Sail Pass in a
-tremendous downpour of rain and sleet; but, notwithstanding this, with
-the climber’s cheery optimism, a ‘fair-up’ was confidently prophesied.
-As an exception to the general rule, our prophecy was fulfilled; for,
-just as we reached the soft snow on Looking Stead, the huge banks of
-mist rolled up from both valleys, and far away in the north we saw
-‘hoary-headed old Skiddaw’ bathed in sunshine, while a keen dry wind
-blew up out of Ennerdale. We trudged along through the snow on the
-High Level, and about mid-day were facing the ice-covered slabs and
-snow-wreathed ledges on the north-east side of the Pillar Rock. Little
-was said as we scrambled to the foot of Walker’s Gully; for each of us
-fully recognised what was ahead, and it was better to be silent, than
-to utter discouraging remarks.
-
-The rope was put on at the foot of the crags, Field being the ‘anchor’
-of the party, whilst I, as usual, was placed next to Jones, to serve
-as a special buttress when hand and foot holds should become scarce. A
-strong jet of ice-cold water came rushing down over the first pitch,
-so that, not wishing to have our enthusiasm cooled so early in the
-day, we climbed up the wet, slippery slabs on our left. About fifty
-feet higher we had some difficulty in a shallow sloping chimney, down
-which a mud avalanche seemed to have fallen quite recently, and here
-our leader remarked ‘we ought to have been equipped with mud-guards.’
-We were soon facing the main gully, with its tremendous chock-stones
-rising one above the other, over which streamed large quantities of
-water, suggesting a somewhat too rapid cleansing of our mud-stained
-garments. We entered the chimney and found it just wide enough to
-back up, with both feet on the right-hand wall; the falling ice-chips
-apprising us of the fact that hard work was in progress higher up.
-
-We climbed very rapidly for about fifty feet, close together, until
-almost within touch of the uninviting stream of water falling over the
-first jammed boulder, which was now just above our heads. Knowing this
-to be one of the most difficult pitches in the lower part of the climb,
-a short ‘council of war’ was held, for all seemed desirous of avoiding
-a cold bath as long as possible. Then, screwing up his courage, Jones
-made a bold dash through the waterfall to the back of the cave. Knowing
-his objection to monopolising pleasures of this kind, we followed him,
-and were soon all gasping and shivering below the jammed boulder. After
-further consideration and experiment, the only safe course, apparently,
-was for me to stand under the waterfall and give the leader a shoulder
-over the _mauvais pas_. As our ablutions seemed likely now to be very
-thorough, we ate our lunch and watched, for a time, the falling water,
-which, in my opinion, to some extent spoilt the view. The discomfort of
-our position, however, soon impressed upon us the necessity of moving.
-Field therefore held me firmly from the back of the cave, whilst I
-stood under the shower-bath; and Jones mounted on my shoulders, from
-whence he reached a hold on the top of the boulder, over which he
-pulled himself with an exclamation of delight. I then retired to the
-cave with considerable alacrity. Sounds from above warned us that the
-leader was scarcely yet secure, so we steadily paid out about forty
-feet of his rope, until he reached safe anchorage at the top of the
-three boulders forming the pitch. In following we wasted very little
-time under the waterfall, and soon joined Jones on a little snow-patch,
-from which we could study the situation. A hundred feet or so higher,
-and apparently overhanging our present position, was the top jammed
-boulder. Evidence was not wanting, however, to show us that we were not
-safe from falling objects; for, stuck in a curiously upright position
-in the snow in front of us, were three walking-sticks, with two pairs
-of torn gloves and some much-worn socks lying by their side. We thought
-at first a party of tourists had somehow reached here and forgotten
-their ‘impedimenta;’ but our leader remembered that some friends,
-having climbed the Pillar Rock at Christmas, had thrown their sticks
-and luggage down into Jordan Gap before descending themselves. The snow
-proved harder than they thought, their property making an unexpected
-descent into Walker’s Gully, and here were we confronted with the
-opportunity of acting as a rescue party; but, not thirsting for fame,
-we decided to leave the relics undisturbed.
-
-Jones now led us up several small, wet pitches, until we came to a
-sudden stop in a great cave, where there was no apparent way out,
-except through a very small hole high up in its roof; an outside route
-being practically impossible on account of the accumulation of ice on
-both walls. Jones remarked that he was not going ‘to emulate the camel
-that failed to go through the eye of a needle;’ so, to reduce his bulk
-as far as possible, he emptied his pockets and left his wet jacket for
-Field to sit upon. No holds on the side of the cave were available, so
-the leader climbed upon my shoulders, but he could barely reach his
-arms through the hole. Field, meanwhile, was smoking and making the
-most of his comfortable position. With somewhat insincere apologies, we
-called on him to form an additional buttress, and, from his shoulders,
-I was able to force the leader through the hole, amidst the sound of
-tearing clothes and muffled remonstrances from their owner.
-
-I shall not readily forget my own sufferings in that hole. The first
-attempt, from Field’s shoulders, was a complete failure, because the
-upper part of my body absolutely refused to fit the shape of the hole.
-After several fruitless efforts and much wasted energy, I happened
-to look up and saw Jones smiling down at me. “That is not right. Go
-down and have another try,” said he. He then loosed the rope rather
-suddenly, whereupon I made an unexpected descent upon Field, who was
-standing below enjoying my troubles; and there was much confusion in
-the cave. After extricating ourselves, Field again kindly placed his
-shoulders at my service, but from a somewhat higher level than before,
-and this, with the aid of his ice-axe applied from below, ultimately
-landed me at the top of the hole feeling very roughly handled. Field
-then sent up our jackets, and, after the hole had been slightly
-enlarged by removing some loose rocks, he came up himself in good style.
-
-We were now at the foot of the formidable top-pitch, which had never
-been climbed. A sudden seriousness settled on us all as we looked up
-at it, and remembered that this pitch had defied some of the finest
-cragsmen of our time. The walls on both sides were perpendicular,
-and the rounded appearance of the rocks suggested an unusual absence
-of hand and foot holds, whilst the presence of ice in several places
-caused us much uneasiness. There were three large flat chock-stones
-piled irregularly right across the chasm. Towards the upper one, which
-overhung considerably, the two walls converged so much that it seemed
-possible to ‘back up’ the last part of the climb, if the leader could
-only reach it safely. The only other alternative would be to climb up
-on the right wall, close under the lower chock-stone, and traverse
-outwards and upwards until suitable holds could be found. A troublesome
-sleet was beginning to fall; so that we were glad to climb into the
-cave directly beneath the chock-stones. A firm ‘hitch’ was discovered
-in the back of the cave, by which Field could anchor us; and he settled
-himself in a wet corner where his attention was occupied in dodging the
-drops of falling water and directing our movements.
-
-Our first efforts were on the left wall; and by means of an ice-axe
-fixed in a narrow corner, Jones skilfully and safely wedged himself in
-a crack which led almost to the top of the first boulder. However, for
-the next half-hour his attempts to make further progress were in vain,
-for a hand could not be spared to chip the ice off the rocks; and it
-was found necessary to abandon this left wall and to try the opposite
-one, which now occupied our attention for some time. Jones made several
-attempts from a shoulder to effect a lodgment below the chock-stone.
-Then, whilst enjoying a well-earned rest, we espied a small rock,
-wedged high up in the crack between the main wall and the roof of the
-cave. That small rock proved to be the key of the situation, for, after
-probably the finest piece of climbing I have ever witnessed, a rope was
-passed through the hole behind it, and we were in a position to attempt
-the climb safely. We were all suffering acutely from cold, especially
-Field, on account of his inaction, though he declared that the
-excitement of our movements kept him warm. Notwithstanding this, our
-leader, taking off his boots and jacket, prepared for a long struggle
-on that icy wall, whilst I padded my head to gain an inch or two in
-height. Jones now swung up as high as possible on the hitched rope;
-then, while standing on my head, he found a very small hold for one of
-his toes, and after ascending a few feet was hidden from our sight by
-the intervening chock-stone. The next few minutes were anxious ones;
-we shivered with cold, and held the rope firmly in case there should
-be a mishap higher up. Almost immediately there was a rush of falling
-snow far out over the pitch, and it scarcely needed our leader’s jödel
-of success to assure us that at last Walker’s Gully had yielded to the
-onslaught of the climber.
-
-We pushed the leader’s boots into his jacket pockets and sent up all
-our ‘luggage.’ Owing to the half-frozen condition of our fingers, tying
-the various things on the rope took so long a time, that we called
-forth an impatient exclamation from above. Eventually we, in turn,
-landed safely at the top, after swinging ignominiously on the rope,
-in much the same way as our ‘luggage’ had done. However, the great
-hitherto unclimbed pitch of Walker’s Gully was below us, and there
-followed the usual congratulations. Our progress up from the screes had
-been slow, something like three hours, but much time had been spent in
-reconnoitring under extremely bad conditions.
-
-The situation was still rather serious, for we were perched on a narrow
-snow-ledge on the very brink of the upper chock-stone; and the three
-of us were almost in a state of collapse from cold and the saturated
-state of our clothes. The forced inaction of the leader, whilst we were
-finishing the climb, had made him so benumbed as to be almost helpless,
-and he was sitting with his feet in the wet snow, ineffectually trying
-to put on his boots. We had carefully kept some stockings and gloves
-dry in the rücksack; but the opening of the sack with half-frozen
-fingers proved unfortunate, for its contents escaped, and, with the
-other relics which had come down through Jordan Gap, now adorned the
-snow-patch far below. It was then agreed that this narrow, exposed
-ledge was, under the circumstances, not a suitable dressing room;
-so we gathered up our belongings, including our leader’s boots, and
-carefully ascended the snow until we came to a safe resting place. Here
-we resorted to the usual means of thawing ourselves, and our leader’s
-boots were restored to their appointed places.
-
-The race up the steep snow seemed to revive our spirits, and, by the
-time the dry rocks below Great Doup were reached, our sufferings gave
-way to the glow of success. One little excitement was still in store
-for us, for Jones told us that he was threatened with frost-bite in
-both feet. On removing his boots we found that his statement was true,
-so we rubbed his feet with soft snow, and, before putting on his boots,
-the troublesome feet were placed as far as possible in the pockets
-of the warmest member of the party, until circulation was thoroughly
-restored.
-
-Night was drawing on apace; so we bade farewell to our ‘vanquished
-foe,’ and were soon scampering along the High Level, bound for the
-well-earned comforts of Wastdale.
-
-IRON CRAG CHIMNEY.--Towards the head of the Shoulthwaite Valley,
-which is 3-1/2 miles from Keswick, near the road to Ambleside, may be
-seen high up on the right-hand side, a magnificent couloir. It runs up
-the south side of one of the steepest faces of rock in the district,
-and is called, after the rock, Iron Crag Chimney. We had passed in
-sight of the Crag scores of times, but the chimney is so cunningly
-hidden away on the far side from the road, that it was not until Mr.
-J. W. Robinson told us of it, that we dreamt of there being anything
-worth climbing there. He and my brother went to prospect it in March,
-1896, but found it in such a very bad condition, that after climbing
-the comparatively easy first pitch, they were forced to beat a retreat.
-They came back, however, with a glowing account of the second pitch,
-and spoke very excitedly about ‘“a thing” at least 100 feet high, wet,
-mossy, and with an overhanging stone half-way up, from which the water
-dropped out four yards into the bed of the gully, 40 feet below.’ They
-thought, however, that a small ledge, up to which they had climbed,
-would continue far enough along the left wall of the gully to enable
-them to traverse well out from under the stone, and so reach the top
-of it. Of the nature of the climbing above that they knew nothing, but
-were both anxious to try it and confident of success.
-
-Continued bad weather hindered another attempt until June of the same
-year, when Mr. F. W. Jackson and I joined the other two and we set out
-to attack this formidable ‘hundred-footer.’ The day was fine and the
-rocks in perfect condition, and we succeeded in climbing the chimney
-throughout. I intend to give more detail of the second ascent; but it
-may be as well to mention here that the second pitch only yielded after
-several attempts, by more than one member of the party, and only with
-the aid of a shoulder, given from the little ledge, was the leader able
-to climb to the top of the ‘chock-stone.’ After this another thirty
-feet of chimney brought us to the top of the pitch, and great were the
-rejoicings that we had, after a very severe struggle, mastered it. I
-shall never forget how white the face of one member of the party was
-when it appeared over the top of the pitch, how he yelled to us to
-‘haul in the taut,’ how he ‘quoth “nevermore,”’ and how impolitely
-he spoke to the leader for having climbed it at all. Altogether this
-second pitch gave us a good deal of trouble, but the top part of the
-chimney, though very rotten and steep, and liable to come away in small
-quantities, was climbed with comparative ease.
-
-After this, except some exploration of the Crags by Mr. H. W. Blunt, it
-was not visited again by climbers until the New Year of 1899, when Mr.
-O. G. Jones, with my father, my brother, and myself, found ourselves
-standing at the bottom of the first pitch. We had expatiated on the
-difficulty of the second pitch, and Jones was very keen on trying it,
-having, in fact, come over from Wastdale with us for that purpose. _En
-route_ to Iron Crag we had climbed a gully on the west side of the
-_massif_, which consisted of a series of very interesting chimneys,
-the pleasures of which were greatly enhanced by magnificent views of
-Derwentwater. This had made us somewhat later than we anticipated,
-and an animated discussion was held at the bottom as to whether,
-considering the lateness of the hour and the bad condition of the
-gully, which was streaming with water, it would not be advisable for
-two of the party to stay below or go round and join the others at
-the top. This was decided against; ‘all or none,’ said Jones, so we
-roped up with him leading. He soon reached the small ledge under the
-stone, and then stopped to take breath and prospect. ‘Shall I come up
-to you?’ shouted my brother. ‘No thanks! I’ll have a try from here
-alone, and you would get wet through in no time up here,’ returned he.
-This consideration for my brother was utterly unlike him, for, amongst
-other similar occasions, I well remember one on which, in a gully--or
-rather waterfall--in Wales, he got wet through on the first pitch,
-and insisted on our finishing with him all the eight pitches. His
-look of glee when we emerged from the top of each pitch with the water
-running down us was a thing to be remembered. However, to return, he
-jammed his left foot against the left wall of the gully and pressed
-his back against the other, and almost before we had time to see what
-had happened, was smiling down on us from the top of the pitch. It was
-very disgusting to see him just ‘romp’ up the place we had found so
-difficult the year before, and when I had climbed up to him he smiled
-sardonically and said, ‘Is that your pitch? Well, really----!’ A small
-handhold had weathered away since the time of the first ascent, which
-somewhat simplified the passing over the ‘chock-stone,’ but even now I
-think most people would find it difficult. We could only apologise and
-feel small, but, had we known it, there was a surfeit of excitement and
-difficulty in store for us higher up.
-
-The pitch we had just climbed was composed of most excellent rock, but
-up above, where we now were, everything was changed, and the upper
-rocks, which had been rotten enough before, were now, as a result of
-the heavy rain, of the worst description imaginable. Great pieces as
-large as one’s head came away at once, and every step had to be most
-carefully tested before we could proceed. Now was the time for us to
-appreciate our leader, for a less careful man would have ‘pounded’ us
-severely before we had made any progress worth mentioning. As it was,
-several big pieces had to be removed, and some came whizzing past in
-much too close proximity to be pleasant.
-
-After the second pitch the chimney continues straight up and is fairly
-wide for two hundred feet or so; but there is no good anchorage until
-the level skyline is reached. Towards the top it narrows down to a
-thin, rotten and very steep crack. By slow and very careful progress
-we reached this crack, which had been climbed straight up on the first
-ascent; but after Jones had tried it a few times he evidently thought
-it hopeless, for he shouted down to us, ‘It won’t go to-day. The rain
-has made everything too rotten. We shall have to go back.’ It was four
-o’clock, raining heavily and nearly dark, and to go back meant in all
-probability sleeping on the top of the second pitch, an idea which
-none of us relished. So my brother climbed up to Jones and, after
-consulting for a while, they decided to climb out of the crack on the
-right-hand side. To do this a shoulder would have to be given, from a
-small shelving ledge, to enable the leader to reach the firmer and less
-steep rock up above. This was the most obvious route of ascent, but the
-ledge looked very unstable and rotten, and vibrated a little on being
-tested. However, Jones thought it might hold if stepped on in the right
-way; so my brother climbed up on to it and Jones followed. By utilising
-the side of the crack, they were able to put very little pressure on
-the ledge; Jones climbed on to his companion’s shoulders, and, when he
-had cleared away a few of the loose rocks, was, after an anxious moment
-or two, able to draw himself up on to the skyline and disappear from
-our sight. After a few seconds he gave a cheer and called to my brother
-to follow him. This he had just begun to do and had left the ledge
-about five feet, when I heard a dull ominous crack, and, on looking up,
-saw the whole thing coming down. There was no time to do anything but
-squeeze into the chimney and warn my father. I succeeded in getting
-far enough inside to escape serious damage, but the heel of my left
-boot, which projected a little, was torn entirely away. My father’s
-escape was more marvellous, for it seemed that nothing could save him;
-but on looking down I saw the great rock strike a projecting piece of
-the chimney only a few inches above his head, and spread out like a
-fan into a thousand splinters which shot far out into the air, falling
-again near the foot of the chimney; and thus we escaped with only a
-few slight bruises. One shudders to think what would have happened
-if the ledge had fallen when Jones and my brother were on it. It may
-be of interest to say here that during the whole of our climbs with
-Jones, this was the only approach to an accident we had, and under his
-leadership the possibility of anything going wrong seemed, and always
-was, very remote indeed.
-
-After this we were not long in joining the other two at the top. By
-this time it was nearly dark and still raining heavily, and on the
-crest of the chimney we were faced by a bitterly cold wind. Jones,
-who had been exposed to this during the time we were ascending, was
-shaking with cold, and he shouted through the storm--‘Hurry up! Coil
-the rope and then we’ll do a sprint.’ On looking round we found that he
-had gone. We finished coiling the rope and hurried up to where he had
-been, but could not see him anywhere. We shouted again and again, but
-got no answer. After peering about and shouting several times we came
-to a standstill. ‘Is he subject to fits?’ inquired my father in a most
-doleful tone of voice. We had never heard of anything of the sort, so
-set off down the side of the crags in the hope of finding him awaiting
-us below. A miserable hour was spent in walking about the bottom of
-the crags calling his name; but the whistling of the wind in the rocks
-above, and the swishing of the rain were the only answers we got; so we
-set off down the fell-side, and, after floundering about in the dark,
-over the stone-walls and through the river, we found ourselves at last
-on the main road to Keswick. We were very anxious to know what had
-become of Jones, so hastened home, where we found him, ‘dressed up in
-all his best,’ toasting his feet in front of a comfortable fire. ‘Where
-have you been?’ ‘Dinner has been waiting an hour,’ and so on, were the
-thanks we got for our weary hunt among the crags for him, and the query
-of my father’s about his taking ‘fits’ became one of his favourite
-jokes. After proposing the ‘sprint’ to us he had run round a projecting
-shoulder of rock to leeward, and started off to Keswick over the moor,
-by the route we had taken earlier in the day. We had expected him to go
-down to the Shoulthwaite Valley, and in this way had missed him.
-
-So finished one of the most exciting days we ever spent with Owen
-Glynne Jones; and its events are indelibly stamped on my memory. But,
-full of incident as the day had been, my pleasantest recollection is
-of the evening that followed; when, by the fire and over our pipes,
-we fought old battles over again, recalling to life happy days and
-exciting moments on the fells, ending with the songs and glees Jones
-loved so well to sing, and across the space of years, taking us back
-into the ‘dear, dead days,’ will come into our ‘mind’s eye’ the picture
-of him kneeling by the piano, singing with the keen enthusiasm which
-characterized everything he did, his favourite hymn--
-
- Lead, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,
- ...
- O’er moor and fen, o’er crag and torrent,
- Till the night is gone.
-
-ENGINEERS’ CHIMNEY, GABLE CRAG.--This new and interesting climb
-is situated about midway between the Oblique Chimney and the Central
-Gully. The beginning of it lies at nearly the same level as that
-of the Oblique Chimney, and can be reached by traversing some easy
-ledges from the ‘Sheep Walk,’ or by ascending directly from the foot
-of the Crags. Although the chimney was well known to many climbers,
-its ascent had, curiously enough, not been seriously attempted until
-July 30th, 1899, when Messrs. G. T. Glover and W. N. Ling made the
-first ascent. Since then it has been ascended on two other occasions,
-and it seems likely to become as popular as any of the Gable Crag
-climbs. The scenery is magnificent and the climbing throughout of a
-most interesting character, and in the centre of the lower part of the
-chimney a loosely wedged stone adds an element of risk and difficulty,
-which is absent from the other chimneys on this face. About eight feet
-from its commencement the chimney divides into two branches, but the
-route lies up the left-hand one. A good resting place for the second
-man is to be obtained in the right-hand branch, and he ought to stay
-here while the leader is negotiating the very difficult passage over
-the chock-stone. In all the ascents so far it has been found advisable
-to pass a rope behind and over this stone, to improvise a handhold, and
-even then this ten feet or so will be found quite difficult enough for
-most people. After this, another twenty-five feet of careful climbing
-brings one to a broad, sloping ledge where a rest can be taken. From
-here two routes are available. One is to keep to the chimney, which
-continues straight upward for about forty feet, and the other is to
-traverse out round the left-hand buttress for a few feet and then bear
-upwards, joining the ‘Sheep Walk’ near the top of the Crags. The
-former of these involves about twenty feet of fairly easy climbing,
-until the small cave, roofed over with the stone which dominates the
-chimney, is reached. From this cave the easiest method of ascent is to
-utilise a thin crack in the left wall into which some small stones are
-firmly jammed and which may be reached by wedging across the chimney
-and traversing outwards, a slight projecting ledge affording some help
-in the process. The ‘take-off’ into the crack is somewhat delicate
-and decidedly sensational on account of the scanty foothold, but once
-gained ten to twelve feet of further climbing practically finishes the
-chimney. The traverse route round the buttress is much easier, but it
-entirely evades the most sensational part of the climb.
-
-WEST WALL CLIMB, DEEP GHYLL.--For climbers of Deep Ghyll who
-ascend the second pitch by the right-hand exit, this new route is
-probably the best way out of the Ghyll. After thus passing the second
-pitch, the West Wall Climb starts from a point about twenty-six yards
-below the entrance to the Great Chimney. By climbing over two small
-ledges and up a conspicuous thirty-feet chimney, a broad ledge is
-reached, where further direct progress is not advisable.
-
-The best way lies around a corner to the right and up a series of
-easy ledges, working gradually back again to above the commencement
-of the climb. About half-way up ‘The Wall’ an undercut pinnacle is
-reached and ascended on the left before a lodgment can be effected on
-its outside edge, and some enjoyable work follows until a spacious
-ledge on the right can be utilised. When Messrs. J. W. Robinson, J. H.
-Doncaster, and H. W. Blunt first made the ascent, in the September of
-1898, this portion of the climb was considered difficult, and it is
-probably the only part where special care is necessary. Above this the
-climbing can be varied considerably, but the direct ascent of a rock
-ridge, straight ahead, is to be recommended. The course throughout is
-well within the powers of most climbing parties, and the magnificent
-views of Scawfell Pinnacle and Deep Ghyll add additional interest to
-the ascent.
-
-We are indebted to two friends for the notes on the following
-climbs:--To Mr. G. T. Glover for those on the Ling Chimney, and to Mr.
-W. R. Reade for those on the West Jordan Gully.
-
-THE LING CHIMNEY, EAGLE’S NEST ARÊTE.--In the first edition
-of his book Mr. O. G. Jones mentions that there are two chimneys on
-the left-hand side of the Eagle’s Nest Arête, ‘the right of these
-is shallow and open ... whether it can be climbed or not I have
-never ascertained.’ On October 15th, 1899, Messrs. W. N. Ling, C.
-E. Martineau and G. T. Glover made the first recorded ascent of it,
-after a preliminary exploration from above. From the top of the small
-grass gully which commences the _arête_ climb, one traverses about ten
-feet across some rock to the left, being then in a direct line below
-the final chimney. Going straight upwards, by steep rock steps, an
-upright slab is swarmed up with the hands and feet on each side, until
-a platform is reached, on which the second man can join the leader.
-About fifteen feet above this is another platform at the foot of a
-narrow chimney which needs careful climbing for about ten feet, until a
-foothold can be utilised on the sharp edge of the left wall.
-
-From here some stiff pulls on the arms land one out either on a broad
-ledge above the easy gully route, or up a continuation of the chimney
-to the right-hand side of the narrow pinnacle at the finish of the true
-_arête_ climb. The ascent, as a whole, requires more care than the
-gully route.
-
-THE WEST JORDAN GULLY, PILLAR ROCK.--This deeply cut gully,
-or, more correctly speaking, chimney, is a striking feature of the
-Western face of the Pillar Rock, and, together with the East Jordan
-Gully, the head of which it meets at Jordan Gap, cuts off the actual
-Pillar Rock from Pisgah. Probably many climbers have examined the West
-Jordan Gully, but it does not appear to have been seriously attacked
-before July, 1898, when Mr. W. P. McCulloch and the writer climbed it.
-Walking up the bed of the gully we passed a tempting looking crack on
-the North wall which ends in a small cave; above this cave the gully
-is ‘chocked’ by several overhanging stones which from below seem very
-formidable obstacles. We, however, avoided the crack and, mounting a
-series of jammed stones, reached the innermost recesses of the chimney.
-We were now almost on a level with the top of the crack, and, the gully
-being here narrow enough to brace firmly across, we backed upwards
-and outwards for about fifteen feet, reaching the cave without great
-exertion. So far we had done well, but still the great jammed stones,
-round which we had to pass, loomed black overhead. Holds for the
-traverse outward looked anything but satisfactory, so Mr. McCulloch,
-after passing the rope round a conveniently placed jammed stone,
-climbed on to my shoulders and, with considerable difficulty, dragged
-himself into a small cave about fifteen feet above. As this cave would
-only accommodate one man, I climbed to Mr. McCulloch’s level, with a
-little assistance from the rope, and took the lead. Traversing outwards
-for about fifteen feet, I climbed a sensational forty-feet chimney,
-which we had surveyed from above several days previously, and landed
-safely in the bed of the gully past all difficulties. The height of the
-whole pitch is slightly under 100 feet, and, from beginning to end, the
-climbing is of a most interesting character. The second ascent was made
-by the brothers Broadrick, in August of the same year, but there is no
-record of it having been climbed since.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX II
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-_THE PILLAR ROCK AND ITS PURLIEUS UP TO DATE_
-
-
-In conformity with its deserts as the grandest mass of crags in
-Lakeland, the Pillar Rock has, of recent years, received most attention
-from those in search of new routes and variations. So numerous and
-intertwined are some of the latter that it would be difficult to say by
-how many different ways the top of the famous rock can now be attained.
-There are certainly a score that possess the merit of individuality.
-However, though there is one important exception, that of the New West
-Climb, the old routes still monopolise the bulk of the traffic. With
-the development of the craft of rock-climbing the once popular, easy
-routes, such as the Old West Climb or the Pendlebury Traverse, have
-become less used than formerly. For a moderate party with an expert
-leader the North Climb is now the favourite course, though the ‘New
-West’ has become recognised as the finer climb. This recognition will,
-probably, in due course make the latter outrival in popularity its
-older compeer. But the ‘Slab and Notch,’ with the finish up the left
-wall of the Great Chimney, still takes most Pillarites to the goal of
-their ambition. In the other extreme stands the New North West Climb,
-and fortunately so. It is too difficult and dangerous to attract those
-climbers who truly realise that they have a life to lose. Famous
-experts--one of whom made the descent alone--declare the New North West
-Climb to be unjustifiable. For the descent of the Rock, especially
-after reaching the top by one of the longer climbs, the Central Jordan
-Crack is most generally used. Even under the worst conditions of storm,
-ice, or snow a rope looped around the top retaining wall of the crack
-allows downward escape to be made with comparative ease and safety.
-
-[Illustration: THE PILLAR ROCK FROM THE WEST SIDE
-
- A The Low Man.
- B The High Man.
- C Pisgah.
- D The top of Easy Scree Gully.
- PP New Pisgah Routes.
- _aa_ The original old West Route.
- _bb_ The New West Climb.
- _dd_ The West Jordan Gully leading up to Jordan Gap.
- _ee_ Screes bounding the base of Pisgah.
- _ff_ Scree-slopes leading down to the Waterfall.
- _s_ The Slingsby Crack. Old West Climb Variation.]
-
-THE NEW WEST CLIMB.--Taken chronologically in this section,
-if for no other reason, this course demands first attention. Its
-outstanding features are sound, clean rocks, sensational situations
-with magnificent views, and secure belays at each section where they
-are really required. The climbing begins about 20 yards down the screes
-from the foot of the West Jordan Gully; the exact point is just below
-some large boulders which abut against the base of the main rock. Large
-hand- and footholds enable the steep lower rocks to be easily climbed,
-though at one point, about 60 feet above the start, there is a smooth
-place that gives trouble when ice is present. About 20 feet higher, a
-well-marked ledge leads to the right and out of the groove up which
-the climb has thus far run. Some turfy ledges then soon conduct the
-climber up to an impending nose of rock. After struggling up a short,
-steep pitch in the base of this, it becomes obvious that a traverse to
-the left is advisable. The place is vertical, but bulky and numerous
-holds enable the passage to be made in comfort. The traverse finishes
-abruptly on a steep buttress, with turf ledges at its foot. On the
-right a convenient crack provides means of upward progress for about
-30 feet; then an all too short scramble up a steep arête gives access
-to two small ledges with accommodation for one climber only on each.
-The rocks directly ahead overhang threateningly, and a traverse to the
-left into the base of a steep chimney--the key to the climb--becomes
-advisable. This movement is sensational, but the handholds nowadays are
-ample for the swing across. Yet it is advisable to take the precaution
-to hitch the rope over the splendid belay at the beginning of the
-traverse, especially if the conditions are adverse. Once across this
-section, a large chock-stone in the foot of the chimney can be utilised
-as anchorage whilst the leader moves upwards. The upper part of this
-30 foot chimney is probably the most awkward part of the whole climb.
-If the back be kept on the left wall throughout, numerous small, but
-sufficient, excrescences can be found on the confronting side of the
-chimney. It would seem advisable to keep as much as possible in the
-narrow cleft.
-
-A secure resting-place, with room for three or more climbers,
-is shortly gained, and the chimney, which becomes loose and
-repulsive-looking higher up, should now be deserted in favour of an
-interesting traverse to the right. The passage around the vertical
-corner is impressive, but careful use of the feet prevents the
-awkward attitudes so often seen here. The movement across the face
-to the right is still continued over capacious ledges in a slightly
-upward direction to some prominent shattered rocks. Good anchorage is
-available here. The final section begins above the shattered rocks, and
-lies up a small, shallow crack which closes in about 15 feet higher
-and necessitates a delicate step across a smooth slab on the right.
-A well-marked, grassy recess is thus eventually gained. The ascent
-finishes up this, and emerges within a few feet of the summit of the
-Pillar Rock.
-
-SAVAGE GULLY.--The direct ascent of this great rift, the aspect
-of which is familiar to all who visit the Rock by way of the North
-Climb, is too risky and dangerous to deserve serious attention from
-rock-climbers. Yet from a historical and topographical point of view
-the description of the first ascent by Mr. P. A. Thompson may prove of
-interest. Though this indefatigable pioneer was finally safeguarded by
-tying on a rope lowered from near the ‘Nose,’ the party who made the
-second ascent--Messrs. Barton--conceded the honour of precedence to
-Mr. Thompson, saying that the rope thus held could not be considered
-any aid. On the lower 110 feet, resting-places have since been found,
-and at no point is it necessary for the leader to take out more than 60
-feet of rope. Under the date June 3, 1909, Mr. Thompson wrote:--
-
-‘Savage Gully was climbed right through by me to-day after I had
-examined the route, held from the top of the Nose by Mr. L. J.
-Oppenheimer. The almost vertical portion immediately beyond the point
-where the ordinary North Climb diverges is by far the hardest part
-of the climb. The leader must run out 110 feet of rope, and there
-are no hitches or convenient resting-places on the way. The gully is
-divided by a narrow rib of rock, between which and the right-hand wall
-the climb starts. The first 25 feet present no great difficulty, but
-beyond this point the climbing becomes severe. Backing up does not
-appear to be possible, and the holds lie sometimes on the right and
-sometimes on the left of the rib, which was crossed in all five times.
-These crossings were always sensational, and, one from right to left,
-about half-way up, was greasy. At the top of the pitch a platform was
-reached, and an excellent holding ground found in a small cave between
-the continuation of the rib and the left-hand wall of the gully. Here I
-sent my boots down, and unroping, waited while Mr. Oppenheimer climbed
-by the ordinary route to the top of the crack leading down into Savage
-Gully, from which point he threw down a rope. With a second man in the
-cave to give a shoulder the best route would probably lie directly up
-the crack on the left of the rib, but this was too difficult to try
-alone. On the right the gully was comparatively easy for some distance,
-and climbing up for 30 feet I reached the rope and tied on. This branch
-of the gully then became too steep and narrow to follow, and another
-traverse had to be made across the rib, here expanded to a considerable
-buttress, on a shelving ledge, wide enough to kneel on, and with small
-handholds. This traverse is the only serious difficulty in the upper
-part of the climb. The moral support of the rope was inconsiderable, as
-10 feet of slack had to be taken in before the traverse could be made.
-On reaching the left-hand branch of the gully 30 feet more of climbing
-up slabs which, in stockinged feet, proved easy led to the foot of the
-crack. The final steep little chimney was wet, but otherwise not very
-difficult. Mr. Oppenheimer came up over the Nose, rejoining me in two
-hours after the start from the foot of the gully.’
-
-THE NEW NORTH WEST CLIMB.--This exceptionally severe course
-was first climbed on the 8th of June 1906 by Messrs. F. W. Botterill,
-L. J. Oppenheimer, A. Botterill, and Dr. J. H. Taylor. It is only
-suitable for experts, who, moreover, would be well advised to come to
-it in perfect form after a lengthy climbing holiday. Success depends
-on the skill of the leader. He can receive scanty support from his
-companions at the places where such aid is really required. Absence of
-a dependable belay for the long lead up the difficult upper section of
-the face militates against any claim for safety the expedition may be
-said to possess.
-
-The course starts from the westerly end of the Green Ledge. This is
-marked _g_ on Mr. Jones’ line drawing facing p. 254. By a curious error
-he named it the Nose. The rocks are comparatively easy at the outset;
-some short chimneys lead up to a sloping slab, where a traverse to the
-left is made into a more obvious chimney. This gives about 45 feet of
-interesting back and knee work until it is possible to work out to
-the right, and then up easy rocks to the crest of the buttress, where
-stands a prominent cairn. Broad, grass-covered slabs lead to the base
-of the nose of the Low Man, where the real difficulties begin.
-
-The route at first bears away to the west up some slabs, and then
-returns around a corner to a good ledge several yards long, whereon
-stands a prominent cairn. Anchorage is available at this point. The
-ledge is traversed to its extreme easterly end, and, after rounding
-a projecting rock, an ascent of about 10 feet allows a V
-shaped recess to be gained. This has been called ‘Le Coin.’ Above
-this important stance there are three distinct ledges to be gained.
-The first of these entails about 15 feet of difficult ascent from
-‘Le Coin’; probably the best way lies up the right wall. The first
-ledge possesses a sound belay, and the second is recognizable by a
-larger belay, which is cracked, but safe at present. A party of three
-might foregather here. An ascent of quite 35 feet then leads to a
-‘triangular’ ledge, possessing practically no dependable belay. The key
-to further progress here is the negotiation of a sensational stride
-around a corner to the left and thus into an open, exposed chimney
-nearly 50 feet high. Above this there is a difficult and risky traverse
-back to the right, mostly on a small, grassy ledge. A broad recess
-slightly higher soon gives ample resting space. From the second ledge
-above ‘Le Coin,’ whereon stands the ‘cracked belay,’ to this point
-entails a lead out for the first man of about 90 feet. The difficulty
-and danger of this section will undoubtedly militate against the
-North-West Climb ever becoming ‘an easy day for a lady.’ The ascent to
-the crest of the Low Man is made up a conspicuous cleft, Oppenheimer’s
-chimney, which is reached after crossing some broken rocks to the
-right. Two projecting chock-stones facilitate the ascent.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-“OVER THE NOSE”--THE PILLAR ROCK]
-
-THE HIGH MAN FROM ABOVE THE NOSE ON THE NORTH CLIMB.--This
-ascent can be made in several different ways, some of which were made
-in the earlier days, but, like many variations on the Pillar Rock,
-never recorded by the pioneers. Yet Stony Gully, which gives the
-usual route from the Nose up to the Low Man, is best avoided should
-the climbers find themselves ‘under fire’ from another party who have
-thoughtlessly gone on in advance. There have been several narrow
-escapes from falling stones hereabouts. At such times knowledge of the
-alternative ways up the High Man may be useful. After surmounting the
-Nose, Stony Gully should be crossed and left immediately. Easy grass
-and rock ledges then afford rapid upward progress to be made to the
-base of the steep rocks of the High Man. All the way up the sharp,
-rocky, north-east arête of the peak is conspicuous overhead, and the
-point to aim for is a deeply cut chimney somewhat to the left of a line
-directly below the summit of the arête. This chimney was climbed some
-years ago; its recesses are narrow and steep below, but higher up there
-is a broad ledge on the right, whence the pull over the dominating
-chock-stone can be taken. The climber emerges on the great, sloping
-slabs which slant down the upper right-hand wall of the Great Chimney.
-They are an unmistakable feature in the view of the east side of the
-rock from the Shamrock. The slabs may be crossed more easily than
-their appearance would indicate, and thus the usual upper section of
-the Great Chimney entered on a level with the ledge leading around and
-below the Notch.
-
-On the other hand, these slabs can be avoided by climbing upwards to
-the right to a broad ledge and then around the prominent perpendicular
-nose of the High Man to join the easy, ordinary route from the Low
-Man. There is yet another way to the top of the Rock, which was used
-by Mr. Botterill’s party in 1909. This runs almost directly up the
-nose of the High Man from the broad ledge previously mentioned. The
-place is steep and sensational enough to warn off novices, but the
-rock is firm and yields sufficient hand and footholds, though these
-are awkwardly spaced. The same party reached this nose from below by
-climbing up the outer right-hand wall of the chimney first mentioned.
-This is probably the easier of the two routes, for the rock is deeply
-split into convenient clefts for hands and feet. Incidentally it might
-be mentioned that those ascending the Rock by the Old Wall Route, from
-near the top of Walker’s Gully, pass below these more difficult climbs
-and take a slanting course up to a small square-looking chimney, above
-which the usual way from the Low Man is gained. This was one of the
-earliest ways up the Pillar Rock, and the ascent involves less real
-hand and footwork than any other route.
-
-THE CURTAIN AND ARÊTE.--This forms the left-hand wall of the
-Great Chimney, and may be climbed from bottom to top. At the beginning
-there is a variation which slants up to the crest of the Curtain
-from a point a few feet below the beginning of the fine pitch in the
-Great Chimney. A still more interesting method of attack lies up an
-unmistakable cleft behind a huge detached obelisk on the south or
-left-hand side of the Curtain. Above the cleft a narrow crack affords
-a very pleasing exit. Once on the crest of the Curtain the work is
-straightforward, the ordinary tracks from the east side being crossed
-_en route_. The final stretch of the arête, which lands the climber on
-the top of the rock, involves some exhilarating arm-swings on capacious
-holds.
-
-THE WEST JORDAN CRACK and the FAR WEST JORDAN CLIMB were
-discovered in 1909 by Messrs. H. B. Gibson and W. B. Brunskill. A
-poised block, which stands a few feet west of the foot of the old West
-Jordan Climb, marks the base of operations. From this the ‘Crack’ route
-slants upwards to the left over the top of a steep slab to a diminutive
-ledge at the foot of a vertical corner, up which rises a narrow crack.
-The ascent of this 20 foot corner is the crux of the climb; above it
-the summit cairn is only a few feet away. The Far West Jordan Climb is
-somewhat the easier of the two problems. From above the poised block
-previously mentioned, the route diverges at once to the left, and,
-after crossing a grass-floored depression, it makes for a detached
-spike, about 5 feet high, close to the left sky-line. This affords good
-anchorage for the second climber whilst the leader tackles the ensuing
-somewhat exposed section from the top of the detached spike. This
-consists of a passage up a crack to the right of an overhanging block.
-Above this a fine arête is gained which leads to the summit.
-
-THE WEST RIDGE OF PISGAH.--The Pisgah problems have never been
-considered seriously by climbers, but this longer course up the whole
-length of the west side of the prominent little peak is worthy of
-passing mention. The route shows to advantage on the line drawing of
-the west side of the Pillar Rock. At the point of divergence, about 45
-feet above the screes, the left-hand way is the easier of the two; it
-regains the direct route by way of a detached rock-pinnacle.
-
-WALKER’S GULLY.--Since it almost seems customary nowadays
-to become benighted in this magnificent gorge, a few notes may be
-given as to altered conditions. Those who pay their first visit to
-this exceptionally severe course would be well advised to avoid the
-‘watery’ first pitch on the left. If abnormally dry it may be overcome
-direct, but this probably involves more severe climbing than anything
-encountered in the higher main bed of the gully. The best course for
-those who wish to add this initial pitch to their laurels is to start
-up the buttress a few feet to the right of its foot. About 30 feet
-higher a grass ledge is reached, where a short traverse can be made to
-the left, and then the way lies up a narrow sloping scoop for nearly 25
-feet. At the top of this the holds are rather deficient, but it is soon
-possible to step across on to the upper part of the big chimney and
-thence struggle up directly over the capstone.
-
-The great cave below the mass of tumbled boulders in the upper part of
-the gully has recently given serious pause to at least two parties of
-experts. The hole at the back of the cave is blocked by fallen rocks,
-and considerable difficulty has been encountered in making the upward
-way on the exposed outside edge of the jammed boulders. It may be
-mentioned that the blocking of this hole is probably only temporary; it
-has occurred before, and been removed by wary experts. During the first
-ascent the hole required considerable enlargement.
-
-The fact that the final obstacle can be overcome by first climbing
-up the right wall until the left wall can be reached to assume a
-backing-up attitude would seem to be unknown to many parties. Even
-a moderately short man can utilise this method. Failure to realize
-this has resulted in more than one party spending a night in the damp
-recesses of the gully. Yet they would probably find the magnificent
-scenery ample reward for the discomfort involved. The great black walls
-of the gorge loom gloomily on either hand. To watch the moon’s rays
-casting a pervasive gleam athwart the distant peaks is indescribably
-beautiful. But this is only ‘moonshine,’ especially to those who have
-watched and waited.
-
-THE SHAMROCK.--The climber who emerges safely from Walker’s
-Gully may be glad to know that there is a pleasant scramble thence
-to the lower peak of the Shamrock. This acts as a welcome muscular
-sedative after the previously severe exercise in the gully. Just to
-the left of the top of the great upper pitch a crack will be noticed
-slanting to the left up the wall of the Shamrock. This yields about 30
-feet of ascent, and then, turning to the right, the climber mounts,
-first on clean rocks, and later over grass-crowned ledges, to the
-summit. After a short descent across the head of the Shamrock Gully, it
-is possible to mount the opposite wall and emerge quite close to the
-cairns which mark the downward path by the Shamrock Traverse.
-
-THE SHAMROCK BUTTRESS, by the original route, affords a pleasant
-excursion in winter time, when the gully and greater climbs close
-at hand are scarcely approachable. The course starts up a small but
-well-defined gully a few yards to the right of the wide entrance to
-the Shamrock Gully. It continues straight up the Buttress, until a
-high slice of smooth rock suggests a slight descent and traverse to
-the right to the foot of an obvious chimney pitch with prominent
-chock-stones. Above this another short pitch gives the approach to the
-foot of a steep rib of rock which is crowned by a loosely wedged stone.
-The easy bed of the Shamrock Chimney is now entered and followed beyond
-the short, final pitch which, except under snowy conditions, possesses
-a ‘through route.’ To avoid this pitch an interesting variation can
-be made up the steep crack on the right-hand wall, from the summit of
-which there is a short traverse to the left to the foot of the usual
-arête finish of the Shamrock Chimneys Climb. Curiously enough this
-latter course is seldom visited nowadays, yet it is by far the finest
-expedition on the Shamrock.
-
-In 1909 a party led by Mr. H. B. Gibson made a variation on the
-Shamrock Gully side of the buttress in its upper part. After ascending
-a 25 foot slab and some easier rocks, they entered the gully above
-the great pitch. From a pile of loose boulders, since swept away,
-they continued up the right wall of the gully, bearing at first to
-the right, and finished at the top of the original Shamrock Buttress
-course. An extensive fall of rock has taken place on this final
-stage of the climb; the place is now decidedly unsafe, and should
-be avoided. It might be noted that the falling masses and previous
-natural weathering have altered the structure of the great pitch of the
-Shamrock Gully. The left-hand route may now be considered the easier of
-the two ways of overcoming the obstacle.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-_NEW CLIMBS ON GREAT GABLE, SCAWFELL, AND AROUND WASTDALE HEAD_
-
-
-THE ABBEY RIDGE ranks as the best discovery on Great Gable since
-the ascent of the Ling Chimney in 1899. In the present work (p. 158)
-there is a reference to the rocks to the left of the ordinary West
-Chimney route up the Eagle’s Nest Ridge. This attracted the attention
-of Messrs. F. Botterill and J. Hazard with a happy result--the
-annexation of a new climb. This was in the April of 1909.
-
-The lower part of the new ridge is well defined, but above the broad
-ledge, almost on a level with the exit from the ordinary West Chimney,
-several routes are available. This section was climbed many years ago
-on more than one occasion, notably when the deep, black chimney on the
-west side of the ridge was visited. This fine cleft is well seen from
-the Arrowhead Ridge, rising above the big boulder pitch in the Eagle’s
-Nest Gully. The ascent is not difficult.
-
-The latter remark scarcely applies to the new portion of the Abbey
-Ridge, especially if the direct ascent of the _mauvais pas_ be made.
-A long ‘run out’ for the leader at this point warrants the warning
-that the lofty sanctuary of the Abbey is only for the expert who is
-in perfect training. The climb begins easily, either at the very
-bottom of the ridge or by joining it at a point almost on a level with
-the beginning of the Eagle’s Nest Ridge. The ascent to the top of a
-conspicuous detached mass begins to suggest difficulty. But the real
-work starts directly above this, in gaining a narrow grassy ledge which
-stretches across the face for several feet. From the extreme left
-of this ledge the way lies up the arête until a steep, grassy gully
-slightly more to the left affords a finish to the upper ledge on a
-level with the top of the Eagle’s Nest Chimney. This is the easier of
-the two exits. The direct route bears away to the right below the steep
-and grassy gully until an overhanging block rises above the climber.
-It is important to make sure of this position, as the rocks are now
-very well scratched. The key to the situation is a good hold for both
-hands right under the overhanging block. Progress beyond this crucial
-point is scarcely safe unless this grip is secured, but once above this
-‘step’ the rest is comparatively safe and easy. The rock throughout is
-of the usual Gable quality.
-
-Two other small variations on the Napes may be mentioned in passing.
-In the autumn of 1910 Messrs. H. R. Pope and E. T. W. Addyman found an
-interesting problem on the right wall of the ordinary West Chimney on
-the Eagle’s Nest Ridge. From the big belay half-way up this cleft it
-is possible to traverse out to the right on to a steep rock face which
-forms the left-hand wall of the Ling Chimney. This wall can be climbed
-to the top on ledges which lead across to the right-hand edge and then
-back to the left again. The finish can be taken directly upwards.
-
-It is scarcely advisable to say that anything new can be found on the
-Needle Ridge. However, Messrs. A. G. Woodhead and J. Laycock have
-accentuated the fact that this much-trodden ridge can be climbed
-straight up from the lowest point. The last 15 feet before the old
-route is gained require skilful treatment.
-
-Numerous small and unimportant variations on the ever-attractive
-Needle have been made. Records of personal gymnastics are best omitted
-here, though the best of all may be mentioned--that of the beginner,
-who ‘climbed’ the top stone by a really new method. This enthusiast
-assumed a position of repose on the mantelshelf, and for half-an-hour
-pored over the view over the edge and down the impressive scree slopes
-of Gable. At last the patience of the lusty leader on the top became
-exhausted. Though the novice hung on with his hands, he ‘had to come,’
-which he did feet first.
-
-The attractions of the Ennerdale Face of Great Gable have been
-increased by the discovery of a splendid course by Dr. J. S. Sloane
-and Messrs. M. Gimson, A. J. Gimson, and J. E. Henderson in the
-April of 1909. They appropriately suggested that the rift might be
-called the SMUGGLER’S CHIMNEY, and this name has been adopted.
-The hand and footwork starts about 100 feet west of the foot of the
-Central Gully, with about 20 feet of ascent of steep rock. The chimney
-proper, which is vertical and about 85 feet in height, now begins. It
-is in three stages, and the first part gives 35 feet of engrossing
-climbing before a cave is entered. The hardest part of the climb occurs
-where there is an undercut bulge of rock about 10 feet below this
-resting-place. At this point it is probably best to forsake the back
-and foot method and allow the arms and knees to do most of the work.
-The second section of the chimney above the Cave consists of a narrow,
-vertical, deeply-cut crack which bears some resemblance to the Monolith
-Crack in North Wales. This stretch--though squeeze might be the better
-word--is 25 feet in height. The final pitch is almost the same height,
-but its extra width will prove gratifying to stout climbers despite
-the somewhat constricting final wriggle afforded by the hole of the
-‘through route.’ Easy, grassy ground is now encountered, which leads
-past the ‘Smuggler’s Retreat,’ and thus to the crest of the crags.
-
-In the September of 1908 Messrs. G. H. L. Mallory and G. L. Keynes
-found two ‘little climbs’ on the Ennerdale Face to the left of the
-Bottle-shaped Pinnacle Ridge. They can be reached from the Scree
-Gully--marked B on the line drawing--by traversing upwards from the
-fork towards a large overhanging crag. This is a prominent feature
-of this side of Gable Crag. The new climbs are claimed to be the
-nearest routes which can be found to the left and to the right of
-the overhanging crag. Cairns mark the start of each course, that to
-the left being the easier of the two, and giving about 150 feet of
-climbing. On the right a steep crack affords for the most part the
-means of ascent. The difficulty is concentrated in the first 80 feet.
-Where the crack becomes easier and wider higher up, it is probably
-better to end the climb by traversing on to the right buttress.
-
-A few other minor points of interest on the Ennerdale Face may be
-worth mention. For instance, Messrs. H. V. Reade and G. Arbuthnot have
-shown that the vertical crack rising from near the foot of the Oblique
-Chimney to the gap behind the Bottle-shaped Pinnacle may be climbed,
-but not without difficulty. The disappearance of the much discussed
-‘rocking-rock’ in the Engineers’ Chimney has not made the ascent any
-easier; in fact, the relative difficulty of this section remains about
-the same.
-
-In misty weather the foot of the Central Gully was often difficult
-to locate, even though the climber happened to be sitting at it.
-Recognition is now a simple matter, for a huge boulder has fallen
-and bridged the foot of the gorge most picturesquely. Other slight
-alterations have also occurred in the bed of the gully. For instance,
-more holds have developed on the steep crack in the middle part of
-the gully, where the usual easy route slants up to the left to the
-Staircase Pitch. The ascent of this crack is now frequently made.
-For those who do not essay the ‘Direct Finish’ there is a steep but
-not difficult crack just to the left of the great nose of rock which
-so boldly divides the upper part of the Central Gully. The ordinary
-route is still further to the left, but there are variations galore
-hereabouts.
-
-’Tis a far cry from Wastdale to the head of MOSEDALE to find an
-outcrop of wet slabs less than 200 feet high. Yet several parties of
-enthusiasts have developed the art of finding diminutive new climbs in
-remote corners. There are two main rifts splitting the Mosedale Rocks.
-These are known as the East and the West Cracks. The former is the more
-difficult of the two; in fact, the pitch near the top would seem to
-require the use of a lowered rope from some friends above if the ascent
-is to be made safely. It has not yet been climbed without this aid. At
-least two routes have also been found directly on the face between the
-two cracks, and two smaller rifts to the right of the East Crack have
-been added to the list of conquests. All are well marked and easier
-to find than to climb, for the experts of the Fell and Rock-Climbing
-Club, usually under the skilled leadership of Mr. H. B. Lyon, have
-specialised on the Mosedale Rocks.
-
-GREAT END. THE BROTHERS’ CRACK.--Glorious as is Great End in the
-winter time, it has never appealed largely to the rock-climber pure and
-simple. But these latter will be entertained excellently if they join
-the brotherhood of the new crack, which owes its exploitation to those
-well-known judges of a sound climb, Mr. G. F. and Rev. A. J. Woodhouse.
-The crack rises about 60 feet to the north of the well-known Brigg’s
-Cave Pitch on the east end of the crags. The actual crack itself is
-nearly as high as that on Kern Knotts. It is situated in a corner, and
-rises vertically from a large grass ledge. This take-off is reached
-by ordinary scrambling, though the final landing is made by means of
-a short crack. The real climbing up the main crack, which is here too
-narrow to admit one’s body, begins with a slabby section in two parts,
-in all about 20 feet high. The crack now widens, and is available for
-wedging purposes. After a short stretch of ‘back and knee’ the most
-difficult portion is reached, and for this the leader would be well
-advised to thread the rope behind a jammed stone. The final obstacle
-possesses an overhanging chock-stone, but good ledges on the left wall
-simplify the finish. The climb is undoubtedly severe, for the leader
-can nowhere receive any help from his companion.
-
-SCAWFELL.--Of late years but little new climbing of any
-magnitude has been done on Scawfell. This is no doubt entirely due
-to the fact that in the early days Scawfell was the most attractive
-and most exploited of all the Lakeland crags. The present decade has
-produced first-rate climbers to an unlimited extent, but their best
-efforts have been restricted by the rocks themselves, and, where these
-have been forced to yield climbs, what they have given us are in many
-cases just beyond the line of safety, even for the best parties.
-Another effect of this strenuous search after new routes has been the
-discovery of many variations, and some of these are worth description,
-although necessarily brief, in a work like the present.
-
-SCAWFELL PINNACLE CLIMB DIRECT FROM UPPER DEEP GHYLL.--The start
-of this climb is described by Mr. Jones on p. 88. After the first 15
-feet or so he traversed away to the left on to the arête of the Low Man.
-
-Messrs. A. G. Woodhead and W. L. Collinson climbed this lower
-difficulty in August 1907, after which they bore straight upward over
-shelving and fairly difficult ledges for a hundred feet or so, until
-impending rocks forced them away to the left. When almost in a line
-with the top of the Pinnacle they struck straight upward from a broad
-platform (where a cairn now stands) over a bulge of rock, necessitating
-a good arm pull, until a belay was reached. Thence a grassy gully led
-them without difficulty to the top of the High Man. The climb is
-one of much merit, and deserves more popularity than it enjoys. The
-exceedingly difficult start may have acted as a deterrent, but it may
-be an encouragement to leaders to know that once they have overcome
-this _mauvais pas_ the higher rocks contain climbing of a much easier
-order.
-
-SCAWFELL PINNACLE FROM DEEP GHYLL, VARIATIONS.--A somewhat
-easier way of reaching the Low Man from the _firma loca_ (p. 81) than
-that of the arête followed in the first ascent, was found and climbed
-by Mr. A. H. Binns alone in August 1904. This is now called Gibson’s
-Chimney route, after Mr. H. O. S. Gibson, who repeated the ascent in
-June 1907, and left a lucid description of it in the Wastdale Climbers’
-Book.
-
-From the _firma loca_ a traverse is made in the direction of the arête
-until a crack sloping up to the right is reached. This is followed for
-about 15 feet, and the upper reaches of the chimney described by Mr.
-Jones as ‘hopeless’ (p. 82) soon attained. Here a leaf of rock, with
-good holds on its edge, affords moderately difficult and strenuous
-climbing for 30 feet until the chimney becomes impossible. It is then
-abandoned to the left, along a traverse which leads past a good belay
-to the arête. The first step upward on this gives a pretty problem in
-an exposed position. The holds are small but good until the vertical
-piece is scaled. Thence the going is comparatively easy to the crest of
-the Low Man. Other variations have been found from the _firma loca_,
-but, while some of these many prove useful to a leader unable to follow
-Mr. Jones’ route, the original climb is by far the most entertaining
-for strong parties.
-
-A good belay about 40 feet up the lower crack has dispelled many of its
-terrors, and now renders the long initial run out on the part of the
-leader quite unnecessary.
-
-DEEP GHYLL, SECOND PITCH.--It is of interest--a melancholy
-interest perhaps--to know that it is no longer necessary to climb up
-the left or right side of this famous pitch in the historic manner, and
-that an inglorious ascent can now be made through a hole at the back
-of the cave. Stones drop straight down this hole from the Ghyll above,
-perhaps as a hint to climbers to play the game in the old-fashioned way!
-
-MOSS GHYLL, UPPER VARIATION.--This starts some 20 feet to the
-right of the foot of the Great Chimney. A few feet up the face a
-crack is reached, and this can be followed to a small cairn. Here a
-choice of routes offers, one back to the top of the Great Chimney, and
-the alternative one to the Pisgah Ridge. A strong party led by Mr.
-F. Botterill first proved the possibilities of this variation, and
-described it as slightly more difficult than the direct exit up the
-chimney.
-
-MR. BOTTERILL’S CLIMBS.--The long sloping cracks, the upper
-parts of which were followed in the Collier’s and Keswick Brothers’
-climbs, were ascended in their entirety at Whitsuntide 1903 by Messrs.
-F. Botterill, H. Williamson, and E. Grant.
-
-The crack nearest Mickledore Ridge is difficult throughout, and
-is, moreover, somewhat earthy and friable; there is no record of a
-repetition of its ascent. The companion crack was the scene of a
-remarkable _tour de force_. Mr. Botterill’s account of his exploit,[2]
-and the warning note sounded by a party of great skill and experience
-which unsuccessfully essayed the second ascent, will probably acquaint
-climbers with sufficient details to cause them to take the climb itself
-‘as read.’ It is in a class apart, and, basing our judgment on a survey
-made on a rope from above, we do not recommend it.
-
-After a lapse of nearly twenty years, and repeated onslaughts by many
-parties, PIERS’ GHYLL was ascended throughout for the second
-time in September 1910. Mr. H. R. Pope, admirably backed up by Mr.
-R. B. Sanderson, succeeded in leading a large party up the various
-wet and friable pitches that go to make the climb. From a vivid
-description, written by Mr. Sanderson in the current number of the Fell
-and Rock Club _Journal_, we gather that, in spite of the constantly
-falling rocks in the Ghyll, the narrow pitch below the Bridge Rock is
-practically unaltered, and is still the greatest difficulty. It is
-necessary to stand immediately below the waterfall in order to work up
-a shallow, almost holdless groove. This is very steep; the rocks are,
-of course, wet and slippery; added to these is the uncertain nature
-and paucity of the holds--altogether a combination of difficulty,
-disagreeableness, and danger that most parties will care to court but
-very seldom.
-
-During the same holiday Messrs. Pope and Madan climbed from Tennis
-Court Ledge to the Fives Court on Pisgah Buttress by traversing from
-the right-hand end of the Ledge for a short distance. Thence they
-climbed directly up a steep rock-face for 15 feet or so to the Fives
-Court, a somewhat easier but much more exposed route than that up the
-crack utilised in the first ascent.
-
-Other variations of a minor character have been made on many of the
-older climbs; indeed so thoroughly has the face been scoured, that it
-would be a very rash man who would nowadays come down to the Wastwater
-Hotel and say that he had made a new route up Scawfell.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-_THE BUTTERMERE CLIMBS, AND THOSE IN OUTLYING DISTRICTS_
-
-
-For strong and experienced parties of climbers, with a penchant
-for boating, fishing, and long mountain tramps on the ‘off days,’
-Buttermere is well-nigh ideal. Moreover, the _blasé_ ‘Wastdale Header’
-will find amongst the fine corrie-like combes of High Crag and High
-Stile, and above the great hollow of Warnscale, climbs of an entirely
-different nature from most of the nail-scratched, polished courses
-of his former haunts. Many of the Buttermere climbs are still to
-all intents and purposes virgin ascents. The rock of which they are
-formed does not take nail-marks so readily, and the blatant, scratched
-foothold, which positively shouts at one ‘here am I!’ is as yet an
-alien in these parts. The texture of the gullies is very different; it
-is always necessary to be on the alert for unsteady chock-stones; every
-hold needs testing; in fine, care and experience are essential to safe
-ascents.
-
-Mr. L. J. Oppenheimer, in his book ‘The Heart of Lakeland,’ has made
-out a strong case for the claims of Buttermere as a centre for the more
-historic climbs, and justly says that ‘after Wastdale Head--though no
-doubt a long way after--it is one of the best centres in Lakeland.’ The
-Buttermere Hotel is in every way a most excellent house, and to those
-whose leaning is towards a simple life the farmhouses in the valley
-are second to none. So much granted, it is perhaps as well to review
-the work that has been done here, chiefly, it may be stated, by Mr.
-Oppenheimer and his friends and brethren of the Rücksack Club.
-
-THE GULLIES OF WARNSCALE.--When standing in the huge, green
-hollow at the edge of Buttermere, one has on the north the great
-face of Fleetwith, with a long prominent gully almost in the
-centre--Fleetwith Gully. A point of the compass further round is a
-bulging outcrop of rock, a prominent feature in all the photographs of
-the Head of Buttermere. This is Green Crag, and up its left-hand side
-runs Green Crag Gully, reminiscent of the late J. W. Robinson, who,
-with Mr. W. A. Wilson, made its first ascent in 1899. To the right of
-this, and on the Crag itself, is an unmistakable black rift, which is
-now known as Toreador Gully. Further round still, and facing Fleetwith,
-is the well-known Haystacks Mountain. Well to the left of the striking
-cones which have given the mountain its name is a steep rock-face
-seamed by three vertical rifts, one of which forks into two branches
-about a third of the way up the Crags--the Y Gully. The middle rift is
-Warn Gill, an ‘exceptionally severe course,’ whilst the one to the
-right is Stack Ghyll, probably the best and most useful climb in the
-valley.
-
-FLEETWITH GULLY is somewhat disappointing on close acquaintance.
-There are at least six pitches, but only two have any claim to
-individuality. These are generally moist, and are scarcely ever
-climbed, because they can easily be avoided on either side. Vegetation,
-water, and loose stones are the impressive features of the gully.
-
-GREEN CRAG GULLY suffers from a drawback common to some others
-of the Buttermere climbs--in all but the driest weather a very
-considerable stream of water tumbles down it. As a climb it is somewhat
-disappointing, but the first pitch, a fine vertical rise of about 70
-feet, is quite entertaining. Above this the going lacks character
-and is comparatively easy, although care is needed on account of the
-quickly disintegrating rock. Of a very different character is its
-companion climb, TOREADOR GULLY. After some exploration work,
-during which a dangerous huge block was dislodged, a party of Fell and
-Rock Club Members, led by Mr. H. B. Lyon, subsequently made its ascent
-in August 1908.
-
-After a somewhat difficult start, the gully eases off and seductively
-leads the climber upward to an 80-foot wet chimney, which is the crux
-of the climb. The walls are set at a convenient distance apart for
-‘backing up,’ and for a while all goes well. However, just when the
-leader, who has worked upwards with his feet on the right wall and
-back on the left, is beginning to feel fatigued and in need of a rest,
-the difficulties increase, and it becomes necessary to transfer the
-body across and face the opposite wall. Of anchorage there is none,
-but the second man can back up to below the leader, and, firmly braced
-across the chimney, can at least support him by the encouragement
-of his proximity; whether he could hold his companion in the event
-of a slip is somewhat doubtful. By most careful balancing, and an
-exceedingly anxious time for the second man, the leader can effect a
-lodgment facing the left wall, whence, with great difficulty, he can
-work over the crest of the pitch.
-
-Above this are two obstacles of a comparatively mild nature. There is
-no record of a second ascent, although we understand that this climb is
-quite justifiable for a really strong party.
-
-The three remaining gullies above Warnscale Bottom are those on the
-Haystacks, to which we have already made reference. Of these, the
-left-hand or Y Gully can be summarily dismissed as containing too
-much loose and dangerous rock. The next cleft to the right, WARN
-GILL, suffers somewhat from the same fault, and, moreover, is
-generally wet. It was reserved by Messrs. Oppenheimer, Scott, and Shaw
-as a _bonne bouche_ for Mr. F. Botterill to lead up, and, as the former
-naïvely remarks, ‘it proved rather more than difficult enough.’ After
-climbing six excellent pitches, one of which, a long chimney raked
-by a waterfall, proved to be abnormally severe, they were forced to
-abandon their project when about 40 feet below the top of the gully.
-A way of escape was found about 60 feet lower down on the right-hand
-side. This lay up a steep rock and heather buttress leading to a
-small chimney which took them to the top of the crags. The climbing
-throughout is of great difficulty, quite apart from the instability
-of some of the holds, and there is no doubt that this was a failure
-far surpassing in achievement many a climb which has been brought to a
-successful issue. It is perhaps well to note in passing that the name
-is a corruption of Warnscale Gill, and was not given with any idea of
-deterring subsequent parties.
-
-STACK GHYLL, the next rift to the right, is a very different
-proposition. From below it looks most alluring. Peeping over the top
-of the ‘capstone’ of the first pitch is such a succession of chimneys
-as is bound to arouse the keenest feelings of pleasurable anticipation
-in a climber’s breast. One can well sympathise with the tantalising
-way in which this comparatively short, first pitch repelled all the
-earlier efforts to overcome it. All kinds of theories were evolved, but
-all were proved fallacious by the smooth, overhanging chock-stone. It
-seemed to be quite impregnable until, after repeated efforts, a small
-hole was found on the right of the stone. This ultimately proved to be
-the key to the pitch, and, as was but a just reward for many previous
-disappointments, Messrs. Oppenheimer and Craig succeeded in passing
-an ice-axe through the hole, and, by using the shaft as a handhold,
-emerged successful. A short time previous to this the pitch had been
-turned on the right, up some grassy ledges, and the gully entered
-fairly high up, whence it was followed to the top.
-
-The going immediately above the first pitch is fairly easy, and leads
-by way of a narrow chimney, liberally supplied with chock-stones, to
-a small scree patch. Immediately beyond is a pretty 40-foot chimney,
-amenable to back and knee methods, which gives out on broken rocks.
-Above this an outcrop of rock bars the way, and after passing this on
-the left, one is soon confronted by the last obstacle.
-
-The gully is here spanned by an unbroken wall of rock except in the
-right-hand corner, where is a fine cave, overhung by a huge block.
-This is too high to reach, but off a sturdy shoulder a handhold can
-be grasped on the right. A trying drag up, chiefly on the arms, then
-enables the leader to effect a lodgment above the pitch, in readiness
-for the others, who will derive much strenuous exercise unless they
-pocket their pride and accept a tug from the rope--an excellent gully
-and, if climbed during dry weather, but little inferior to the best in
-Lakeland.
-
-THE BIRKNESS COMBE CLIMBS.--The wild upland hollow dividing
-High Stile from High Crag contains one of the many Eagle Crags of
-Lakeland. This is the finest rock around Buttermere, and recalls very
-strongly in shape, height, and general contour the famous Cyrn Lâs
-buttress of Snowdonia. The rock of this Eagle Crag is of a much better
-type, however, from the climber’s point of view, and the fine climb,
-BIRKNESS CHIMNEY, made in August 1903 by Mr. L. J. Oppenheimer
-and Dr. Norman Sheldon, is much superior to anything on Cyrn Lâs.
-
-A good climb also is that up the prominent black rift which faces High
-Crag. This is known as BIRKNESS GULLY, and it affords about a
-couple of hundred feet of climbing, the upper part of which is fairly
-difficult. The initial stages are quite simple, and the interest is not
-fairly aroused until, high up, a huge cave, roofed in by huge boulders,
-is reached. About 15 feet below the dominating boulder is a huge,
-wedged rock which bridges the gully; the climb on to this behind sundry
-smaller jammed stones is very pretty. It is well for the second man
-to pass the leader when on a level with the main bridge and traverse
-outwards on to it. He can then climb up to a higher cave immediately
-below the great capstone and belay the rope. The leader then comes out
-to the bridge and scales the vertical right wall immediately above it.
-The holds are small but sufficient, and the proceeding is rendered
-safe by the rope held by the second man. Above this nothing remains
-save a descent to the foot of the Gully, with a view to an assault
-upon BIRKNESS CHIMNEY. This is a climb of great severity, and,
-but for the possibility of threading the rope to belay the leader at
-the worst part, might be dismissed as unjustifiable. As things are,
-however, a strong--one should perhaps say a _very_ strong--party will
-find great sport and a reasonable immunity from risk. The Chimney
-proper branches from the Gully described, at a point just below the
-serious climbing in the latter. It is entered by way of a steep, grassy
-corner, dominated by a chimney, generally moist, of about 20 feet in
-height.
-
-The next pitch, a chimney, is rather more so than that passed, both as
-regards height and moisture. It can be obviated by the rocks on either
-hand, however. Above it is a steep wall of rock surmounted by a crack.
-The wall can be climbed direct or by way of a chimney on the left,
-either of which routes is interesting, but not as stiff as the crack
-above. Beyond this is the difficult pitch. High up, a huge mass of rock
-protruding from the right wall breaks the continuity of the chimney
-and forms a cave. Away outwards, at about the level of the cave, is a
-shallow groove with no bottom; the difficulty is to get into this. And
-a very serious difficulty it is. Fortunately a small stone is tightly
-jammed inside the cave, and the leader’s rope can be passed behind
-it. He then traverses outward, aided somewhat by his second, and
-after a long stretch upward, in a most awkward position, a handhold is
-reached. Then occurs a most strenuous arm pull, with the feet dangling
-helplessly, or vainly seeking support on the smooth rock-wall. Elbows,
-arms, and shoulders are simultaneously requisitioned ere a hold for the
-feet can be found in the groove. Once this is gained, however, the work
-is easier until the top chock-stone is reached. This demands another
-effort, and the pitch is vanquished.
-
-Dr. Sheldon, who led the first ascent, was much impressed by its
-difficulty, and likened it to the top pitch of Walker’s Gully, which he
-had climbed a short time previously. There remain two more obstacles
-before the steep wall at the top is reached, neither of which call for
-special comment. Near the angle of Eagle Crag there is a long straight
-Gully which so far has not been climbed in its entirety. It repelled a
-party of exceptional strength some years ago, after an assault upon it
-lasting for seven hours.
-
-BLEABERRY COMBE, carved out of the breast of High Stile,
-contains the small tarn whence issues Sour Milk Ghyll, beloved of the
-Buttermere day excursionist.
-
-As he stands at the door of Buttermere Hotel and gazes upward at
-the crags above the water slide, a fine rift is open to his view.
-This, which by the way can also be seen from near Keswick, was the
-first climb made on the Bleaberry Combe Crags. It is the BLACK
-CHIMNEY, and was first climbed by the late O. G. Jones and J. W.
-Robinson (what a lot we Lakeland climbers owe to those two!) in the
-early days of their acquaintance.
-
-In spite of its promising appearance it contains but two pitches, both
-of which are fairly simple. Further along the crag to the right, and
-hidden from sight of the hotel, is the CENTRAL GULLY. This lacks
-continuity throughout the greater part of its length, but possesses
-two pitches of considerable difficulty. Further round still is a long
-narrow chimney. At present it is known as Bleaberry Chimney, but we
-would suggest OPPENHEIMER’S CHIMNEY as a more appropriate
-name, for Mr. Oppenheimer was in the large party that first climbed
-it in 1908, and the fraternity will welcome this permanent means of
-identifying him with the fine work he has done in its vicinity. To
-quote his own words, ‘the chimney is the longest and most enjoyable
-climb on these crags.’
-
-Two long, easy gullies on the north-west side of Grassmoor, suitable
-for beginners, and another on Dale Head facing Honister, complete the
-tale of the Buttermere climbs, which, as the famous courses around
-Wastdale become more familiar, are sure to attract more attention in
-the future, and deservedly so, than they have done in the past.
-
-It cannot at present be said that the outlying climbs of the Lake
-District receive much attention, thus few of them are kept in
-a good state of repair. Perhaps the Borrowdale courses are most
-visited, notably Sergeant Crag Chimney and Mouse Ghyll. Considerable
-alterations have taken place in the former course since Mr. Jones’
-days. The difficult central pitch, or, rather, the upper part of it,
-has partially collapsed. Though the ascent is much simplified, the
-place needs respectful treatment. At least one leader has fallen here
-quite recently. There is one Borrowdale climb which seems practically
-deserted. This is BLACK CRAG GULLY. This fine, narrow rift
-splits the face of the cliff at the easterly head of Troutdale, and
-looks very striking when seen across the Borrowdale Valley from Mouse
-Ghyll. Unfortunately there is a loose section almost half-way up which
-would prevent the ascent from being recommended except to advanced
-experts. The two pitches below this danger zone are quite good. The
-ensuing pitch, about 30 feet high, is singularly smooth, and few
-sound holds are available. The fall of a well-known leader not very
-long ago tested the strength of an alpine rope here. Luckily it was
-belayed around a tree, and, though in the hands of a beginner, it held
-securely, despite a fall of over 20 feet. Even trees on a climb may
-be sometimes useful. Above this dangerous portion the climb is most
-enjoyable, and unique for the lake views it affords.
-
-In the early days parties of keen campers and scramblers frequented
-the beautiful dales around the head of ULLSWATER. But nowadays,
-after everything has been explored thoroughly, it cannot be said that
-there is much in the vicinity to attract cragsmen. On Helvellyn, St.
-Sunday’s Crag, and Fairfield there is plenty of indefinite scrambling
-to be found, but this is never continuously good, rather the reverse.
-Despite its huge bulk Helvellyn possesses few rocks that favour the
-climber. Dolly Waggon Pike, at the head of Grisedale, is the best of
-all. It contains two gullies which may be reached from Patterdale in
-about an hour and a half, or from the top of Dunmail Raise on the
-Grasmere side in less than an hour’s time. In these days of motor
-mountaineering this fact is worth remembering. The best-known course,
-DOLLY WAGGON PIKE GULLY, lies rather towards the westerly end of
-the crag, and rises, narrow and steep, just to the right of a series
-of big scree gullies which unite and send a conspicuous talus of scree
-down the mountain side. Some short introductory scrambling leads to
-the real climbing, where an almost vertical crack rises on the left in
-the true bed of the gully. A shallow scoop on the right gives the best
-route for about 15 feet, when it may be advisable to traverse back to
-the left into the crack above the steepest part. This is now followed
-by a patch of scree above a series of slabs, and short boulder pitches
-lead to the final chimney, which rises slightly on the left. About 300
-feet east of this somewhat easy course there is a much more imposing
-opening in the crags. This was noticed many years ago by the pioneers,
-notably by the late Tom Westmorland, whose name all climbers remember
-with respect in connection with the early days on the Pillar Rock, and
-the building of the Westmorland cairn or Great Gable. The great rift
-in Dolly Waggon Pike, though often attempted, was not climbed in its
-entirety direct until so recently as 1910. Strange to tell, it fell to
-the lot of the pioneer’s son, Mr. Horace Westmorland, to lead the first
-party. His companion was Mr. John Mounsey. Their friends have named the
-place the PENRITH GULLY.
-
-There are four difficult pitches in the gully, three of them being of
-the cave and jammed-boulder variety. Unfortunately a grassy terrace
-divides the lower pitches from the upper portion, making it easy to
-leave the gully above the second pitch. This somewhat spoils the
-continuity of the climb. The first pitch is not difficult, and may be
-passed directly over the chock-stone after first backing up on the
-left. The second obstacle is more trying. The best plan is to ‘back
-up’ as far as the recess under the capstone, and with the second man
-in this secure resting-place the leader may negotiate the awkward exit
-over the boulder on its right-hand side. The third or ‘Great Pitch’
-starts from above the intervening ledge. Eighty feet higher a huge
-boulder has become jammed across the gorge, with a smaller mass below
-it. There is no cave below these, and as the place is very steep,
-somewhat smooth, and always rather wet, it ranks as much the most
-difficult part of the climb. A shallow scoop just to the right of the
-bed of the gully enables the lower chock-stone to be reached. Some
-anchorage is available here, and the rope may be threaded to secure
-the further advance of the leader. The final exposed section is best
-climbed to the left of the crack, which is formed between the big
-boulder and the left wall. The final pitch is vegetation-covered, and
-possesses a fine bridge-rock, but the whole of the gully is loose, and
-the finish somewhat unpleasant.
-
-DOVE CRAGS, PATTERDALE.--This cliff looks tempting when seen
-from below the Kirkstone Pass and near the Brotherswater Hotel,
-which provides the best starting-point. Climbers have more than once
-essayed the ascent. ‘An impossible face’ and ‘an inaccessible gully’
-seemed to be the only result until October 1910, when Messrs. H.
-Westmorland, J. Mounsey, and W. A. North discovered a complicated route
-up the rock-face. This was about 100 feet to the right of the really
-‘inaccessible gully.’ The overhanging sections were avoided by some
-skilful traversing, and the situations often proved sensational. In the
-local newspapers it was stated that a doctor was present at the foot of
-the crags.
-
-Small cairns mark the route, which, once correctly started upon, can
-hardly be missed, for there is scarcely another available.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-_RECENT CLIMBS AROUND LANGDALE AND DOE CRAG_
-
-
-PAVEY ARK.--Despite the exploitation of Gimmer Crag and other
-smaller local attractions, this fine mass still ranks as first
-favourite with most climbers who stray Langdalewards. Yet, though
-it becomes more and more scarred and scratched with the marks of
-‘hob-nailers,’ one curious feature must impress those who visit the
-crags after several years’ absence. This is the curious encroachment of
-vegetation. Beautiful as are some of the plants and grasses which cling
-to the face, the cragsman revels most in seeing and climbing the stern,
-bare crags. The rarest botanical specimen, if it cumber a handhold,
-is treated with scant respect. Fortunately the more popular routes
-are practically free from dangerous vegetation, but recent adventures
-on some that are less frequented would suggest that a warning note be
-struck.
-
-THE CRESCENT CLIMB, which begins around the corner a few yards
-to the right of the Great Gully, is much spoilt by the exuberance of
-plant life. The first 200 feet lie altogether up a grassy slope or
-opening. There are steep, shelving rocks on the right, but these are
-not approached until an overhanging portion supervenes. Then the main
-feature of the Crescent begins. This is a traverse below the impending
-portion. The place is exposed, but the hand and footholds are ample,
-whilst the anchorage is all that could be desired. After crossing the
-rocks for about 60 feet, the heathery slopes can be gained that lead
-up to Jack’s Rake at rather more than half of its length. The deep,
-narrow rift of GWYNNE’S CHIMNEY will now be noticed right ahead,
-and this gives a splendid finish to the course. In fact, were it not
-for this attraction the Crescent would scarcely be worth the attention
-of climbers. The Chimney has walls of exceedingly rough rock, and
-an oblong-shaped mass of rock may roughly be said to divide it into
-two portions. The exit is made on the right, and an easy ridge leads
-upwards. There is plenty of indefinite scrambling until the highest
-point of Pavey Ark is reached.
-
-THE BUTTRESS BETWEEN THE GREAT AND LITTLE GULLIES at first
-sight suggests first-class climbing. Closer acquaintance, however,
-reveals the presence of so much vegetation and such an indefinite
-rock structure that the place is disappointing. The ascent had been
-made many years ago, but no record would appear to have been made
-until early in 1910, when the late J. Anton Stoop and Mr. Douglas
-Yeomans discovered a route, which has the merit of individuality.
-They started from the foot of the buttress about 50 yards to the left
-of the Great Gully, and adhered as closely as possible to the main
-ridge, gradually slanting up to the left towards the head of a small
-side gully which springs out of the Little Gully. The last 80 feet
-consisted of a vertical face, with a very conspicuous overhanging stone
-at the corner. The face was climbed by a chimney which had been seen
-from below, just to the left of the corner. The chimney consisted of
-two parts, with a chock-stone at the top. Above this the climb can be
-varied considerably; the upper rocks of Pavey Ark are famous for their
-wonderful gripping and ripping qualities, and they are here at their
-best.
-
-A good deal of indefinite scrambling has been undertaken on the walls
-of the deep opening at the easterly end of the cliff--marked C on Mr.
-Jones’ line drawing facing p. 203. Two routes on the left-hand wall are
-worth passing mention. GIBSON’S CHIMNEY is a well-marked cliff
-in the upper part of the opening. Large cairns mark the start and the
-finish. There are two definite pitches, which in all afford about 50
-feet of straightforward backing up practice.
-
-BENISON’S CHIMNEY, which rises between Gibson’s Chimney and Rake
-End Chimney, is built on a different mould. It consists of a series of
-ill-defined scoops somewhat resembling the Shamrock Chimneys on the
-Pillar. The place is nearly 200 feet high. It reeks with danger and
-rank vegetation; moreover, loose holds occur at crucial points. The
-most difficult section occurs about 150 feet above the start. A steep
-bit of rock about 15 feet high has to be ascended. There is practically
-only one satisfactory hold on this stretch; the ulterior support is
-grass; and the base of operations is a quivering, turf ledge, which
-threatens to come away momentarily. Thus no help can be afforded the
-leader, whose troubles are further accentuated by a lack of anchorage.
-The writer trusts that few climbers will be attracted by Benison’s
-Chimney.
-
-GIMMER CRAG has of late years received much attention from rock
-enthusiasts. The shapely buttress is a conspicuous feature of the
-Langdale Pikes, especially when seen from the direction of Blea Tarn.
-The full height of the crag, which is singularly firmly weathered, is
-nearly 400 feet. It thrusts itself aggressively forth from the grassy
-spur which joins Pike O’ Stickle with Harrison Stickle. Yet, until the
-late Andrew Thomson, of genial memory, described its opportunities so
-recently as 1901, climbers scarcely seemed to realise the existence of
-Gimmer Crag. There are now three distinct climbs of exceptional merit
-and two important variations, whilst on either side of the main crag
-plenty of indefinite scrambling and short gully problems can be enjoyed.
-
-THE GIMMER CHIMNEY.--This obvious cleft starts at the foot
-of the Crag to the right of, and lower down than the nose of, the
-buttress. The first serious difficulty occurs about 40 feet up, where
-the direct ascent of the chimney becomes impossible, and a traverse is
-made to the right. After an awkward upward movement has been made it
-is possible to force a way back into the chimney by swinging on a good
-handhold. The second obstacle is of the strid variety, followed by a
-shallow groove, with the best holds on the right wall. This gives out
-below a well-defined chimney, which is difficult to enter, being, as
-its engineering discoverer aptly described it, ‘bell-mouthed.’ Above
-this a traverse to the right is made, whence a chimney with holds on
-the right wall enables some grassy higher ledges to be reached. The
-final chimney is wide at the beginning, but narrows near the top, where
-a rib of rock protrudes and leaves a narrow but safe passage on the
-right.
-
-The two face routes A and B, with their variations, start
-from a terrace, which extends for some considerable distance across
-the face. This is about 90 feet above the commencement of the Chimney
-Climb, and may best be reached by way of a small, slanting gully filled
-with bilberry bushes, now known as the Bilberry Shute. It may be most
-convenient first to mention the most direct ascent up the nose of the
-buttress; this is known as Oliverson’s variation of the A Route. This
-starts just to the left of the ‘Nose,’ and after about 40 feet of steep
-practice on comparatively small holds, a ‘three-step’ traverse is made
-to the right on the crest of the ‘Nose,’ whence the way lies directly
-upwards to the ‘belay.’ To follow the original A and B Route from the
-terrace a course to the right of the ‘Nose’ is followed up a rough slab
-crowned with broken rocks, beyond which a sloping rock ledge is gained.
-This may be recognized by its having a shallow ‘crevasse’ separating it
-from the main crag. At the further and lower end of this ledge from the
-point at which it is reached a leaf of rock, abutting against the base
-of a depression in the wall above, marks the start of a short pitch,
-which brings the climber to the ledge where the routes divide. This has
-been called Thomson’s Ledge.
-
-A ROUTE.--From Thomson’s Ledge a traverse to the left is made in
-order to continue the A Route; a recess is soon entered, out of which
-the way lies almost directly upwards for quite 40 feet to the ‘belay,’
-where Oliverson’s Variation joins the old route about 80 feet above the
-terrace. A traverse to the left is then made to the foot of the shallow
-Lichen Chimney, the ascent of which is the stiffest part of the course,
-and almost 60 feet of rope is used by the leader before the second man
-can be brought forward from the ‘belay.’ The last pitch consists of a
-narrow chimney, with the best holds on the right wall, which finishes
-abruptly at the top of the crag.
-
-B ROUTE.--Starting from Thomson’s Ledge a traverse is made to
-the right in an upward direction until a corner is turned and the foot
-of Amen Corner, a 15-foot pitch of extreme severity, is reached. This
-is a slanting crack on a rock wall that overhangs, as also does the
-other wall, which forms the corner. The best method of surmounting
-this is to grip the upper edge of the crack and walk up the other edge
-with the body nearly horizontal at first, and the hands and feet close
-together.
-
-From the top of this pitch a ledge, known as the Gangway, which slopes
-outwards and upwards, is followed for about 30 feet to a small grass
-platform, and the Green Gully rises straight overhead. This is awkward
-to enter directly, and it may be better to ascend some 15 feet on the
-right, whence a stride can be taken into the bed of the gully. For
-quite 70 feet the ascent is not difficult, and at that height the
-leader reaches the anchorage of the Crow’s Nest. This is a small hollow
-in the right wall, and it is attained by making a short traverse, where
-the hands do most of the work. Very little assistance can be given to
-those following, as the rope tends to pull the climber from his holds,
-but anchorage can be found by threading the rope behind the handholds
-which were used on the traverse.
-
-The gully can be climbed to the summit, but being grassy and loose in
-places, it is preferable to finish up the sound arête directly above
-the Crow’s Nest.
-
-A variation which finishes up with this section can be made by way of
-an upward traverse to the right from the top of the 40-foot corner on
-the A Route, and this would join the Green Gully about 15 feet below
-the Crow’s Nest. It might also be mentioned that both above and below
-Amen Corner traverses can be effected to the right to join the Gimmer
-Chimney.
-
-The deep, wide gully to the left of the main crag possesses one cave
-pitch, which may be passed on the right of the chock-stone, but this
-may be avoided altogether by keeping to the right throughout. The other
-gullies on the west side of Gimmer Crag afford good scrambling, but
-here again the difficulties are too easily obviated.
-
-Climbers staying at Langdale could spend an enjoyable day by walking
-over to Grasmere and thence visiting the crags in Easedale or Deer
-Bield’s Crag in Far Easedale. After the climb is over it makes a
-delightful finish to the day to return to Langdale over the fells by
-Codale and Stickle Tarns.
-
-THE TARN CRAG above Easedale Tarn is a prominent feature in
-a favourite landscape. Quite recently Mr. J. Stables unearthed,
-literally, a route thereon which gives about 200 feet of quite good,
-sound climbing. The beginning lies in a line below the left of the
-highest point, and cairns now mark the way. The passage from the first
-chock-stone pitch to the recess, with the ensuing face traverse, will
-be found the most difficult section of the ascent.
-
-DEER BIELD’S CRAG in Far Easedale is quite an hour’s walk away
-from Grasmere. Its height is nearly 300 feet; and a buttress runs up
-the centre, with impossible-looking chimneys on either side. That on
-the left is still unclimbed, but the one on the right yielded to the
-attack of Messrs. Stables and Turner in 1908. They found at least
-half-a-dozen difficult pitches, the fourth proving to be the stiffest
-of all. The rock on Deer Bield’s Crag is firm and reliable, but
-singularly free from good ledges for hands and feet. Upward progress is
-made by using the numerous cracks which are a curious feature of the
-structure.
-
-For an off-day there is no more pleasant spot in Langdale than the
-vicinity of the Oak How Needle, which is perched on the side of
-Lingmoor, below the upper crags. Its situation is almost opposite
-a point on the coach road about half a mile beyond Chapel Stile
-when going towards Dungeon Ghyll. The outstanding mass makes a good
-photograph. The ascent of the short side is easy, but a crack on the
-front of the rock may be considered decidedly difficult.
-
-The outline of BOWFELL as seen from near the head of Windermere
-is one of the most massive and picturesque in Lakeland. The Langdale
-Pikes are perhaps more arresting at first sight, but a longer study
-of the mass to their left conveys a sense of grandeur and stability
-lacking in the more famous ‘twin peaks of Langdale.’
-
-THE LINKS OF BOWFELL are well worth a visit from climbers
-passing from Dungeon Ghyll to Wastdale, for they offer a pleasant
-contrast to the exposed buttresses of Gimmer Crag. Unlike most of our
-rock-faces, they have a southerly aspect, overlooking Eskdale and Three
-Tarns. The gullies, starting at the eastern end of the crags, are
-numbered from one to eleven, but only Nos. 4, 5, and 6 contain good
-climbing. The others are a suitable practice ground for novices.
-
-It is well to start operations in No. 4, which has two pitches of
-interest, and then descend by way of No. 3 to the foot of No. 5. The
-large pitch at its foot is quite entertaining, and upon the occasion
-of its first ascent, on a day of pouring rain, offered a stubborn
-resistance before capitulating on the right. Above it, easy going takes
-one quickly to the top of the crags, and thence around to the foot of
-No. 6.
-
-This also possesses a good pitch of the chock-stone variety near its
-foot. The way up it lies straight to beneath the ‘capstone,’ which bars
-direct progress. It is then feasible to work out under the stone on the
-right until an upward move can be made to the top of the pitch. On the
-occasion of the first ascent, in September 1897, by Messrs. C. R. B.
-Storry, G. H. McKilburn, and the writers, the upper part of the pitch
-was topped by loose stones; even nowadays it is well for the following
-climbers to take cover under the capstone, both for their own safety
-and to belay the leader as he scales the pitch.
-
-THE BOWFELL BUTTRESS is a more serious proposition, and as
-a climb the route found up it, in December 1900, by Messrs. Shaw,
-Oppenheimer, Craig, Hargreaves, and West, compares in point of
-difficulty and length with the North Climb on the Pillar, if the latter
-ceased immediately above the Nose.
-
-The Buttress faces N.N.E., overlooking Mickleden, and is best reached
-from Langdale by following ‘the Band’--the long, grassy spur running
-down towards Stool End Farm--about two-thirds of the way to the top of
-Bowfell. From here it is best to contour around to the right and thence
-along, bearing obliquely upward, to the foot of the Crags.
-
-The work starts at the lowest point of the Buttress, and, to quote Mr.
-Oppenheimer’s lucid account, ‘after 30 feet of broken rocks, the foot
-of a long chimney is passed, and a 10-foot chimney to the right of it,
-with an awkward pitch, taken. This leads, in another 10 feet, to a
-small terrace running down to a gully on the right. The next 50 feet
-is an upward traverse to the left, into the long chimney, soon after
-entering which a good sentry-box affords a stopping-place.
-
-‘After 40 feet straight up the long chimney the latter ends on a grass
-terrace, which slopes down to the right and broadens considerably;
-following this, for 20 feet, a rather difficult vertical crack is
-reached. From the shelf at the top of the crack 50 feet up, bare rough
-rocks lead to a grassy corner. Here there is a very convenient large
-block, to which the second man should belay himself as the leader
-advances to the left along a very exposed upward traverse, with little
-handhold, into a small rock corner.
-
-‘The best plan here is to climb to the right, away from the corner, and
-then to the left over the top of it, on to a grassy patch sloping away
-to the left, beside a fine belaying pin. To the right of this a chimney
-starts: 40 feet up there is a small pitch; then another 40 feet on
-sloping slabs to the right with a wall to the left, leads to the top of
-the Low Man, where a cairn has been placed.
-
-‘Twenty feet more of easy scrambling leads to the top of the buttress,
-which is separated from the mass of Bowfell by a narrow neck, from
-which scree gullies descend on either side.’
-
-A few short scrambles can be found amongst the crags above Angle
-Tarn on Hanging Knott, but the terrace-like formation of the rocks
-hereabouts is of greater interest to the geologist than to the climber.
-Flat Crags, and the wild recesses of Hell Ghyll and Crinkle Ghyll, have
-been visited by the fraternity, but their reports of these localities
-are quite unfavourable, except as regards their scenery.
-
-DOE CRAG.--At the time of the writing of Jones’ chapter on this
-fine cliff, most of the routes up the best rock faces in the district
-were exhausted, and short variations had become the order of the day.
-
-Doe Crag was the one great climbing ground which had many new,
-unexplored courses upon it, and the almost certain knowledge Jones
-had of their existence is evident to all who read his chapter in the
-present book. These delightful descriptions of the gullies are in every
-way accurate at the present time, except that the Intermediate Gully
-is now ascended direct over every pitch; it is only necessary in this
-Appendix to carry the tale through another epoch--the Buttress epoch.
-
-This started in March 1903, when Mr. F. Philipson and the writers
-made the ascent of the two most prominent buttresses. Since that time
-the various remaining buttresses and their subsidiary ridges have
-been ascended in such detail and thoroughness as characterize the
-nail-scratched rocks of Scawfell and the Pillar. These courses are now
-described, irrespective of merit or difficulty, as they occur from
-left to right as one stands facing the crags at a point slightly above
-Goat’s Water. The nomenclature is that adopted by Mr. G. F. Woodhouse
-in his excellent monograph, and by those who later made virgin ascents
-on this magnificent crag. It but remains to be said that, whereas the
-gullies are almost exclusively for expert and ultra-expert parties, the
-buttresses offer climbs which in many cases may be safely undertaken by
-parties of moderate strength.
-
-[Illustration: DOE CRAG, SEEN FROM ACROSS GOAT’S WATER
-
- A A Buttress.
- B B Buttress.
- C C Buttress.
- D D Buttress.
- E E Buttress.
- _f_ Easy Gully.
- _g_ Great Gully.
- _h_ Central Chimney.
- _j_ Intermediate Gully.
- _k_ Easter Gully.
- _l_ North Gully.
- _m_ A Buttress Climb. _Original Route._
- _n_ A Buttress Variations.
- _o_ B Buttress. _Broadrick’s Route._
- _p_ The Lion’s Crawl.
- _q_ Easy Terrace.
- _r_ B Buttress. _Original Route._
- _s_ B Buttress. _Woodhouse’s Routes._
- _t_ C Buttress Climb.
- _t_^1 C Buttress Climb Variation.
- _t_^2 Branch exit from Intermediate Gully.
- _v_ D Buttress Climb.
- _w_ Blizzard Chimney.
- _x_ Easter Gully. _Jones’ Route and continuation up E Buttress._
- _y_ Easter Gully. Broadrick’s Crack.
- _z_ E Buttress Climbs.
- 3 The Real Chimney.
- 4 Woodhouse’s Crack.]
-
-A BUTTRESS is the magnificent bastion which separates the Easy
-Scree Gully from the Great Gully. Unlike the other buttresses, which
-afford good climbing only for about 200 feet above their bases, the
-best sport is to be obtained in its higher reaches. The climbing starts
-at about the centre of the buttress, where is a cairn, but a vast
-overhanging precipice forces the climber away diagonally to the left
-along a narrow, grass ledge, which dwindles until, at a considerable
-height above the screes, an awkward corner is rounded. This can be
-reached by two distinct variations starting lower down and to the left
-of the route described, both of which are very stiff. Above this a thin
-crack is ascended for about 30 feet until a large ledge is attained.
-Here a choice of routes is available. A cave pitch straight ahead can
-be ascended on the right wall and, after ascending some broken rocks, a
-traverse to the right discloses an interesting chimney, above which the
-serious climbing ceases. An easy gully leads to this cave pitch direct
-from the Easy or Little Gully.
-
-For very strong parties a fine variation is to traverse diagonally
-upward to the right from the large ledge, treading the upper edge of
-the huge overhanging crag already referred to, until a fine chimney
-is entered. This is difficult, but the anchorage is good. A few feet
-above it an exposed traverse is made away to the right until the foot
-of a most sensational crack is reached. This can be climbed, or the
-traverse continued somewhat further until upward progress can be made
-by a zigzag course almost overhanging the upper confines of the Great
-Gully. To Messrs. Ormiston-Chant, Craig Gordon, and Parker most of the
-fine variations on this buttress have fallen.
-
-B BUTTRESS offers several good climbs, the most recently
-discovered of which--the Giant’s Crawl--starts at the foot of the
-Great Gully and, after striking straight upwards for about 100 feet of
-exceptional severity, follows a well-defined slab diagonally to the
-right for about 250 feet. It then doubles back to the left and thence
-to the top of the crags.
-
-Some years ago Messrs. R. W. and H. C. Broadrick made a very fine climb
-up the crest of the retaining wall of the Great Gully. This started
-from the same point as the Giant’s Crawl, but instead of continuing
-across the face to the right they struck upward over some poised and
-shattered blocks and came upon the well-defined crest referred to;
-thence, by continuously steep and sensational rocks, which, however,
-afford good holding, they forced a way to the crest of the crags--one
-of the best and longest routes up the Buttresses.
-
-A few feet below the foot, and to the right of the Great Gully, a wide
-broken terrace or rake gives easy access to the heart of the crags, and
-all the other good climbs on B, C, and D Buttresses to be described,
-finish on this terrace.
-
-Some considerable distance below the start of the terrace, and at
-about the lowest extremity of B Buttress, a thin crack starts up to
-the right. This marks the start of the route by which the Buttress was
-first climbed. The crack gives out upon a grass ledge about 30 feet
-above the screes. Beyond this a somewhat awkward stretch of climbing
-brings one below some overhanging rocks, which entail a flank movement
-to the left until a conspicuous recess is reached. The continuation
-above this is most exhilarating, a steep exposed face of rock which
-takes the climber into an ideal situation, and which claims his entire
-attention in the continuation of its enjoyment. Two chimneys on either
-hand have both been climbed, but the ascent of the rock-face should not
-be missed. It finishes on the Easy Terrace. Above this the Buttress
-evidences a lack of continuous climbing, and the time will be better
-spent by descending the terrace and thence round to the foot of the
-Central Chimney.
-
-After ascending the easy rocks at its foot for about a hundred feet, a
-detached pinnacle is a prominent object on the left. Messrs. Woodhouse
-found that by passing behind this a fine chimney could be entered and
-ascended to a grassy ledge at its top. A pleasing variation is to be
-had by passing below the pinnacle, whence a steep slab recommends
-itself to the gymnast, and, after a strenuous pull on the arms, lands
-him at the foot of the chimney mentioned above. From the grassy ledge
-above it the route can be varied in many ways, but the best sport lies
-across to the left for a few feet, where a chimney of real difficulty
-forms the lowest of a series of pitches of great merit.
-
-C BUTTRESS separates the Central Chimney from the Intermediate
-Gully, and throughout its entire length is set at a very high angle. It
-offers little temptation to stray from the line of least resistance,
-and the climbing is better defined than on most of the Buttress routes.
-For a hundred feet or so the holds are large and plentiful, but the
-climbing is interesting withal, until further progress in the same line
-is barred by impending rocks.
-
-After traversing slightly to the right some steep slabs provide
-excellent sport until a good belaying pin is reached. Again discretion
-suggests a flank movement, this time slightly downwards to the left,
-and thence, after rounding a corner, upward progress is made to a grass
-ledge.
-
-The scenery hereabouts is magnificent, and a few minutes can be well
-spent in viewing the formidable difficulties of the Central Chimney,
-the greater part of which is now visible. It appears anything but
-inviting, and most people will be content with merely looking. Our
-Buttress also has become difficult, and the next move up some steep
-slabs, which terminate on a wide grassy ledge awkward of access, is
-one necessitating considerable care and skill on the part of the leader.
-
-A little beyond this, on the right, is a steep chimney leading
-downward to the Intermediate Gully, at a point immediately below the
-difficult pitch. This branch chimney was first ascended by the brothers
-Woodhouse, and is stiff.
-
-The continuation of our climb now begins to lose interest, and before
-long we find ourselves at the foot of the final pitch of the Central
-Chimney, whence the going is comparatively easy.
-
-D BUTTRESS, separating the Intermediate and Easter Gullies, is,
-in the writers’ opinion, the most entertaining and prettiest problem of
-all. In its lower reaches it is quite easy and apt to disappoint until,
-at the same height as the difficult pitch of the Intermediate Gully, it
-rises almost vertically for above a hundred feet.
-
-The way lies up a vertical arête, which recalls most strongly some
-of the Coolin Ridges. The holds are sound and rough, but none too
-large--just sufficient to leave a fair margin of safety in a very
-exposed position. This delightful stretch gives out at an excellent
-belay, beyond which the interest continues unabated for 50 feet or so,
-until it ceases on a wide grass platform. Shortly beyond this the Easy
-Terrace is again reached.
-
-Before dealing with the easy climbs of the E Buttress, mention must
-be made of three fine chimneys, two of which have been climbed since
-Jones wrote his description of the Easter Gully. On page 235, after
-he had ascended the first pitch of the Gully and attained the ‘great
-hollow’ above it, he refers to ‘splendid branch gullies up to the
-ridges on either side.’
-
-Two of these branch gullies were climbed many years ago, that on the
-left-hand wall, now called the South Chimney, by Mr. H. C. Broadrick,
-and its counterpart on the North Wall by the brothers Woodhouse.
-
-This latter is known as the Black Chimney. It is deeply cut, and looks
-most forbidding. A closer acquaintance dispels most of its terrors, for
-the holds are excellent, and the fearsome upper capstone can be rounded
-on the right-hand side with comparative ease. It is, however, well
-worth a visit, and the continuation up the E Buttress is not lacking in
-interest.
-
-Lower down than the South Chimney--a pretty problem in ‘backing up’--a
-rectangular opening in the crags, almost immediately above the first
-pitch of the Easter Gully, claimed the attention of Messrs. Woodhouse,
-Westmorland, and the writers in April 1910. A heavy blizzard of snow
-and hail, which fell at the time they made its first ascent, suggested
-the name BLIZZARD CHIMNEY, and this was adopted. It has always
-seemed rather a pity that the majority of the names on Doe Crag are so
-prosy; the latter-day climbers have lacked the happy knack of giving
-distinctive names to their exploits.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- G. P. Abraham & Sons, Photos. Keswick
-
-THE BROADRICK’S AND HOPKINSON’S CRACKS DOE CRAG]
-
-The most awkward part of the Blizzard Chimney is at its foot; to effect
-an entry is not easy, but once attained and an exposed bulge climbed by
-the crack on the left, the rectangular opening is reached, and the way
-lies up the left-hand wall of this. After about 90 feet of moderately
-difficult climbing the chimney gives out on the D Buttress.
-
-E BUTTRESS presents a variety of fairly easy climbs. None of
-these possess sufficient individuality or difficulty to demand a
-detailed description; the routes of greatest interest are shown on the
-outline drawing facing p. 370. These climbs supply a real want on Doe
-Crag, and render the climbing upon it, from ‘easy’ to ‘exceptionally
-severe,’ graded to an ideal degree.
-
-Beyond the North Gully there is no climbing of sustained interest,
-but the REAL CHIMNEY, a curious cleft enclosed on all sides,
-possesses unique features. It is about 150 feet above the foot of the
-crags, some distance to the right of the North Gully.
-
-The NORTH GULLY itself was first climbed in 1901 by the Messrs.
-Barton, and again by the writers two years later. Since then it has
-been visited several times. After climbing to the under side of the
-chaos of jammed boulders which form the great pitch, a narrow ledge
-will be noticed running outward along the left wall. The feat of
-traversing along this with practically no support for the hands, and
-a fearsome drop below, led to the inclusion of the Gully amongst the
-‘exceptionally severe’ courses, and rightly so. Just when the ledge
-dwindles to nothing, a good hold can be reached with the left hand, and
-then a severe struggle upwards discloses good holding above. Thence
-the going is easier, and the top of the boulders can soon be attained.
-Away at the opposite end of the crags, a hundred feet to the left of
-Slingsby’s Pinnacle in the Great Gully, and at about the same level
-is a fine crack which the brothers Woodhouse first climbed in 1905.
-The lowest 35 feet are of about the same standard of difficulty as the
-Doctor’s Chimney on Gable Crag; indeed the crack as a whole is about
-as long and of as great merit as its more popular counterpart on Great
-Gable, and is very well worth a visit.
-
-It but remains to be said that the first pitch of the Great Gully can
-be climbed direct up the left-hand side of the boulder without the aid
-of a threaded rope--a most strenuous effort--and that the two pitches
-of the Intermediate Gully (which Mr. Jones obviated in the manner
-described in his chapter) are amongst the very finest in the whole of
-the Lake District.
-
-Other climbs in the Coniston district have been discovered recently by
-enthusiastic members of the Fell and Rock-Climbing Club.
-
-SYLVAN CHIMNEY is one of the best of these. It lies to the left
-of Church Beck, and is the most conspicuous cleft in the splintered
-mass of rock between Boulder Valley and Lever’s Water, being situated
-300 or 400 yards below the tarn.
-
-(Boulder Valley is the fine upland hollow running from the foot of the
-falls below Low Water in the direction of Lever’s Water.) The Chimney
-affords about 120 feet of fairly difficult climbing.
-
-A few yards to the left of Sylvan Chimney is GOULDON GULLY,
-which gives a rather longer but somewhat easier climb. A slab of
-about 70 feet provides excellent practice in neat footwork. Above it
-a 100-foot chimney proves interesting, but unfortunately is somewhat
-earthy in its interior.
-
-COLONEL CRAG, the boss of rock at the foot of Paddy End, at
-about the same height as Sylvan Chimney, has also been thoroughly
-explored and climbed, but is scarcely worth a visit; indeed it is to be
-feared that the proximity of Doe Crag would lead to the utter desertion
-of vastly more entertaining places than these latest additions to the
-Coniston climbs.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- A
-
- A Gully, Pike’s Crag, 3-5
-
- ” Wastwater Screes, 193
-
- Aaron Slack, 114, 129
-
- Abbey Ridge, Great Gable, 332-333
-
- Abraham, Messrs., quoted, 247, 248, 288, 289, 290
-
- Addyman, Mr. E. T. W., 333
-
- ‘All the Year Round’ quoted, 38, 41, 286
-
- ‘Alpine Journal,’ 12, 149, 164
-
- Ampezzo Dolomites, 29
-
- Angle Tarn, 33, 213
-
- Ark, Pavey, 208-218, 358-361
-
- Arrowhead Branch Gully, 149
-
- ” Gully, 146, 158
-
- ” Ridge, 147, 162-167
-
-
- B
-
- B Chimney, Pike’s Crag, 7-10
-
- B Gully, Wastwater Screes.
- _See_ Great Gully
-
- ‘Backing-up,’ 124
-
- Baddeley’s Guide Book, 33
-
- Badminton ‘Mountaineering,’ 105, 112
-
- Barton, Messrs., 321
-
- Bear Rock, 147, 165
-
- Beckhead, 114, 115, 121, 139
-
- Beckhead Tarn, 115
-
- Belaying Pin, Moss Ghyll, 50
-
- Birkness Combe Climbs, 349-352
-
- Black Chimney, Bleaberry Combe, 353
-
- Black Crag Gully, Borrowdale, 354
-
- Black Crags, 213
-
- Black Sail Pass, 109, 254, 258
-
- Blea Crags, 291, 292
-
- Bleaberry Combe Climbs, 352-353
-
- Blencathra, 93
-
- Blue, Tom, 117.
- _See_ Tom Blue
-
- Boot, 37
-
- Borrowdale, 93, 98, 114, 237, 239, 242
-
- Botteril, Mr. F., 322, 332, 342, 347
-
- Botteril’s Cracks, Scawfell, 341-342
-
- Bottle-shaped Pinnacle, 119, 123, 138
-
- ” ” Ridge, 131, 335
-
- Bowfell, 89, 211, 213
-
- ” Buttress, 368-369
-
- ” The Links, 367-368
-
- Brandreth, 114, 117, 119, 136
-
- Broad Stand, 27, 32-37
-
- ” ” Descent, 40
-
- Brown Tongue, 12, 28, 36, 91
-
- Brunskill, Mr. W. B., 347
-
- Buckbarrow, 196, 287
-
- Burnmoor, 27
-
- Burnthwaite, 252
-
- Buttermere, 271, 281, 282, 287
-
- Buttermere Climbs, 344-353
-
-
- C
-
- C Gully, Pike’s Crag, 5-7
-
- ” Wastwater Screes, 192, 193, 200-207
-
- Cairn, Hopkinson’s, 76, 80, 81
-
- ” Westmorland, 117, 151
-
- Central Chimney, Bleaberry Combe, 353
-
- ” ” Doe Crag, 226-232
-
- Central Gully, Gable Crag, 118, 130, 138-145, 336-337
-
- ” ” Great End, 90, 91-104
-
- ” ” Wastwater Screes.
- _See_ C Gully
-
- Central Jordan, 260, 318
-
- Christmas climbing, 15, 19, 104, 120, 130, 197, 163
-
- ‘Climbing in England,’ 211, 218
-
- Cockley Beck, 213
-
- Collie Step, 45
-
- Collier’s Climb, 8, 24, 31, 32, 55-65
-
- ” Chimney, 51-52
-
- Collinson, Mr. W. L., 339
-
- Colonel Crag, 379
-
- Combe Ghyll, 237-242
-
- Coniston, 213, 218, 219, 226
-
- Corner, the Scawfell Chimney, 41
-
- Court, the Tennis, 43, 44
-
- Crack, Kern Knotts, 163, 182-187, 213, 238
-
- Crack Grépon, 187
-
- Craig, Mr. G. H., 349
-
- ” Mr. Alan, 372
-
- Croda da Lago, 78
-
- Curtain and Crête Climb, Pillar Rock, 326-327
-
- Curtain, the Great End, 111
-
- ” Pillar Rock, 267, 268, 269, 326
-
- Cust’s Gully, 39, 90, 111-113
-
-
- D
-
- D Gully, Pike’s Crag, 11
-
- Decoy Pinnacle, 27
-
- Deep Ghyll (Hell’s Gate), 146
-
- Deep Ghyll, 2, 12-28, 32, 43, 58, 69, 70, 76, 77, 80, 81, 82, 84, 85,
- 86, 87, 88, 341
-
- Deep Ghyll Cairn, 42
-
- Deer Bield’s Crag, Easedale, 366
-
- Derwent, 238
-
- Derwentwater, 93
-
- ‘Divide,’ the, 106
-
- Doctor’s Chimney, 136-140
-
- Doe Crag, 219-236, 369-378
-
- ” A Buttress, 371-372
-
- ” B ” 372-374
-
- ” C ” 374-375
-
- ” E ” 375-376
-
- ” Blizzard Chimney, 376-377
-
- ” Central Chimney, 220, 223, 226-232
-
- ” Easter Gully, 221, 222, 235, 236
-
- ” Great Gully, 219, 220, 223-226
-
- ” Intermediate Gully, 232-234, 378
-
- ” North Gully, 377
-
- Dolomites, 29, 56, 78, 185, 214
-
- Dress Circle, the, 174
-
- Drigg, 170
-
- Dungeon Ghyll, 208, 209, 211, 214
-
-
- E
-
- Eagle Crag, 253
-
- Eagle’s Nest, 160, 161
-
- ” Gully, 146, 147
-
- ” Ridge, 135, 147, 150, 155, 156-162, 163, 174, 314, 315
-
- Easedale, 209
-
- East Jordan, 260
-
- ” Gully, 267
-
- Easter Gully, Doe Crags, 221, 222, 235, 236
-
- ‘Eight-foot Drop,’ 268
-
- End, Great.
- _See_ Great End
-
- Engineer’s Chimney, Gable Crag, 311-313
-
- Engleberg Valley, 107
-
- Ennerdale, 114, 254, 271
-
- ” Face of Gable, 114, 115, 117-119
-
- ” Pillar, 70.
- _See_ Pillar Rock
-
- Esk Hause, 89, 93, 100, 110, 168, 213
-
- Eskdale, 31, 34, 36, 42, 213
-
-
- F
-
- Facework, difficulty of, 16
-
- Fairfield, 215
-
- Far West Jordan Climb, 327
-
- Fell and Rock-Climbing Club, 337, 378
-
- Fives’ Court, Pisgah Buttress, 54, 343
-
- Fleetwith, 345
-
- ” Gully, 345, 346
-
- Freshfield’s Italian Alps, 29
-
- Fünffingerspitze, 185
-
- ” Chimney, 230
-
- Furness Railway, 287
-
-
- G
-
- Gable Crag, 141, 334-337
-
- ” ” Central Gully, 118, 130, 138-145, 311
-
- ” ” Oblique Chimney, 8, 118, 119-132, 136, 138, 141, 150,
- 183
-
- ” ” Sheep Walk, 118, 131-133, 312
-
- ” ” Traverse, 121
-
- Gable End, 91
-
- ” Needle, 147, 150, 153, 156, 160, 165, 168-174
-
- Gap, Wind, 114, 119, 128
-
- ” Windy (Wind Yatt), 254, 258
-
- Gash Rock, 288
-
- Gatesgarth, 271
-
- Gatherstone Beck, 258, 259
-
- Gavel Neese, 115, 121, 127, 138
-
- Gibson, Mr. H. B., 327, 331
-
- Gimmer Crag, 208, 361-365
-
- ” ” A Route, 363
-
- ” ” B Route, 363-364
-
- ” ” Amen Corner, 363
-
- ” ” Chimney, 361
-
- Gimson, Messrs., 334
-
- Glaramara, 237
-
- Goatswater, 219, 220, 229
-
- Gouldon Gully, 379
-
- Grainy Ghyll, 92
-
- Grasmoor, 353
-
- Great Chimney, Deep Ghyll, 19, 24-26
-
- ” ” Pillar Rock, 260, 267, 268, 325
-
- Great End, 39, 89-91, 93, 99, 211, 237
-
- ” ” Brother’s Crack, 338
-
- ” ” Central Gully, 91, 92-103
-
- ” ” South East Gully, 90, 104-111
-
- Great Gable, 92, 114-117, 127, 135, 168, 176, 180, 237.
- _See_ Gable Crag
-
- Great Gully, Doe Crag, 223-226
-
- ” ” Pavey Ark, 213-218
-
- ” ” Wastwater Screes, 194-199
-
- Great Napes, 116, 146, 147, 163, 167, 168
-
- ” Waterfall, 257
-
- Green Cove, 259
-
- ” Crag Gully, 345, 346
-
- ” Gable, 114, 119, 128
-
- ” Ledge, Pillar Rock, 323
-
- Grépon Crack, 187
-
- Grey Knotts, 114
-
- Guideless climbing, 135
-
- Gwynne quoted, 208, 210
-
- Gwynne’s Chimney, Pavey Ark, 358
-
-
- H
-
- Hand Traverse, 281, 282-284
-
- Harrison Stickle, 208, 209, 214, 215
-
- Haskett Smith, ‘Climbing in England,’ 211, 218
-
- Hause.
- _See_ Esk Hause
-
- Haystacks, 345, 347
-
- Hazard, Mr. J., 332
-
- ‘Heart of Lakeland,’ 344
-
- Hell Gate, 117
-
- Helvellyn, 215
-
- High Level Route, Great Gable, 119
-
- ” ” ” Pillar, 259
-
- High Man, Pillar Rock, 259, 260, 268, 269, 270, 281
-
- High Man from the Nose, Pillar Rock, 324-326
-
- High Stile, 286, 287
-
- Hollow Stones, 2, 12, 22, 41, 48
-
- Honister Pass, 114
-
- Hopkinson’s Cairn, 76, 81
-
- Horse and Man Rock, 2, 11
-
-
- I
-
- Ice-axes, 112;
- applications of, 171, 184
-
- Ill Fell, 207
-
- Iron Crags, 304-311
-
- ‘Italian Alps,’ Freshfield’s, 29
-
- Italy, Northern, 184
-
-
- J
-
- Jack’s Rake, 209, 210, 217, 218
-
- Jammed-stone Pinnacle, 140, 141
-
- Jenkinson’s Guide Book, 33
-
- Jordan Gully, 259
-
- ” Pillar Rock, 70, 257, 258, 260, 281
-
- ” Scawfell Pinnacle, 19, 26, 69, 70, 72, 76
-
- Journal, ‘Alpine,’ 12, 149, 164
-
- ” ‘Scottish Mountaineering,’ 193
-
-
- K
-
- Kern Knotts, 104, 117, 175-189, 213
-
- ” ” Chimney, 175-182, 186
-
- ” ” Crack, 163, 182-187, 213, 238
-
- ” ” West Chimney, 187-189
-
- Keswick Brothers’ Climb, 31, 66-68
-
- Kirkfell, 114, 117, 136, 139
-
- Knotts, Grey, 114
-
- Knotts, Thunacar, 214
-
-
- L
-
- Langdale, 33, 215
-
- Langdale Combe, 213
-
- ” Pikes, 208, 213
-
- Langstrath, 239, 288
-
- Laycock, Mr. J., 334
-
- Le Coin, 323, 324
-
- ‘Ledge,’ the, Pillar Rock, 268
-
- ” Tennis Court, 43
-
- Left Pisgah, 260, 266
-
- Ling Chimney, 314, 315
-
- Lingmell, 2, 91, 173, 285
-
- ‘Little Dru of the Lake District,’ 69
-
- ” Gully, Pavey Ark, 210-213
-
- ” Hell Gate, 146
-
- Liza Stream, 114, 254, 281
-
- Lliwedd, 226
-
- Looking Stead, 254, 258, 259
-
- Lord’s Rake, 13, 16, 22, 27, 29, 34, 36, 69, 73, 74, 79, 83, 84
-
- Low Man, Pillar Rock, 70, 257, 258, 260, 261, 269, 270, 272, 276,
- 278, 281
-
- Low Man, Scawfell Pinnacle, 14, 16, 70, 73, 74, 77, 82, 83, 85, 88,
- 265
-
- Low Man Cairn, Scawfell Pinnacle, 83
-
- ” ” ” Pillar Rock, 270
-
- Lower Kern Knotts, 175, 176
-
- Lyon, Mr. H. B., 338, 346
-
-
- M
-
- Manchester Town Hall, 191
-
- ‘Mantleshelf,’ the, 277, 282
-
- Marshall, Prof. Milnes, 13
-
- Matterhorn, 135
-
- Mauritius, Pieter Botte, 69
-
- Mickledore, 1, 12, 13, 29, 31, 34, 35, 37, 38, 40, 65
-
- ” Chimney, 32.
- _See_ Scawfell Chimney
-
- ” Screes, 36
-
- Mönch, 208
-
- Mosedale, 92, 254, 258
-
- ” Rocks, 337-338
-
- Moses’ Sledgate, 115, 121, 128
-
- Moss Ghyll, 15, 30, 32, 43-53, 76, 92, 239, 341
-
- Mouse Ghyll, 291, 292, 354
-
-
- N
-
- Napes, Great, 116, 136, 146-147, 150, 172
-
- ” White, 115, 127, 128, 133
-
- Needle, Gable, 147, 150, 153, 156, 160, 165, 168-174
-
- ” Gully, 146, 150-152, 154, 159, 162, 174
-
- ” Ridge, 147, 153-156, 334
-
- Neese, Gavel, 115, 121, 127, 138
-
- Nether Beck, 190
-
- New North West Climb, Pillar Rock, 318, 322-324
-
- New West Climb, Pillar Rock, 317, 318-320
-
- North Climb (Pillar Rock), 271-282
-
- ” ” (Penrith), 31, 37, 38, 55
-
- ‘Nose,’ the, Pillar Rock, 257, 259, 271, 275
-
- ” ” Scawfell Pinnacle, 74
-
- ‘Notch,’ the, 268
-
-
- O
-
- Oak How Needle, 336
-
- Oblique Chimney, 8, 118, 119-132, 136, 138, 141, 150, 182, 183
-
- Old Man, Coniston, 213, 219, 229
-
- ” Wall, Pillar Rock, 269, 326
-
- Oppenheimer, Mr. L. J., 321, 322, 344, 345, 349, 350
-
- Oppenheimer’s Chimney, 353
-
- ‘Outside Edge,’ Gable Needle, 173
-
-
- P
-
- ‘Pall Mall Budget’ quoted, 170
-
- Parson’s Gully, 42
-
- Pavey Ark, 208-218, 358-361
-
- ” ” Benison’s Chimney, 360
-
- ” ” Gibson’s Chimney, 360
-
- ” ” Gullies, 208, 218
-
- ” ” Great Gully, 213-218
-
- ” ” Little Gully, 210-213
-
- Pedestrians, Notes for, 27
-
- Pelmo Traverse, 29
-
- Pendlebury Traverse, 268
-
- Penrith Climb. _See_ North Climb
-
- Petty’s Rift, 31
-
- Photography and Climbing, 163
-
- Pier’s Ghyll, 91, 239, 285-286, 342-343
-
- Pieter Botte, 69
-
- Pike of Stickle, 208, 213
-
- Pike’s Crag, 1-11
-
- Pikes of Scawfell, 2, 33, 50, 99
-
- Pillar Fell, 91, 254, 255, 258, 267
-
- ” Rock, 254-284, 317-331
-
- Pinnacle, Bottle-shaped, 119, 123, 138
-
- ” Jammed-stone, 140, 141
-
- ” Scawfell, 19, 27, 69-88, 265
-
- Pisgah Buttress, 53-55, 342
-
- ” Left, 260, 266
-
- ” Pillar Rock, 70, 257, 260, 328
-
- ” Right, 260, 266
-
- ” Scawfell, 19, 26, 32, 70, 71
-
- ‘Playground of Europe,’ Leslie Stephen’s, 76
-
- Pope, Mr. H. R., 333, 342
-
- Pressure on Loose Stones, 26
-
- Professor’s Chimney, 19, 25, 26, 27, 69, 70, 71, 76
-
- Progress, Rake’s, 13, 29-32, 37, 38, 43, 46, 57, 58, 60, 63, 66
-
- Pulpit Rock, 2, 11, 31, 33, 35
-
-
- R
-
- Rake End Chimney, 218
-
- ” Ennerdale Face, 121
-
- ” Jack’s, 209, 210, 217, 218
-
- ” Lord’s, 13, 16, 22, 27, 29, 34, 36, 69, 73, 74, 79, 84
-
- Rake’s Progress, 13, 29-32, 37, 38, 43, 46, 57, 58, 60, 63, 66
-
- Raven Crag, Chimney, 253
-
- ” ” Glaramara, 237, 242
-
- ” ” ” Gully, 242-253
-
- ” ” Great Gable, 117, 175, 180
-
- Reade, Mr. H. V., 336
-
- Robinson, Mr. J. W., quoted, 119, 120
-
- Robinson’s Chimney (Deep Ghyll), 14, 16, 17
-
- ” Gully, Great End, 90
-
- Rope, How _not_ to use it, 154, 155
-
- ” Length of, 83, 239
-
- ” Special application of, 225, 228, 278
-
- Rossett Ghyll, 33
-
- Rosthwaite, 238, 288
-
- ” Fell, 237
-
- Rothhorn, Zinal, 73
-
- Rücksack Club, 345
-
-
- S
-
- Sack, Carrying the, 101, 102
-
- Sanderson, Mr. R. B., 342
-
- Sanger-Davies’ Book, 78, 230
-
- Savage Gully, 258, 261, 272, 273, 275, 276, 277, 320-322
-
- Scarpetti, 214
-
- Scarth Gap, 117, 271, 281
-
- Scawfell, 13, 27, 29, 30, 35, 69, 70, 237, 339-347
-
- ” Cairn, 37, 42
-
- ” Chimney, 32, 34, 39-42
-
- ” Crags, 1, 13
-
- ” Pikes, 33, 208. _See_ Pikes of Scawfell
-
- ” Pinnacle, 19, 27, 69-88, 275
-
- ” ” by Deep Ghyll, 76-84, 195
-
- ” ” by Steep Ghyll, 11, 14
-
- ” ” from Upper Deep Ghyll, 339-340
-
- ‘Scottish Mountaineering Journal,’ 193
-
- Screes, Central Gully, 193, 200-207
-
- ” Great Gully, 194-199, 248
-
- ” Wastwater, 58, 190-207
-
- Seathwaite Fell, 237
-
- Seatoller, 238, 271
-
- Seatree, Mr. George, quoted, 38
-
- ‘Sentry-box,’ the, 52, 53
-
- Sergeant Crag Gully, 288-290, 354
-
- Shamrock, 255, 257, 259, 281, 329-330
-
- ” Buttress, 330
-
- ” Chimney, 256, 264-265, 330, 331
-
- ” Gully, 25, 256, 261-264
-
- ‘Sheep Walk,’ the, 118, 131, 133, 312
-
- Shoulthwaite, 304
-
- Skew Ghyll, 89, 92
-
- Skiddaw, 93, 296
-
- Slab and Notch Route, 260, 267-268
-
- Slack, Aaron, 114, 129
-
- Sledgate, Moses’, 115, 121, 128
-
- Slingsby’s Chimney, Scawfell, 73, 75, 83
-
- ” Crack, Pillar Rock, 270
-
- Sloan, Dr. J. S., 335
-
- Smuggler’s Chimney, 335
-
- ” Retreat, 118, 335
-
- Snow, Heavy, 23
-
- South-east Gully, Great End, 90, 104-111
-
- ‘Split Block,’ 277
-
- Spout Head, 92
-
- Sprinkling Tarn, 89, 93, 98, 100, 237, 252
-
- Stack Ghyll, 348-349
-
- Stake Pass, 214, 220
-
- Stand, Broad, 27, 32-37, 40
-
- Steep Ghyll, 13, 20, 30, 43, 48, 53, 57, 69, 71, 73, 74, 85, 86, 243
-
- Step, Collie’s, 45
-
- Stickle, Pike of, 208, 213
-
- ” Tarn, 211, 215
-
- Stirrup Crag, 118
-
- ” Rope, 279, 280
-
- ‘Stomach Traverse,’ 272, 274, 276
-
- Stones, Hollow, 2, 12, 22, 41, 48
-
- Stony Gully, 119, 141, 324, 325
-
- Strands, 190
-
- ‘Strid,’ the, 277
-
- Styhead Pass, 89, 91, 115, 117, 168, 181, 213, 237
-
- ” Tarn, 93, 128
-
- Sugarloaf, 208
-
- Switzerland, 111
-
- Sylvan Chimney, 379
-
-
- T
-
- Tarn Crag, Easedale, 365
-
- Taylor, Dr. J. H., 322
-
- Tennis Court Ledge, 43, 44, 47, 49, 53, 55, 61, 244
-
- Thompson, Mr. P. A., 320, 321
-
- Thornythwaite Fell, 237
-
- ‘Thumbs Down,’ 180
-
- Thunacar Knott, 214
-
- Tin Box on Pinnacle, 72
-
- Tom Blue, 117, 176, 179
-
- Tongue, Brown, 12, 28, 36, 91
-
- Toreador Gully, 346
-
- Traverse, Gable Crag, 121
-
- ” Hand, 281, 282, 284
-
- ” Pelmo, 29
-
- ” Pendlebury, 268, 269
-
- ‘True Up,’ 104
-
-
- U
-
- Ullswater, 345
-
- Upper Eskdale, 42
-
- ” Kern Knotts, 175, 176, 181
-
-
- W
-
- Walker’s Gully, 254, 255, 256, 258, 267, 269, 295-304, 328-330
-
- Warn Gill, 345, 347-348
-
- Warnscale Gullies, 345-349
-
- Wastdale Church, 48
-
- ” Climbing-book, 1, 77, 119, 135, 136, 140, 156, 170, 247
-
- ” Head, 115, 116, 117, 191
-
- Wastwater, 1, 27, 36, 170, 287
-
- ” Screes, 58, 190-207
-
- Waterfall, Great, 258
-
- West Chimney, Kern Knotts, 187-189
-
- ” Climb, Pillar Rock, 269-271, 281
-
- ” Jordan Crack, 327
-
- ” Jordan Gully, 315
-
- ” Wall Climb, 313-314
-
- Westmorland Brothers, 152
-
- ” Cairn, 117, 151
-
- ” Crag, 117, 138, 151, 152
-
- ” Mr. Horace, 356
-
- Wetherlam, 219
-
- White Napes, 115, 127, 128, 133
-
- Williamson, Mr. C. N., quoted, 37, 41, 69, 70, 286
-
- Willink’s Illustrations, 270
-
- Wind Gap, 114, 119, 128
-
- ” Yatt (Windy Gap), 254, 258
-
- Windermere, 215
-
- ‘Window,’ the (Moss Ghyll), 45, 49
-
- Woodhouse, Messrs., 338, 370, 373, 375, 376
-
-
- Y
-
- Yatt, Wind, 254, 258
-
- Yewbarrow, 118, 190, 254
-
-
- Z
-
- Zinal Rothhorn, 73
-
-
-
-
-WASTWATER HOTEL,
-
-WASDALE HEAD, CUMBERLAND.
-
-This HOTEL is charmingly situated at the head of Wastwater Lake, and is
-the chief centre of Cumberland Climbing--the Pillar Rock, Great Gable,
-Great End, Scafell and the Pikes, all being within an easy walk.
-
-The arrangements of the Hotel have been made specially to suit the
-requirements of Climbers and Tourists.
-
-A First-Class DAUPHINE GUIDE and CLIMBER has been engaged, who will
-conduct Climbers on the various Climbs in the District at a Moderate
-Charge.
-
-SMOKE AND BILLIARD ROOMS.
-
-Conveyances can be sent to Seascale Stations to meet Visitors, if so
-desired.
-
- J. RITSON WHITING, Proprietor.
-
- TERMS ON APPLICATION. LETTERS _via_ CARNFORTH.
-
-_Agent for Beale’s (Buckingham’s) Celebrated Three-Strand Alpine
-Rope--60, 80, 100 feet lengths always in Stock; also for Simond’s
-Ice-Axes._
-
-
-ALSO AT--
-
-Rowhead Temperance Hotel,
-
-WASDALE HEAD.
-
-(Three Minutes’ Walk from the WASTWATER HOTEL.)
-
-Beautifully situated at the foot of Kirkfell.
-
-RE-FURNISHED THROUGHOUT.
-
-CLIMBING PARTIES SPECIALLY CATERED FOR.
-
- Three Sitting-rooms. Eight Large Bedrooms.
-
- TERMS ON APPLICATION.
-
- J. RITSON WHITING, Proprietor.
-
-
-
-
-SUN HOTEL,
-
-CONISTON.
-
-(Quarters of the Fell and Rock-Climbing Club.)
-
-TARIFF.
-
- S. D. S. D.
-
- Breakfast 1 6 2 0
-
- Luncheon 1 9 3 6
-
- Dinner 2 0 3 6
-
- Teas 0 6 2 0
-
- Bedrooms (Single) 2 0 3 0
-
- Bedrooms (Double) 3 6 4 6
-
- HOT AND COLD BATHS.
-
- PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SITTING-ROOMS.
-
- SEPARATE DRAWING-ROOM FOR LADIES.
-
-T. SATTERTHWAITE, Proprietor.
-
-
-LODORE HOTEL, Borrowdale,
-
-KESWICK.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This HOTEL is close to the Lake and surrounded by Beautiful
-Scenery--Quiet, and a Good Centre for Walking and Climbing.
-
-Electric Launches on the Lake. Garage. Telephone No. 2 G.P.O.
-
- J. S. HARKER, Proprietor.
-
-
-
-
-JAEGER
-
-PURE WOOL
-
-Complete Outfits in Pure Wool for Climbers.
-
- +----------------------+
- | _Alpine Outfits |
- | a Specialty._ |
- +----------------------+
- | Shirts, |
- | |
- | Spencers, |
- | |
- | Sweaters, |
- | |
- | Alpine Mitts, |
- | |
- | Puttees, |
- | |
- | Camel-hair |
- | |
- | Sleeping Bags, |
- | |
- | etc. |
- | |
- +----------------------+
- |Illustrated Price List|
- |Post Free. |
- +----------------------+
-
-JAEGER PURE WOOL WEAR is never oppressive, while always protecting from
-chill. Expert Athletes, of both sexes, know from experience that it is
-the most suitable covering, and the wide World knows the JAEGER Name
-and Trade Mark as guarantees of Pure Wool, High Quality and Good Value.
-
- LONDON--126 Regent Street, W.
- 456 Strand, Charing Cross, W.C.
- 30 Sloane Street, S.W.
- 102 Kensington High Street, W.
- 115 Victoria Street, S.W. (close to A. & N. Stores).
- 85 and 86 Cheapside, E.C.
- MANCHESTER--18 King Street, and 10 Princes Street.
- LIVERPOOL--58 Church Street, and 4 Castle Street.
-
-_Address in other towns sent on application._
-
-
-
-
-H. HARDEN,
-
-PRACTICAL ALPINE BOOTMAKER.
-
-_Boots made from an old one as pattern and nailed complete with best
-small and large Alpine Nails, Swiss Pattern._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Our Boots are already well known and used by most Expert Mountaineers.
-
-Boots Ready in Stock, Nailed and Complete, for Immediate Delivery.
-
-PRICES ON APPLICATION.
-
-ST. JOHN STREET, KESWICK, CUMBERLAND.
-
-
-
-
-BURBERRY
-
-WEATHERPROOF CLIMBING KIT
-
-[Illustration]
-
-CLIMBERS REALISE the vital importance of clothing that meets the
-exigencies of this strenuous pastime, and agree that BURBERRY
-successfully solves the problem of the most healthful, comfortable, and
-serviceable equipment.
-
-BURBERRY MATERIALS are especially woven and scientifically
-weather-proofed by Burberry processes for the set purposes of:--
-
- Affording natural warmth by diverting cold winds.
-
- Preventing penetration by rain, sleet or snow.
-
- Maintaining normal temperature under the most divergent conditions.
-
- Combining ability to withstand the rough wear and tear of climbing
- with remarkable light weight.
-
-BROCHURE “Y” clearly sets forth how all these are accomplished. A copy
-will be sent on request with patterns of cloths made especially for
-climbers.
-
-BURBERRYS The Haymarket, S.W., LONDON; 10 Boulevard Malesherbes, PARIS;
-Basingstoke; and Agents in Provincial Towns.
-
-
-
-
-ARTHUR BEALE,
-
-Late JOHN BUCKINGHAM,
-
-194 SHAFTESBURY AVENUE, LONDON, W.C.
-
-IS THE ONLY MAKER OF THE CELEBRATED
-
-ALPINE CLUB ROPE,
-
-WHICH IS ALMOST EXCLUSIVELY EMPLOYED
-
-By the =Leading Mountaineers= of the time. It is made of the Best
-Manilla Hemp, and the new Rope now being made, which from tests taken
-(Admiralty proof) is of a much greater breaking strain than formerly,
-is marked by three red worsted threads, one in the centre of each
-strand to distinguish it from others on the market, and not one thread
-only in the centre of the Rope as heretofore (see the Report of the
-Special Committee on Ropes, &c., in Vol. I., No. 7, of the _Alpine
-Journal_). Each length is tied with Red Tape bearing my Name.
-
-_BEWARE OF FRAUDULENT IMITATIONS._
-
-ARTHUR BEALE (late JOHN BUCKINGHAM),
-
-194 Shaftesbury Avenue, London, W.C.
-
-ICE AXES by English and Foreign Makers kept in Stock.
-
- RÜCKSACKS, BELTS, SLINGS, &c. PRICE LISTS ON APPLICATION.
-
-_Diploma awarded for Alpine Rope at the Bergen Sports Exhibition 1910._
-
-
-JAMES S. CARTER
-
-_The Alpine Bootmaker_,
-
-16 South Molton Street (First Floor),
-
-LONDON, W.
-
-[Illustration: 45/-]
-
-Specialist in Boots for =Climbing & Touring= For over 50 years Maker to
-the
-
- ENGLISH,
- CONTINENTAL,
- CANADIAN and CAPE
- ALPINE and
- CLIMBING CLUBS.
-
-_Illustrated Price List on application._
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_Es’ablished nearly a Century._
-
-HILL & SON,
-
-4 Haymarket, London, S.W.
-
-(_Opposite His Majesty’s Theatre._)
-
-London Manufacturers of Sporting, Table, Toilet and Pocket Cutlery,
-Alpine Ice Axes and Accessories, Skates and Fine Steel Work.
-
-=H. & S.= have a very Interesting Stock of Mechanical Contrivances and
-Useful Inventions for Everyday Wants.
-
-Utilities of all Sorts for Travellers and the Household.
-
- Specialities for the Garden. Jewellery, Silverware and
- Electroplate.
-
-ALL LISTS FREE.
-
-_Alpine Ice Axes--Various Patterns for Ladies and Gentlemen._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
- Rücksacks. Several Patterns, With and Without Outside Pockets. Of
- Foreign Manufacture, from 12s. 6d.
-
- London Make, 17s., 18s. 6d. and 22s.
-
- Alpine Expedition Stick, as Illustration, with Steel Head and
- Point, and Leather Head Case, 23s. 6d.
-
- Ash, Hazel, and Oak Mountaineering Sticks, with Steel Points, 9s.
- 6d., 10s., 11s.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-BOOT FURNITURE.--No. 6, Mummery Spikes, 1s. 3d. per dozen. Nos. 1, 2,
-5, 6d. per dozen. Swiss Side and Centre Nails, 1s. 6d. per 100. Larger
-Side Nails, 4s. 6d. per 100. _Postages extra._
-
-
-_LANGDALE._
-
-Dungeon Ghyll New Hotel
-
-(Quarters of the Fell and Rock-Climbing Club).
-
- _The Hill Climbers’ Paradise._ _In the Heart of Lakeland._
-
-_The Place for a Restful Holiday._
-
-PERFECT BATHROOMS AND SANITARY ARRANGEMENTS.
-
-NEWLY FURNISHED THROUGHOUT.
-
- _Postal Address_--AMBLESIDE. _Telegraphic Address_--ELTERWATER.
-
-J. COWPERTHWAITE
-
-(_Of the Prince of Wales and Rothay Hotels, Grasmere_), PROPRIETOR.
-
- J. FOTHERGILL, Manager.
-
-
-
-
-MOUNTAIN AND CLIMBING PHOTOGRAPHS.
-
-Our Unique and Well-known Series now include the following Districts
-and their Surrounding Peaks: Zermatt, Chamonix, Grindelwald, Arolla,
-=Pontresina=, Oetzthal and Stubaithal; also the =Dauphiny Alps, the
-Dolomites and the Grand Combin=.
-
-The British Series include the English Lake District, North Wales,
-Scotland, and Skye.
-
-In Platinotype, 8-1/4 by 6-1/4 ins., at 1s. 6d. each; Set of 50, £3,
-10s. Other Sizes also, up to 40 by 30 ins., in Carbon and Platinotype.
-
-
-We Specialise in High-Class
-
-LANTERN SLIDES
-
-of any Subject in the above Series.
-
-Price, =2s.= each; Set of =50=, =£4, 10s.=
-
-
-_Lists and Full Particulars from_
-
-Messrs. G. P. ABRAHAM & SONS,
-
-Victoria Buildings,
-
-KESWICK.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[1] Not in Jones’ List.
-
-[2] In the Wastdale Climbers’ Book.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
-Obvious printer errors corrected silently.
-
-Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROCK-CLIMBING IN THE ENGLISH LAKE
-DISTRICT***
-
-
-******* This file should be named 56043-0.txt or 56043-0.zip *******
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-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Rock-climbing in the English Lake District,
-by Owen Glynne Jones</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Rock-climbing in the English Lake District</p>
-<p> Third Edition</p>
-<p>Author: Owen Glynne Jones</p>
-<p>Release Date: November 24, 2017 [eBook #56043]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROCK-CLIMBING IN THE ENGLISH LAKE DISTRICT***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by Anita Hammond, Wayne Hammond,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/rockclimbingengl00joneiala">
- https://archive.org/details/rockclimbingengl00joneiala</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="frontis" src="images/frontis.jpg" alt="" /><br />
-<img src="images/sig.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">Owen Glynne Jones
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_i">i</span></p></div>
-
-<h1>
-ROCK-CLIMBING<br />
-<small>IN THE</small><br />
-<span class="x-large">ENGLISH LAKE DISTRICT</span><br />
-<br />
-<small>BY</small><br />
-<span class="large">OWEN GLYNNE JONES, B.Sc. (<span class="smcap">Lond.</span>)</span><br />
-<small>MEMBER OF THE ALPINE CLUB</small><br />
-<br />
-<span class="medium table">With a Memoir and Portrait of the Author, Thirty-one Full-page<br />
-Illustrations in Collotype, Ten Outline Plates of<br />
-the Chief Routes, and Two Appendices by</span><br />
-<span class="large">GEORGE AND ASHLEY ABRAHAM<br />
-<br />
-<i>THIRD EDITION</i></span><br />
-<br />
-<span class="x-large">G. P. ABRAHAM AND SONS</span><br />
-<span class="large">KESWICK, CUMBERLAND<br />
-1911</span><br />
-<br />
-<span class="copy table">All rights reserved<br />
-<i>Price 21s. net</i>]</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ii">ii</span></h1>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">iii</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="PUBLISHERS_NOTE">PUBLISHERS’ NOTE.</h2>
-
-<p>The rapid exhaustion of the first edition of Mr. <span class="smcap">Owen Glynne
-Jones’</span> book on ‘Rock-climbing in the English Lake District,’
-and further numerous enquiries for copies of this unique and
-invaluable work, induced us to make arrangements for the
-publication of another issue. A third edition has now become
-necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Since the first edition appeared in 1897, several important
-new climbs have been made, most of which have been written
-about by the author, and are here found just as they left his pen.
-Of some of the other climbs nothing had been written, so, in
-response to the request of several climbing friends, two appendices,
-bringing the book up to date, have been added. The memoir by
-Mr. W. M. Crook, which is accompanied by an excellent portrait
-of Mr. Jones, will, we are sure, be welcomed by all as a valuable
-addition to the work.</p>
-
-<p>We are glad to avail ourselves of this opportunity of acknowledging
-the kindness of several friends for much valuable
-advice and assistance given.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-G. P. ABRAHAM &amp; SONS,<br />
-<span class="smcap">Keswick</span>.<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">iv</span></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">v</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="PREFACE">PREFACE.</h2>
-
-<p>I feel I owe a word of apology to the readers of this
-brief and inadequate memoir of a dead friend. At
-the request of Jones’ most intimate friends I have
-compiled it in the scanty leisure moments of a few
-weeks of a busy life, too few to do justice to my
-theme. I wish to return my heartiest thanks to
-those of his friends who have so quickly and generously
-aided me with the materials at their disposal,
-especially to Mr. F. W. Hill, Dr. W. E. Sumpner,
-the brothers Abraham, of Keswick; Mr. W. J.
-Williams, Mr. Harold Spender, and M. Spahr, of
-Evolena. I hope if any inaccuracies are detected by
-these or other friends, they will communicate with
-me. It has been difficult to avoid them, for all the
-written documents do not agree in facts and dates.
-I trust, however, that this brief record of great effort,
-great achievement, and great tragedy will be more
-acceptable than no record at all.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-W. M. CROOK.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>National Liberal Club,</i><br />
-<span class="i4"><i>Whitehall Place, London, S. W.</i></span><br />
-<span class="i8"><i>Feb. 26th, 1900.</i></span><br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">vi</span></p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Region separate, sacred, of mere, and of ghyll, and of mountain,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Garrulous, petulant beck, sinister laughterless tarn;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Haunt of the vagabond feet of my fancy for ever reverting,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Haunt and home of my heart, Cumbrian valleys and fells;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Yours of old was the beauty that rounded my hours with a nimbus,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Touched my youth with bloom, tender and magical light;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">You were my earliest passion, and when shall my fealty falter?<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Ah, when Helvellyn is low! Ah, when Winander is dry!<br /></span>
-<span class="author"><i>William Watson.</i><br /></span>
-</div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="Owen_Glynne_Jones">OWEN GLYNNE JONES.</h2>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="PREFACE_CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>EARLY LIFE AND FIRST CLIMBS</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>Owen Glynne Jones was born on November 2nd,
-1867. A Welshman by blood, he was a Londoner
-by birth, for he first saw the light of day in Clarendon
-Street, Paddington. His father, Mr. David
-Jones, was a carpenter and builder, and the son
-commenced his education at a local school. Of his
-early life there is little to tell. He seems to have
-spent his holidays in Wales, and there to have
-developed, among what may without inaccuracy be
-called his native mountains, that passion for climbing
-which made him famous, and which led to his early
-and much lamented death.</p>
-
-<p>In 1881, when not yet fourteen years of age,
-Owen Jones was sent to the Central Foundation
-School in Cowper Street, City Road, of which Dr.
-Wormell was head master. Those who knew him
-there speak of him as ‘a bright, promising schoolboy.’</p>
-
-<p>He remained at Dr. Wormell’s for three years
-(1881-1884). He distinguished himself in science
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">viii</span>
-and won several prizes while at the school. On
-leaving he was awarded the Holl scholarship, and
-passed to the Technical College at Finsbury, under
-the City and Guilds of London Institute.</p>
-
-<p>Jones spent two years (1884-1886) at Finsbury.
-During that time he passed through the complete
-course of instruction in the Mechanical department
-there. He worked with conspicuous ability and
-success at mechanical engineering, mechanical drawing,
-mathematics, and chemistry, as well as in the
-mechanical laboratory and in the wood and iron
-workshops. When he left, his teachers spoke of him
-in the highest terms. ‘Mr. O. G. Jones,’ said Professor
-Perry, ‘was as able, as earnest, as promising as any
-other whom I can now remember.’ Mr. John Castell-Evans
-speaks of his ‘eager enthusiasm and scrupulous
-conscientiousness;’ and Professor Silvanus Thompson
-wrote of him: ‘He is imbued with modern methods,
-... and is possessed of a healthy enthusiasm for
-his work that is infectious.’ At the close of his
-course he passed with a Clothworkers’ Scholarship to
-the Central Institution in Exhibition Road, South
-Kensington, where he passed the next three years
-of his life.</p>
-
-<p>The three years (1886-1889) he spent in the
-Engineering Department, and at the end of his
-course he had attained the highest position in the
-class-list of any student of his year, and he received
-the diploma of Associate of the Institute. On the
-completion of his course he was appointed assistant
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">ix</span>
-in the Mathematical Department. During his life
-at South Kensington he made the same impression
-as heretofore on all with whom he came in contact.
-Intellectually alert, diligent, energetic, enthusiastic,
-he seemed bound to make some mark in the world.</p>
-
-<p>In the year following the completion of his
-course, and while he was an assistant at South
-Kensington, I first met him.</p>
-
-<p>It was during the Easter holidays of 1890.
-Having broken away from the party with whom
-I had been spending most of my holiday in Borrowdale,
-I made my way to Wastdale Head Inn. I
-picked up a chance acquaintance with two young
-fellows in the inn, and we agreed to go together to
-climb the Pillar Rock&mdash;with the aid of a ‘Prior’s
-Guide’ which I had in my pocket.</p>
-
-<p>When we commenced the ascent, which proved
-very easy&mdash;I believe we went up the easiest way&mdash;the
-dark, slim young fellow somehow naturally
-assumed the lead. Before we started he had discovered
-that I had been to Switzerland and had
-done some climbs there, so he was very modest
-about his own powers. A few seconds on the rocks
-dissipated all doubt. With great confidence and
-speed, climbing cleanly and safely, he soon showed
-he was no ordinary climber. I had been out with
-some very tolerable Swiss guides, but never before
-with a man to whom rock-climbing seemed so natural
-and easy. My curiosity was excited. He could not
-be one of the great climbers, for he had never been
-out of the British Islands, but he could climb.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">x</span></p>
-
-<p>On the top we found a small, rusty tin box, in
-which were a number of visiting cards. One of
-these belonged to Mr. A. Evans, of Liverpool, and
-a subsequent visitor had written on it the date
-of his death in the central gully of Llewedd. One
-of us produced a card, on which the other two wrote
-their names. The dark young fellow signed his
-name ‘O. G. Jones.’ I wonder if that card is there
-still.</p>
-
-<p>That afternoon and the following day he plied
-me with questions about Switzerland. How did the
-climbing there compare with these rocks? Had I
-climbed the Matterhorn? Did I think he could do
-it?&mdash;absurd question&mdash;and so on. Restless, eagerly
-active, very strong, good-tempered, enthusiastic, he
-was a man one could not forget. We parted after a
-day’s acquaintance. I never dreamed I should see
-him again.</p>
-
-<p>His companion on that occasion was another
-South Kensington man, Dr. Sumpner, now of Birmingham.
-The next time we met was at Jones’s
-grave in Evolena. During our conversations at that
-first brief meeting I learned that Jones was at South
-Kensington; he told me he first learned serious
-climbing on Cader Idris; I marvelled at his wonderful
-grip of the rocks, his steady head, his extraordinary
-power of balancing himself on one foot in
-what seemed to me then almost impossible
-positions, and I felt that his enthusiasm would soon
-lead him to the Alps, if any opportunity offered.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">xi</span>
-His heart was already there. Yet he was so
-ignorant of the ‘lingo’ of the climbing world that
-my use of the words ‘handholds’ and ‘footholds’
-considerably amused him.</p>
-
-<p>The following Easter he was again among the
-Lake Mountains, having devoted the Whitsuntide
-and Christmas holidays of the preceding year to his
-favourite pursuit, the last mentioned period being
-spent in North Wales. I hurry over his climbing
-in the Lake District for the very sufficient reason
-that in this volume, so characteristic of its author,
-his work there is described by himself with all the
-accuracy of a trained scientist, and with all the
-enthusiasm of an ardent mountaineer. Descriptions
-of all these climbs were kept by him in numerous
-small notebooks, full of neat shorthand with dates,
-proper names, &amp;c., written in, and with occasional
-pen and ink sketches of his routes up crags and
-gullies to illustrate the shorthand notes. Full of
-mournful interest are these touches of a vanished
-hand, these silent echoes of a voice that is still.</p>
-
-<p>It was, I believe, during this Easter of 1891 that
-he met Mr. Monro, to whose enthusiasm he was
-subsequently wont to attribute his first visit to the
-Alps, which took place in the autumn of that year.
-The result of that meeting and the wonderful
-amount of climbing in ‘the playground of Europe’
-that Jones managed to cram into eight short years
-must be reserved for another chapter.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">xii</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="PREFACE_CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>CONQUERING THE ALPS</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>In the autumn of 1891 Owen Jones was an unsuccessful
-candidate for the Professorship of Physics
-at University College, Aberystwyth, and almost
-immediately afterwards he was the successful candidate
-for the post of Physics Master in the City of
-London School, which he was occupying at the time
-of his death. In the previous year, 1890, he had
-taken his B.Sc. degree in London University, coming
-out third in the list of First Class Honours in
-Experimental Physics. These facts are mentioned
-here now, somewhat out of their proper chronological
-order, because, with the exception of a few papers he
-contributed to magazines (the <i>Alpine Journal</i>, the
-<i>Climber’s Journal</i>, and <i>Cassell’s Magazine</i>) and
-sundry newspaper articles, they are the only facts
-that need be mentioned in his otherwise uneventful,
-though busy, life.</p>
-
-<p>Jones’ real life was lived among his beloved
-mountains. His devotion to them was unsurpassable,
-his zeal was consuming, his enthusiasm knew no
-bounds. In the summer holidays of 1891 he had
-his first introduction to the Alps. His most original
-work was undoubtedly done among the rocks of his
-native Wales and in the English Lake country, but
-he flung himself into Alpine work with all the ardour
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">xiii</span>
-
-and energy of which his peculiarly ardent and
-energetic nature was capable. He spared neither
-time, money, nor comfort in his devotion to the
-noblest and most exacting of all sports&mdash;that of
-mountaineering.</p>
-
-<p>The following table&mdash;very imperfect, I fear&mdash;compiled
-by his own hand up to the close of 1897,
-and for 1898 and 1899, from letters kindly sent to
-me by his friends, will give some idea of his marvellous
-physical endurance and the extent of his
-knowledge of the Alps. His own portion of the list
-was found in his handwriting in his copy of Cunningham
-and Abney’s ‘Pioneers of the Alps’:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="tlist">
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="10">1891</td>
- <td colspan="3">Dent des Bosses</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Grande Dent de Veisivi</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Pas de Chèvres</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Col de Seilon</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Col de Fénètre</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">M. Capucin</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Tête de Cordon</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Tête d’Ariondet</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Grand Combin</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Grivola</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="13">1892</td>
- <td colspan="3">Thälihorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Rossbodenjoch</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Matterhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3"><a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a>Mittaghorn and Egginerhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Punta di Fontanella</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">2 cols to Prerayen</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Col d’Olen</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Combin de Corbassière</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Col de Boveire</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Fénètre de Saleinaz</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Col de Chardonnet</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Pic du Tacul</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">M. Redessan</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1893</td>
- <td colspan="3">Dent Blanche
- (This was in April, 36
- hours.) No summer
- season in Alps.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="11">1894</td>
- <td colspan="3">Piz Languard</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Piz Morteratsch</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Zwei Schwestern</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Piz Bernina</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Croda da Lago</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Kleine Zinne</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Grosse Zinne</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">M. Pelmo</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">M. Cristallo</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Sorapis</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Cinque Torri (3 ways)
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">xiv</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="19">1895</td>
- <td colspan="3">Rothhorn from Zermatt</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Rothhorn from Zinal</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Traverse Zinal to Zermatt</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Riffelhorn from Glacier</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Dom from Randa</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Täschhorn and Dom (traversed from the Mischabeljoch to Randa&mdash;first time by this route&mdash;in one day)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Monte Rosa</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Rimpfischhorn (from Adler Pass)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Matterhorn (traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Weisshorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Obergabelhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Grand Cornier</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Triftjoch</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Furggenjoch</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Lysjoch</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Süd-Lenzspitze (traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Nadelhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Hohberghorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Steck-Nadelhorn (?)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="7">1896</td>
- <td colspan="3">Little Dru</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Blaitière</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Col du Géant (twice)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Charmoz (traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aig. du Plan</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aig. du Midi</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">N. peak Périades (by the Arête du Capucin)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="18">1897</td>
- <td colspan="3">Schreckhorn (in January)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Finsteraarhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Jungfrau</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aletschorn (traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Beichgrat</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Bietschhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Lötschenlücke</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Mönch</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Mönchjoch</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Eiger</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aig. d’Argentière</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aig. Moine (traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aig. Tacul (traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Col du Midi</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Portiengrat</td>
- <td>}</td>
- <td rowspan="2">In one day</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Weissmies</td>
- <td>}</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Fletschhorn</td>
- <td>}</td>
- <td rowspan="2">In one day</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Laquinhorn</td>
- <td>}</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="19">1898</td>
- <td colspan="3">In winter: From Grindelwald to Rosenlaui by the Wetterhorn-Sattel, Finsteraarjoch, and Strahlegg</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Two Drus (attempted traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Big Dru</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Grèpon (traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Dent de Requin</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aiguille du Chardonnet</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aiguille du Midi</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Mont Maudit</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Mont Blanc (traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aiguille du Géant</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Two Drus (traverse)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Riffelhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Wellenkuppe and Gabelhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Lyskamm and Castor</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Alphubel, Rimpfischhorn, and Strahlhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Allalinhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Dent Blanche by South Arête</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Täschhorn by Teufelsgrat</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Dom, Täschhorn, and Kienhorn, descending by Teufelsgrat
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xv">xv</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td rowspan="17">1899</td>
- <td>Riffelhorn</td>
- <td>}</td>
- <td class="td3" rowspan="4">In his<br />first five days<br />at Zermatt</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pollux</td>
- <td>}</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Breithorn (traversed from Schwarzthor)</td>
- <td>}</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Six chief points of Monte Rosa</td>
- <td>}</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Matterhorn</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Cols d’Hérens and Bertol</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Petite Dent de Veisivi</td>
- <td>}</td>
- <td class="td3" rowspan="3">In 12 hours<br />from Kurhaus<br />Hotel and back</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Grande<span class="p4">”</span></td>
- <td>}</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dent Perroc</td>
- <td>}</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aig. de la Za (by face)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Aig. Rouges (traverse of all peaks)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Mt. Blanc de Seilon in one day</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Dent des Bouquetins</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Mt. Collon</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Pigne d’Arolla</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3">Dent Blanche (West Arête attempt)</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>I cannot pretend that this list is perfect, and the
-brief notes I append are intended rather to give in a
-small space some of the points of human interest in
-the above bald list of names than for his mountaineering
-friends, to whom anything that could be
-printed here could convey little or nothing that was
-new.</p>
-
-<p>It is a coincidence that he commenced his
-acquaintance with the Alps in the very valleys&mdash;Ferpècle
-and Arolla&mdash;in which he spent the last
-days of his life, and down which his friends mournfully
-escorted his body eight years later. It was on
-one of the Dents de Veisivi (the Petite Dent) that,
-in 1898, Professor Hopkinson, one of Jones’ numerous
-climbing friends, met his death with his two
-daughters and his son. As we walked down the
-Arolla valley the day before he fell from the Dent
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvi">xvi</span>
-Blanche, Owen Jones was chatting, with a wonderful
-freshness of recollection of detail, of his climb up the
-Grand Combin during his first season in the Alps,
-and I believe the guide who led him up then was
-one of the search party from Evolena who found his
-body on the rocks of the Dent Blanche.</p>
-
-<p>The earlier climbs of 1892 were described by him
-in a paper entitled ‘The Dom Grat and the Fletschhorn
-Ridge,’ which appeared in the <i>Alpine Journal</i>
-in 1898. A brief quotation from his own account
-will give some idea of the easy vivacity of his style.</p>
-
-<p>Speaking of the Saas peaks which ‘were designed
-in pairs,’ he writes:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘It is, perhaps, to our credit that we took an
-easy pair first&mdash;the Mittaghorn and the Egginer&mdash;but
-our stay at Saas that year was to be short,
-and we could not afford to fail at higher work. A
-couple of Saas loafers undertook to guide us, but
-proved to be lamentably weak. They shed tears and
-ice-axes, and required much help from us dismayed
-amateurs. Then we left the district, and before my
-next visit my comrades were scattered over the
-globe, beyond the seductive influence of axe and
-rope.’</p>
-
-<p>How characteristic of poor Jones the whole of
-that passage is! The unconcealed evidence of his
-own great physical strength, the playful sense of
-humour&mdash;his friends will remember how he used to
-explain his own initials, O.G., as standing for the
-‘Only Genuine Jones’&mdash;in the words ‘they shed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvii">xvii</span>
-tears and ice-axes,’ and the touch of pathos, in the
-light of after events, of the phrase ‘beyond the
-seductive influence of axe and rope.’</p>
-
-<p>The omission of the names of the Mittaghorn
-and Egginerhorn from Jones’s own list in 1892 shows
-that even his own record cannot be regarded as
-complete, a thing not to be wondered at considering
-the enormous amount of work he did.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noticed that in this year, as in the
-year before and in 1894, Jones has entered the
-names of peaks and passes that in the succeeding
-years he would have considered quite unworthy of
-serious notice.</p>
-
-<p>But next year he ventured on a feat that, so far
-as I know, was not only extraordinary for one with
-comparatively so little experience of the higher
-Alps, magnificent climber though he was, but it
-has remained, I believe, unique in the annals of the
-great mountain on which it was performed. At
-Easter, 1893, Jones climbed the Dent Blanche, the
-mountain with which his name will be for ever
-associated in the climbing world. The ascent was
-made on the 25th and 26th April, and the expedition
-took thirty-six hours, a wonderful feat of
-strength and endurance. M. Adrien Spahr, the
-landlord of the Hotel de la Dent Blanche at Evolena,
-and of the new Kurhaus at Arolla (from which Jones
-started the day before his last, fatal climb), has
-kindly favoured me with the following brief note in
-reference to that expedition:&mdash;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xviii">xviii</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p xml:lang="fr">‘C’est bien le 25 Avril, 1893, que Monsieur Jones a fait
-l’ascension de la Dent Blanche avec les guides Pierre Gaspoz
-et Antoine Bovier père d’Evolène. Je suis redescendu moi-même
-avec lui depuis Evolène à Sion.’</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In an interview which appeared in the press in
-1894 Jones said of this climb, one of the most
-difficult things he ever did:&mdash;‘The longest day I
-ever had afoot was at Easter, ’93, doing the Dent
-Blanche. We took two guides and a porter, and
-had great difficulty in getting them to attempt the
-last two hundred feet. We were out in the open
-for thirty-six hours, with very short rests, no sleep,
-and excessive labour, but we revelled in every
-minute of it. The mountain was in a dangerous
-condition, and the last five hours on the way home
-we spent in wading, waist-deep, through soft snow.
-It was rather painful, of course, but there was a
-certain pleasure even in our pain, for it helped to
-make philosophers of us. We agreed to think of
-other things in the midst of our sufferings, and we
-succeeded creditably well. I believe now that I
-could stand almost anything in the way of pain or
-exposure.’</p>
-
-<p>In 1894 he commenced in the Engadine and then
-went on to the Dolomites, where his great skill as a
-cragsman and his familiarity with all sorts of rock-work
-made him much more at home than he yet was
-among the snow-peaks, as his list shows. On rocks
-I think it is not using the exaggerated language of
-friendship to say that he probably had no superior
-among his countrymen at the time of his death, and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xix">xix</span>
-comparatively few equals. Among the great snow-peaks
-he had not attained so high a level. Had he
-lived he would, I believe, have ranked with the
-greatest, for he had not done all he was capable of;
-and when he met his death he was still in his prime,
-and he was a man of great courage, immense
-resourcefulness, and phenomenal physical endurance.</p>
-
-<p>In 1895 he devoted himself largely to the
-reduction of the great peaks in the Zermatt district,
-some of which he already knew. In that year also
-he returned to the Dom Grat and the Fletschhorn
-Ridge, whose acquaintance he had made in 1892.
-The following passage from the <i>Alpine Journal</i>
-derives an added interest from the fact that Elias
-Furrer was his guide then, as he was his guide on
-the last, fatal climb:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘In August, 1895, Elias Furrer took me from the
-Täsch Alp to the Mischabeljoch, and thence over the
-Täschhorn and Dom to Randa, a course of seventeen
-and a half hours, including halts. Shortly afterwards
-Mr. W. E. Davidson followed our route from
-the Mischabeljoch. During the same week Furrer
-showed me a third pair of the Saas peaks. We
-bivouacked on the Eggfluh rocks one bitterly cold
-night, and next day traversed the Südlenspitze and
-Nadelhorn. The usual <i>grande course</i> is to include
-the Ulrichshorn, and descend to Saas again; but
-Furrer had business and I fresh raiment at Zermatt,
-and we hastened over the Stecknadelhorn (or was it
-the Hohberghorn?), and thence by the Hohberg
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xx">xx</span>
-Pass and Festi glacier down to Randa in fourteen
-hours from the start.’</p>
-
-<p>His energy in climbing this year was remarkable,
-I had almost said stupendous. In addition to the
-long climbs referred to in the above extract, it will
-be seen from the list given above that he twice
-ascended the Zinal Rothhorn, traversed the Obergabelhorn
-and Matterhorn, and did two important
-climbs without guides. The ascent of the Rothhorn
-from Zinal was the first that Mr. Hill and he made
-together in Switzerland. The traverse of the Rothhorn
-and the ascent of the Weisshorn he did without
-guides, in company with the Hopkinsons, who
-perished in 1898 on the Petite Dent de Veisivi. Mr.
-W. J. Williams, who climbed much with Jones in
-the Alps, has kindly placed in my hands a very
-characteristic post-card of Jones’s, giving, in his own
-brief, vivacious way, a clearer idea of his boundless
-enthusiasm and energy in his favourite sport than
-anything that anyone else could write. It is dated
-‘Bellevue, Zermatt, Monday, Sept. 2, 1895,’ and reads
-as follows:&mdash;‘The Hopkinsons and I traversed the
-Rothhorn without guides in grand style. Reached
-the summit from the Mountet in 4&frac14; hours, including
-&frac34; hour halt. Had a shock of earthquake on the
-top. Next day we went up to the Weisshorn, bivouac
-in open air, and the day after managed the Weisshorn.
-It was delightful. Then they went off to
-their people at the Bel Alp, and I stayed on at
-Zermatt ever since. The weather was bad at the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxi">xxi</span>
-end of the week (Weisshorn on Friday), but on
-Monday I crossed the Furggenjoch with Elias
-Furrer, whom I took on for 14 days at 20 francs, and
-Tuesday traversed the Matterhorn; Wednesday, the
-Monte Rosa hut; Thursday, Monte Rosa from the
-Lysjoch, a lengthy expedition, but magnificent; I
-carried my camera the whole time; Friday, the Fluh
-Alp; Saturday, the traverse of Rimpfischhorn from
-the Adler pass, dangerous by falling stones, but very
-jolly; Sunday, I rested and photographed down
-here. To-day I go to the Täsch Alp, and to-morrow
-shall attempt the traverse of Täschhorn and Dom in
-one day. If the weather still holds I shall then
-traverse the Dent Blanche, which is now in fine condition,
-like ourselves. Love to all.&mdash;Owen.’</p>
-
-<p>Lived there ever a keener mountaineer? On the
-day before he was killed, as we were walking down
-the Arolla Valley together, I expressed surprise at
-the vast amount of eager work he was crushing into
-every week. He replied, ‘You see there are only a
-few years in which I can do this sort of thing, and I
-want to get as much into them as possible.’ Alas!
-Owen Jones had not twenty-four hours more; the
-years were ended.</p>
-
-<p>The season of 1896 was a terribly bad one and
-Jones suffered with less energetic and less daring
-mortals. In the <i>Alpine Journal</i> he laments that he
-only did six peaks, but he crossed the Col du Géant
-twice, traversed the Aiguille de Charmoz, and did
-the North peak of the Périades by the Arête du
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxii">xxii</span>
-Capucin. And the disappointments of that summer
-season had the effect of sending him to the Alps in
-the following winter&mdash;his first winter visit. He
-deserted his favourite Christmas hunting grounds,
-Wastdale Head Inn and Pen-y-gwrwd, for the Bear
-Hotel at Grindelwald. It so happened that I was
-there when he arrived. On the last day of 1896 I
-had made an unsuccessful attempt on the Schreckhorn
-after being out fourteen and a half hours,
-and after an accident to the leading guide, which
-confined him to bed for three weeks. I returned to
-Grindelwald and thence to England. Jones, who
-had just come out, determined to climb the Sehreckhorn.
-The first attempt failed, as the snow was in
-very bad condition, and he only got as far as the
-hut, where he spent a far from comfortable night.
-A few days later, however, he made a second
-attempt with successful results. Both in print and
-in manuscript he has left an account of the two
-expeditions. I quote a short passage&mdash;it has not
-too close a relation to the climbs, but it illustrates
-the playful humour which made Jones so charming
-and vivacious a companion, alike in an alpine hut or
-in the smoke room of ‘P.Y.G.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I approach for a moment with some delicacy
-the threadbare topic of the insect population of
-alpine huts, the fauna of the alpine bed. In
-summertime the traveller must not assume that the
-straw on which he lies is more dead than alive.
-Carelessness in this respect may cost him his peak
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxiii">xxiii</span>
-next day; he should bring Keating and use it
-liberally. But in winter he is almost safe and
-unmolested. Some say that the fleas go down to
-the valley with the last autumn party, and come up
-in the early summer with the first tourists. Others
-think that they hibernate in the warmest corners of
-the hut and make it a rule to emerge only when it is
-well worth while. An occasional winter tourist is
-probably too tough, his attractions too few. The
-solution of the problem I must leave to others. It
-will probably be offered by some conscientious
-German biologist, in an exhaustive illustrated monograph,
-published in the Mittheilungen.’</p>
-
-<p>The autumn holidays of this year were again
-very busy ones. Jones spent them in the Alps, and,
-as his list shows, his climbs included the traverse of
-the Aletschhorn, Aiguille du Moine, and Pic du Tacul.
-He did the Portiengrat and Weissmies in one day,
-and the Fletschhorn and Laquinhorn in another.
-Young Emil Imseng was his guide, and he found
-Jones rather too hungry for peaks to be the easiest
-sort of patron to travel with. When they had done
-the Portiengrat he had had enough for one day, so
-he suggested that Jones should rest. But he did
-not know his ‘Herr;’ the Weissmies was taken that
-day likewise.</p>
-
-<p>In 1898 Jones again paid a winter visit to the
-Alps. Grindelwald was a second time his centre.
-He crossed from there to Rosenlaui by the Wetterhorn-Sattel,
-and crossed the Finsteraarjoch and the
-Strahlegg.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxiv">xxiv</span></p>
-
-<p>In the Summer of 1898 he went first to
-Chamounix, and afterwards to Zermatt, and got
-through a portentous amount of work. He began
-by attempting the traverse of the two Drus, but
-failed owing to bad weather. However, he climbed the
-Grand Dru, and then in rapid succession the Grépon,
-Dent du Requin, Aiguille du Chardonnet, Aiguille
-du Midi, Mont Maudit, traversed Mont Blanc,
-climbed the Aiguille du Géant, and finished up in
-that district by accomplishing his formerly thwarted
-purpose, and traversing both the Grand and the
-Petit Dru.</p>
-
-<p>Then he came on to Zermatt. He climbed the
-Riffelhorn again (by the Matterhorn Couloir), did
-the two peaks of the Lyskamm (in conversation
-with me the last time I met him he seemed to think
-this the most difficult thing he had ever done) and
-Castor, Strahlhorn and Rimpfischhorn, Wellen Kuppe
-and Gabelhorn, Allalinhorn and Alphubel, Dent
-Blanche (by the south arête), the Täschhorn by the
-Teufelsgrat, and the traverse of the Dom, Täschhorn
-and Kienhorn.</p>
-
-<p>I was standing outside the Monte Rosa Hotel,
-in the main street of Zermatt, one bright sunny day,
-that summer, when early in the afternoon Jones,
-with his two guides, came in from one of these
-climbs. He had been frequently doing two peaks in
-one day (I believe he had once done three). All the
-party showed signs of wear and tear, but Jones was
-the freshest of the three. His face and hands were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxv">xxv</span>
-as brown as berries, covered with dust and sweat;
-his clothes were literally in rags, torn to pieces on
-the rocks. Yet in a few minutes he had washed,
-changed into the garb of civilization, and reappeared
-as fresh in body and as vigorous and vivacious intellectually
-as if he had undergone no fatigue at all.
-Twenty hours’ physical work did not appear to take
-as much out of him as five hours does out of humbler
-mortals.</p>
-
-<p>It was just about this time that his friends the
-Hopkinsons were killed in the Arolla Valley. Jones
-was a good deal upset by the news, and knocked off
-climbing for a couple of days, a wonderful thing for
-him; but then he resumed as busily as ever. Of the
-climbing skill both of Dr. Hopkinson and of his
-young son, who was killed with him, he spoke in
-the highest terms. He had frequently climbed with
-both.</p>
-
-<p>I have said little of Jones’s British climbs, for
-the simple reason that the fullest and best record of
-his work in Lakeland is contained in the book to
-which this brief memoir is prefixed, and his work in
-Wales (which he also intended to describe in a
-volume) is not so easily accessible or so fully recorded
-in any published documents as is his work in the
-Alps. Apparently there does not exist among his
-papers any list of his Welsh climbs, though he kept
-voluminous shorthand notes of almost everything he
-did in the climbing world; but it is not possible, in
-the short space and time at my disposal, to attempt
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxvi">xxvi</span>
-to give from them any complete picture of the work
-he did in Wales. The Messrs. Abraham, however,
-have kindly placed in my hands the following brief
-notes of some of the most remarkable experiences
-they have had in company with Jones, both in Wales
-and in the Lake District:</p>
-
-<p>‘Two climbs with Mr. Jones are most strongly
-impressed on our memories, and these two would
-probably rank as the two finest rock climbs made in
-our district.</p>
-
-<p>‘These are Scawfell Pinnacle from the second
-pitch in Deep Ghyll in 1896, and the conquest of
-the well-known Walker’s Gully on the Pillar Rock
-in January, 1899.</p>
-
-<p>‘Both of these were generally considered impossible,
-and it is probably no exaggeration to say
-that no leader excepting Mr. Jones would have had
-confidence to advance beyond the ledge where the
-last <i>arête</i> commenced on the Scawfell Pinnacle
-climb.</p>
-
-<p>‘The same thing might be still more emphatically
-said of the last pitch in Walker’s Gully, and to those
-who know the place it is almost incredible that the
-climb could even be commenced under such conditions
-as prevailed during the first ascent.</p>
-
-<p>‘We visited North Wales with Mr. Jones in 1897,
-and explored the climbs in the Cader Idris district.
-The finest climb in this district is the Great Gully
-above Llyn-y-Cae on Mynydd Pencoed, and Mr.
-Jones was the first explorer and climber of this and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxvii">xxvii</span>
-most of the Cader Idris climbs. Some time was
-also spent at Penygwryd during this visit, but
-unsuitable weather prevented any climbs of importance
-being done.</p>
-
-<p>‘Shortly after Easter, 1899, Mr. Jones paid his
-next visit to North Wales, and on this occasion
-much new and first-class climbing was done from
-Ogwen Cottage as centre.</p>
-
-<p>‘The second ascent of Twll Du was made by a
-party led by Mr. Jones, and shortly afterwards the
-two great gullies to the right of Twll Du were first
-ascended under Mr. Jones’ leadership. Amongst
-several minor first ascents the gully in the Eastern
-Buttress of Glyder Fach and the first direct ascent
-of the Northern Buttress on Tryfaen from Cwm-y-Tryfaen
-are most worthy of note.</p>
-
-<p>‘The following Whitsuntide again saw Mr. Jones
-at Ogwen Cottage, but the weather conditions were
-such as to prevent any very notable climbing being
-recorded.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course it is impossible to give in the space at
-my disposal any idea of the large amount of climbing
-done in these various districts by Mr. Jones.</p>
-
-<p>‘To one with his abnormal physical powers, and
-true love and enthusiasm for the mountains the most
-was generally made of every opportunity to climb.</p>
-
-<p>‘He was never so happy as when in a really
-‘tight’ place, and to many climbers the spirit and
-energy shown by him under most trying circumstances
-will act as an incentive to worthy imitation.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxviii">xxviii</span></p>
-
-<p>‘As a climber he was unique, and many years
-must elapse ere another can hope to fill his place
-worthily; but, as a friend under all circumstances,
-he was always to be depended upon, for the weakest
-and heaviest members in every party were generally
-his special care, and many can never forget his true
-unselfishness and the kindly way in which personal
-blunders were criticised.</p>
-
-<p>‘Whether the party was struggling up a waterfall
-or resting shivering and wet under a huge chock-stone,
-or clinging desperately to a wind-swept
-ridge or icy couloir, everyone felt happy with Jones
-as their comforter and leader.</p>
-
-<p>‘The musical gatherings in the evenings seem
-now to lack one voice, and nought but sadness can
-be left for many of those who remember companionships
-which can never be replaced.’
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxix">xxix</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="PREFACE_CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE LAST SEASON IN THE ALPS</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>I come now to the last season in the Alps, the
-season of 1899. The first part of his holiday was
-spent at Zermatt, and then he and Hill met by
-arrangement at the Kurhaus at Arolla. They soon
-got to work, beginning with the two Dents de
-Veisivi (the scene of the accident to the Hopkinsons
-the previous year) and the Dent Perroc, in twelve
-hours from the Kurhaus and back. Then followed
-the Aiguille de la Za by the face, a traverse of all
-the peaks of the Aiguilles Rouges, Mont Blanc de
-Seilon and the Pigne d’Arolla in one day, the Dent
-des Bouquetins, and the traverse of Mont Collon.
-A slight accident to one of the party of which I was
-a member, necessitated an unexpected descent on
-the evening of August 26th to Arolla, in the hope
-of finding a doctor. There was none there, but we
-found many friends and acquaintances, among them
-being Owen Jones. On the morning of Sunday
-27th, our party left for Evolena just after breakfast,
-as we heard there was a German doctor there, and
-we wanted our wounded member attended to
-without delay. Just as we were starting we found
-Jones and Hill leaving also, intending to traverse
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxx">xxx</span>
-the Dent Blanche, climbing it by the west arête,
-which had only been done twice before, and we all
-hoped shortly to meet again in Zermatt.</p>
-
-<p>It was a bright sunny morning, hot and dusty.
-For a good part of the way from Arolla to Haudères
-I chatted to Jones. We did not go very fast on
-account of the damaged member of our party, about
-whom Jones was very solicitous. He himself seemed
-very fit, and was full of life and enthusiasm for his
-favourite passion. He chatted freely of all his
-climbs, of our first meeting nine years before, of all
-that had happened since, of frostbite on the Dom,
-and the remedy&mdash;sticking his fingers into boiling
-glue&mdash;worse than the disease. His traverse of the
-ice arête between the two peaks of the Lyskamm
-and his Easter ascent of the Dent Blanche seemed
-to me to have made the deepest impression on him
-of all his achievements in the mountains. He was
-rather inclined to underrate his wonderful rock-work
-in North Wales and in the Lake District, a department
-in which, in my opinion, he was really greatest,
-though his feats of endurance in the Alps were
-something off the common. He told me that his
-ambitions inclined towards a tour in the Himalayas,
-if circumstances allowed of his realising that dream.</p>
-
-<p>At Haudères we parted company. Hill and
-Jones, with their guides, who met them at Haudères,
-turned up to Ferpècle; we went on to Evolena. If
-my friend’s health permitted, I had arranged to see
-Jones in Zermatt on Tuesday afternoon. Difficult as
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxi">xxxi</span>
-was the expedition he was undertaking, the awful
-reality of the morrow never crossed my mind even as
-a possibility. A stronger or more well-equipped
-party I had never seen start on an expedition. It
-was about 12-30 when we all said good-bye.</p>
-
-<p>At Evolena the doctor ordered our invalid a day
-or two of complete rest. So on Monday morning
-the third member of our party, with his guide,
-started for the Col de la Meina to return to his wife,
-whom he had left in the Val des Bagnes, from which
-we had come. For the sake of the walk I accompanied
-them to the top of the Col. About 9-15, just
-before we lost sight of the west arête of the Dent
-Blanche, I searched the arête with my field glasses
-to see if any trace of Jones and Hill’s party could be
-detected. None of us could see anything, so we
-concluded, as the mountain was in very good condition,
-that they had probably already got to the
-top, and were then descending by the south arête.
-But they were still on the arête, though we failed to
-see them on the dark rocks. Had it been three-quarters
-of an hour later we might actually have
-been witnesses of the accident.</p>
-
-<p>On the top of the Col de la Meina we were
-caught by a storm of mist and rain, blowing up from
-the west. I bade adieu to my friends and hastened
-back to Evolena. That was the mist which caught
-Mr. Hill on the gendarme in his descent after the
-accident and detained him 22 hours alone on the
-great mountain.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxii">xxxii</span></p>
-
-<p>But of the accident no one dreamed. No premonition,
-no presentiment, troubled our thoughts.
-Monday and Tuesday passed quietly and uneventfully
-for us.</p>
-
-<p>On Wednesday morning my friend got permission
-from his doctor to walk up to Arolla for lunch. We
-gladly availed ourselves of the new freedom.</p>
-
-<p>At Arolla we found many of Jones’s friends
-hoping to meet him shortly in the Zermatt Valley.
-On our way back to Evolena we passed the body of
-the Tiroler guide, Reinstadler, of Sulden, which was
-being carried down the valley. He had been killed
-on Monday, August 28th&mdash;that black and fatal day
-in the Evolena Valley&mdash;by falling into a crevasse on
-the Pigne d’Arolla.</p>
-
-<p>As we re-entered the garden of our hotel, M.
-Spahr met us looking very grave. ‘Had we heard
-of the great accident on the Dent Blanche?’ For
-the first time the thought of danger to Jones and
-Hill crossed my mind. I quickly asked him for
-details, telling him why I was apprehensive.</p>
-
-<p>He had had a telegram from Dr. Seiler from
-Zermatt, which he showed me. It was in French
-and ran something like this: ‘A tourist and three
-guides have fallen from the Dent Blanche. A caravan
-of guides is starting from Zermatt to look for
-the bodies, which will reach Haudères about six
-o’clock to-morrow evening. Have four coffins
-ready at Haudères. I am coming round myself.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Seiler.</span>’
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxiii">xxxiii</span></p>
-
-<p>Four bodies! This could not be Jones and Hill’s
-party, there would be five or three, for they had
-intended to make the ascent on two ropes, three and
-two respectively on each. If all five had been roped
-together, one could not have been saved. My mind
-grew easier. So we reason when we do not know.</p>
-
-<p>But I could not avoid thinking of the awful
-accident, and as I thought my fears returned. No
-other party had left the Evolena Valley for the Dent
-Blanche that week. The bodies had fallen on the
-Evolena side. It was improbable they had climbed
-from the Zermatt side. Could it be that the fifth
-body had not been seen? One climber and three
-guides was a most unusual party? I grew uneasy
-again, and finally telegraphed to Dr. Seiler: ‘Have
-Messrs. Jones and Hill arrived?’</p>
-
-<p>While we were waiting for dinner and a reply, a
-voice hailed me by name out of the gathering gloom.
-It was that of Mr. Harold Spender, who had just
-driven up the valley with his sister and a younger
-brother, Mr. Hugh Spender. We exchanged greetings
-and discussed the accident. I told them what
-I feared.</p>
-
-<p>We were sitting in the balcony outside the hotel
-in the summer darkness when a villager put a yellow
-telegraph envelope in my hand. I hastily tore it
-open, and this is what I read: ‘M. Hill arrived
-safely this morning, but Jones and three guides fell
-an hour and a half from the top on Monday morning.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Seiler.</span>’
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxiv">xxxiv</span></p>
-
-<p>Owen Glynne Jones was dead. My mind almost
-reeled at the fact. Intellectually I knew it must be
-so, but I was utterly unable to realise it. I could
-almost hear the sound of his voice and the rattle of
-the nails of his dusty boots on the stones that last
-Sunday morning. But his voice was stilled for ever.</p>
-
-<p>And Hill! He had escaped, but how? Where
-had he been since Monday morning? Out on the
-mountain alone, without guides, or food, or drink.
-The thing was incredible, impossible. But the
-impossible and the incredible was true.</p>
-
-<p>At eleven o’clock fifteen guides and Mr. Harold
-Spender started as a search party. My injured
-friend and myself went with them as far as we
-could. The little village was already in darkness,
-swathed in sorrow. For the telegram that brought
-me news of Jones’ death announced the death of a
-village guide too.</p>
-
-<p>In the chapel only lights burned. It was the
-vigil round the body of Reinstadler. Silently and
-sadly we tramped up the valley along the carriage
-road to Haudères. Then in single file, like an army
-on a night march, we marched up the steep and
-narrow path to Ferpècle. Far below us, on our
-right, the torrent roared. We picked precarious
-steps by the light of our lanterns and the aid of our
-axes. We talked little and in muffled tones.</p>
-
-<p>We reached Ferpècle about 1.30 a.m. on Thursday.
-The hamlet was asleep. The guides broke
-eight huge poles out of the fences of the fields and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxv">xxxv</span>
-from the outbuildings. Grim duty! The poles were
-to make four rude biers on which to carry the bodies
-down.</p>
-
-<p>Between 3 and 4 a.m. we gained the Bricolla
-Alp, where Jones and Hill had slept the night
-before the fatal climb. The kindly shepherd provided
-us with milk and a fire&mdash;it was now very
-cold&mdash;and we produced provisions from our rücksacks
-and had a much-needed meal. It was a curious
-sight&mdash;the little stone hut, a big wood fire blazing
-in a hole in the floor, pails of milk all round the walls
-on shelves, a circle of rough weather-beaten men,
-their faces lighted by the flickering flames and by
-the uncertain light of one or two of our lanterns.
-Rembrandtesque&mdash;and profoundly sad.</p>
-
-<p>A little after four we went out. The grey dawn
-was just breaking, but a cold, thick, clammy white
-mist had swept down on the alp and chilled us to
-the bone. At the top of the moraine my friend and
-I had to turn back. We should only have been a
-hindrance had we gone on, as both of us were
-damaged. Spender and the guides went forward.
-Let Mr. Spender describe the rest.</p>
-
-<p>‘At four the column resumed its way. Rain
-had begun to fall and a dense mist was closing down
-upon us. But it was soon light enough to put out
-our lanterns, and courage came with the dawn. We
-rounded the alp, and then began to climb the long,
-dreary moraines which lead up to the glacier. The
-guides went at a terrific pace. But it was good to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxvi">xxxvi</span>
-be taken into this noble fraternity&mdash;to be accepted
-as a comrade and not as a “climber”&mdash;to be honoured
-by a share in the generous quest.</p>
-
-<p>‘But the pace soon slackened. We halted on
-the edge of the glacier, roped in fours, and began to
-search gingerly for a way through the terrific ice-fall
-of the glacier. We were mounting by the old
-approach to the Dent Blanche, up the ice-fall, now
-long since abandoned. The glacier was, of course,
-quite changed since any of these guides had last
-visited it. The ice was split and rent into every
-conceivable shape. We were surrounded with leaning
-towers of ice, threatening at any moment to fall
-on us and crush us.</p>
-
-<p>‘A great pile of seracs on the Northern ice-fall,
-across the ridge, fell with a mighty crash. Away to
-the right we could hear the thunder of avalanches.
-But never for a moment did the guides hesitate.
-Steadily and unflinchingly they threaded their way
-between the menacing seracs. Crossing broken fragments
-of ice, balancing between profound crevasses,
-not thwarted but ever searching for a way. At last
-we suddenly struck upon the tracks of Jones’ party
-away to the North side of the glacier close to the
-rocks. There we scrambled up, half by the rocks
-and half by the ice, and then at last, after many
-hours, found ourselves on the great plateau beneath
-the long snow couloir running down from the West
-Ridge. There, if anywhere, they were likely to be.
-And there, high up among the rocks, we could just
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxvii">xxxvii</span>
-see, with the aid of a good telescope, some dark
-objects which were not rocks.</p>
-
-<p>‘“There are our friends,” said the guides.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, there was no doubt of it. It was now ten
-o’clock and the sky had cleared. A party was
-formed, and mounted the rocks to fetch the bodies.
-As they climbed, suddenly another army of men
-appeared below us, above the ice-fall, advancing
-swiftly. They were the party of the Zermatt Guides.
-They came on unroped, climbing fast. It was a
-magnificent sight to see this troop of giants in their
-own element, a troop of equals, masters of peril.
-They halted below the rocks and sent up another
-small band to join the Evolena Guides. There was
-a long pause, and then they all began to descend,
-bringing the bodies.</p>
-
-<p>‘I will draw a veil over what we found. Men
-cannot fall many thousands of feet and lie in artistic
-attitudes.... But it was four o’clock before the
-Bricolla hut was reached, and darkness had fallen
-before the bodies came to Haudères. The Zermatt
-Guides were out for twenty-four hours, and the
-Evolena Guides over twenty.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. W. R. Rickmers, a German resident in
-England, and a member of the Alpine Club, sends the
-following to the <i>Alpine Journal</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr. Seiler sent out thirty guides under Alois
-Supersaxo. Dr. R. Leuk, Mr. K. Mayr, and Mr.
-W. R. Rickmers joined them. We left the Staffelalp
-at 10 p.m. on August 30th, reached the Col
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxviii">xxxviii</span>
-d’Hérens at 6 a.m. on the 31st, in fog and snow,
-which cleared away later on. Descended Ferpècle
-Glacier towards termination of W. ridge of Dent
-Blanche, and ascended the small glacier which comes
-down from point 3,912 on the S. <i>arête</i>. At the spot
-under the “g” in “Rocs rouges” this glacier forms
-an icefall (moderately difficult), and besides that a bit
-of the Glacier de la Dent Blanche hangs over the
-narrowest part of the W. ridge. We then came to
-the foot of a great gully. On the map it is the first
-one from W., and it is very clearly indicated. In
-the rocks to the right of the couloir (looking down)
-and about three hundred feet above the rim of the
-glacier, the bodies were found. It was about 10 a.m.,
-and a party of Evolena guides, accompanied by Mr.
-Harold Spender, was already on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>‘The height above sea-level was ca. 3,600-3,700 m.
-Straight above, on the ridge, one saw a smooth cliff
-(ca. 400-500 feet below summit), and if that was the
-fatal <i>mauvais pas</i> the fall must have been about
-1,500-1,700 feet in a series of clear drops of many
-hundred feet. The rope was intact between Furrer
-and Zurbriggen.</p>
-
-<p>‘The guides did their work well; the icefall, of
-course, caused a great deal of trouble.’</p>
-
-<p>While the search party was crossing the glacier
-and the snow-fields, I watched them through my
-glasses. Presently the sun got the better of the
-morning mist, and the pure white snow gleamed
-beautifully. Then from the Col d’Hérens there
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xxxix">xxxix</span>
-swept a tiny, serpentine black line, moving fast.
-It was men. I turned my glasses on them. They
-were the Zermatt party, some thirty strong, advancing
-at a rare pace. It was a beautiful sight, so
-masterful, so sure was their progress.</p>
-
-<p>As the long, hot hours of mid-day passed, I
-descended to Ferpècle, and sent up a boy with food
-and drink for the certainly wearied searchers when
-they returned from their sad duties. At length they
-came, drawing the bodies over the grass slopes till
-they reached a path where they could be carried on
-their shoulders. Darkness had fallen when we
-reached Haudères.</p>
-
-<p>Late on Friday night Mr. Hill came round for
-the funeral. His voice seemed to me strangely
-altered. Otherwise he had come through his
-terrible experience wonderfully, thanks to a splendid
-constitution and nerves of steel. Then first
-I heard the true story of the accident. I reproduce
-his own account from the <i>Alpine Journal</i>. All had
-roped together early in the climb, and the accident
-took place about ten o’clock. Mr. Hill says:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘When I reached the level of the others, Furrer
-was attempting to climb the buttress, but, finding
-no holds, he called to Zurbriggen to hold an axe for
-him to stand on. Apparently he did not feel safe,
-for he turned his head and spoke to Jones, who then
-went to hold the axe steady. Thus we were all on
-the same level, Vuignier being some twenty-five or
-thirty feet distant from them and also from me.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xl">xl</span>
-Standing on the axe, which was now quite firm,
-Furrer could reach the top of the buttress, and
-attempted to pull himself up; but the fingerholds
-were insufficient, and before his foot had left the
-axe his hands slipped, and he fell backwards on to
-Zurbriggen and Jones, knocking them both off, and
-all three fell together. I turned to the wall to get
-a better hold, and did not see Vuignier pulled off,
-but heard him go, and knew that my turn would
-soon come. And when it did not I looked round,
-and saw my four companions sliding down the slope
-at a terrific rate, and thirty feet of rope swinging
-slowly down below me.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is difficult to analyse my sensations at that
-moment. My main feeling was one of astonishment
-that I was still there. I can only suppose that
-Vuignier had belayed my rope securely to protect
-himself and me during our long wait on the traverse.</p>
-
-<p>‘It must be admitted that Furrer did not choose
-the best route; but his choice is easy enough to understand,
-for the only alternative did not look inviting.
-At all events, it is certain that he acted on his own
-initiative. I say this reluctantly, and solely for the
-purpose of contradicting a statement I have read in
-an account of the accident&mdash;that he was induced by
-Jones to climb straight over the gendarme instead
-of going round it. It is a pity that historians, who
-must of necessity be ignorant of the facts, should go
-out of their way to make such conjectures.</p>
-
-<p>‘The problem before me was a difficult one. It
-was quite impossible to climb down alone, and I
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xli">xli</span>
-could not expect to succeed where guides had failed;
-the only course open was to attempt to turn the
-gendarme on the right. This I succeeded in doing
-with great difficulty, owing to the ice on the rocks
-and the necessity of cutting up an ice slope in order
-to reach the ridge. In about another hour I gained
-the summit, and was greeted with a faint cooey,
-probably from the party we had seen. I could not
-see them nor make them hear, so made my way
-down with all reasonable speed, hoping to overtake
-them. When I reached the lowest gendarme&mdash;the
-one with a deep narrow fissure&mdash;a sudden mist hid
-everything from view. It was impossible to see the
-way off; and while I was trying various routes a
-snowstorm and cold wind drove me to seek shelter
-on the lee-side of the rocks. There, tied on with my
-rope, and still further secured by an ice-axe wedged
-firmly in front of me, I was forced to remain until
-mid-day on Tuesday. Then the mist cleared, and,
-climbing very carefully down the snow-covered rocks
-I reached the snow arête, where most of the steps
-had to be re-cut. The next serious difficulty was
-the lower part of the Wandfluh; I could not remember
-the way off, and spent two or three hours in
-futile efforts before I found a series of chimneys on
-the extreme right, leading down to the glacier. The
-sun set when I was on the high bank of moraine on
-the Zmutt Glacier, and in the growing darkness it
-was far from easy to keep the path. The light in
-the Staffel Alp inn was a guide as long as it lasted,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlii">xlii</span>
-but it went out early, and, keeping too low down, I
-passed the inn without seeing it, and being forced to
-stop by the nature of the ground, spent the night
-by the side of the torrent. It was late in the morning
-when I awoke, and then a scramble of a few
-minutes brought me to the path, near the sign-post,
-and I reached Zermatt at half-past eleven.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hill’s escape is one of the most wonderful in
-the history of mountaineering. His endurance and
-courage are not less remarkable. To have been out
-alone, in bad weather, without anything to eat save
-five raisins, and with nothing to drink but ice and
-snow, on a difficult and dangerous mountain, and to
-have returned safely is, I believe, a record in climbing
-annals. I may add a few details, given me by Mr.
-Hill when I first met him after the accident, which
-he has not reproduced in the above narrative.</p>
-
-<p>He thinks his companions were killed instantaneously.
-They uttered no sound; they made no
-apparent attempt to save themselves. With arms
-outspread they rolled helplessly down the awful face
-of the mountain. He watched them for a few
-seconds, powerless to help, if help would indeed have
-availed, and then turned from the sickening sight.</p>
-
-<p>During the last part of his descent, even his
-great strength began to fail. Once, on the Wandfluh,
-he lost his axe and had to spend an hour in climbing
-down to recover it, as it was absolutely essential
-to his safety. After he left the Zmutt glacier in
-darkness, he appears to have become delirious. He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xliii">xliii</span>
-was constantly talking to imaginary companions.
-He fell into holes in the ground and went to sleep
-without strength to rise. He wakened from cold,
-called to his companions to go on as it was time to
-be leaving, stumbled, and fell asleep again.</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday morning Dr. Sumpner arrived,
-having travelled straight through from Birmingham
-to Evolena. Friends tramped down from Arolla,
-others had come from Zermatt, the secretary of
-Jones’s section of the Swiss Alpine Club came from
-near Neuchâtel. A carriage bore Jones’s plain black
-coffin, with a gilt cross on it, down from Haudères.
-We buried him and the Evolena guide, Vuignier, in
-the little graveyard of the Roman Catholic church,
-almost in sight of the glorious, but terrible, mountain
-on which they met their fate. The scene in the
-village almost baffles description. All the villagers,
-men and women, attended the funeral, clad in coarse
-white robes. The grief of the women, especially of
-Vuignier’s poor old mother, was heart-rending to
-witness. The little Roman Catholic chapel was
-crowded, the congregation all in white, save the
-acolytes, two village boys, who served the altar in
-their coarse brown, everyday clothes, and the choir,
-whose strong voices rang through the whitewashed,
-humble building. A little knot of Englishmen, sunbrowned,
-of another faith or of no faith at all, joined
-in the impressive and solemn service. It was a sight
-that no one present can ever forget.</p>
-
-<p>After the service, we bore the two coffins to the
-graveyard. Rev. Mr. Scott, the Anglican chaplain,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xliv">xliv</span>
-read the English burial service over Owen Jones’s
-grave. Mr. Hill sent a beautiful wreath of edelweiss
-and the foliage of the Alpine rose. A rude wooden
-cross marked the spot till Jones’s friends erected
-a suitable gravestone. The lovely warm sunshine
-and the bright blue sky, and the gleaming snows on
-the slopes of the Dent Blanche, formed a curious
-contrast to the mourning of the village in that
-Alpine valley.</p>
-
-<p>Thus perished, as he would, I doubt not, like
-to have died, Owen Glynne Jones, a brave and
-dashing mountaineer, a cheery and kindly friend,
-whose presence will be long missed by all who
-had the privilege of knowing him. His death was
-due to a pure accident, occurring when he was in
-the plenitude of his powers, and when he seemed
-just about to reap the reward of long years of
-patient, ardent toil.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-W. M. CROOK.<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlv">xlv</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table class="toc3col">
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td />
- <td class="tdr"><small>PAGE</small></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#Owen_Glynne_Jones"><span class="smcap">Memoir of Owen Glynne Jones</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">vii</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><small>CHAP.</small></td>
- <td />
- <td />
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>I.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_I"><span class="smcap">Pike’s Crag</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>II.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_II"><span class="smcap">Deep Ghyll, Great Chimney and Professor’s
-Chimney</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>III.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_III"><span class="smcap">The Rake’s Progress and Certain Short Climbs<br />
-near It</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">29</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>IV.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_IV"><span class="smcap">Moss Ghyll, Collier’s Climb, and Keswick<br />
-Brothers’ Climb</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">43</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>V.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_V"><span class="smcap">Scawfell Pinnacle</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">69</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>VI.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_VI"><span class="smcap">Great End and its Gullies</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">89</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>VII.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_VII"><span class="smcap">Great Gable, the Ennerdale Face, and the<br />
-Oblique Chimney</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">114</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>VIII.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><span class="smcap">The Ennerdale Central Gully and Two Little<br />
-Chimneys</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">134</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>IX.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_IX"><span class="smcap">The Great Napes and its Gullies</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">146</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>X.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_X"><span class="smcap">The Ridges of the Great Napes</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">153</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XI.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XI"><span class="smcap">The Gable Needle</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">168</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XII.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XII"><span class="smcap">Kern Knotts</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">175</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XIII.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><span class="smcap">The Wastwater Screes</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">190</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XIV.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><span class="smcap">Pavey Ark</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">208</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XV.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XV"><span class="smcap">Doe Crag, Coniston</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">219</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XVI.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><span class="smcap">Combe Ghyll</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">237</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XVII.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII"><span class="smcap">The Pillar Rock</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">254</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XVIII.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII"><span class="smcap">Notes on Remaining Climbs</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">285
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlvi">xlvi</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th colspan="2"><a href="#APPENDIX_I">APPENDIX I.</a></th>
- <th>295</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th colspan="2"><a href="#APPENDIX_II">APPENDIX II.&mdash;</a></th>
- <th />
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><small>CHAP.</small></td>
- <td />
- <td />
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>I.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_1"><span class="smcap">The Pillar Rock and its Purlieus up to Date</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">317</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>II.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_2"><span class="smcap">New Climbs on Great Gable, Scawfell, and
-around Wastdale Head</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">332</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>III.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_3"><span class="smcap">The Buttermere Climbs, and those in Outlying
-Districts</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">344</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>IV.</td>
- <td><a href="#CHAPTER_4"><span class="smcap">Recent Climbs around Langdale, and Doe
-Crag</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdr">358</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlvii">xlvii</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<table class="loi3col">
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#frontis"><span class="smcap">Portrait of Owen Glynne Jones</span></a></td>
- <td />
- <td><i>Frontispiece</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_006"><span class="smcap">The Pike’s Crag Gullies</span></a></td>
- <td><i>To face page</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_012"><span class="smcap">Deep Ghyll, First Pitch</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_020"><span class="smcap">Scawfell Pinnacle and the Professor’s Chimney</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">20</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_026"><span class="smcap">Scawfell Crags from the Pulpit Rock</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">26</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_030"><span class="smcap">The Ascent of the Broad Stand</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">30</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_040"><span class="smcap">The Penrith Climb From Mickledore</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">40</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_051"><span class="smcap">Collier’s Chimney, Moss Ghyll</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">51</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_066"><span class="smcap">Keswick Brothers’ Climb</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">66</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_069"><span class="smcap">Attitudes on Scawfell Pinnacle</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">69</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_073"><span class="smcap">Scawfell Pinnacle and Deep Ghyll</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">73</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_076"><span class="smcap">The Last Hundred Feet on the Scawfell Pinnacle</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">76</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_083"><span class="smcap">Ascent of Scawfell Pinnacle from Deep Ghyll</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">83</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_090"><span class="smcap">The Great End Gullies, Seen From Sprinkling
-Tarn</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">90</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_099"><span class="smcap">Top of the Central Gully in Winter, Great End</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">99</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_114"><span class="smcap">Wastdale and Great Gable</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">114</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_127"><span class="smcap">Ennerdale Face of Great Gable</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">127</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_146"><span class="smcap">Great Gable From Lingmell</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">146</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_153"><span class="smcap">The Ridges of the Great Napes</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">153</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_156"><span class="smcap">The Upper Part of the Needle Ridge</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">156</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_168"><span class="smcap">The Gable Needle</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">168</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_178"><span class="smcap">Kern Knotts Chimney</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">178</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_184"><span class="smcap">Kern Knotts Crack</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">184
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlviii">xlviii</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_191"><span class="smcap">The Screes and Wastwater</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">191</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_208"><span class="smcap">The Pavey Ark Gullies From Stickle Tarn</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">208</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_220"><span class="smcap">Doe Crag and Goatswater</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">220</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_225"><span class="smcap">First Pitch in Doe Crag, Great Gully</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">225</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_257"><span class="smcap">The East Face of the Pillar Rock</span> (viewed from the Shamrock)</a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">257</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_267"><span class="smcap">Round the Notch, Pillar Rock, East Side</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">267</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_271"><span class="smcap">The North Face of the Pillar Rock</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">271</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_325"><span class="smcap">Over the Nose&mdash;the Pillar Rock</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">325</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#i_376"><span class="smcap">The Broadrick’s and Hopkinson’s Cracks, Doe Crag</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">376</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h2>OUTLINE DRAWINGS OF THE CHIEF ROUTES</h2>
-
-<table class="loi4col">
- <tr>
- <td><small>PLATE</small></td>
- <td />
- <td />
- <td />
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>I.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_002"><span class="smcap">The Pike’s Crag Gullies</span><br />
-<small><i>Diagrammatic</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc"><i>To face page</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>II.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_002"><span class="smcap">Scawfell From the Pulpit Rock</span><br />
-<small><i>From the photograph facing p. 26</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">46</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>III.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_094"><span class="smcap">The Great End Gullies</span><br />
-<small><i>From the photograph facing p. 90</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">94</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>IV.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_135"><span class="smcap">The Ennerdale Face of Great Gable</span><br />
-<small><i>From the photograph facing p. 127</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">135</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>V.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_161"><span class="smcap">The Great Napes Ridges</span><br />
-<small><i>Diagrammatic</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">161</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>VI.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_203i">i. <span class="smcap">The Wastwater Screes</span><br />
-<small><i>From the photograph facing p. 191</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">203</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td />
- <td><a href="#i_203ii">ii. <span class="smcap">The Pavey Ark Gullies</span><br />
-<small><i>From the photograph facing p. 208</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">203</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>VII.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_370"><span class="smcap">Doe Crag, Coniston</span><br />
-<small><i>Diagrammatic</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">370</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>VIII.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_242"><span class="smcap">Pillar Rock, East Side</span><br />
-<small><i>From the photograph facing p. 257</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">242</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>IX.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_254"><span class="smcap">Pillar Rock, North Side</span><br />
-<small><i>From the photograph facing p. 271</i></small></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">254</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>X.</td>
- <td><a href="#i_318"><span class="smcap">Pillar Rock, West Side</span></a></td>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdr">318</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xlix">xlix</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="INTRODUCTION">INTRODUCTION</h2>
-
-<p>Some eight years ago chance led me to the Lake
-District for the first time, and a kindly acquaintance
-whom I then met at Wastdale taught me something
-of the joys of rock-climbing. Since that occasion
-every holiday has been spent on the mountains,
-either in Cumberland or North Wales or Switzerland,
-and they have taught me much that is worth knowing
-and that when once learnt can never be forgotten.
-Men with the highest literary qualifications have
-written of the charm of mountaineering, and every
-aspect of the subject has been touched upon with
-fullest justice and with a grace of style that has
-captivated many a non-climber in spite of his prejudices.
-Yet I cannot refrain from adding my own
-humble tribute of praise to the sport that has done
-so much for me and my best friends.</p>
-
-<p>It satisfies many needs; the love of the beautiful
-in nature; the desire to exert oneself physically,
-which with strong men is a passionate craving that
-must find satisfaction somehow or other; the joy of
-conquest without any woe to the conquered; the
-prospect of continual increase in one’s skill, and the
-hope that this skill may partially neutralize the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_l">l</span>
-failing in strength that comes with advancing age or
-ill-health.</p>
-
-<p>Hunting and fishing enthral many men, but
-mountaineering does not claim the sacrifice of beasts
-and fishes. Cricket and football are magnificent
-sports, and it is a perpetual satisfaction that the
-British races are becoming enthusiastic in their
-appreciation of keen contests in these games. Yet
-there is something repulsive in the spectacle of five
-thousand inactive spectators of a struggling twenty-two,
-and the knowledge that the main interest of
-many players and observers is of a monetary character
-does not tend to convince one of the moral benefits
-that these sports can offer. On the other hand, it is
-scarcely fair to judge a sport by those who degrade
-it in this manner, and we all know that genuine
-cricketers and footballers play for love and honour.</p>
-
-<p>The mountaineer does not reap any golden
-harvest by his exertions&mdash;even if he writes a book
-on his subject. He does not exhibit his skill to
-applauding thousands; and his vanity is rarely
-tickled by the praise of many. He must be content
-with the sport itself and what it offers him
-directly.</p>
-
-<p>Probably the scientific mountaineer gains most.
-He is certain to acquire rare and valuable knowledge
-of facts in zoology, botany, or geology, if he starts
-with the necessary intellectual equipment. The
-physicist’s mind is perpetually exercised by the
-natural phenomena he witnesses; mist bows, Brocken
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_li">li</span>
-spectres, frost haloes, electrical discharges of the
-queerest description, mirages, all these offer him
-problems of the most interesting kind. But the fact
-is, there is so much to do that is directly connected
-with the climbing itself that the natural sciences are
-usually left to themselves, and their consideration
-reserved for special expeditions.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, science can often assist the
-climbing. The engineer can triumph with applications
-of the rope. He can tell us some facts worth
-knowing on the value of friction as an aid to stability,
-on the use of an axe as a support or as a lever, or on
-the safe methods of negotiating loose stones. The
-man who knows something of geology is a useful
-member of an exploring party; he is often able to
-guess correctly where available passages occur in a
-wilderness of rock, and can judge at a distance what
-quality of climbing the party may expect. The
-expert in mountain weather does not exist; perhaps
-he does not dare to, or perhaps the subject is too
-complicated for a nineteenth-century scientist. However
-this may be, it is worth while paying a little
-attention to meteorology and noting the quality of
-weather that follows any definite condition of the
-wind, the barometer, or the atmospheric temperature.</p>
-
-<p>The causes that have resulted in the publication
-of this little book are as difficult to define as those
-that produce a rainy day in the Alps; and, now that
-the book is written and nothing remains but an
-introduction, I wish that the reverse order of proceeding
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lii">lii</span>
-had been adopted, and that the introduction
-had been written as a peg on which succeeding
-chapters might have been definitely hung.</p>
-
-<p>From the outset the illustrations have been
-regarded as the chief feature of the book, and it was
-my good fortune early to obtain the co-operation of
-Messrs. G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons in the production
-of good photographs of the most interesting pieces of
-rock scenery that the Lake District affords. Messrs.
-George and Ashley Abraham have accompanied me
-on several climbing excursions with the express
-purpose of obtaining artistic and yet accurate photographs
-of the main difficulties that beset the cragsman’s
-course, and I am bound to add that they are
-as skilful in tackling severe pitches as they are in
-taking successful pictures. The practical troubles in
-manipulating heavy photographic apparatus where
-most people find work enough in looking solely to
-their own safety, the frequent impossibility of finding
-a sufficient contrast in light and shade among the
-crag recesses, and the subsequent difficulties in
-development of such awkward subjects, will convince
-the reader that theirs has been no light task, and at
-the same time will offer sufficient excuse for certain
-small defects that we have been unable to eliminate
-from the photo-mechanical reproductions. These are
-in collotype on platino-surface paper which shows
-the fine texture of the rock structures.</p>
-
-<p>For the benefit more particularly of climbers
-several outline diagrams have been introduced to
-explain the outlines of those more important crags
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_liii">liii</span>
-up each of which many different routes have been
-found, lines of ascent that cannot be readily recognised
-in the photographs themselves, and that cannot
-be briefly described in words. Some of these are
-purely diagrammatic, where it has been found impossible
-to base them on good general views. The
-others are outlined from photographs, and can in
-most cases be compared directly with the corresponding
-views from which they are derived.</p>
-
-<p>With the knowledge that I was getting substantial
-aid in the illustrative portion of the book, the
-management of the rest has been much simplified.
-There are very many people who come regularly to
-the English Lake District to ramble about on the
-fells and to make the ordinary ascents. Of these, by
-far the greater number steer clear of the precipices
-and other steep parts, wisely recognising the danger
-that attends the inexperienced in such places. Nevertheless,
-they enjoy the mountains and are charmed
-with the scenery. They do not know much about
-the innermost recesses of even their favourite peaks.
-To many of them Mr. Haskett Smith’s little book on
-‘Climbing in England’ must have been a revelation;
-for it indicates with sufficient clearness that every
-crag in the country of any considerable dimensions
-has been explored with wonderful thoroughness by
-Alpine climbers, and that these abrupt walls and
-gloomy gullies are the happy hunting-ground of many
-an enterprising athlete. If my accounts of the
-different ascents were briefly stated in the orthodox
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_liv">liv</span>
-climbing-guide form, the book could appeal to none
-but the elect; only an athlete in excellent training
-could digest such solid diet. If, on the other hand,
-they were recorded in narrative form, with a little
-expansion of detail where serious difficulties occurred
-during the expeditions, the book might at the same
-time appeal to many a tourist who loves the country
-and who likes to learn more about it. The latter
-course has been adopted, and it is sincerely to be
-hoped that the succeeding chapters will interest
-such tourists.</p>
-
-<p>There was another and more important consideration
-which helped to decide on the form actually
-taken. Our Alpine climbers of the highest rank are
-born, not made. But most of the others, taking with
-them some natural aptitude and plenty of money, are
-made abroad. Why do they not take their preliminary
-training for a year or two in Wales, or
-Cumberland, or on the Scottish hills? It would be
-much wiser and cheaper to support the ‘home
-industry’ so far as it goes, before making their <i>débuts</i>
-on the high Alps. Our British hills can give them
-no glacier practice, but they can learn a vast deal
-concerning rock-climbing before they leave the
-country. To such as these the book is primarily
-dedicated. There are no professional guides in
-Cumberland who know anything about the rocks.
-The amateur must come out and manage for himself.
-But it is here intended to show that the Cumberland
-school is a well-graded one; that the novice can
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lv">lv</span>
-start with the easiest and safest of expeditions, and
-can work his way up to a standard of skill comparing
-favourably with that of the average Swiss guide.
-There is nothing so instructive as guideless climbing,
-be it ever so humble in character. It makes the man
-wonderfully critical when taken in hand by guides
-later on, and renders him also much more able to
-profit by their practical instruction.</p>
-
-<p>For such beginners, the mere statement of the
-position of a gully and the number and character
-of its chief obstacles would be quite useless. He
-requires something more; a suggestion here and
-there of the manner in which the troubles can be
-avoided or overcome, and a comparison of these
-difficulties with others. It is natural that every man
-has his own way of employing the limbs; my way of
-dealing with a pitch might not at all suit another
-climber, who perhaps relies less upon balance and
-more on strength of arm than myself, or <i>vice versâ</i>.
-It is therefore unwise to appear dogmatic in describing
-methods, and I hasten to assure those knowing
-critics that I have never meant to appear so. And
-yet it is none the less a definite object throughout to
-render the accounts in sufficient detail for those who
-want assistance in repeating the ascents. I have not
-hesitated to draw on old experiences, gained when
-the ground was comparatively new to me; for there
-is a tendency to depreciate, or indeed to overlook
-entirely, the difficulties in any familiar route after
-constant practice has removed those elements that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lvi">lvi</span>
-introduce risk or uncertainty of success, and a novice
-can often explain to a novice far more effectively
-than an expert.</p>
-
-<p>The Lake District is becoming more popular every
-year as a centre of operations for cragsmen. Yet
-there is no corresponding development of a set of
-professional guides out there, though I believe they
-would thrive exceedingly, and all stock information
-about the mountains is confined to a few manuscript
-books, and to Mr. Haskett Smith’s little publication
-already referred to. The new comer is continually
-at a loss for details; he has no means of learning
-what is difficult or easy, how to circumvent dangerous
-obstacles or to discover the safe points of attacking
-them; he is dependent for such facts on chance
-acquaintances made in the country or on correspondence
-more or less painfully elicited from authorities.
-When unsuccessful in these ways he is sometimes
-tempted to launch out on his own account and wrest
-the information from the mountains themselves.
-This heroic method is undoubtedly the most effective,
-but it involves too much risk for the unpractised hand,
-and the wonder is that so few serious casualties occur
-in its application. Such accidents do occur through
-ignorance of the district, and always will so long as
-the necessary knowledge that gives safety to the
-explorer is confined to the few.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Haskett Smith’s book serves in the fullest
-manner to indicate where good scrambling can be
-obtained, to define the few technical terms in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lvii">lvii</span>
-cragsman’s vocabulary, and to give general advice
-concerning the best centres. It has been of the
-greatest use to the climbing fraternity, who owe
-their thanks to him. But he gives no detail of the
-scrambling itself. He has appealed more particularly
-to the expert, who can manage all his pioneering for
-himself. Notably is this the case with the Pillar
-Rock&mdash;practically his own particular preserve&mdash;where
-most of the routes have long since been made
-out by him. For years he knew the Rock as no one
-else knew it; every chimney and ridge and wall was
-within his ken. Yet in his little handbook there is
-scarcely an indication of the possession of all this
-unique knowledge. Most climbers expected some
-expansion in the description of his early explorations;
-but he has kept rigidly to his scheme of treatment,
-and dealt but scant justice to himself throughout the
-work. This book, then, is to be regarded in some
-sense as supplementary in character, the cordial
-witness of the good sport obtainable by following his
-advice and general directions.</p>
-
-<p>There are many men who think well of the sport,
-but speak slightingly of the narrow field offered for
-it by the Lake District. No doubt the Alps offer
-far more scope both in range and quality. But we
-cannot very conveniently reach Switzerland at every
-season of the year. At Christmas and Easter it is
-entirely barred to most people. The expense of
-foreign travel is a consideration, and the question of
-length of holiday is rarely negligible. Cumberland
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lviii">lviii</span>
-can be reached in a night from London; the district
-is an inexpensive one for tourists. The fact that
-there are hundreds of climbs at our disposal in the
-Alps is no great inducement in itself; we can never
-climb more than one or two at a time, and for most
-of us there will always remain scores of ascents that
-we shall never have the opportunity of accomplishing.
-One can learn how to swim as effectively in a swimming-bath
-six feet deep as in an ocean; and one can
-gain an extensive and practical acquaintance with
-rock-climbing in a district where the whole set of
-climbs can be accomplished by the expert in a few
-short holidays, as in a country where the choice is
-unlimited. Personally I should always go to the
-high Alps when the chance offered itself, but Cumberland
-serves remarkably well to allay the desire for
-mountain air and vigorous exercise when Switzerland
-is out of the question.</p>
-
-<p>What does it matter that a climb has been done
-before? Climatic conditions and the members of
-one’s party introduce sufficient variety. Years ago
-an expert reporter was trying to teach me shorthand.
-His method was to induce me to copy out
-the same report again and again; it was an excellent
-idea, and the system was well vindicated with apter
-pupils. Likewise in climbing, an apt pupil will
-learn rapidly by repetition of the same ascents.</p>
-
-<p>This introduces a point on which I am scarcely
-qualified to speak, that of physical aptitude on the
-part of the would-be climber. Mr. Clinton Dent in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lix">lix</span>
-Badminton volume bestows a chapter on the subject
-of ‘Mountaineering and Health.’ Here we have an
-authoritative summary of the physical qualifications
-required by the mountaineer, and of the bodily ailments
-he may possibly incur. A perusal of the
-chapter will convince the reader of the suitability of
-a mountainous region such as our own country can
-offer for preliminary training before the high Alps
-are approached. There is much less likelihood of
-over-strain; snow-blindness, frost-bite, and mountain
-sickness are rarely met with here.</p>
-
-<p>Climbers are absolutely incapable of any sustained
-effort when they reach certain altitudes, and
-the limit depends on the individual. It is the misfortune
-of some to feel an uncomfortable perturbation
-of the heart when once a definite level is passed.
-They are well enough able to exert themselves below
-that level, but can hope for no pleasurable exercise
-above it. With every desire to climb, with muscle
-and mind enough to excel in the sport, they are
-nevertheless debarred from enjoying the high Alps.
-Let them therefore make the best of our British hills
-for a while, and then perhaps proceed to the
-Dolomites in the Austrian Tyrol for fuller applications
-at a safe low level of what they have here
-learnt.</p>
-
-<p>Solitary scrambling is universally condemned.
-Most climbers of experience have learnt something
-about it, and are unanimous in their unfavourable
-judgment. Nothing teaches the scrambler so quickly,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lx">lx</span>
-if his nerve is sufficiently strong; but the penalty
-paid for slight mistakes is often extreme, and the
-risk is too great for him to be justified in deliberately
-choosing the single-handed venture. A party of two
-makes the strongest combination for most of the
-ordinary Cumberland climbs; three are generally
-better for the severest courses. Any beyond that
-number will to a greater or less extent increase
-the difficulty of the ascent and the time spent in
-effecting it.</p>
-
-<p>A rough classification is here appended of over
-a hundred well-known courses judged under good
-conditions. They are divided into four sets. The
-first are easy and adapted for beginners, the second
-set are moderately stiff, those of the third set
-rank as the difficult climbs of the district, and the
-last are of exceptional severity. Some attempt has
-been made to arrange them in their order of difficulty,
-the hardest ones coming last; but the variations of
-condition of each due to wind, temperature, rain,
-snow, or ice are so extensive that no particular
-value should be attached to the sequence. But even
-if only approximately correct, the lists may help
-men in deciding for themselves where to draw the
-line that shall limit their own unaided performances.
-As for the items in the fourth class, they are best left
-alone. Mark the well-known words of an expert
-(Mr. C. Pilkington): ‘The novice must on no account
-attempt them. He may console himself with the
-reflection that most of these fancy bits of rock-work
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lxi">lxi</span>
-are not mountaineering proper, and by remembering
-that those who first explored these routes, or rather
-created them, were not only brilliant rock gymnasts
-but experienced and capable cragsmen.’</p>
-
-<h3><i>Easy Courses.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="table">
-Deep Ghyll, by the west wall traverse.<br />
-Cust’s Gully, Great End.<br />
-Traverse across Gable Crag.<br />
-‘Sheep Walk,’ Gable Crag.<br />
-D Gully, Pike’s Crag.<br />
-Broad Stand.<br />
-Needle Gully.<br />
-‘Slab and Notch’ Route, Pillar Rock.<br />
-Great End Central Gully (ordinary ways).<br />
-South-east Gully, Great End.<br />
-</p>
-
-<h3><i>Moderate Courses.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="table">
-West Climb, Pillar Rock.<br />
-C Gully, Pike’s Crag.<br />
-A Gully, Pike’s Crag.<br />
-Bottle-nosed Pinnacle Ridge.<br />
-Westmorland Crag, Great Gable.<br />
-Penrith Climb, Scawfell.<br />
-Scawfell Chimney.<br />
-Old Wall Route. Pillar Rock, East Side.<br />
-Deep Ghyll (ordinary route).<br />
-Scawfell Pinnacle (short way up).<br />
-Dolly Waggon Pike Gully.<br />
-Raven Crag Chimney, Great Gable.<br />
-Crag Fell Pinnacles, Ennerdale.<br />
-Gable Crag Central Gully (ordinary way).<br />
-Black Chimney (High Stile).<br />
-Pendlebury Traverse Route, Pillar Rock.<br />
-Combe Ghyll.<br />
-Fleetwith Gully (easy way).<br />
-Arrowhead Branch Gully<br />
-Smoking Rock, Great Doup, Pillar Fell.<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lxii">lxii</span>
-Professor’s Chimney.<br />
-Needle Ridge, Great Gable.<br />
-Pillar Rock, the Arête.<br />
-Arrowhead Ridge, by Traverse from East Side.<br />
-Eagle’s Nest Ridge (ordinary way).<br />
-</p>
-
-<h3><i>Difficult Courses.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="table">
-Deep Ghyll West Wall Climb.<br />
-Great End Central Gully (chimney finish).<br />
-Pillar Rock by Central Jordan.<br />
-The Doctor’s Chimney.<br />
-Shamrock Buttress.<br />
-Pillar Rock by West Jordan.<br />
-Kern Knotts Chimney.<br />
-Little Gully, Pavey Ark.<br />
-Great Gully, Pavey Ark.<br />
-Gable Crag Central Gully (direct finish).<br />
-Oblique Chimney Gable Crag.<br />
-Gable Needle.<br />
-Arrowhead Ridge (direct climb).<br />
-Pillar Rock Far West Jordan.<br />
-Gimmer Crag Chimney.<br />
-Doe Crag, Great Gully.<br />
-Pillar Rock by the Great Chimney.<br />
-The B Chimney, Pike’s Crag.<br />
-Scawfell Pinnacle, by Steep Ghyll.<br />
-Pavey Ark, Crescent Climb, and Gwynne’s Chimney.<br />
-Keswick Brothers’ Climb.<br />
-Pillar Rock, West Jordan Crack.<br />
-Doe Crag Buttresses (ordinary routes).<br />
-Sergeant Crag Gully (ordinary way).<br />
-Mouse Ghyll.<br />
-Pillar Rock (by north face).<br />
-Smuggler’s Chimney, Gable Crag.<br />
-Rake End Chimney, Pavey Ark.<br />
-Moss Ghyll (by branch exit).<br />
-Bowfell Buttress.<br />
-New West Climb (Pillar Rock).<br />
-The Brothers’ Crack, Great End.<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lxiii">lxiii</span>
-Sergeant Crag Gully (direct).<br />
-Keswick Brothers’ Climb (variation finish).<br />
-Stack Ghyll, Buttermere.<br />
-Bleaberry Chimney, Buttermere.<br />
-Deep Ghyll (by various routes).<br />
-Collier’s Climb, Scawfell.<br />
-Raven Crag Gully, Glaramara.<br />
-Moss Ghyll (by direct finish).<br />
-West Jordan Gully, Pillar Rock.<br />
-Shamrock Chimneys.<br />
-Fleetwith Gully (direct).<br />
-Shamrock Gully (left-hand route).<br />
-Kern Knotts West Chimney.<br />
-Shamrock Buttress (Route II).<br />
-Shamrock Gully (ordinary route).<br />
-Pisgah Ridge, by the Tennis Court Ledge.<br />
-Iron Crag Chimney.<br />
-Engineer’s Chimney, Gable Crag.<br />
-Eagle’s Nest Ridge by Ling Chimney.<br />
-</p>
-
-<h3><i>Exceptionally Severe Courses.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="table">
-Doe Crag, Intermediate Gully.<br />
-Scawfell Pinnacle, High Man (direct from Deep Ghyll).<br />
-Gimmer Crag, B route.<br />
-The Abbey Buttress, Great Gable.<br />
-Screes Great Gully (direct).<br />
-Doe Crag, North Gully.<br />
-Gimmer Crag, A Route.<br />
-Toreador Gully, Buttermere.<br />
-Birkness Chimney, Buttermere.<br />
-Warn Gill, Buttermere.<br />
-Haskett Gully, Scoat Fell.<br />
-Doe Crag, Easter Gully, O. G. Jones’ Route.<br />
-Scawfell Pinnacle <i>viâ</i> Low Man by Deep Ghyll, Gibson’s Chimney.<br />
-Scawfell Pinnacle by Deep Ghyll, O. G. Jones’ Route.<br />
-Kern Knotts Crack.<br />
-North Face Pillar Rock, by Hand Traverse.<br />
-Doe Crag, Easter Gully, by Hopkinson’s Crack.<br />
-Doe Crag, Central Chimney.<br />
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_lxiv">lxiv</span>
-Eagle’s Nest Ridge, Great Gable.<br />
-Doe Crag, Easter Gully, by Broadrick’s Crack.<br />
-Walker’s Gully.<br />
-C Gully, the Screes.<br />
-North West Climb, Pillar Rock.<br />
-Scawfell Pinnacle (direct from Lord’s Rake), O. G. Jones’ Route.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>In every expedition the party should be provided
-with a sufficient length of rope&mdash;varying from twenty
-to fifty feet for two men, thirty to eighty feet for
-three&mdash;according to the character of the climb and
-the lengths of its individual pitches. It is very
-unwise to dispense with the rope, even on simple
-courses; the fact is patent in the Alps that amateurs
-take a long time to learn how to look after their
-portion of the rope when busily engaged on rocks;
-they are apt to leave all such details to the guides in
-front or behind them, and would do well to practise
-regular independence in that respect.</p>
-
-<p>Ice-axes are generally necessary during the colder
-months of the year. They are inconvenient to
-manipulate on very difficult rocks, whether the
-climber is going up or down. But in the rapid
-descent of easy crags, face outwards, they are invaluable
-as aids to balancing; and steep grass or
-scree can undoubtedly be descended better with
-their assistance. The Cumberland crags are too
-smooth to make <i>scarpetti</i> (<i>Kletterschuhe</i>) worth trying.
-These are rope-soled shoes that grip better
-than nailed boots when the texture of the rock-surface
-is sufficiently rough, but our expeditions are
-best made without them.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">ROCK-CLIMBING</h2>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>PIKE’S CRAG</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Pikes of Scawfell are bold and picturesque,
-but their precipices are slight and climbers can
-find but little on them that needs the use of a
-rope. One genuine exception must be made in
-favour of Pike’s Crag, the rock that guards the
-Pikes end of Mickledore. Here a good deal of
-practice may be obtained, and although in comparison
-with Scawfell Crag over the way we may
-feel that everything is in miniature, yet the quality
-of the work is good and some of the pitches really
-severe. Few people seem to have troubled to
-examine the detail of the cliff until September, 1894,
-when Messrs. Fowler and Wilberforce spent a few
-days on it, and prepared the effective diagram of the
-lines of route that they subsequently transferred to
-the Wastdale book.</p>
-
-<p>The crag is visible from the road near the head of
-Wastwater, and its three chimneys show up as black
-recesses of inviting steepness and difficulty. These
-retain their interesting appearance all along the walk
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span>
-up Brown Tongue, and it is surprising that at Hollow
-Stones everybody turns off to the right towards Deep
-Ghyll, when straight ahead they cannot but observe
-the opportunity for novelty that Pike’s Crag can
-offer them.</p>
-
-<p>Between the Pulpit rock that overlooks the
-Mickledore screes and the main mass of the Pikes is
-a little <i>col</i> or neck that can be reached with ease from
-either side. A gully runs up to it behind the Pulpit
-from the Mickledore screes, with no difficulties whatever
-to obstruct the walker. Another (<small>D</small>) leads to
-the same spot from the Lingmell side, starting near
-the foot of the great buttress of the Horse and Man
-rock, and boasting of two pitches. Between <small>D</small> and a
-scree gully well away to the left lie the three chimneys,
-<small>A</small>, <small>B</small>, and <small>C</small>, and the best climbing of these
-crags is here concentrated.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that we can get some pleasant scrambling
-up the outside of the Pulpit. A grass gully shows
-well in the illustration, close to the right-hand edge
-of the picture. The square tower of rock to which
-its left branch leads overlooks the <small>D</small> gully and offers
-fair sport. There are probably a few interesting
-problems in the short gullies leading from <small>D</small> towards
-the Horse and Man ridge. But to cover the best
-ground in a single expedition I can recommend the
-ascent of <small>A</small> and descent by <small>C</small>, then the direct climb
-up the right branch of <small>B</small> and a return down the two
-pitches in the <small>D</small> gully. Such was an afternoon’s
-work that I was advised to undertake when inquiring
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
-of those who knew best how to gain a general knowledge
-of Pike’s Crag. My companion was unacquainted
-with Lake District climbing; it was his first
-day in Wastdale, and during our walk homewards,
-after following as rigidly as we could the directions
-given us, he was reluctantly compelled to admit
-that Cumberland climbing had good points that he
-had never hitherto attributed to it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p class="author"> PLATE I.</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE PIKE’S CRAG GULLIES.</p>
-<p class="copy">AA is about 300 feet high.</p>
-<img id="i_002" src="images/i_002.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="small table">
-<i>a</i> Initial Variation in the A Chimney.<br />
-<i>b</i> Left Branch of the B Chimney.<br />
-<i>c</i> Great Pitch in the C Chimney.<br />
-D Easy Gully between E and F.<br />
-E Horse and Man Rock.<br />
-F Pulpit Rock.<br />
-G Easy Grass Gully.<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>We bore up from Hollow Stones directly towards
-the <small>A</small> chimney, over a good deal of rough ground and
-an occasional snowslope. It is the longest climb of
-the three, and the hand-and-foot work commenced at
-once. A block at the bottom, some fifteen feet in
-height, was turned by a vertical crack on the left, with
-excellent holds on the side wall. An easier way is by
-the right, up a series of steep, wet, and mossy ledges.
-This block was crowned by long tufted grass, and more
-moss in the bed of the gully indicated clearly that we
-were not on a much frequented route to Scawfell
-Pikes. A few feet higher we noticed a grass terrace
-stretching across the face of the crags to the right.
-There proved to be several such terraces on the same
-buttress between us and the <small>B</small> chimney, and we
-concluded that it would be possible to climb up from
-one to the other and so avoid the chimneys altogether.
-Soon our route became steeper and careful clambering
-was necessary. The gully was narrow and its walls
-smooth, and no chance of further side-exit was open
-to us. Then came the first genuine pitch, in three
-portions of increasing severity, though the hardest
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-is not in any way difficult or dangerous. We worked
-first over a small boulder, then a bigger one followed,
-and we were brought to a standstill at the entrance
-of a narrow cave. We decided in favour of the right
-wall, which showed good holds up near the level of
-the roof. It looked a bad bit to surmount, but when
-once the right leg of the climber had been swung on
-to a sloping ledge on the wall, it was only needful to
-edge along towards the jammed boulder and step off
-into the bed of the gully again. The whole pitch is
-about thirty feet high. Walking up the scree that
-now presented itself, we were rather disagreeably
-impressed by the appearance of the second pitch that
-confronted us. It was a mossy wall about ten feet
-high, and water streaming down it gave us but little
-hope of continuing the climbing beyond it with dry
-garments. Nevertheless the reality was not so objectionable.
-The wall stretched from side to side of the
-gully and offered many routes up. Taking a course
-to the right of the middle, we found small footholds
-beneath the moss that gave the chance of using the
-fingers and toes only. Clammy embracing we
-avoided, and our satisfaction on reaching the top was
-altogether disproportionate to the actual difficulty we
-had overcome, and will be unappreciated by those
-who tackle the gully in drier weather. It seems to be
-still better to work up the left corner.</p>
-
-<p>Forty feet higher we could see the third and last
-pitch. The gully is now very much more open. We
-made a digression on the right again, and peered
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-inquisitively down the hole at the top of the <small>B</small>
-chimney&mdash;the hole that was said to discriminate
-nicely between a thin man and a thick. The buttress
-was considerably broken about here, and offered admirable
-scrambling of a heterogeneous description;
-but we had yet one more stage in our own direct
-course, and returned to finish it. Several boulders
-had combined to form another cave, whose interior
-appeared to be rather complicated&mdash;judging by the
-number of times I knocked my head in exploring its
-upper regions. We tried hard to force a route up the
-right wall, but after twenty minutes had been wasted
-in futile attempts we decided to take the regulation
-route to the left, and leave the variation for another
-day that might find us there with an ice-axe.
-The left wall is sufficiently provided with holds to
-make the climb easy; but at the top there were
-several stones to be passed that report said were in a
-shaky condition. We were not troubled by them,
-and after passing over, a glance at the screes that
-remained above gave assurance that the presence or
-absence of a few loose stones at the head of the pitch
-would be quite fortuitous.</p>
-
-<p>After a short halt called for photographic purposes
-we made for the head of the <small>C</small> gully, the next
-to the west that actually reaches the sky-line when
-viewed from below. It was nearly all scree at a steep
-angle, and we had good reason to be thankful that
-no exploring parties were further down. There were
-two or three places passed in our descent where the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-craggy bed of the gully jutted out through the layer
-of loose stones, and at such spots, though no actual
-climbing was necessary, the danger of one man
-bombarding the other with projectiles made us both
-proceed with an excess of caution. The one difficulty
-in the gully, which we were now preparing
-to descend, is by far the finest looking pitch on
-Pike’s Crag. A large boulder with square edges
-roofs in a cavern thirty feet high; a stream of water
-pouring down the gully spreads over the boulder, and
-forms a thin curtain of spray stretching from side to
-side of the cave entrance. The two walls of the
-gully are black and glistening, the floor of the cave
-is slippery, and slopes steeply down to the foot of the
-ghyll. The only safe way up or down the pitch is
-by a series of ledges in a square recess on the left,
-well marked in the opposite illustration.</p>
-
-<p>We were ignorant of the character of the climbing
-here, but there was no resisting the conclusion
-forced upon us by a peep over the edge of the pitch,
-that the recess on our right offered us the only
-chance of descent. The ledges were tufted with
-thick grass that now and again threatened to give
-way. But on the whole we felt very safe, and when
-the actual corner of the recess was reached, the
-difficulties vanished and we had a simple traverse
-back towards the waterfall. The descent of six or
-eight feet to the foot of the fall was partially under
-the spray, but haste on such slippery ground was out
-of the question, and we moved one at a time with a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
-solemn indifference to the damping influences around
-us, that might have argued a whole day’s previous
-exposure and the absence of a vestige of dry
-clothing. We had a steep slide down the snow
-banked up at the foot of the gully, and then picked
-a way across to the <small>B</small> chimney, the centre of the
-series and the most attractive.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_006" src="images/i_006.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE PIKE’S CRAG GULLIES</p></div>
-
-<p><small>A</small> and <small>C</small> may be reasonably called easy. They
-are not too hard for muscular novices, and are comparatively
-safe. But the central chimney is decidedly
-stiff, and should not be indiscriminately recommended
-with the others. It is very narrow all the way to
-the jammed stone at the top; it is about as difficult
-to get out, when half-way up, as it is to continue the
-direct ascent, and suitable belaying for the leader or
-his followers cannot be found at the hardest parts of
-the climb. I tried the chimney once when there was
-a considerable quantity of water coming down, and
-was compelled to give it up: it is probable that even
-with a second man to help me I could not have
-managed it.</p>
-
-<p>We found our way safely to the entrance of our
-chimney and started up. Almost immediately we
-passed the branch gully on the left. It looks very formidable,
-and indeed its first pitch is undoubtedly hard.
-It consists of a two-storied cave, the first floor composed
-of three jammed stones, which are passed by
-backing up the crack and traversing outwards. The
-second pitch is of a simpler character, consisting of
-a cave that can be passed on either side. We had
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-no designs on this variation, and were contented to
-throw a casual glance towards the lower obstacle as
-we proceeded up the rocky bed of our central
-chimney. Our field of view soon became very
-limited, for the clean-cut parallel walls on either side
-were scarcely five feet apart, and the average slope
-of the gully exceeded forty-five degrees. During the
-first hundred feet the work was distinctly safe and
-easy, but a glance backward at the point whence we
-had started, seemingly the first stop in the event of
-our falling, made us both inclined to imagine dangers
-in our way. The side walls in intense gloom formed
-a fitting frame to the narrow picture of the distant
-sunlit fells. The general aspect of the situation
-closely resembled that of the upper half of Collier’s
-climb on Scawfell, and of the Oblique Chimney on
-Gable Crag, though in each of those cases the chimney
-is at a considerable angle to the vertical, whereas here
-the fissure in the rocks is almost perpendicular. We
-were a little perplexed by some ice that had frozen
-in large rounded knobs to a thickness of eight or ten
-inches over a steep six feet of the gully. An axe
-would have summarily disposed of any icicles of
-doubtful security, but we had not expected any such
-evidences of cold and were unprovided. The ice was
-not absolutely continuous; here and there we could
-kick out levels for our feet, and to our relief the
-trouble was passed in a few minutes. Then came
-the worst bit of the ascent&mdash;the scene of my discomfiture
-eighteen months before. First came a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-vertical wall stretching across the gully, and rising
-twenty feet above our somewhat insecure standing.
-Beyond that the gully sloped evenly to the dark
-recesses of a cave, the jammed boulder of which
-almost appeared vertically above our heads. We
-mounted an upright block at the foot of the wall,
-and prospected for holds. None were visible. I
-peered at the sides in search of scratches, which
-would show whether the earlier party or parties had
-backed up the chimney. No! they had not availed
-themselves of that process. Then, with the conviction
-that an indirect way must exist, we examined
-the walls a few feet below the pitch, and at last hit
-upon a way of mounting higher. I was belayed by
-a rope passing round the upright block already
-referred to, and proceeded to walk along the horizontal
-edge of a thin crack on the right wall, leaning
-across to the other side of the gully for general
-support on the hands. I had implicit trust in the
-rope and the man at the other end of it, or the
-manœuvre would have given me agonies of apprehension.
-Just as the second step was being made
-along the crack, its thin edge broke away under my
-foot and I slipped a few feet down the gully, till the
-rope tightened and brought me to a stop. A second
-attempt was more successful. The edge was followed
-till it expanded into a respectable foothold, and then,
-holding myself straight, I was able to reach good
-ledges for the hands. It was now easy to stride
-across to the left wall and climb directly upwards
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-along its crest to a platform large enough for both
-of us; hither my companion followed me, adopting
-almost the same tactics and taking but half the time.
-We were now virtually out of the gully, and found
-the sunshine pleasant after so much darkness. But
-the joy that might have attended our remaining
-efforts in working up to the head of the chimney was
-marred by the reflection that we had not conquered
-the chief difficulty; we had only avoided it. This is
-right and proper for snow-climbers, but distinctly
-unorthodox for cragsmen. Our doubts grew as we
-advanced, and at last I proposed to descend again
-and settle them finally. This suggestion was met
-with a very prompt approval, and ten minutes later
-found me at the foot of the vertical wall again. It
-did not look any easier, and I am not prepared to
-say how narrowly I missed a second failure. After
-leaving the upright block the scanty holds soon disappeared,
-and with some desperate struggling I
-found myself backing up the chimney with the feet
-thrust hard against the left wall. Both sides seemed
-dangerously smooth, but cautious wriggling for a
-distance of two or three feet brought a handhold
-within reach, and the top of the wall was gained.
-The only other ascent known to me was by a man
-with a singularly long reach, and in some marvellous
-way he managed to climb the wall without any
-backing up.</p>
-
-<p>Thence to the cave was fairly easy after a few
-mossy loose stones had been flung down, and the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-finish was effected by a neat little ledge along the
-left wall, passing out just at the edge of the pitch.
-The hole through the cave is not so small as the
-first investigators imagined; the trouble in passing
-through is due to its crookedness, but the name of
-the chimney is generally supposed to indicate with
-proper remoteness the garment that is here threatened
-with a complete inversion.</p>
-
-<p>We hurried across the top of <small>C</small> gully and round
-the Horse and Man to the Pulpit rock. The <small>D</small> gully
-had a great deal of snow in it, and we indulged in
-sundry glissades. The snow was not too hard nor
-the angle too great, otherwise ice-axes would have
-been necessary. The upper pitch was passed on our
-left with perfect ease. Then further snow led to
-the lower pitch, a much more imposing sight. Two
-sharp-edged boulders of immense size formed a cave.
-On the side of the Pulpit rock there seemed to be no
-chance of passing it. The other side, though mossy,
-might easily be made to go. In our descent we kept
-a little further away, and came down ledge after ledge
-with excellent holds to the foot of the pitch. Then
-more glissading brought us down to the open fell
-again. We spent a quarter of an hour watching
-with much interest a party coming down Scawfell
-Pinnacle by Steep Ghyll, and having seen them safely
-into the lower part of the ghyll, where the steady
-click of the leader’s axe intimated slow progress over
-ice-covered rocks, we turned our backs to the fell
-and moved leisurely homewards.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>DEEP GHYLL. THE GREAT CHIMNEY AND
-PROFESSOR’S CHIMNEY</i></span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Deep Ghyll.</span>&mdash;This will remain for long a
-favourite resort of climbers, partly because the two
-pitches are always interesting and may be turned in so
-many different ways, partly because the gully gathers
-annually a big snow drift, which can generally be relied
-upon between Christmas and Easter to afford some
-practice in the use of the ice-axe, and partly because
-the rock scenery is of the finest character throughout.
-The ghyll has been familiar to the visitors of Scawfell
-for many years. It was first ascended in March,
-1886, by Messrs. Geoffrey Hastings and Slingsby, and
-an interesting account of the expedition appeared in
-the ‘Alpine Journal.’ It had been descended twice
-before, in 1882, by Messrs. Mumm and King, with
-heavy snow blocking the pitches, and in 1884 by Mr.
-Haskett Smith. The quickest way of reaching the foot
-of the ghyll is to walk up Brown Tongue till within a
-couple of hundred feet of the level of Hollow Stones.
-It is here unnecessary to keep straight over towards
-the centre of Mickledore, for a shallow depression
-to the right of Brown Tongue may be traversed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-obliquely upwards, and the scree struck close to the
-well-defined edge of the lower crags of Scawfell.
-Thence it is best to keep close under the cliffs, following
-an easy gradient up to the Lord’s Rake. This is
-the large scree gully passing up to the right, under
-the main mass of Scawfell. The scree forms at the
-foot of the Lord’s Rake the usual fan-shaped talus,
-which here stretches down towards Hollow Stones.
-In summer it may occasionally be worth while
-making directly up the centre of the scree.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_012" src="images/i_012.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">DEEP GHYLL, FIRST PITCH</p></div>
-
-<p>Just opposite the corner round which one turns
-into the Lord’s Rake a rather slightly marked gully
-starts up from the side of the rake. It becomes better
-defined a few yards higher, and leads directly into
-Steep Ghyll. Almost at the same spot a ledge is to be
-noticed passing round to the left of the huge wall
-fronting us at this corner. This is the start of the
-Rake’s Progress, the happy name given to the well-known
-terrace leading to Mickledore. We shall
-have further occasion to allude to this ledge, but we
-now pass up the Lord’s Rake till in a few feet we
-come to a magnificent gully on our left, recognizable
-under any conditions except the most snowy by the
-cave at its foot. A fine View of Deep Ghyll and its
-surroundings may be obtained by scrambling up to
-the low ridge that faces us as we look outwards from
-the cave. The ridge is somewhat broken up, and the
-terrible accident that caused the death of Professor
-Milnes Marshall at this spot must be a warning to
-any who wander up without thought of danger.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span></p>
-
-<p>The orthodox route up the first pitch in Deep
-Ghyll is by the cave and chimney. It is the
-most interesting way, and probably in dry clean
-weather it is the easiest. When the chimney is
-cased with ice the route may become impossible.
-In that case a recess in the right wall (right, of
-course, when looking up at the climb) is often taken
-as a winter emergency exit; for although the holds
-are slight in summer, loose stones well bound up
-make it quite feasible in frosty weather.</p>
-
-<p>The hardest way up the pitch is by the thin cleft
-between the big boulder and the left wall.</p>
-
-<p>Passing up for about 150 feet we find a steep
-slope of rock occupying the left half of the gully.
-The scree in the other half leads up into a cave
-whose black rectangular aperture may have been
-observed from the Lord’s Rake ridge. The cave is
-formed by the ubiquitous jammed boulder, and no
-through route can be effected. A thin chimney cuts
-between the rock slope and the huge vertical left
-wall that rises with scarcely a break to the Low Man
-on the Scawfell Pinnacle. This chimney constitutes
-the easiest and safest route over the second pitch.
-On the right face an irregular ledge leads to a larger
-chimney (Robinson’s), which with some trouble can be
-followed till a level about twenty feet above the top
-of the cave pitch is reached. Thence a small terrace
-offers an easy promenade to the upper bed of the
-gully. A third way of taking the difficulty has been
-found; indeed, it is the most obvious way, though
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-much the hardest. It is to climb the left wall of
-the cave entrance, and then wriggle up between the
-rock slope and the cave boulder.</p>
-
-<p>There are many pleasant reminiscences of parties
-in Deep Ghyll. The hardest struggle I ever had
-with the first pitch was on Christmas Day, 1897.
-The rocks were badly glazed, and though we had no
-trouble in penetrating to the inmost recesses of the
-cave, we could find no easy way of getting higher.
-We were loth to try, seeing that one of our party
-had, with a mistaken philanthropy, loaded his rücksack
-with preserved fruit, prunes, and Carlsbad
-plums, and proceeded forthwith to dignify our primitive
-lunch with these unwonted luxuries. A halt
-called to consume a beef sandwich may be quickly
-terminated&mdash;and that, moreover, without a sense
-of sorrow, unless the beef is very bad&mdash;but those
-who know Carlsbad plums will realise how easily we
-were demoralised by their seductiveness, and how
-much we preferred to sit in our cave and argue on
-complicated topics with the plum-box open. But
-the owner was a man of some resolution, and
-heroically vowed that we should see no more of the
-plums till we reached a small recess at the top of
-Moss Ghyll, where we should ensconce ourselves after
-climbing the gully. So we made a start at once.
-The back way out of the cave promised well at first.
-It showed no trace of ice, but on emerging from the
-chimney (at the spot where the lower figure is shown
-in the View facing p. 12), and looking straight down
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-to the entrance of the cave, it was found that a
-thin sheet of ice covered all the rocks. Generally
-speaking it would be better to let the rocks alone on
-such an occasion&mdash;in fact always, unless Carlsbad
-plums are at stake. Then, perhaps, the second man
-may be held firmly by the rope from behind while
-he gives the leader a shoulder. This help is of no
-use unless the leader can venture to trust the icy
-handhold above him, by which he is to swing round
-the awkward corner to the right. Some such scheme
-our party devised, after many futile attempts to fix
-an axe firmly as a foothold, and the leader dragged
-himself up the glazed surface to the deep snow
-above. In the ordinary state of things, be it
-remembered that where the climber emerges from
-the hole, he has first to stride round to a small ledge
-on the right. He can use as a take-off the rough
-surface of the boulder, and can reach a rigid
-handhold of small dimensions but good shape.
-Thence to the top of the pitch is easy scrambling,
-though care is needed.</p>
-
-<p>The snow in the gully was in grand condition
-for kicking steps, and after the last man had been
-brought up the pitch in safety we marched to the
-upper cave and discussed the question of route over
-the second pitch. The direct way was ruled out of
-court at once, for its largest ledges are but half an
-inch wide, and ice on these rendered them useless.
-With a keen recollection of our trouble down below,
-we thought of the Robinson Chimney on the right,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-which is quitted by crossing on to a slabby rock that
-slopes down towards the centre of the gully. With
-ice on this an attempt to force the way up would more
-likely find us shooting over to the foot of the cave.
-Such a finish to our little day would no doubt
-exactly coincide with the anticipations of our more
-sanguine relatives and friends, but for the moment
-we had to consider each other’s feelings and I
-suggested the easy way up. There was a smiling
-unanimity of agreement in the party which pleased
-me far, very far more than a hundred strictly
-impossible ascents. We descended the gully again
-to the foot of the rock slope, and rounded into the
-little chimney. Things went very well for a few
-feet. But as we rose the ice became more troublesome,
-until it was necessary to chip it away from
-each diminutive ledge, and to proceed upwards with
-the utmost caution. The first part finished with a
-little snow patch twenty feet above the top of the cave
-boulder and the bed of the ghyll. Some years
-before, when first I visited Deep Ghyll, we had found
-it impossible to climb directly upwards from this
-point, and a man was let down by the rope into the
-ghyll. He cut steps up until he had obtained a
-higher level than the others waiting, and then
-induced them to traverse out a bit and jump into
-the snow below. The process was possible only
-with a long rope. Here we could all rest and contemplate
-the rock slab opposite which finishes the
-Robinson Chimney. Forty or fifty feet higher we
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-could see, well marked out by the snow, the upper
-traverse that enables a careful walker to pass up
-Deep Ghyll without any hand-and-foot work. It is
-readily accessible from the Lord’s Rake, a few feet
-higher than the ordinary entrance to Deep Ghyll,
-and leads at an easy angle to a point in the main
-gully some hundred feet above the second pitch.</p>
-
-<p>Looking up at the left wall of the Ghyll we could
-see that our slender chimney was but the beginning
-of a long crack that cut obliquely into the wall, and
-curled upwards in a fine sweep of eighty feet
-towards the summit of the Low Man. The curtain
-of rock that closed in the crack on its right hand
-made our next few yards rather troublesome, for it
-encroached on our ledge and rendered the work too
-open. Facework is always more trying than chimney
-climbing, especially when ice is about. But the
-leader’s recollection of the ease with which this part
-could be overcome in summer time divested it of all
-its fancied terrors and perhaps of some of its real
-dangers, and he had therefore a better time of it than
-his companions, whose extremities were somewhat
-benumbed by their patient waiting in awkward
-places, and whose activities were confined to their
-vivid imaginations. All actual danger was over
-when a horizontal ledge was reached well above the
-centre-level of the gully, which we followed with
-ease to the broken rocks that almost form a third
-pitch for Deep Ghyll.</p>
-
-<p>Here the pleasantest way of finishing the day
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-was to cut steps in the snow up the central gully,
-the angle gradually steepening from 35° to 55° at
-the top. That way we therefore took, and were soon
-enjoying the plums. But a rise of a few feet will
-show the Professor’s Chimney immediately to the left,
-cutting deeply into the rock between the Scawfell
-Pinnacle on the left and Pisgah on the right, and
-terminating at a fine-looking notch, ‘The Jordan,’
-in the sky-line. Exactly opposite, on the right-hand
-side of the ghyll, is the Great Chimney, a black
-and formidable square-walled recess crowned by a
-jammed boulder. This was for a long time regarded
-as impossible and scarcely ever attacked, but at last
-it yielded to the combined ingenuity of Messrs. Blake
-and Southall, and has since shown itself to be very
-amenable when approached with due precaution.</p>
-
-<p><i>First pitch, New route.</i>&mdash;The Christmas Day of
-1896 was very windy and cold. Our party had fought
-continually against the weather all the way to Deep
-Ghyll, and inasmuch as we had only the previous day
-arrived at Wastdale our limbs were scarcely fit for
-such a desperate grind. I had the pleasurable
-responsibility of guiding a lady, Mrs. H., who had
-been persuaded to accompany her husband on a
-winter excursion. We had a great deal of very soft
-snow to get through on our way up, and I was looking
-forward to a long halt in the lower cave, where
-we should at least be protected from the wind
-and snow. Great was our distress when we
-found the entrance completely blocked up by a huge
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-drift. It must have been fully twenty feet deep
-in front of the cave, and the prospect was most disheartening.
-In disgust I clambered up the wall
-immediately to the right of the boulder, and at last
-managed to reach the aperture leading into the cave
-from above. It was festooned with huge icicles, and
-at first the entrance looked effectually blocked.
-Smashing down the ice with the energy of despair,
-the tremendous clatter suggesting to my friends that
-of a bull in a hardware shop, I discovered that the
-chimney was only iced at its entrance, and that the
-upper storey of the cave could be reached. Some
-of the others quickly followed, and we found ourselves
-in a spacious chamber into which the great heap of
-snow had scarcely encroached. This was delightful.
-We threw ourselves into the drift that blocked the
-main entrance, and cut away at it with vigour till at
-last we had tunnelled through to the daylight. The
-biggest man of the party yet remained outside and we
-persuaded him to insert his legs into the aperture.
-Without giving him time to change his mind we seized
-his boots and hauled hard. For one dread moment
-we thought him jammed for ever, but immediately
-afterwards we found ourselves lying on our backs
-in the cave with a yawning opening in the snow-drift,
-the while our massive friend measured his
-diminished circumference with a loop of rope. The
-others then came in and made themselves at home on
-ropes, ice-axes, and other people’s cameras. We were
-a party of ten, large enough to be a merry one.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-Our surroundings were weird and savage, unlike the
-British notions for a Christmas Day, but I remember
-that we behaved like civilized people in perhaps one
-respect. We discussed the year’s literature. Fancy
-Troglodytes discussing ‘Trilby’! Then it occurred
-to us that our feet were very cold, and that we
-should not have much daylight for climbing if we
-waited longer. Our intention had been to climb
-Deep Ghyll in two separate parties, by the ordinary
-way. But the drift suggested a trial of the crack up
-the left-hand side of the first pitch. The snow would
-serve as a high take-off, and also a good cushion to
-soften the fall if the leader were destined to fail.
-The first difficulty was to get safely into the crack;
-then it was found that the holds were very scarce,
-and the recess somewhat too constricted to allow any
-bracing across from one side to the other.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_020" src="images/i_020.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">SCAWFELL PINNACLE AND THE PROFESSOR’S CHIMNEY</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Think of a foothold; double it. Put your whole
-weight on to it as you straighten out. Take away
-the hold you thought of, and you will find yourself
-wondering how you got there. In some such
-vague way are very bad bits climbed, and while
-gasping for breath at the top the climber usually
-feels that it was the worst place he has ever been in.
-Seriously, however, this route is severe at all times.
-In summer the drift is absent, but with rocks slightly
-wet, as they usually are in that corner, the effort of
-working upwards is extreme. It is probably best to
-keep one’s back to the boulder all the way up.</p>
-
-<p>My section of the party came up first. We were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-very cold, and some fear that Mrs. H. would have
-frost-bite prompted us to change our minds concerning
-Deep Ghyll, and to traverse away to the left
-towards the foot of Steep Ghyll. The others came
-up the pitch by our route, led in good style by
-Mr. H. V. Reade. They expressed regret at our
-untimely departure, and worked laboriously up the
-ghyll. It was ungenerous of us that evening to gloat
-over the fact that they had had a terribly cold time
-of it higher up.</p>
-
-<p>Our route out of the ghyll was known to Mr. Haskett
-Smith in 1882. It is not often used, and, indeed,
-in winter it offers certain risks of its own. Starting
-from the top of the pitch we bore directly down towards
-the entrance to Lord’s Rake, and when within a
-reasonable distance of the snow, jumped down to it,
-sinking in up to our necks. Hurrying down to
-Hollow Stones as fast as our limbs would carry us,
-we endured the pangs of returning circulation in our
-hands and feet, and finished the descent in exhilaration,
-and with a sense of having well earned our
-share of the Christmas festivities.</p>
-
-<p><i>Second pitch, Variety routes.</i>&mdash;A description of
-the direct way over the second pitch is scarcely
-necessary. The leader must start just at the entrance
-to the cave, and work up the corner to the
-recess between the jammed stone and the cave
-boulder. The holds are minute, and the necessary
-stress on the finger tips excessive. He should try it
-first when there is snow below him, and with his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-second arranged to pay out twenty feet of rope from
-the innermost corner of the cave. If the leader is
-destined to slip, it will take place at the point where
-the slope suddenly becomes easier, for then his fingers
-are fatigued, his centre of gravity wants for the
-first time an onward as well as an upward motion, and
-his foothold will fail him at the crisis. Therefore his
-centre of gravity will describe the ordinary parabola
-back into the snow, and the tremendous jerk on the
-rope will make the man wonder whether the remains
-of his centre of gravity are worth retaining. Supposing
-that he has safely rounded this awkward
-edge, the utmost caution is necessary for six feet till
-the scree is reached. Then comes the trouble of
-manipulating the rope without shaking down stones
-on the next man who is to pass up. If the leader
-wants the rope to be in actual tension on his
-account, he has a hard task in bracing himself
-firmly without dislodging the scree from under his
-feet. This trouble of course is minimised when good
-firm snow can be cut to supply him a footing.</p>
-
-<p>On the whole this direct route over the second pitch
-may be regarded as too risky, except under the best
-possible circumstances&mdash;such, for example, as existed
-when Messrs. Robinson and Creak found the two
-pitches in Deep Ghyll entirely covered with snow, and
-an easy route available straight up the middle from
-bottom to top. Then there was no second pitch!</p>
-
-<p>The chimney on the right is excellent, but is not
-a course open to beginners. It is in two parts. At
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-the two places where it must be quitted the route
-lies up the buttress on the left. I recall the remark
-of an unenterprising follower as he looked up at the
-vertical walls above him; he had been in difficulty
-down below and was inquiring my intentions. His
-patience had been all but exhausted, and he said so,
-adding: ‘It is not merely steep parts that so upset
-me. They can be borne, but I don’t like this infernal
-dangling.’ The discussion was diverted into a side
-issue, as to whether the adjective was permissible, but
-in justice to his memory&mdash;he never visited the Lakes
-again&mdash;be it said that very few climbers like the
-sensation of suspense.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Great Chimney.</span>&mdash;The position of this has
-already been defined. Its ascent affords the best
-finish to the Deep Ghyll climb if snow is absent from
-the gully and the screes are wearisome. The aspect
-of the chimney is most forbidding from below, and
-there is probably but one way of vanquishing it. I
-had been told how the first party had proceeded
-up it, and had also heard an account of their
-defeat at a second attempt. There is much likelihood
-of defeat even when one knows the way, by
-reason of the awkwardness of the corner that needs
-careful negotiation, and I am bound to admit that a
-first ascent rapidly accomplished may help the climber
-very little in his second attempt. At the time of my
-visit the rocks were warm and dry, our party of three
-had just come up Collier’s Climb, and were keen on
-completing their knowledge of Scawfell by making
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-for the only chimney with which they were unacquainted.
-We all gathered together high up in the
-recess, and then, when the rope had been satisfactorily
-arranged for a long run out, I started working up the
-right wall by some small but strong ledges till the
-roof of the cavern was approached. Then it became
-necessary to work out of the cave and round by the
-jammed stone. Just outside was a ledge within
-reach for the hands; but to work the body up the
-corner so as to kneel on the ledge was very awkward,
-the main trouble arising from the depressing effect of
-the corner of the jammed stone which forced head
-and shoulders almost to the level of one’s feet. The
-prayerful attitude realized, I could anchor myself a
-little by looping the rope round a stone in the roof
-and had then only to stand up and clamber between
-the boulder and the living rock, trusting to footholds
-on the latter. A few feet landed me in safety and the
-others came up like smoke, carrying my cap that the
-gymnastics round the corner had shaken down to them.
-A short scree and a few easy rocks completed the
-gully, which both in regard to the aspect from above
-and to the form of its one great difficulty reminded us
-of the Shamrock Gully over in Ennerdale. The main
-differences in these two pitches are that the Shamrock
-Gully pitch looks easier but proves to be harder, also
-that it has less cave and more boulder. Neither
-pitch is suitable for beginners.</p>
-
-<p>By walking across to the foot of the lower part
-of Professor’s Chimney&mdash;a name, by the way, given
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-first to the easy exit on the right of Pisgah&mdash;a pitch
-of some severity can be taken or left, as fancy
-dictates. The platform above this pitch leads well
-into the chimney and the climb again gets stiff. A
-direct ascent of the pinnacle is probably feasible
-from this level, but the first thirty feet will need
-the utmost enterprise on the part of the daring
-aspirant to fresh honours in this well-explored
-region.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Professor’s Chimney.</span>&mdash;This looks
-almost as difficult as the Great Chimney opposite, but
-is more a test of style than skill, the only trouble
-being that of loose rocks. Though unworthy of
-perfect confidence at all times, it may become most
-friendly in times of frost; many loose stones occur
-that can be safely <i>pressed</i> though dangerous to <i>pull</i>,
-so that with a slight modification of style they are
-rendered highly useful. Then of course two loose
-stones may share one’s weight when one cannot
-take it.</p>
-
-<p>The introduction of all this elementary practical
-mountaineering is due to my recollection of a huge
-stone that came away near the top of the Professor’s
-Chimney when my party were coming up it. I was
-out of harm’s way on the Jordan above, but in
-wrestling with the last part of the chimney, a portion
-that slightly overhangs, the second in the party pulled
-away the rock. It bounded down, ricochetting from
-side to side, and for a moment placed the startled
-climbers in imminent peril.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_026" src="images/i_026.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">SCAWFELL CRAGS FROM THE PULPIT ROCK</p></div>
-
-<p>In conclusion, just a word to pedestrians who
-have come out to climb only by telescope. The
-ascent of Scawfell from the Lord’s Rake may be
-safely and rapidly accomplished by following its lead
-past the entrance to Deep Ghyll.</p>
-
-<p>The best plan is to keep as straight a course on
-the scree as the up-and-down nature of the Rake
-will permit, with the steep rocks immediately on the
-left. A pinnacle is almost at once passed on the
-right that in former times was oft mistaken by the
-unlearned for the great Scawfell Pinnacle, more
-especially because a cairn had been erected on its
-crest as a decoy, by the wily discoverer of the true
-pinnacle. Then it becomes necessary to descend a
-little, taking care not to slither down to the right
-with the loose <i>debris</i>. After a few yards the slope
-again rises for a while, and an easy gully shortly
-discloses itself on the left, following which the tourist
-will find himself in a few minutes on the stony
-plateau that at an easy inclination travels away
-westward to Burnmoor. In clear weather he will see
-the huge cairn that crowns the top of Scawfell, at a
-slight elevation above the top of the gully, and can
-safely make a bee-line for it. Climbers often descend
-by this route in bad weather when the Broad Stand
-appears to elude their anxious search.</p>
-
-<p>The quickest way down from Scawfell is to make
-for the head of this gully, and then, instead of
-descending, leave it on the right and follow the edge
-of cliff straight towards the head of Wastwater;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-where the edge is deflected to the left, a scree-run
-to the foot of Brown Tongue takes us over rough
-but safe ground to the diminutive footpath that
-starts at the stone wall. It should be learnt first in
-clear weather, if possible, as there is no royal road
-to safety for the befogged novice on the fells.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE RAKE’S PROGRESS AND CERTAIN SHORT
-CLIMBS NEAR IT</i></span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Rake’s Progress.</span>&mdash;This happy title dates
-from about 1881. The Progress is an easy ledge
-leading from the lower end of the Lord’s Rake to the
-point where the Mickledore ridge joins the main mass
-of Scawfell. It runs along the base of the vertical
-walls of this mountain, and though at a great elevation
-above the huge Mickledore hollow, is scarcely entitled
-to the thrilling adjective <i>vertigineuse</i> of the French
-climbing vocabulary. Yet it is capable of carrying
-one into the finest situations; and even the hardened
-expert, with his steady head and well-trained muscles,
-realises while on it that danger is hovering about him
-at every step, though it does not touch him. Years
-ago I read, in Freshfield’s ‘Italian Alps,’ of the Pelmo
-traverse in the Ampezzo Dolomites, and memory
-seized on the Rake’s Progress as the nearest approach
-to it that mountain experience had then afforded. Let
-there be no rise on the Mickledore; make the Progress
-thrice as long, and a little more rakish; change
-the rock from porphyry to magnesian limestone; let
-the drop below the ledge be a few hundred feet instead
-of a few score; make it necessary to crawl on all fours
-in one or two corners, and the resemblance will be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-perfect! In a few yards after the preliminary scramble
-on to the ledge, the crags are broken on our right
-by the short chimney entrances to Steep Ghyll and
-Moss Ghyll. These cannot be mistaken, inasmuch
-as they mark the last possible points of attack on
-these cliffs for one-half of the traverse.</p>
-
-<p>Passing the entrance to Moss Ghyll, to which we
-must return for the ascent of this fine gully, a steep
-rise marks the accomplishment of one-third of the
-course. A little further a thin cleft cuts obliquely
-up the cliff towards the left. It is wonderfully
-straight, and the slabs of rock on either side are
-hopelessly smooth. The crack widens higher up, but
-until 1897 the terrific simplicity of its lower portion
-had warned off all who examined it with the view
-of storming this side of Scawfell. The upper half,
-reached by an ingenious zig-zag route on the face, is
-now well known as one of the safest and best climbs
-on Scawfell. Shortly afterwards we reach a rectangular
-recess looking as though it had been quarried
-for a gigantic monolith. Here again the great
-difficulty of starting up is manifested at a glance,
-though in the same direction up above the recess is
-so much more deeply cut and the sides so much
-nearer to each other that one’s safety is assured for the
-second half of the climb. In this case also, the middle
-is reached by a slight detour on the left. A few yards
-further along the Progress are two thin cracks uniting
-at a height of twenty feet and leading to a platform
-ten feet higher. Thence a perfectly safe cleft passes
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-directly up for another forty feet, till a grassy
-ledge, clearly visible only when marked by snow,
-takes one easily to the middle of the long chimney.
-To mount the chimney is an undertaking well
-within the powers of the average rock-climber, and
-with the additional merit of being perfectly safe for
-a party of three.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_030" src="images/i_030.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Ascent of the Broad Stand</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 30</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>Such are the Keswick Brothers’ Climb and
-Collier’s Climb, two of the best conceived problems
-of the district and worthy of their discoverers. The
-lower half of the latter is undeniably severe; even
-the best have failed at it, and I propose in a
-separate section to describe an ascent in detail, to
-point out the method our party adopted to eliminate
-the risk that the climber is popularly supposed to
-accept as inevitable, and to indicate how the Keswick
-Brothers’ route enables us to avoid the worst
-piece altogether.</p>
-
-<p>The next halt we make close to the Mickledore,
-within thirty-five feet of the end of the Progress.
-Here a thin cleft, known as Petty’s Rift for the last
-twenty years, leads to a square recess ten feet up, and
-marks the start of the North or Penrith Climb up the
-Scawfell crags. These are now only a few score feet
-above us. The illustration facing page 26 shows how
-the upper outline of the cliff and the Mickledore
-ridge approach to within a few feet of each other.</p>
-
-<p>Having reached the Mickledore ridge it is well
-worth while walking along it to its furthest end, and
-then bearing to the left on to the Pulpit rock, for the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-sake of the fine view of the climbs we have just been
-enumerating. The Eskdale side of Scawfell is terminated
-by an abrupt vertical cliff that seemingly offers
-no sort of route for the cragsman. Half way down
-to the corner of this cliff, a gully cuts deeply into
-the mountain, and passes upwards at an apparent
-angle of 45° towards the tops of Moss Ghyll and
-Collier’s Climb.</p>
-
-<p>The gully&mdash;Scawfell Chimney or Mickledore
-Chimney, as it is sometimes distinctively called&mdash;has
-its own peculiar difficulties in wet or snowy weather,
-but when at its best it may be attacked by comparatively
-inexperienced men, if they are properly
-equipped and exercise ordinary precautions. On the
-other hand, the gully represents the drainage channel
-for a considerable area, and is usually wet.</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly the easiest way from Mickledore up
-to the ridge facing us is by the Broad Stand. The
-start is made in the cleft half way between Mickledore
-and the foot of Scawfell Chimney. Three short
-pitches, each less than ten feet, take us on to an easy
-slope that can be followed to the upper part of the
-chimney. To keep up between the chimney on our
-left and the steep cliffs to our right is an easy matter
-in clear weather, till Pisgah appears on our right,
-the descent into Deep Ghyll straight in front of us,
-and the cairn-crowned summit of the mountain a
-hundred yards away towards the left.</p>
-
-<p>This finishes the preliminary survey of the eastern
-face of Scawfell, during the perusal of which the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-reader is recommended to examine the diagram
-facing page 46.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Broad Stand.</span>&mdash;My first climb in the Lake
-District was up the Broad Stand. Dr. S. and I had
-planned a week’s walking tour over the Cumberland
-fells, guided by Baddeley and Jenkinson, and ignorant
-of the existence of any regular rock practice
-hereabouts. We walked up from Langdale one
-Sunday morning in heavy snow to the top of Rossett
-Ghyll, and then studied the guide book for information
-concerning the small tarn that lay a few feet beneath
-us. ‘Deep and clear, and good for bathing,’ we read;
-so we bathed. It was long ago, and neither of us
-has bathed during a snowstorm since. Our feet got
-benumbed standing on the snow while we were
-dressing ourselves, and we had much ado to restore
-circulation. Then as the day advanced and the air
-cleared a little, it seemed possible that we might find
-a way up Scawfell Pikes, which, we had read, was
-the highest point in England. With much ploughing
-through soft snow, loaded with heavy knapsacks,
-and supported by but one broken walking stick, we
-reached the topmost cairn in perfect safety and
-realised the height of that Easter ambition. Then it
-was that Dr. S. read aloud to me a thrilling description
-of the Mickledore chasm, which presented an
-almost impassable barrier between the Pikes and
-Scawfell, a terrific gap that only hardy cragsmen of
-the dales were able to traverse. The ice-cold bath
-on that Sabbath morn had done much to quench
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-our spirit, but we had partially recovered ourselves,
-and a burning desire to scale the majestic peak
-opposite flamed up in each of us simultaneously, and
-drove us down towards the Pulpit rock that sentinels
-the Mickledore. The guide-book was not wanting
-in detail. There were three Ways of attacking
-Scawfell from Mickledore; first the Chimney, then
-Broad Stand, and then the Lord’s Rake. I believe
-we guessed the position of the chimney correctly, for
-after all there is something to show for the name;
-but we were hopelessly at sea with the other two.
-Dr. S. argued that Lord’s Rake sounded so much
-worse than Broad Stand that we were bound to go
-for it wherever it might be and however easy its
-aspect. Nobody at home would believe us if we described
-a Broad Stand as a vertical wall hundreds of
-feet in height, glistening with ice, and guarded above
-by overhanging boulders ready to pulverise the bold
-invader. On the other hand, the Lord’s Rake seemed
-remotely to suggest Jacob’s Ladder, and offered the
-imagination a goodly choice of adjective and epithet.
-Where, then, was the Lord’s Rake? We had little
-time to consider, and rapidly decided that the Broad
-Stand was away down in Eskdale on the left, and the
-Lord’s Rake straight up from Mickledore. Wherein
-we were wrong, as the previous pages may show the
-reader. Then we tried to get up the wall just where
-the Mickledore ridge strikes the cliff, but the cold soon
-drove us to seek some easier start lower on the left.
-Thus it was that fate took us to the actual Broad
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-Stand, up which, inexperienced though we were, we
-could scarcely help finding the correct route. Place
-a man at the right starting point, and he will easily
-find the upward line of least resistance, though not so
-swiftly as he would trace out the downward line if
-he slipped.</p>
-
-<p>Twelve yards down from the Mickledore we
-came to a deep recess in the mountain side, large
-enough to penetrate if one is not burdened with
-a knapsack. (A confirmation of the right spot is
-supplied by a thinner crack six feet lower down
-the screes.) Wriggling up into the recess and then
-out on to the slightly sloping platform above it was
-a matter of only a few seconds, and we then found
-facing us a wall of from eight to ten feet in height
-offering very little hand or foothold for a direct
-attack. But by descending the sloping grassy ledge
-at its foot we could see some iced ledges (clear rocks
-show the marks of many boots) that suggested the
-circumvention of the difficulty. To these we in turn
-trusted ourselves, and by passing round the somewhat
-awkward left-hand corner of the wall we found
-an easy though steep route to its flat top. Then a
-smaller wall of about seven feet barred the way. It
-was easier than the last, though in those days the
-frost had not scooped out the hollow on the edge,
-and by the help of my comrade’s shoulders I reached
-the summit. The difficulties were obviously over;
-we could walk up by the right on to the snow slope,
-above which, as our early inspection from the Pulpit
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-rock showed, there was an easy route to the top of
-Scawfell. Unfortunately my friend was not up the
-last step. I could not reciprocate his kindness and
-offer him my shoulders. We had no rope, and the
-rocks were all glazed. I had not intended to mention
-our ropeless condition, but the truth will out sooner
-or later; neither had we nails in our boots. But
-apparently we had sense enough to realize that an
-accident might happen if we tempted Providence
-any further, and with some sorrow we decided to
-descend again. We found our way down the Mickledore
-screes and Brown Tongue to Wastdale, and there
-learnt that we had tried conclusions with the Broad
-Stand at its worst. We also learnt that from the top
-of the third step which I had reached the route lay
-up the snow slope to the broken rocks, then slightly
-to the left until the easy part of the chimney could
-be looked into, then obliquely up to the right over
-rough ground to the small cairn overlooking Deep
-Ghyll. Many times since then, rattling down the
-Broad Stand when the rocks were dry and our party
-well acquainted with every inch of the ground, have
-we recalled that Easter Sunday and our first essay of
-the Broad Stand. There have also been many occasions
-to remember the golden rule in the descent of
-these crags. First find the top of the Scawfell Chimney;
-keep it on the right till its one pitch is just
-below. Then bear to the left down the grassy slope
-and hunt for the notch in the top step of the Broad
-Stand.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span></p>
-
-<p>The usual thing in a fog is to find oneself down
-in Eskdale. I remember a photographic friend once
-leaving his camera at the foot of Deep Ghyll while
-he went for an hour’s round of Lord’s Rake, Scawfell
-Cairn, and the Broad Stand. The dense mountain
-mists gathered about him at the top, and rendered
-useless his efforts to steer the true course. That night
-he discovered himself at Boot, and three days
-elapsed before he found his camera, suffering from the
-effects of over-exposure as much as himself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The North Climb.</span>&mdash;This starts at Petty’s
-Rift, already referred to on page 31, about twelve
-yards from Mickledore along the Rake’s Progress.
-From a distance it looks as though the climb would
-necessarily include the funnel-shaped gully below the
-Progress, and the whole aspect of the work is somewhat
-forbidding. Nevertheless the difficulties are
-concentrated in the first six feet. When once the
-climber can get a foot on to the floor of the little
-square recess, his safety is assured. In the photograph
-facing page 40 the positions of the three members of
-the party indicate sufficiently well the course usually
-taken. The last man is taking off with his left foot,
-and has his right hand at the edge of the recess on
-to which he intends to climb. The face is very exposed
-in wintry weather, and several stories are told
-of parties who have suffered here from frostbite. It is
-not a safe place to descend when ice is about the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>The following account of the North or Penrith
-Climb is taken from Mr. C. N. Williamson’s article in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-‘All the Year Round.’ Introducing, as it does, Mr.
-Seatree’s original description, I make no apology for
-quoting it in full: ‘There is yet another and a more
-direct way of climbing the Scawfell cliffs from Mickledore,
-which, for want of a better name, we may christen
-the “North Climb.” The route is known to very
-few. It was discovered for himself in 1874 by Mr.
-George Seatree.... Major Cundill had already
-climbed it in 1869.</p>
-
-<p>‘From the ridge we traversed a ledge of grass-covered
-rock (the Rake’s Progress) to the right until
-we reached a detached boulder, stepping upon which
-we were enabled to get handhold of a crevice six or
-seven feet from where we stood. To draw ourselves
-up so as to get our feet upon this was the difficulty.
-There is only one small foothold in that distance,
-and to have slipped here would have precipitated
-the climber many feet below. Having succeeded in
-gaining this foothold, we found ourselves in a small
-rectangular recess with barely room to turn round.
-From here it was necessary to draw ourselves carefully
-over two other ledges into a small rift in the
-rocks, and then traverse on our hands and knees
-another narrow ledge of almost eight feet to the left,
-which brought us nearly in a line with the Mickledore
-ridge. From here all was comparatively smooth
-sailing.</p>
-
-<p>‘The detached boulder may be identified with
-certainty by noticing that it is imbedded in the
-Rake’s Progress close to the top of a funnel-shaped
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-grassy gully about ten or twelve yards from Mickledore.
-None but experienced climbers should
-attempt the North Climb from the Mickledore.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Scawfell Chimney.</span>&mdash;A year after our first
-sorry attempt on Broad Stand Dr. S. and I were being
-shown the merits of Cust’s gully on Great End as a
-school for step-cutting, by an enthusiastic wielder of
-the ice-axe, Mr. C. G. Monro. Neither of us knew
-much about the subject, but it was pleasant to be well
-instructed, and on reaching the summit of Great End
-we wondered where we could cut steps next.
-Monro suggested an adjournment for lunch at
-Mickledore and a subsequent passage up the doubtless
-snow-filled chimney: to which we all agreed.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the chimney, Monro took the lead
-and hopefully ploughed through heavy wet snow as
-a preliminary. Unfortunately, the snow became
-softer and deeper as we advanced, until at last we
-were up to our waists in slush, and wet through.
-The pitch was not very far to seek. We saw long
-dripping icicles barring our direct route onwards.
-Both sides of the gully were heavily glazed with wet
-ice, and we foresaw an anxious time of waiting while
-the leader prospected. At the time we were not aware
-that the usual exit was upon the right-hand side of
-the pitch, by a couple of easy broad ledges. Nor
-could we see that the pitch was in two parts, cave
-upon cave, with a large resting-place between; for
-the icicles hung in an impenetrable curtain. Monro
-attacked the icicles valiantly. Twice he succeeded
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-in working half way up between the centre and left
-wall, but twice he was repulsed vigorously, and
-found himself landed in the snow below. I was
-getting cold and impatient. Monro was willing to
-take a breathing space. I unroped and made for
-the left wall. Cutting little steps for hands and feet
-in the ice that covered the wall, and using the fingers
-for all they were worth, in some ungainly fashion I
-reached the level of the top of the pitch and
-traversed on to the snow above. The axe had been
-used, I suspect, more like a croquet mallet than anything
-else, and introduced its own particular dangers.
-But it was of no consequence, the pitch was climbed,
-and the shivering pair below tried to fling up the
-rope to me. This was a matter of much difficulty,
-placed as we were, but by approaching each other
-as far as we dared, a happy fling brought the end of
-the rope to my hand, and I responded by throwing
-down, to their extreme peril, the ice-axe that they
-needed to effect their ascent. We managed the rest
-badly. My position was insecure in the upper snow
-of the gully, or at any rate it seemed to be so. The
-others were benumbed with cold and wet, unable to
-feel the holds or to rely on getting any help from me.
-We certainly were not a strong party, and there was
-no possibility of mutual aid. The only consolation
-was in the fact that all danger was absent; a fall
-could only result in a plunge into ten feet of soft
-snow, but we never afterwards spoke with pride of
-that afternoon’s work. The other two decided to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-give it up, and go down to Mickledore again. My
-own feelings were not consulted, but what matter?
-The Broad Stand was somewhere about. I might
-descend that way and shout when in trouble. We
-joined again at Mickledore, and rather gloomily
-glissaded to Hollow Stones.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_040" src="images/i_040.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE PENRITH CLIMB FROM MICKLEDORE</p></div>
-
-<p>That evening at Wastdale we hunted out Williamson’s
-reference to the Scawfell Chimney. ‘It is
-impossible to get straight up the chimney, as the way
-is blocked by an overhanging slab, and escape must
-be effected either by the right-hand wall near the
-top, where handhold is miserably inadequate, or by
-the “corner,” forty feet up the chimney. The passage
-of the corner is a matter of stride and balance, as
-there is no positive hold for the hands. There is a
-bad drop into the chimney behind, and a slip in
-rounding the corner would end in broken limbs, if
-not a battered skull. A man essaying the corner
-must apply himself like a plaister to an unpleasantly
-projecting rock, and then by shifting the weight
-from one foot to the other (for the legs are stretched
-widely apart) he can creep round.’</p>
-
-<p>The chimney has not often been climbed by that
-variation of mine since then. In dry weather it is
-perfectly safe to ascend or descend direct by the
-pitch. In the ascent both sides of the gully may be
-used at first; then comes an awkward crawl over the
-first jammed boulder, into the secondary cave. Then,
-taking care of a few loose stones, another jammed
-boulder forming the roof is overcome&mdash;it is only a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-few feet high&mdash;and a passage out on the right is made
-possible. A long stretch of scree next fills the bed
-of the gully, the right wall of which is here broken
-away almost entirely, so that the climber generally
-makes an exit, and passes straight up to the Deep
-Ghyll cairn. But a pitch still remains to terminate
-the scree, and must be climbed by him who would
-assure himself of having explored the gully in its
-entirety.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Parson’s Gully.</span>&mdash;An easy way of descending
-to upper Eskdale other than by the Mickledore
-route was pointed out a few years ago by the
-Rev. T. C. V. Bastow. It is by a short gully with
-two pitches, due south of the summit cairn. When
-drift snow lies about it, it is generally possible to
-walk or glissade down the whole length of the gully
-on to the screes below.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>MOSS GHYLL, COLLIER’S CLIMB, AND
-KESWICK BROTHERS’ CLIMB</i></span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Moss Ghyll.</span>&mdash;There are accounts of explorations
-of this famous gully as far back as 1889. It
-was styled Sweep Ghyll by Mr. R. C. Gilson, partly
-for euphonious grouping with Deep Ghyll and Steep
-Ghyll, and partly as a suggestion of ‘the probable
-profession of its future first climber.’ In June, 1889,
-a strong set of four managed to penetrate upwards
-into its recesses a yard or two beyond Tennis Court
-ledge, 300 feet above the Rake’s Progress, and almost
-exactly half way from start to finish. Here the
-explorers saw the great jammed boulders apparently
-barring all further progress, and decided to return
-the way they came. Then, a few days later, another
-party went round to the top of the gully and
-descended to the lower edge of the small scree that
-so quietly terminates the high and difficult last
-chimney. Here they firmly anchored themselves,
-and let down an adventurous member on 160 feet of
-rope. He descended in this way as far as the upper
-portion of the great obstacle in the middle of the
-gully, but saw no way whatever for an ascending
-party to circumvent or attack successfully the
-immense barrier. He apparently realized that the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-upper chimney could be fairly climbed, though of
-course it would tax the resources of the best of
-cragsmen; but the jammed boulders he judged
-to be insuperable, and returned to tell his companions
-the melancholy news. They left Moss
-Ghyll with the conviction that it would never be
-climbed, and until December, 1892, everyone else
-who came and saw turned back with much the
-same impression.</p>
-
-<p>On the 27th of that month Messrs. Collie,
-Hastings, and Robinson made a determined attack
-on the ghyll. The winter was exceptionally fine and
-the rocks were clean and dry. They easily reached
-the Tennis Court ledge, and thence traversed into
-the gully. Penetrating the cave below the big
-pitch, Dr. Collie, who was leading, climbed up to
-the roof and out by a small window between the
-jammed boulders. Thence, by the ingenious expedient
-of hacking at a thin undercut plate of rock,
-he exposed a small foothold on the wall that enabled
-him to traverse out from the pitch and into a place
-of safety beyond. Thence to the top of the pitch
-was an easy matter, and the remaining members of
-the party quickly followed him. It has since been
-discovered that the hardest part of the gully was
-yet before them. They, however, had practically
-solved the main problem, and were contented to
-work out of the gully by steep ‘mantelshelf’
-climbing up to the left. The honour of the first
-strict ascent of Moss Ghyll fell to Dr. Collier a few
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-days later, who climbed the ghyll from beginning to
-end under the impression that the previous party
-had done the same. Dr. Collier was accompanied
-by four others, and was emphatic in his opinion that
-the final chimney represented the hardest part of
-the climb. Two days later he took up Professors
-Marshall and Dixon, and from the former I obtained
-sufficient information to start off one morning on my
-own account to learn for the first time what Moss
-Ghyll was like.</p>
-
-<p>It was distinctly a day of adventure, and I learnt
-a great deal concerning the ghyll. The passage
-across the Collie step appeared to me the most difficult,
-but the loose slabs over which one has to walk
-adroitly were then covered with fresh snow. The
-famous step was invisible, and I had to stoop and
-scrape in order to determine its exact shape and
-position. At the first attempt on the traverse I
-slipped, and fell into the snow-bed of the gully below.
-The result was scarcely surprising, though eminently
-uncomfortable. But the falling was, under
-the circumstances, almost part of the programme,
-and a rope had been fixed in the interior of the
-cavern, passed out through the ‘window,’ and then
-attached to my waist, to eliminate the danger of
-plunging some 400 feet down to the foot of the
-gully. The second attempt was successful, though I
-confess to a feeling of lively apprehension as the
-critical point was being passed.</p>
-
-<p>Thence to the parting of the ways was easy
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-travelling, and an exit was made by the left-hand
-route. I returned two days after to fetch axe and
-rope, that had been left at the big pitch, but it was
-not until the Whitsuntide of 1896 that a suitable
-opportunity occurred of visiting Moss Ghyll at its
-best, for the purposes of comparison and of exploration
-of the direct finish. During that interval the
-climb had been repeated many times, and Moss
-Ghyll was by way of becoming ‘an easy day for a
-lady.’ Hot-headed youths would arrive fresh at
-Wastdale, inquire for the hardest thing about, and
-at the mention of Moss Ghyll would straightway fling
-themselves into the breach and by hook or crook
-wriggle themselves up and out in triumph. Others
-were unsuccessful, and it was always amusing to
-learn where the stupendous difficulty had arisen,
-where no mortal man could have gone further. The
-personal equation was always in evidence, both in
-the actual climbing and in the history thereof.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p class="author">PLATE II.</p>
-
-<p class="small">SCAWFELL FROM THE PULPIT ROCK (p. 26).</p>
-
-<p class="small">The height of Pisgah above the Lord’s Rake is about 520 feet.</p>
-
-<img id="i_046" src="images/i_046.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table">
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell">
- <i>a</i> Scawfell Chimney.<br />
- <i>b</i> Broad Stand (p. 30).<br />
- <i>c</i> Penrith or North Climb (p. 40).<br />
- <i>d</i> Collier’s Climb.<br />
- <i>e</i> Keswick Brothers’ Climb.<br />
- <i>f</i> Moss Ghyll.<br />
- <i>g</i> Dr. Collie’s Variation-exit.<br />
- <i>h</i> Steep Ghyll.<br />
- <i>j</i> Pinnacle Climb from Lord’s Rake.<br />
- <i>k</i> Low Man.<br />
- <i>l</i> Scawfell Pinnacle (pp. 69 and 76).<br />
- </span>
- <span class="tcell">
- <i>m</i> Pisgah.<br />
- <i>n</i> North Ridge of Pinnacle (p. 83).<br />
- <i>p</i> Lord’s Rake.<br />
- <i>q</i> Easy Terrace into Deep Ghyll.<br />
- <i>r</i> Great Chimney.<br />
- <i>s</i> Entrance to Deep Ghyll (p. 12).<br />
- <i>t</i> Rake’s Progress.<br />
- <i>v</i> Mickledore Screes.<br />
- <i>w</i> Mickledore.<br />
- <i>x</i> West Wall Climb (App.).<br /></span>
- </span>
-</p></div>
-
-<p>My companions at Whitsuntide were Messrs. W.
-Brigg and Greenwood. Neither of them had been
-in the ghyll before, but both were very keen to make
-its acquaintance, though so far as reading could take
-them the smallest details of the climb were perfectly
-well known. We separated off from a larger party on
-the Rake’s Progress, and at the entrance to the gully,
-which I have already defined in position, we roped
-up and began the rock climbing at once. There are a
-few small and stiff pitches that may be taken as they
-come in the first fifty feet of ascent from the Progress;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-but we were quite willing to make the usual divergence
-to the right from the entrance to the first cave. This
-led us up easy grass and rock close to the gully,
-which soon dwindled into utter insignificance by
-reason of its right wall being almost entirely cut
-away. Keeping out in the open until the slope
-suddenly steepened, we made a traverse into the
-gully, and walked up the screes until stopped by a
-long and awkward-looking grass-crowned chimney.
-Then we were hemmed in on both sides, and my friends
-were invited to define the nature of the next move.
-They knew something of the locality; we had to
-climb up the right-hand wall on to a level platform
-some eighteen feet higher, and then work back into
-the ghyll by a slightly upward traverse. The platform
-was the well-known Tennis Court ledge, and its
-vertical wall was one of the chief difficulties of former
-days. When in 1893 I had first occasion to climb
-the wall, there was much ice about and it was easiest
-to work some way up the chimney before stepping
-out on to the wall. The second attempt, two days
-later, was in worse circumstances, and I preferred
-working directly upwards to a still higher level before
-diverging. On that occasion it seemed as though
-the simplest plan would have been to avoid the
-Tennis Court ledge altogether and keep to the
-chimney. But Mr. Kempson has since pointed out
-that the grass holds at the top are unreliable except
-when frost holds the earth together. With Brigg
-and Greenwood I should have been loth to leave the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-Tennis Court unvisited. So we clambered directly
-up to it. The holds in the lower part of the wall
-were slight but very firm. The surface was rough
-and reliable. Two-thirds of the way up we found a
-little spike of rock that offered an admirable hold,
-sufficient to belay the rope safely while rounding
-the top edge of the wall and drawing up on to the
-platform. The others then came up with ease, and
-we halted a moment to look at the view.</p>
-
-<p>The ledge is scarcely large enough for tennis, it
-might be eight feet long and two or three feet wide;
-the name is just the overflow of the pretty wit of
-some early explorer. Above us rose threateningly the
-vertical rampart that separates Moss Ghyll and Steep
-Ghyll. We could see the jammed boulders a little
-higher up in our ghyll. They appear small from
-Hollow Stones, but from our ledge each looked
-almost as large as a church. Wastdale Church we
-had in mind. The opposite wall of the ghyll looked
-hopelessly inaccessible, and we were little surprised
-that so many before us had been content to look and
-return. The traverse into the ghyll again was not so
-easy. If the leader slipped it would require clever
-management of the rope on the part of the others to
-avoid an unwilling follow on, though I believe a
-party was once tested here in that manner&mdash;and
-survived the test.</p>
-
-<p>It was necessary to pass round a small buttress on
-to the scree bed of the gully. The first two steps
-were upwards, with just a steadying hold above for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-the hands. It was not desirable to keep too high,
-an unnecessary lengthening of the <i>mauvais pas</i> that
-some climbers recommend. The footholds are not
-perfect; they are large, but slope the wrong way.
-When dry, the friction is ample to prevent slipping.
-Where the rocks are glazed, as I have good occasion
-to remember, the passage is distinctly dangerous,
-especially the return from the gully to the Tennis
-Court ledge.</p>
-
-<p>Thence, when all had rounded the corner safely, we
-walked up scree into the large cavern formed by the
-two jammed boulders. The one would of itself have
-formed a bridge across the gully, with a recess between
-it and the steep bed of the gully; the other, which is
-much larger, has fallen on to the first and roofed over
-the recess. When well within the cave we could see
-the ‘window’ high up between the two boulders, the
-one weak point by which the pitch could be attacked.
-I clambered up the interior of the cave and on to the
-window-sill. One of the others followed me, the third
-staying below to anchor the rope more firmly. From
-the window we could see the smooth steep wall on
-our right by which we were to traverse outwards. A
-couple of feet below our level we could observe that
-the rock formed a sharp horizontal edge six feet long,
-below which it overhung considerably. Just along
-this edge we were preparing to walk, using two steps
-that were sufficiently large for our needs. The first
-was the step cut by Dr. Collie. The second was at
-the further end of the short promenade, and was just
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-capable of holding the toes of both boots. Starting
-with the right foot on the first step, the further end
-of the second step was taken in a long stride with the
-left. The right was then brought up to it, and the left
-reached round the corner at the end on to a respectable
-and satisfying foothold. The trick of balancing
-was not very difficult, providing of course that the
-body was kept as nearly as possible vertical. A tumble
-when no snow was about would be painful even with
-a rope to limit its freedom, so we moved with deliberation
-and with a due sense of the difficulties of the
-place. After passing the dreaded <i>pas-de-deux</i>, I
-reached in about ten feet of ascent a satisfactory
-recess, where a ‘belaying pin’ was to be found. It
-is an excellent projection of rock, sometimes overlooked
-by climbers, behind which the rope can be
-slipped, and held with firmness in the event of a fall.
-It is a little awkward for the leader to pass directly
-up into the ghyll again before the second man moves
-away from the window. Such a course would require
-a long rope. Using the belaying pin we found that
-a sixty-feet length of rope was ample for the party
-of three, and no time was lost in unroping or re-adjusting.
-When our second man reached the pin
-I quitted the recess to make room for him, and
-mounted into the gully while he played up the last
-man. A few feet of easy scree brought us into the
-large open portion of the ravine which marks the only
-spot where it is possible to break away to the left
-from the gully. The final crags in front rose abruptly
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-up for another 200 feet, and were deeply cut by the
-vertical Collier’s Chimney, which starts almost at
-once from our level. The skyline trended downwards
-by the left, so that the open route to the top was
-not so long in point of distance as the other.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_051" src="images/i_051.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Collier’s Chimney, Moss Ghyll</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 51</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>It certainly was easier to work up the wall to the
-left. It rose at a steep angle, and was columnar in
-structure, with long, porphyritic slabs crowned by
-small levels of tufted grass. The leader would often
-be unable to help his followers with the rope, but the
-successive ledges could be so chosen that no great
-distance would exist between the resting-places.
-Such open work is often more trying for the nerves
-than harder chimney climbing, but it is always
-admirable practice when the ledges are reliable.</p>
-
-<p>I had quitted the gully by this variation three
-years before, and wanted both on my own account
-and that of my friends to work out the alternative
-route. I started up the right wall, at first steadied
-by the left, but soon found myself too far out of
-the chimney to feel at all comfortable. Thirty feet
-up was a jammed stone blocking the narrow way,
-apparently very effectually. But we had heard of a
-possible wriggle behind the jammed stone, and with
-a reprehensible lack of daring I made a traverse to
-the chimney again, and began working up it with
-back and knee in the orthodox manner. The
-situation was safe enough, but the effort of lifting
-oneself inch by inch was supremely fatiguing, and
-when I discovered the hole behind the boulder to be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
-about half my minimum sectional area I began to
-regret the scheme. But it was too late to return, and
-with a dread fear of closing up the ‘through’ route
-for ever, I straightened out one arm above my head
-and thrust it through the hole. Fortunately I had
-no camera sack to hold me back, a frequent source of
-annoyance in a tight place. Here we were all travelling
-light, and I had nothing to thrust through the
-aperture but a limp body that was at every moment
-lessening its rigidity. As soon as both shoulders were
-well in, the rest followed more easily by vigorous
-prisings with the elbows, which are so useful in
-upward thrusting. Dragging myself into a standing
-position on the jammed boulder, I called on the
-others to follow. They chose the outside course,
-making two little détours out and back on the
-vertical wall, probably the exact plan adopted by
-Dr. Collier in the first ascent. My position in this
-little ‘sentry-box’ was secure, and the rope could be
-manipulated with all necessary care till the three
-of us were gathered close together in the tiny recess.
-Then we had a somewhat easier scramble up the
-next vertical portion of the chimney, to pass some
-small jammed stones twenty feet higher. We used
-the same wall and found the footholds in it more
-obviously arranged for our convenience. The first
-climber had surely a bad time of it on this wall,
-seeing that it was all moss-covered, and required an
-immense amount of preliminary clearing before the
-holds could be discerned. But moss has had no
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-chance of growing there for the last four years, and
-we had none to trouble us. A couple of minutes
-carried us from the sentry-box to the top of the next
-pitch. The slope of the ghyll suddenly became
-easier, scree led to a short and easy rock pitch,
-somewhat spoilt by loose stones, and then a walk to
-the top brought us in contact with friends and the
-commissariat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Pisgah Buttress.</span>&mdash;In the second chapter
-mention was made of the small pinnacle of Pisgah
-that flanked the Professor’s Chimney. Viewing the
-crags from Mickledore, it will be seen that this
-pinnacle is the culminating point of the ridge
-between Moss Ghyll and Steep Ghyll. It is
-convenient to introduce here a brief account of
-the first ascent of this ridge directly from the
-‘Tennis Court.’ Messrs. G. and A. Abraham had
-repeatedly assured me that their inspection from
-neighbouring points of view had been favourable,
-but it was not until April 22, 1898, when ascending
-Scawfell Pinnacle by the Low Man, that I examined
-the Pisgah ridge with the object of attacking it.
-The same afternoon these two friends awaited my
-arrival on the ‘Tennis Court.’ I came along the
-Mickledore towards the Pulpit Rock to enjoy a rest
-and the society of a party of friends, but was disappointed
-of both by a call from the Ledge. In ten
-minutes from the Mickledore I joined them, and
-while recovering breath, was interested to hear of
-their attempts to reach the Ledge by other ways
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-than Moss Ghyll. Then, disposing the rope properly,
-we went to the extreme right corner and started the
-real business. I had a vertical crack about twelve
-feet high to surmount. It led to a small platform
-similar to the one from which we began our climb, and
-presented the usual difficulties&mdash;no hand or foothold.
-A shoulder was given me, then probably a head, then
-a steadying hand for my struggling feet, the left
-arm being thrust well into the crack and the right
-doing as best it could on the wall, until it could
-reach the grassy edge of the platform above. Once
-on this the prospect was pleasing, and we dubbed
-the spot a ‘Fives Court.’ Thence a steep chimney
-rose directly towards the ridge. I mounted some
-twenty feet and debated whether the others
-might safely come up and help. There seemed to
-be a fair chance of entering an overhanging chimney
-away up to my left, or of following the direct route
-to the ridge. The first course attracted me a yard
-or two along a narrow ledge, until the way was
-barred by an immense poised block. It trembled as
-I touched the horrible thing; so did my friends
-down below, and they besought me to play the
-straight game, and aim for the arête instead of
-aiming at them. They were perfectly just in their
-choice, and it is as well that their advice was followed,
-for we should have had a terrible time
-working the overhanging chimney. Ten or fifteen
-feet of rather careful scrambling brought me to the
-edge of the buttress, at a point where I could descend
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-a little on the Steep Ghyll side and belay the others
-with absolute security while they mounted.</p>
-
-<p>The point we had reached was on a level with the
-top of the Slingsby’s Chimney on the Pinnacle.
-Another party of climbers were operating over there,
-and gave us some useful information as to the work
-we had above us. Our rock was not altogether firm
-and reliable, so that the next bit of vertical ridge in
-front was discarded in favour of a slight détour on
-the left face. Belayed as he was by the others, the
-leader ran very little risk, and employing a succession
-of moderately firm, tufted ledges, he dragged himself
-steadily up for another twenty feet before his
-companions quitted their belay and joined him.
-Then we unroped and walked up the remaining
-hundred feet with no trouble whatever, astonished
-to find that our difficulties had been so few and so
-rapidly overcome. In an hour from the ‘Tennis
-Court’ we were swinging down the Broad Stand
-ledges.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Collier’s Climb</span>.&mdash;For many years it was
-currently supposed that any attempt to scale the
-precipice between the North Climb at Mickledore
-and Steep Ghyll round by the Pinnacle, ranked the
-daring enthusiast as one <i>quem Deus vult perdere</i>,
-and, moreover, that the gods would not give him the
-chance to finish his undertaking. But with the
-advent of a greater number of experienced climbers,
-coming to Wastdale with recollections of the stupendous
-rocks in the Swiss Alps or the Austrian
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-Dolomites, a reaction gradually set in. To many
-nothing seemed impossible with a party of three and
-an Alpine rope. But a line must be drawn somewhere
-to separate the possible from the impossible,
-and some try to draw it by their own experience.
-These constitute what is called the ultra-gymnastic
-school of climbing. Its members are generally young
-and irresponsible. With years will come a desire to
-depart this life in one piece, after the common joys
-are realized that life is able to offer. The quick-burning
-fever for wild adventure dies away with the
-approach of workable theories of life. Whatever the
-mental phenomenon may be, I am convinced that
-the physical is vestigial&mdash;a trace of our former
-savagery, a suggestion of the lively past, when the
-struggle for existence involved more muscle than
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>Wherefore let live the ultra-gymnasts, if indeed
-they can pass through their March-madness without
-coming to grief; nor should we attempt to inoculate
-them with some harmless sport, for the result is to
-render the sport dangerous.</p>
-
-<p>To return to the separating line that suggested
-this digression. Those who have sought to define it
-theoretically have been of the foolish ones, for it has
-no absolute position for mankind. Each individual
-possesses a line of his own, and at first in looking for
-it he causes it to re-arrange itself. What was once
-impossible for him becomes easy. But his search is
-more rapid than its advance, and a time comes when
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-he realizes that he is perilously near; and in
-wisdom he vows evermore to keep at so many feet
-or centimetres (according to his choice of units) from
-its nearest point. The nearer he habituates himself
-to approach, the oftener does he discover some
-obvious retreat of his line. Those who live far from
-it find that it can narrow its limits. Which things
-are an allegory, for this line is a closed curve and
-limits us in all directions, only one of which leads to
-rock-climbing.</p>
-
-<p>Our walk along the foot of the Scawfell wall by
-the Rake’s Progress showed three breaks in the cliff
-after we left Steep Ghyll. The first marked Moss
-Ghyll, the second Keswick Brothers’ Climb, the
-third Collier’s Climb. The history of Moss Ghyll
-and its gradual yielding to the persistent attacks of
-active parties has been recorded in the first section.
-The news of its ascent came as a surprise to all who
-knew the place, so great a surprise that no room was
-left for wonderment when Dr. Collier a few months
-later proved the practicability of his route. But
-whereas Moss Ghyll became popular in a week by
-reason of the writing-up it immediately received,
-Collier’s Climb was almost untouched for three years.
-The unknown is always the most terrible, and the
-brief note in the Wastdale climbing book recording
-its first ascent left much to an anxious imagination.
-Queer tales were told round at the inn of men who
-were flung back over the Rake’s Progress after rising
-only ten feet. Even Dr. Collier was reported to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-have said he never wished to see the place again.
-Report was inaccurate, but that made no difference.
-I candidly admit that there seemed little chance of
-ever getting up such an awful wall. It was not till
-I found myself twenty feet up the crack that the
-attack seemed in the least degree hopeful.</p>
-
-<p>It was just after Easter in 1896 (April 22), and
-my party had been climbing well on the Screes and
-in Deep Ghyll. The rocks were in marvellously good
-condition, perfectly dry and warm to the touch.
-G. and A. were with me, their last day before returning
-home. I thought it imprudent to take their votes,
-and announced that we were going to look at the
-first part of Collier’s Climb, and to ascertain where its
-difficulty lay. Fortunately they were both sanguine,
-and placed their heads and shoulders at my disposal
-as footholds. We made straight for the right spot
-in an hour and a half of easy going from Wastdale.
-There could be no possible doubt of the place. A thin
-crack rose direct from the Progress, overhanging
-for the first ten feet, then leaning back a trifle
-towards the left. A yard or two to the left of this
-a square corner led directly up so as to join the
-crack just below a thin chimney, that started some
-twenty feet above our heads. To get to this chimney
-was the difficulty. Either the cleft or the corner
-should be taken. Which was the easier?</p>
-
-<p>I first tried the cleft, but it overhung so seriously
-that I dared not venture further. Equally futile was
-the attempt up the corner. Was it possible that we
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-had mistaken the right take-off? To gain time and
-recover our spirits we walked over to the other side
-of Mickledore and prospected the climb. There
-could be no doubt that I had actually started on
-the correct way. Thirty feet up we could plainly
-distinguish a grassy platform that promised us
-temporary safety. If we could get as high
-as that we had Dr. Collier’s authority that the
-remainder of our chimney offered no such difficulties
-as those we had overcome. Even if it
-had, we could as a last resource fix an axe in the
-chimney and descend on a doubled rope in the
-usual Alpine fashion. In this manner, assuring ourselves
-that we had the worst immediately before us,
-we returned with some little courage to the attack.
-This time we decided to take the corner. A. was to
-stand on a small ledge about a foot above the Progress,
-and brace himself firmly enough to hold my
-weight. G. acted as a sort of flying buttress for his
-brother, and paid out my rope with extreme care.
-From A.’s shoulders I could just reach a high handhold
-with the left. But one grip at that height was
-useless, as the body had to be lifted up on to the rib
-of rock separating the two clefts. A. then padded
-his head with a handkerchief beneath his cap, and
-begged me to stand on it. However steady a young
-man may be, there are times when his friends think
-him weak in the head. Such a time was this, and I
-anxiously asked him if he could hold it perfectly still
-while I used it. ‘You may do anything except
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-waltz on it,’ was the encouraging rejoinder, and I
-promptly placed my left foot on his parietal. ‘That’s
-all right,’ the tough young head called out, ‘you may
-stay there all day if you like.’ This was reassuring,
-but I had come out to climb and meant to move on.
-Yet for the life of me I could not see what to do
-next. The left foot required a lift before the high
-handhold could be employed, and there was nothing
-for it to rest against except the square corner of the
-recess. Two or three times I tried hard to grip the
-corner with the toe of my boot, but ineffectually.
-Then A., seeing my trouble, reached up a hand and
-held my boot on an infinitesimal ledge. It felt firm,
-and I trusted to it. With the first movement
-upwards my right hand felt a charmingly secure
-depression in the rib above, and swinging clear from
-A.’s head I dragged up on to the buttress and felt that
-the game was half won already. The rib was easy
-to ascend for a foot or two, till indeed it terminated
-at the small chimney above. But caution was the
-instinct uppermost in my mind, and the climb to the
-grassy platform above might, in spite of appearances,
-prove nasty. Casting around for some means of
-anchoring on my own rope, I saw that in the crack
-to my right a bunch of small stones were firmly
-jammed, and that daylight could be seen behind them
-down a hole that pointed through to the Progress,
-fifteen feet below. Here was a chance that, if we had
-known of it at first, might have been used to conserve
-our strength and nerve from the start. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-others were as yet unroped. Calling to them to let
-go the rope, I drew up the free end by my teeth and
-my ‘unemployed’ hand, and let it fall straight down
-the hole to them. If a fall occurred now in trying
-the next few feet I could only tumble three or four
-yards, and should not pass over my friends’ heads
-and the Rake’s Progress. But the chimney into
-which a few moves brought me was of no high order
-of difficulty; the situation was certainly a trying
-one, for a downward gaze could only take in the rib
-of rock immediately below and the distant screes
-200 feet beyond. I flung some loose stones far out
-into space, and could only just hear a faint clatter as
-they touched the scree. Now was the time to
-appreciate the joy of climbing, in perfect health,
-with perfect weather, and in a difficult place without
-danger, and I secretly laughed as I called to the
-others that the outlook was terribly bad and that
-our enterprise must be given up. But they also
-laughed, and told me to go higher and change my
-mind, for they knew by the tone that my temper
-was unruffled. A few feet more and I drew up to
-the platform. It was about a yard wide and three
-yards in length, reminding us strongly of the Tennis
-Court ledge, a similar formation half way up Moss
-Ghyll. Between the ledge and the wall rising above
-it a fissure cut down into the mountain. It still
-held some old winter snow, and its depths were cold
-as a refrigerator. Shouting to the others to rope up
-at a distance of thirty feet apart, I sat down on the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-grass with my legs dangling in the frigid fissure,
-bracing myself to stand any jerks that might be
-given to the rope by a sudden slip of the second man
-at the rounding of the rib. G. came up second, using
-his brother’s shoulders and head much as I had used
-them. When he reached the ledge he helped me to
-haul his brother. A. was unable to stand on his
-own head as we had done, though we reminded him
-of Dent’s famous climber’s dream, and he hung on to
-the rope with both hands while we pulled. It must
-have been rather an unpleasant sensation that of
-swinging away from the rocks, but he bore it like a
-philosopher, and caught cleverly on to the rib and
-so up to us. I am afraid our satisfaction was now
-somewhat premature, but we were certain of a safe
-descent whatever the remainder of our climb might
-involve. But there was no sign of failure in store.
-The chimneys above us looked steep, but they were
-deeply carved and therefore safe. Also, they cut
-obliquely up the vertical wall, and were not likely to
-involve any inch-by-inch wrestling against gravity.
-These surmises all proved correct, though we were
-astonished at the ease with which the remaining
-difficulties were overcome. It was now two o’clock
-in the afternoon, and we had been half an hour
-getting up the first thirty feet. The remainder only
-took us an equal time, though five times the height,
-and consisting of genuine rock-climbing all the way,
-as the following notes testify.</p>
-
-<p>After a short lunch and a few minutes spent in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-erecting a diminutive cairn, we moved on. Dr.
-Collier had climbed into the upper part of the next
-chimney by a traverse of some difficulty from the
-right. I started the same course, but A. had
-descended a little to look up the direct route, and
-called out that it was safer, though perhaps awkward.
-Therefore we all descended and entered the chimney,
-which is practically a continuation of the crack up
-which our climb had started. It sloped slightly to
-the left, and offered just a sufficiency of holds,
-without demoralizing us with a superfluity. In
-fifteen feet its difficulties were over, and a few yards
-higher we reached another grassy ledge, more
-protected than the former but giving an equally
-grand view of the neighbouring precipices. There
-then followed a vertical pitch of twelve feet,
-simple enough with the help of a shoulder&mdash;or
-without it, for that matter&mdash;and an easy step
-from the top towards the right led to the beginning
-of the upward grassy traverse that so strikingly
-marks the break in the continuity of direction of
-Collier’s Climb. Many people have expressed doubts
-as to the safety of this traverse; on the other hand,
-these many have not all been there to see. The
-route is perfectly safe; there are corners on the
-Rake’s Progress that are intrinsically as hard,
-though perhaps the sublime situation may have its
-effect on some susceptible organisations. Possibly
-in wintry weather the traverse may have its difficulties,
-but if ever it were dangerous the first pitch
-would be impossible.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span></p>
-
-<p>We found the first part of the final chimney
-slightly moist. Probably it is very rarely dry. As
-the diagram facing page 46 indicates, it slopes up
-towards the left and is very deeply cut. The first
-piece was practically a walk up a steep incline, using
-tiny ledges that were disposed along the slope in the
-most suitable places. It ended with a magnificent
-pull up with the arms over a projecting edge on the
-left.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the pleasantest part of the whole, the
-negotiation of twenty-five feet of smooth, slabby rock
-by faith in friction and occasional reference to the
-overhanging side of the gully. Collier had rightly
-made special mention of this part, but to his account
-I should like to add that with dry rock and rough
-garments all will go well. Even a slip on the part
-of the leader will not be serious if he is carefully
-watched and fielded at the bottom of his slide.</p>
-
-<p>At the finish of this exciting portion we saw the
-sky-line a few feet in front of us, and with a spurt
-we ran up and reached the summit breathless.</p>
-
-<p>Since that time I have descended by the same
-route with a different party. We had just come up
-Moss Ghyll, and my two friends were well contented
-with their day’s work; for Moss Ghyll had been the
-limit of their ambition, and they were willing to rest
-contentedly on their laurels. To tackle Collier’s
-Climb had never entered their heads before&mdash;like
-the death-dealing pebble for poor Goliath&mdash;and they
-shyly suggested that we had climbed enough for one
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-day. But with the sense of possession of a trump
-card up my sleeve&mdash;that handy rope-hold at the
-bottom pitch&mdash;I succeeded in rousing their enthusiasm
-sufficiently, and we started downwards. They
-were perfectly safe men to accompany; this had been
-proved in Moss Ghyll, and it was perhaps not so
-very wrong to indulge in a harmless exaggeration of
-the excitement that the finish had in store for them.
-But they climbed extremely well in spite of forebodings,
-and gratified me immensely by agreeing that
-for beauty of surroundings Collier’s Climb has no
-equal in all the gullies of the Lake District. The
-descent was rather easier than the ascent&mdash;a state of
-things so often experienced in difficult climbing work&mdash;and
-we reached the lowest grassy platform in half
-an hour. There we found the little cairn I had erected
-a few months before, and were cheered to see a couple
-of friends approaching from Mickledore to give us
-any aid necessary near the finish. I let down the
-first man by the rope; he went well till within ten
-feet of the Progress, and then, slipping away from the
-hold, was left for an uncomfortable moment dangling
-in mid-air. Lowered a yard or so his legs were seized
-by the men below and he was pulled to their level in
-safety. There he unroped, and thus also descended
-the second man. But he came on the middle of the
-rope, and before reaching the spot where he was
-destined to quit the rocks he was instructed to slip
-the lower end of the rope through the safety-hole.
-On reaching the Progress he also unroped, and with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-the united strength of the party holding me through
-the jammed stone I also was willing, when my turn
-came to let myself hang and be lowered gently down
-like a bale of goods into a ship’s hold.</p>
-
-<p>To descend alone, without adventitious aid of this
-kind, it would be better to take to the crack.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Keswick Brothers’ Climb.</span>&mdash;This occupies a
-position between the two chief routes already described
-in this chapter, but chronologically it comes
-last, and on that account we find it best to treat of
-it after the others. The brothers Abraham and I
-had independently arrived at the conclusion that the
-Scawfell face offered a feasible route between Collier’s
-Climb and Moss Ghyll, of which only the lower half
-required any elaborate planning. In the summer of
-1897, before I had a suitable opportunity of trying
-my fortune there, came the news that my two
-friends had succeeded with their design, considerable
-assistance having been given them by the preliminary
-scrambling of Mr. J. W. Puttrell at the lower end of
-the course.</p>
-
-<p>On Christmas Day, 1897, I was one of a large
-party exploring the new route and its environs. An
-attempt to work directly up the long crack marked by
-the top <i>e</i> in Plate II. was thwarted at a height of forty
-feet or so above the Rake’s Progress by the smoothness
-of the rocks, and by the presence of ice in the crack.
-It will probably go some day when conditions are
-more favourable. I managed to traverse to the edge
-of the buttress on my left, but the prospect round
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-the corner was not a bit more attractive. A descent
-was therefore effected and the ordinary route tackled
-forthwith. It was interesting and remarkably safe.
-We started close to the foot of Collier’s Climb, and,
-working along a nearly horizontal cleft, arrived
-without trouble at the corner of the rectangular
-recess of which mention was made on page 30.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_066" src="images/i_066.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Keswick Brothers’ Climb</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 66</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>Thence we had a steep bit of edgework for thirty
-feet before the leader could ask his second to advance
-from the Progress. This part admits of a little variation,
-but the main fact to be grasped is that the long
-chimney in which Collier’s Climb finishes is retained
-close on our right for fully ten yards, until it
-suddenly narrows, and a grass platform extends
-away to the left with ample accommodation for a
-score of people. This platform, in fact, is part of
-the same grassy ledge that forms the first resting
-place after the troublesome introduction to Collier’s
-Climb; and since that date I have frequently taken
-friends up and down the latter course by this variation.
-The expedition is one that can be strongly
-recommended for moderately good parties, both for
-its beauty and its sustained interest throughout.
-That day, however, our course was ordered differently.
-We had first to follow the original line of ascent for
-fifteen feet up an awkward chimney with its best
-hold insecure. Then on reaching an upper grass
-corner there came an open movement across the face
-of rock to our right, working gradually upwards and
-aiming for a narrow cleft that partially separated a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-small pinnacle from the face. The view of this
-pinnacle from the middle of Collier’s Climb is simply
-exquisite, well worth showing to an enterprising
-camera.</p>
-
-<p>From the pinnacle a slight descent gave an inspiring
-view downwards of the long smooth corner
-that I had unsuccessfully attacked a short time previously.
-At our level the crack had expanded into
-a respectable chimney, that could be easily entered
-twenty feet higher after a brief clamber on the
-buttress. It was disappointing to find then that
-something very like a scree gully, with only moderately
-interesting scrambling, was to finish our work
-in the great cleft. Rather than close the operations
-so quietly the majority voted for an attempt on the
-slightly-indicated branch exit thirty feet to the right;
-and their enterprise was rewarded by the conquest
-of a particularly neat pitch at the top.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_069" src="images/i_069.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Attitudes on Scawfell Pinnacle</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 69</i>)</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>SCAWFELL PINNACLE</i></span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Ordinary Route.</span>&mdash;This magnificent pinnacle
-offers the finest bit of rock scenery in the Scawfell
-<i>massif</i>. It rises up some 600 feet from the foot of
-Lord’s Rake in steep and almost unclimbable slabs
-of smooth rock, forming the left-hand boundary of
-Deep Ghyll and the right of Steep Ghyll. The
-latter, and the Professor’s Chimney springing up out
-of Deep Ghyll, cut it away to some extent from the
-main mountain mass, from which it is separated by
-a narrow <i>col</i> or gap familiarly known as the ‘Jordan.’
-Unfortunately this gap is too high, and the top of
-the pinnacle is reached therefrom by a couple of
-minutes’ scrambling. If only the gap were impossible
-to reach from above, the climb of Scawfell Pinnacle
-would necessarily involve some splendid work, and
-it could almost claim the suggested name of the
-Little Dru of the Lake District.</p>
-
-<p>From a higher point of view Mr. Williamson’s
-comparison is very apt. ‘The most conspicuous
-object at the upper part of Deep Ghyll is a pinnacle
-rock with some slight resemblance, from certain
-points of view, to the celebrated Pieter Botte, in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-Mauritius, except that the stone on the top is much
-smaller than the knob which forms the summit of
-the Mauritius mountain. The Deep Ghyll Pinnacle
-is perhaps best named the Scawfell Pillar, for on
-examination it will be found to have several features
-in common with the Ennerdale Pillar. Both have a
-Pisgah rock and a Jordan gap, both have a High and
-a Low Man, and both have a slanting slab in similar
-positions. So inaccessible does the Scawfell Pillar
-appear, that it is probable no one ever thought of
-making an attempt upon it till Mr. W. P. Haskett
-Smith, whose climbs on the Ennerdale Pillar were
-referred to in a previous article, looking at the rock
-with the eye of a genius for climbing, thought he
-could see a way to the top. He made the attempt
-alone in September of this year [1884] and successfully
-reached the top, being the first man to set foot
-on the summit of this ‘forbidden peak.’</p>
-
-<p>But the gap can be reached easily from the
-summit of Scawfell. If we walk over to the top of
-Deep Ghyll we may look across to the pinnacle on
-the right and notice the black out made by the
-Professor’s Chimney that separates it from us. The
-knob of rock to the right of the Jordan gap is
-appropriately called ‘Pisgah’; it is almost exactly
-of the same height as the cairn on the pinnacle, and
-is barely thirty feet away from it. By rounding
-Pisgah to the right, and carefully skirting the head
-of Moss Ghyll, we reach the Jordan, and find ourselves
-on a narrow ridge with extremely steep
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-plunges on either side. The short climb that faces
-us begins in an awkward way, for we have to get up
-a few feet of overhanging rock before the slope
-eases off, and a slip backwards of an unroped man
-would inevitably result in a fall down the Professor’s
-Chimney or down Steep Ghyll. The firmest rope
-anchorage for the leader is at the top of Pisgah, but
-with more to follow him the usual plan is to descend
-to the gap and loop the rope over a large boulder
-that lies on the crest of the <i>col</i>. He need not worry
-about the danger of the pitch if the rocks are in
-good condition. When Mr. Haskett Smith first
-found this way up on September 3rd, 1884, a few
-days before he reached the top by way of Steep
-Ghyll, large quantities of moss had to be removed,
-and the finger-holds cleared of earth before they
-could be estimated and safely utilized. Not a
-particle of moss remains here now; nay, more, a
-decade of gymnasts have removed much rock by
-dint of scraping with their nailed boots, and have
-made obvious the safest route to the summit.</p>
-
-<p>It starts a yard or two to the right of the gap,
-where a sloping foothold in the overhanging wall
-shows traces of considerable wear and tear. The
-hands can find a sufficient bearing pressure near
-the edge of rock above, but it is unwise to place
-them too high up on the sloping slab. Then,
-straightening out on the foothold for a moment, the
-left hand can find a thin crack good enough for a
-hold while the body is being levered up over the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-awkward edge. Then the crack can be followed up
-the slab to the left till it ends near a little chimney,
-up which a scramble of six feet brings the climber
-within touch of the cairn. Formerly a small tin box
-held many visiting cards, and an ancient pocketbook
-with the names of the early climbers of the
-pinnacle. It was almost a breach of etiquette to pay
-a call here without leaving a card, but the polite
-old days are past, and men come and go now without
-this ceremony. A year ago I hunted in vain for the
-box and fancied that some curiosity-monger had
-feloniously appropriated it, but since then I believe
-it has again been seen there. It may easily slip
-down between the loose stones.</p>
-
-<p>This little climb is dangerous in icy weather, and
-should not then be undertaken. For there is no
-particular fun in it when the rocks are glazed, when
-bare fingers are necessary for the diminished holds,
-and the slow going inevitably involving benumbed
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>The long routes up are impossible except when
-conditions are favourable.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_073" src="images/i_073.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Scawfell Pinnacle and Deep Ghyll&mdash;Winter</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 73</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>The first long way up the pinnacle was climbed
-on September 20th, 1884, by Messrs. Haskett Smith
-and John Robinson. They made the ascent of Steep
-Ghyll, and then, emerging on the right, climbed up
-a steep <i>arête</i> to the pinnacle, where they left their
-names in a glass bottle. Descending again to the
-upper portion of Steep Ghyll, they passed over to
-the Jordan and so on to the mountain. With but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-slight variations, these were the only ways known
-until 1888. In July of that year a party led by Mr.
-W. Cecil Slingsby succeeded in climbing out from
-the lower part of Steep Ghyll on to the north-east
-face of the pinnacle. By a long and difficult chimney
-in this wall they reached the Low Man, as the nearly
-horizontal crest of the first huge buttress is called.
-Thence a sharp ridge took them direct to the final
-rocks, which were sufficiently broken to make the
-finish easy. This route at once commended itself to
-the better climbers at Wastdale as being safe and
-sound. The rocks throughout are excellent, and
-indeed enthusiasts like to compare the finish with
-the famous ridge of the Rothhorn from Zinal. The
-chief objection to be urged against the climb is the
-exposure to wind and cold. I remember once
-starting up with Mr. Robinson one wet day in
-August. He led as far as the foot of the difficult
-Slingsby Chimney, and then resolutely refused to
-budge an inch further because of the wind, which he
-asseverated would blow us away to Hollow Stones.
-I am inclined to believe him now, but at the time
-we wrangled all the way down to the Lord’s Rake,
-where some damp but enterprising tourist, pointing
-up to the vertical crags down which we had been
-dodging our way, inquired in a feeble tenor voice:
-‘Is there a road up there?’</p>
-
-<p>It was not until December 31, 1893, that I made
-my first complete ascent by this route, accompanied
-by M. and C., the latter leading all the way up. We
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-crossed the foot of Lord’s Rake, and made for the
-slight suggestion of a gully that serves to mark the
-beginning of the ordinary Steep Ghyll Climb. It
-was quite easy to follow, and rapidly deepened as we
-rose. In a hundred feet we were in view of the
-enormous cleft of the ghyll, with its black and
-glistening walls apparently almost meeting each
-other a hundred feet over our heads. None of us
-were attracted by that climb, which is never quite
-free from hazard, and we looked about for the spot
-where our route diverged to the right. Here the
-side of the ghyll was very steep for thirty or forty
-feet up, but was cut about by ledges and clefts quite
-good enough for us to mount the wall safely. Then
-we bore up a little towards the left, so as to approach
-the smooth outer face of the Low Man. Advance
-was only possible in one direction, our course taking
-us out on a nose or pinnacle of rock separated from
-the main mass by a deep fissure.</p>
-
-<p>The position was very exposed. It could only
-be approached from one direction, that of Steep
-Ghyll. A glance down the fissure beneath us
-revealed the lower half of the tremendous wall to
-which we were clinging, and though we had plenty
-of room to sit down and rest ourselves, there was a
-sense of coming peril in the next move. The illustration
-facing page 73, taken off the wall from the Lord’s
-Rake ridge, shows the pinnacle and the fissure that
-partially separates it from the face. Standing on the
-highest available point, C. had next to draw himself
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-up on to the little shelf by means of the smallest of
-holds and the use of his knees. We were able to
-guard against his slipping back, and were glad to see
-him clamber up easily to the beginning of the Slingsby
-Chimney. This begins very awkwardly; it would be
-proof of unusual agility and nerve for the leader here
-to manage the first six feet without assistance from
-below. But an unaided ascent is not impossible, and
-careful examination will generally cause the climber
-to discount much of the terror that he is pretty sure
-to have invested in the spot after reading the early
-literature of the subject. We hoisted C. up on our
-shoulders; without hesitation he crept well into the
-crack vertically above our heads, and wriggled his
-way out of sight. When we had paid out forty feet
-of rope, he shouted out to M. to advance, and I was
-left to speculate on a possible variation of the ascent
-by the left of the chimney. In due course M. was
-firmly fixed, and my turn came. The steepness of
-the first fifteen feet was rather appalling, but it was
-so simple a matter to wedge firmly into the chimney
-that there was no sense of insecurity. After the
-vertical bit, the chimney sloped back at an easier
-angle, and though some distance had to be climbed
-before a man might be of much help to those behind
-he would be perfectly capable of looking after himself.
-When we reached this level the aspect of
-the remaining rocks was very much less threatening.
-It was still a matter of hand-and-foot work, but we
-could all forge ahead together instead of moving one at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-a time. The slope eased off again when we reached
-the Low Man, and by preference we kept to the
-ridge on the right as much as we could. This was
-for the sensational view down into Deep Ghyll,
-though that day we saw little but the rolling mist
-above and below us. The rock was firm and rough
-to the touch, and we could well appreciate the comparison
-with the best parts of the Zinal Rothhorn.
-Leslie Stephen’s frontispiece in the ‘Playground of
-Europe’ might have been drawn on our ridge. There
-was a sense of perfect security out there as we sat
-astride the sharp ridge or clasped the huge blocks
-with a fraternal embrace. My only regret was that
-the <i>arête</i> was all too short&mdash;we arrived at the
-pinnacle much too soon. I proposed to descend to
-the Jordan and down by the Professor’s Chimney,
-but my companions pointed out that the latter
-would be damp and rickety, and such a change from
-our recent sport that we could get little fun out
-of it. I reluctantly yielded to the vote of the
-majority and went off to a halting-place in the
-hollow at the head of the Moss Ghyll variation
-exit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Scawfell Pinnacle, Deep Ghyll route.</span>&mdash;In
-October, 1887, a strong party led by the brothers
-Hopkinson found a way down the outside face of the
-Scawfell Pinnacle, to a point on the ridge within a
-hundred feet of the first pitch in Deep Ghyll. There
-they built what is now known as the Hopkinsons’
-cairn. In April, 1893, Messrs. C. Hopkinson and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-Tribe worked up the left wall of the ghyll from the
-second pitch, and reached the main north <i>arête</i>
-about sixty feet above the cairn. They were
-apparently unable to force a way directly up the
-ridge, and managed instead to descend it for a few
-yards and then to climb up the face of the Low Man
-by the 1887 route on the east side of the <i>arête</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_076" src="images/i_076.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Last Hundred Feet on the Scawfell Pinnacle</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 76</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>They thus succeeded in reaching the summit of
-the pinnacle from Deep Ghyll, and an examination of
-the illustration facing page 83 of the great wall that
-they climbed will prove that the performance was an
-unusually brilliant one. (The photograph shows the
-north ridge twenty feet to the left of the leader, who
-is about forty feet above the second man.)</p>
-
-<p>Very little was generally known of that day’s
-work, the note in the Wastdale climbing book being
-of the briefest description; and it cannot be counted
-unto me for originality that in a climb made in 1896
-that was intended as a repetition of the above our
-party left the older route at a point eighty feet up
-the Deep Ghyll wall, and reached the Low Man by a
-new line of advance.</p>
-
-<p>We were a party of three. Messrs. George and
-Ashley Abraham were very keen on trying the new
-route, and equally anxious to get some good photographs
-of the great wall. We climbed up the first
-pitch in Deep Ghyll by the crack on the left, and
-took the second in the ordinary way. Just where
-the traverse commences fifteen feet above the top of
-the central obstacle, a crack starts up the left wall,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-with a prominent jammed block guarding its entrance.
-Traversing over a leaf of rock on to the jammed
-stone, I was steadied for the first twenty feet of
-ascent by the rope, and could not have come to much
-harm in the event of a slip. But there was scanty
-room for a second, and I was compelled to rise with
-an ever lengthening rope below me. The crack was
-followed closely, though it soon became so thin and
-so erect that there was nothing to do but keep on
-the face of the mountain just to its left, every now
-and then gripping its sharp edge for handhold. It
-seemed to be a virgin climb, though this part had
-really been visited two or three times before. Stones
-had to be flung down, and grit scraped from the
-tiny ledges. But on the whole that first sixty feet
-was not very difficult, though markedly sensational,
-and I went on slowly to a little niche in the wall.</p>
-
-<p>The eighty-feet length of rope just reached to the
-crack from which the start was made, and getting
-George to tie himself on at the lower extremity, I
-mounted to a higher and larger niche while he
-cautiously climbed up the crack. The situation was
-very novel. Some may remember the <i>firma loca</i> in
-Mr. Sanger Davies’ account of the Croda da Lago.
-This grass-floored hermitage of mine was truly a
-<i>firma loca</i>, and sitting down comfortably in it I took
-out a biscuit from my pocket and tried to realize
-all the view.</p>
-
-<p>It was every bit as appalling as a Dolomite climb.
-Direct progress upwards seemed quite impossible; a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-feasible traverse over some badly-sloping moss-covered
-ledges to the right led to the sky-line at a
-spot where the <i>arête</i> made a vertical spring upwards
-for forty feet. A descent would have been seriously
-difficult, but it was the one thing we did not want.
-I could hear another climbing party finishing an
-ascent of the pinnacle by the ordinary route, their
-voices echoing down the ghyll and cheering me with
-a sense of neighbourliness. My companions were
-holding an animated discussion below on the subject
-of photography. The light was excellent, and our
-positions most artistic. The cameras were left in the
-cave at the foot of the ghyll. Ashley was afraid I
-meant to go up without him; but his professional
-instinct got the better of his desire to climb, and,
-shouting out to us to stay where we were for five
-minutes, he ran round to the high-level traverse on
-the other side of the ghyll, and down the Lord’s
-Rake to the cavern.</p>
-
-<p>George had the tripod screw and could not hand
-it to his brother; so, asking me to hold him firmly
-with the rope, he practised throwing stones across
-the gully to the traverse. Then, tying the screw to
-a stone, he managed to project this over successfully.
-We composed our limbs to a photographic quiescence.
-Ashley had a splendid wide-angle lens, which, from
-his elevated position on the traverse opposite, could
-take in 400 feet of the cliff, showing the entire route
-to the summit. It was his turn to take the lead.
-‘Mr. Jones! I can’t see you, your clothes are so
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-dark.’ I apologized. ‘Will you step out a foot or
-two from that hole?’ I was in a cheerful mood and
-ready to oblige a friend, but the platform was
-scarcely two feet square, and to acquiesce was to step
-out a few hundred feet into Deep Ghyll. For this I
-had not made adequate preparation and told him so.
-‘Well, will you take off your coat?’ That I could
-do with pleasure, and for a while his instructions
-were levelled at George.</p>
-
-<p>He was in an awkward place and was much
-cramped in ensuring safety, but Ashley was dissatisfied
-and insisted on his lifting the left leg. This
-gave him no foothold to speak of, but in the cause
-of photography he had been trained to manage
-without such ordinary aids. He grumbled a little at
-the inconvenience but obeyed, resolving that if he
-were living when the next slide was to be exposed he
-himself would be the manipulator and his brother the
-centre of the picture. The ghyll had become rather
-gloomy and we had a lengthy exposure. I was glad
-to slip on my jacket again and draw in the rope for
-George’s ascent. When he reached the smaller
-platform just below me, we tried the traverse over
-the slabs to the north ridge, and found that it went
-well enough. We were delighted to find traces of the
-previous party on the rocks at the corner. They
-were made by the Hopkinsons three years before
-(April 2, 1893) in their attempt to mount by the
-ridge. Their cairn was fifty feet further down, and
-we now had the satisfaction of seeing for ourselves
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-how to connect the Hopkinson cairn directly with
-Deep Ghyll.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the question of getting our third man
-up. We tried to throw the rope-end to him, but it
-persisted in clinging to the face vertically below us
-and would not be caught. I had to return to the
-<i>firma loca</i> and throw the rope from there. Ashley
-now reached it safely, tied himself on, and hastened
-up to our level, having left his camera on the traverse
-below. In this way we found ourselves together
-again, on the corner of the <i>arête</i>. The others fixed
-themselves to a little belaying-pin while I attempted
-to swarm up the vertical corner. A couple of feet
-above their heads I found that the only available
-holds were sloping the wrong way. They could be
-easily reached, but were unsafe for hauling, and after
-clinging for some minutes without advancing an inch
-I was compelled to descend and reconsider the
-problem. I thought of Andrea del Sarto:</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Ah! but a man’s reach should exceed his grasp<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Or what’s a Heaven for?<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>and wondered whether Browning meant this to
-apply to the crests of climbing-pitches as well as to
-other objects in life.</p>
-
-<p>At the time we did not know the exact history of
-the early attempts on the <i>arête</i>. As far as we could
-judge our corner might be inaccessible except with
-the help of a rope fixed above us. Certainly the
-scoring of bootnails on the face was scanty. The
-earlier party three years before might have planned
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-to avoid the bad bit. With doubts like these, I
-craved permission to look up a chimney on the Deep
-Ghyll side of the ridge. The other party of climbers
-had now reached the top of the ghyll, and were
-watching our manœuvres with interest. Seeing my
-hesitation they called out to inquire whether we
-should like a rope from the Low Man. We were
-grateful for the suggestion, but there was no peril
-our position, and we asked them to wait for awhile
-at the top of the gully, and see the issue of our next
-attempt upwards. Then, traversing over a buttress,
-I looked up and down the chimney.</p>
-
-<p>It was what is generally called hopeless. To speak
-definitely, it was much worse than the <i>arête</i>, and
-seeing no alternative I returned to the corner and
-prepared for another attempt. This time Ashley
-gave me a shoulder at a slightly lower level on the
-ghyll side of the ridge. A trying drag upwards with
-very scanty fingerholds brought my knees on to a
-satisfying hollow in a little ledge, and steadied by
-the two side faces of the sloping slab I stepped up
-and on to it. The cheers of the observing party told
-us that our <i>mauvais pas</i> was practically overcome.
-The other two men came up with a little assistance
-from the rope, and we cleared away the loose stones
-from our platform. It shelved badly downwards and
-offered no guarantee of safety in case I fell from the
-next vertical bit. But George sturdily rammed his
-brother close against the wall and intimated that the
-two would accept the responsibility of fielding me if
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-necessary. I mounted their shoulders, and reached
-up at arm’s length to a sharp and firm edge of rock.
-A preliminary grind of my boot into a shoulder-blade
-and then a clear swing out on the arms, a desperate
-pull-up with knees and toes vainly seeking support,
-and at last the upper shelf was mounted. But we
-were all breathless.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_083" src="images/i_083.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Ascent of Scawfell Pinnacle from Deep Ghyll</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 83</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>The lower edge of the broken crest of rock that
-marks the Low Man was now close at hand. Close
-by was the fine cairn built when the pinnacle was
-first climbed from Lord’s Rake. A few yards off to
-the east the edge of the cliff was cut by the top of
-Slingsby’s Chimney, and before us remained the
-magnificent ridge up to the summit.</p>
-
-<p>Boot scratches were now numerous, both along
-the ridge and by the left. We took the finish hand
-over hand, and reached the pinnacle cairn in five
-minutes. Our time up from Lord’s Rake had been
-slow&mdash;something like four hours&mdash;but much had
-been spent with photography and in reconnoitring.
-Another day, two years later, I managed it in less
-than half the time.</p>
-
-<p>A party of three should have 150 feet of rope, or
-else our awkward tactics in letting the rope down to
-the ghyll would have to be repeated. Perhaps the
-long run out for the leader will prevent this route
-ever becoming popular. It is a great pity that there
-is no resting-place half way up the wall. With icy
-conditions it would be criminal to attempt the open
-face. Yet the climb is one of the very best in the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-district, and I shall always look back with pleasure
-to my first introduction to this side of Scawfell
-Pinnacle.</p>
-
-<p>We hurried down Deep Ghyll by the traverse
-above both pitches. One of us rushed down too
-jubilantly, and ill repaid the kindly attention of the
-other party, now below us, by a profuse shower of
-stones. With thoughts of all the possible consequences
-of this indiscretion, we picked up our
-cameras and strode more sedately down to the others
-and to Wastdale.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Scawfell Pinnacle from Lord’s Rake.</span>&mdash;A
-very fine expedition was undertaken in December,
-1887, by Messrs. C. Hopkinson, Holder, H. Woolley,
-and Bury. Their note on the day’s sport is quoted
-almost in full: ‘Three of the party, led by Hopkinson,
-made an attempt on the Deep Ghyll Pinnacle from
-the entrance to Lord’s Rake. They succeeded in
-climbing 150 to 200 feet, but were stopped by a
-steep slab of rock coated with ice. From this point,
-however, a good traverse was made to the first gully,
-or chimney, on the left. They forced their way up
-this gully to the top of the chimney. At the top
-there was a trough of ice about 30 feet long, surmounted
-by steep rocks glazed with ice, which
-brought the party to a stop. They descended the
-chimney again and returned to Wastdale, unanimously
-of opinion that the day’s excursion had
-afforded one of the finest climbs the party had ever
-accomplished.’
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span></p>
-
-<p>So we may well think, and it is a great pity that
-the icy conditions of the rock prevented their direct
-ascent into Slingsby’s chimney. The gully they
-entered and almost completely ascended, is marked
-plainly in the general view of the Scawfell Crags
-from the Pulpit, and at first sight appears to run
-up continuously to Slingsby’s chimney. Actually,
-however, it finishes on the side of the nose or
-pinnacle of rock a few feet lower down, and I believe
-this pinnacle could be ascended from it by either
-side. What this earlier party found impossible in
-the Winter of 1887, Mr. G. T. Walker and I in
-April, 1898, favoured by the best of conditions,
-were just able to overcome. We had spent a long
-and exciting day in the neighbourhood, and were
-descending Slingsby’s chimney late in the afternoon,
-when we were suddenly struck with the idea of
-descending the fissure behind the nose and prospecting
-the face of rock between it and Deep Ghyll.
-A rough inspection of the first fifty feet below us
-proving satisfactory, we hastened down Steep Ghyll
-and traversed across to the top of the first pitch in
-Deep Ghyll. In spite of the late hour I could not
-refrain from a trial trip on the edge of the great Low
-Man buttress. At the point where the earlier party
-found the direct ascent barred by smooth ice on the
-wall, and decided to traverse off to the gully on the
-left, we had a council of war. It resulted in my
-throwing down my boots to Walker, and then
-crawling up fifty feet of, perhaps, the steepest and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-smoothest slabs to which I have ever trusted myself.
-This brought me to a tiny corner where I essayed to
-haul in the rope attached to my companion. But he
-also had to remove his boots and traverse to a point
-vertically below me before he could follow up in safety.
-We were now some distance to the left of the edge of
-Deep Ghyll, and straight up above us we could
-distinguish the crack where our new route was to
-terminate. Getting Walker to lodge firmly in a
-notch somewhat larger than mine, six feet away on
-the Steep Ghyll side, I went off again up another
-forty feet of smooth rock, aided by a zig-zagging
-crack an inch or so in width, that supplied sufficient
-lodgment for the toes, and a moderate grip for the
-finger-tips. After both had arrived thus far, we
-were able, with extreme care, to reach the side wall
-of the nose itself, and at a point, perhaps, fifty feet
-from its crest we turned round its main outside
-buttress and found ourselves in a spacious chamber
-with a flat floor and a considerable roof, the first and
-only genuine resting-place worthy the name that we
-found along our route. We could look straight
-down Hopkinson’s gully, and would gladly have
-descended into it and ‘passed the time of day’ with
-a little speculative scrambling thereabouts. But
-darkness was coming on apace, and we had yet a
-most awkward corner to negotiate before finishing
-our appointed business. Standing on Walker’s
-shoulders I screwed myself out at the right-hand
-top corner of our waiting-room, and started along a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-traverse across the right face of the nose. The toes
-of the feet were in a horizontal crack, the heels had
-no support, and the hands no grip. It was only by
-pressing the body close to the wall, which was
-fortunately a few degrees away from the perpendicular,
-and by sliding the feet along almost inch by inch,
-that the operation could be effected. It was with
-no small sense of relief that the end was reached in
-a few yards, and a narrow vertical fissure entered
-that gave easy access to the top of the nose. Then
-we put on our boots again and hurried.</p>
-
-<p>It is thus possible to reach the summit of the
-Scawfell Pinnacle by a route up the buttress quite
-independent of either of the great ghylls that flank it.
-A good variation that has yet to be performed in its
-entirety, though I believe that every section has been
-independently climbed, is that of the Hopkinson’s
-chimney, the nose, and Slingsby’s chimney. Further,
-that evening’s climb has convinced me that we could
-have safely reached Hopkinson’s cairn on the edge of
-Deep Ghyll, and that there is in consequence a most
-thrilling piece of work possible in the direct ascent
-of the buttress, the whole way up to the High Man
-from its base. Slight divergences are, probably,
-unavoidable in the lower half of the climb, but
-permitting these there now remain only about forty
-feet of rock hitherto unascended. It is worth while
-inspecting the view on page 73. The top of the
-nose is there plainly seen in profile 4⅜ inches from
-the bottom; our climb was roughly speaking up to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-the nose, by a vertical line drawn an inch from
-the left edge of the picture&mdash;somewhat less as it
-approached completion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Upper Deep Ghyll Route.</span>&mdash;Three days after
-the ascent recorded in the last section, I found that
-the sharp ridge between the Low Man and the
-summit of the pinnacle could be reached from the
-foot of the lowest pitch of the Professor’s Chimney.
-The suggestion is due to Dr. Collier, who told me
-some years ago that the only real difficulties are
-concentrated in the first thirty feet of the ascent.
-The climb is almost in a straight line, running
-obliquely up the Deep Ghyll face of the Pinnacle,
-and is best inspected from the west wall traverse.
-The first part overhangs considerably, and the holds
-are of the same character as those on the long slabs
-of the Low Man buttress, with a sort of absent
-look about them. But the rocks were dry and
-warm, in the best possible condition, and two minutes
-of deliberate movement led me out of danger. There
-is great variety just here, but the simplest course
-was to make for a slight chimney in the sharp ridge
-above my head. In twenty minutes the High Man
-had been crossed, and the starting-point reached by
-way of the Professor’s Chimney, but if a companion
-and a long rope had been vouchsafed on that occasion
-it would have been a pleasing undertaking to have
-tried the traverse along the wall to the <i>firma loca</i> of
-the second section in this chapter.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>GREAT END AND ITS GULLIES</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>As we walk up towards the Styhead Pass from
-Wastdale we may see well in front of us the long ridge
-of the Pikes monopolizing a goodly portion of the
-sky-line. The high dependence at the head of the
-valley we are skirting is Great End, a reasonable
-enough name for the north-east head of the range.
-It sends down a buttress towards the Styhead Pass
-that, at a closer view, is shown to be well separated
-from the main mass by a deep gully of some
-architectural merit. This is Skew Ghyll. It twists its
-way up to the ridge, and offers a pleasant variation
-route over to Sprinkling Tarn, whence a steep rise
-brings the tourist to the Esk Hause, the lowest point
-between Great End and Bowfell. The climber’s
-interest will be concentrated in the view of the
-long northern face of Great End, well seen from
-Sprinkling Tarn, and his experienced eye will notice
-at once that the face is marked by various gullies
-that invite approach. The whole ground has been
-thoroughly well examined from time to time, with
-the result that several gullies which from below or
-above appear to promise continuous climbing have
-proved to be deceptive in this respect. Yet there
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-remain two that are always interesting, and a third
-that is at any rate popular as a winter course.</p>
-
-<p>Seen from the tarn there are two gullies that cut
-the full height of the precipice from top to bottom.
-The lines of fresh scree that trail down from their
-lower ends show up plainly on the older <i>débris</i>
-that marks the decay of this mountain wall. They
-both slope downwards towards the left when seen
-from this point, and are both obviously provided
-with variation exits at their upper extremities. That
-to the left was formerly called Robinson’s Gully, but
-is now generally known as the South-east Gully.
-There has always been a lack of originality in the
-nomenclature of such places, and with several routes
-on the same mountain the christener’s wits seem
-driven to all points of the compass. The second
-gully is a hundred yards to the right of the first,
-and has long been known as the Great End Central
-Gully. It divides half way up into two well-marked
-portions, the right-hand route constituting
-the main bed of the gully, and terminating at a
-huge notch in the sky-line. The left-hand branch
-as seen from below appears to terminate blindly in
-the face, but actually it leads to a deep and narrow
-chimney cutting into the top wall within a hundred
-feet of the main gully.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_090" src="images/i_090.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Great End Gullies seen from Sprinkling Tarn</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 90</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>Far away to the right, where the cliff has shrunk
-to but one-third of its full height at the Central
-Gully, a black cleft may be descried that leads from
-scree to sky-line. This is Cust’s Gully, indifferent
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-as a summer climb, but always beautiful in the richness
-of its rock scenery, and especially interesting in
-winter, when drift snow offers a royal road to the
-top. Every one has a kind word for Cust’s Gully.
-It is only called the Cussed gully by ignorant
-novices who inquire whether Skew of Skew Ghyll
-fame was a member of the Alpine Club. When it
-is marked out by snow we can from the path just
-distinguish the great rock bridge or natural arch
-across the upper part of the cleft.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Great End Central Gully.</span>&mdash;This wonderful
-ravine offers some special feature every winter. Its
-individuality changes so completely under the mask
-of snow, or ice, or rain, that an attempt to describe
-the gully by an account of any one expedition must
-of necessity be only partially successful.</p>
-
-<p>One fine winter morning a year or so ago we had
-a large party at Wastdale, and for once in a way
-were all of the same mind as to our day’s plans.
-The walk up towards the Styhead Pass&mdash;the Schweinhauskopfjoch
-of the Swiss travellers among us&mdash;would
-just suit our conversationally-minded fraternity,
-to whom Brown Tongue or the Pillar Fell
-or the Gable-end offered gradients too steep for
-words. We sallied forth from the inn with many
-axes and great lengths of rope, and lazily worked
-our way along the valley. The lower path, entirely
-obliterated by the snow, took us across the stream
-to the right on to the low slopes of Lingmell.
-Piers Ghyll stream was crossed without notice, for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-here the gorge is not at all in evidence and requires
-closer examination to reveal its magnificence. Then,
-rising a few feet, we crossed the hollow of Grainy
-Ghyll and made towards Spout Head and Skew Ghyll.
-The snow gave us some glorious effects on the hills
-around. The Mosedale amphitheatre of noble mountains
-towered above Wastdale, and mutely questioned
-us as to the accuracy of the surveyors who could
-give them not even three thousand feet of elevation
-above us. Nowadays theodolites are taken to the
-mountains and misused with great effect; why should
-not the Pillar and Red Pike benefit similarly to the
-extent of a thousand feet or so? There above us on
-our left was Great Gable, a White pyramid cutting
-into a dark sky, at least ten thousand feet of mountain
-beauty between us and its snowy crest. Who could
-believe that the summit was only 2,900 feet above
-sea level? But the engineer among us calmly
-reminded me of an interesting aneroid observation I
-had once taken of the top of Moss Ghyll on Scawfell,
-making it a hundred feet higher than Scawfell itself.
-Was I to rank myself as a truthful scientist and be
-contented with the ordnance survey records, or as
-an artist who should represent heights, shapes, and
-colours as his imperfect senses make them? We
-closed the discussion in favour of the artist and then
-sloped (without slang) up to Skew Ghyll.</p>
-
-<p>This was in splendid condition; the snow was
-deep and hard, and out of sheer pleasure in step-cutting,
-three or four enthusiasts carved their own
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
-staircases up through the ‘narrows’ and away
-towards the little pass above us. It was to be noticed
-that the steps gradually converged to one line as
-the leaders felt their muscles wearying, and they were
-willing to fall in with the caravan now trailing up
-in single file like the elements of a kite’s tail. At the
-top of our little pass we could see straight down
-Borrowdale. Skiddaw and Blencathara formed the
-distant background. Derwent-water reflected a dark
-sky, and by contrast with its snowy shores looked of
-an inky blackness. Styhead Tarn was not very beautiful;
-ice had formed on it a week before, but had
-since been broken up by the wind, and the great
-flakes of crystal unevenly crusted with drift snow
-gave a sense of roughness and of incompleteness out
-of keeping with the finished beauty of the surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>We stayed up here for a few minutes, and then
-contoured along the side of Great End in the direction
-of Esk Hause. The ground was rough; here and
-there the snow required cutting. But no difficulties
-were met with until the narrow entrance to the Central
-Gully suddenly disclosed itself in the precipitous
-wall on our right. The gully points down towards
-the eastern corner of Sprinkling Tarn. It begins
-where the cliff stands nearest to the Esk Hause path,
-and is not to be mistaken for the South-east Gully
-that points directly towards the sharp bend in the
-little stream rattling down to Borrowdale.</p>
-
-<p>At the entrance to our climb we stopped to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-consider the question of roping up. ‘Union is
-strength’ only within certain narrow limits, when
-the bond of union is an Alpine rope. It often
-involves loss of time.</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Down to Gehenna or up to the Throne,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">He travels the fastest who travels alone,<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>and his speed is inversely proportional to the number
-of his followers. We decided to split up into three
-equal parties of four, my men to lead up the main
-gully, the engineer to convey the second set up the
-middle course, and the more substantial residue to
-bear to the left, up a slighter branch that contains
-a very creditable cave pitch half-way towards the
-summit ridge.</p>
-
-<p>Our work was easy at the outset. The gully
-was narrow and steep, but the snow was good, and
-small ledges on either side were utilized whenever
-the little icicle-clad pitches were too slippery for
-direct attack. Where the gully widened a little we
-could see the first serious obstacle in front of us&mdash;a
-vertical wall with a ragged ice-curtain flung over it
-in a most artistic way. It would perhaps have been
-possible to cut directly upwards, but the crowd of
-eager climbers behind could not be expected to fight
-against frostbite for an hour or so while the leader
-amused himself, and the obvious method of circumventing
-the difficulty had its own merits. The right
-wall slightly overhung; close below was a glazed
-rib of rock leading up at an easy angle to the top of
-the pitch.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p class="author small">PLATE III.</p>
-<img id="i_094" src="images/i_094.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE GREAT END GULLIES (p. 90).</p>
-
-<p class="caption">The height of BB is about 450 feet.</p>
-
-<p class="small table">
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell">
- A Holmes’s (or Brigg’s) Cave Pitch.<br />
- B South-east Gully.<br />
- C The Central Gully.<br />
- D Cust’s Gully.<br />
- </span>
- <span class="tcell">
- E Head of Skew Ghyll.<br />
- F Sprinkling Tarn.<br />
- c Left Branch of the Central Gully.<br />
- d Difficult Chimney.<br />
- </span>
- </span>
-</p></div>
-
-<p>Steadying myself against the wall, I started cutting
-slight steps up the thin ice on the rock, keeping
-as near to the corner as possible. Now and again
-the foothold felt insecure, but for the most part the
-ascent was safe, with slight probability of a slip
-into the snow below. The second man followed
-close up, and steadied my feet occasionally with an
-ice-axe. Then came a more gentle snow-slope, up
-which we could kick steps without effort; and while
-the second party were busy with the difficulties that
-we had just overcome, we reached the second pitch
-and hastened to leave it behind us. This was rather
-a harder task than we had yet undertaken. The
-gully was more open and its ice covering less extensive,
-but the pitch was higher and involved our
-climbing up to the centre from the right-hand wall,
-so as to reach the base of the big boulder that crowns
-the pitch. All this would have been easy with the
-rocks clear and dry, but we had to make our footholds
-on the flimsiest rags of ice, and the traverse to the
-middle demanded some long stepping with scarcely
-a hand to steady. On reaching the boulder I was
-compelled to crawl on all-fours round its front to the
-slope on the left-hand side of the gully, and then by
-cutting a dozen steps or so in the hard snow found
-myself in the wide part of the gully at the foot of the
-great divide. The others of my party followed on
-rapidly, and we shouted adieu to our companions
-beneath.</p>
-
-<p>Here we had the finest view of the climb.
-Below, the beauties of the two pitches were greatly
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-increased by our own elevation. They looked very
-difficult, and the picture offered its living element in
-the cautiously advancing parties now just in the
-interesting part of the climb. Above us rose the
-huge buttress that divides the gully, and on either
-side the most fantastic drapery of ice well-nigh
-frightened us with its appearance of impregnability.
-We advanced carefully up to the right, congratulating
-ourselves on having taken the lead, for our
-friends were not pleased with the battery of hard
-chips of snow that our step-cutting gave them. The
-buttress was rounded, and we gained a full view of
-the troubles in store for us. Immediately on our left
-a smooth rock-shoot led straight up to the top of the
-buttress. Between the vertical pillar on the right of
-this shoot and the opposite side of the gully rose a
-sheer wall of ice, like a frozen waterfall twenty-five
-feet in height. So far as we could see at first, there
-was no chance of forcing a quick way up this
-obstacle, and it was obvious that slowness would
-introduce the risk of frostbite. During the previous
-summer my fingers had been rather badly frostbitten
-in the Alps, and there was some chance of their
-still manifesting a susceptibility to cold. We almost
-turned back to follow our friends up another way;
-we could trust each other to exaggerate the terrors
-of this bit, which honestly enough was a trifle too
-stiff for a cold winter day. But while mentally
-framing an excuse for the return, I had advanced up
-to the left-hand edge of the ‘ice fall,’ and started the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-ascent of its spiky edging of rock. From below the
-spikes had appeared fragile and untrustworthy.
-Actually they were too well frozen into place to
-become detached with one’s cautious drag. This
-discovery altered the prospect for us all, and the
-chilly watchers below warmed up with the returning
-enthusiasm. In fact they needed reminding that I
-might yet come down suddenly to their level and
-sweep them off their feet unless they were prepared
-to receive me. When ten feet up, the axe was called
-into requisition to cut a few steps in the fall itself.
-These were useful just so long as the left hand could
-utilise the rocks, but they tended to carry me away
-from my comparatively safe corner, and I soon
-decided to keep away from the fall as far as possible.
-The corner where the gully sloped back was very
-exciting, for implicit trust was reposed in the
-benumbed left hand that had been thrust, well gloved,
-into a thin and icy crack in the wall, and held there
-by frost and friction. It offered no sensation either
-of security or of danger, but it could not very well
-slip out, and we hoped for the best. A few moments’
-struggling landed me safely on the steep slope above
-the pitch, and a vigorous handling of the ice-axe on
-the bed of the gully fully restored circulation to my
-hands. Then followed my cold companions, who had
-been shivering spectators for a long twenty minutes.
-They were thus handicapped from the outset, and
-found the pitch very severe, notwithstanding the
-gentle suggestion of safety that the rope offered.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span></p>
-
-<p>We had some careful work still before us. The
-bed of the gully led steeply up to another large
-and slightly overhanging boulder that blocked the
-direct route, and our only possible method of getting
-above it was to cut steps away on the right, trusting
-to sundry very insecure grass holds. But these were
-much better than usual by reason of the frost. In
-fact the whole climb is perfectly sound in winter,
-though rendered very difficult. In summer it is
-often easy but dangerous.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_099" src="images/i_099.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">TOP OF THE CENTRAL GULLY, IN WINTER.
-GREAT END</p></div>
-
-<p>From the steep right-hand side of the gully we
-could traverse with care to the main bed again, just
-above the boulder; whence to the top of the gully,
-looking from here like an Alpine pass, was a broad
-stretch of unspotted snow. There we joined the
-second party, who had come by the steep grass
-ledges of the central route. Their labours had
-been great&mdash;or else, indeed, they would easily have
-managed to get ahead of us&mdash;but not so much
-from the intrinsic difficulty of their route as from
-the need of continual caution in the more open
-portions of the climb. They had reached a ledge
-that overlooked the right branch, and were proposing
-to descend to our snow slope and cut steps up
-with us. We were nothing loth to give them a
-chance of showing their skill with the axe, and
-for a while halted to enjoy the grand prospect
-behind us, looking straight away towards Sprinkling
-Tarn and Borrowdale. But we found ourselves frequently
-buffeted by strong gusts of wind that swept
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
-furiously down the gully. The whirling snow at the
-little <i>col</i>, now so near, warned us of an approaching
-<i>tourmente</i> on the ridge. Our section soon decided
-to start again, and just below a small cornice that
-crowned the gully we forged ahead, and plunged
-through the powdery fringe of overhanging snow.
-We sank in up to our waists, and had to wrestle
-mightily against the hurricane to find a firm footing
-on the wind-swept rocks beyond. It was no joke
-standing about there with the sharp, cold, drift
-snow from the Pikes blowing into our smarting faces.
-We could not hear ourselves speak, it was almost
-impossible to see the correct course; but there were
-two or three among us well acquainted with this
-ridge in its bitterest moods, and to these the others
-trusted. We floundered down to the right towards
-Esk Hause across the wilderness of blocks strewn
-over the great plateau, and in a hundred yards
-came to a boulder large enough to possess a lee
-side of its own. Here we halted for a chilly half-hour,
-waiting for the third section to arrive. I
-possessed their luncheon in my knapsack, a most
-regrettable circumstance from our point of view, inasmuch
-as it tied us to Great End so long as it pleased
-them to amuse themselves down there on the leeside
-of the mountain. We quickly demolished our own
-share of the provisions, and with an unselfishness
-rarely present in the great latterday mountaineering
-expeditions, decided to leave them a few sandwiches
-and to cloy the hungry edge of our remaining appetites
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-with tobacco. We were not all smokers, but everybody
-present assisted in lighting the first pipe, such a
-labour was it to keep a match burning. We waited
-there in a close bundle until our feet were half frozen
-and our faces stiff with icicles. Then we became
-rather nervous about our missing friends, and debated
-whether they meant to reach the top that day, or
-whether they had turned their backs to the lunch
-and made for Sprinkling Tarn. The latter course
-seemed at once the most expedient for them and the
-most convenient for us, and gladly we acted on this
-assumption. It was just as well we did so, for the
-frost had sharply nipped some of us, and it was long
-before my heels gave me any sensation but that of
-a pair of snowballs in my boots. We slung round
-the Esk Hause, and had some fine glissading to the
-hollow of the hill below the crags.</p>
-
-<p>When well opposite our climb at the point whence
-we had started some five hours earlier, our united
-shouting brought back an answering call from the
-gully. Soon we could see the burly form of their
-greatest member slowly descending the crags at about
-the same spot where we had long before left him.
-Having distinguished him as a preliminary landmark
-easy of recognition, the three others were one by one
-made out. We were relieved to observe that they
-were all coming down in a normal condition; no
-broken limb or sprained ankle had occurred to spoil
-their pleasure and stop their climbing. After a few
-minutes’ waiting we learnt their story. The left-hand
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-route had begun in a vertical ice-sheet twenty
-feet high that took them two hours to surmount.
-Then, when with sighs of relief, or hyperbolic
-language, or eloquent silence, that marked each
-individual’s satisfaction at the happy completion of
-a difficult pitch, they had cut their way over the
-edge of this wall and rounded the traverse that
-dominated it, they were aghast to meet a wall of ice
-in every respect similar to the first, but magnified!
-This was heart-breaking, but they made a bold bid
-for success, and started afresh on the new task. But
-the daylight was already within an hour of vanishing,
-and a night on those rocks would have been too
-much for even the sturdiest of them.</p>
-
-<p>So with a wisdom not often met with in such
-cases where an element of competition enters into the
-day’s work, they resolved to retire and join us below.
-There we met again, and they received their lunch.
-I was censured to a slight extent, but blame is
-pretty sure to be the portion of him who carries the
-provisions. He that shoulders the bag is a responsible
-individual, and the condition of good training
-that it induces is moral as well as physical.</p>
-
-<p>Then let me insist on the value of such physical
-training. The photographer who takes his camera to
-the High Alps is often too fond of his apparatus to
-give it up to a guide or porter; he frequently decides
-hurriedly to take a shot, and soon learns that it is
-best to carry all for himself. Economy may often
-preach the same precept. Now to lift his own weight
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-is a labour he at first fancies will tax all his strength,
-but a little practice in carrying a well constructed
-and well packed rücksack on small expeditions
-will teach him something different. The weight of
-the whole equipment for half-plate photography&mdash;camera,
-three lenses, tripod, and other accessories&mdash;is
-so small a fraction of his own weight that its mere lift
-is a negligible consideration. His pace will be diminished
-and his back often uncomfortably heated. But
-supposing the burden well arranged, many a climber
-could habituate himself to it. One of our greatest
-Alpine climbers is said to train in Cumberland by
-carrying a rücksack filled with stones. Without
-attempting to persuade any one but a geologist so to
-burden himself on principle, I strongly advise the
-man who hopes ultimately to climb without guides
-to get early into the habit of carrying loads on
-smaller ascents. It will always be a joy to travel free
-when occasional opportunity offers, and then he will
-assuredly improve his pace. On a really stiff pitch
-the sack may have to be raised independently by the
-rope, a cause of serious delay when the rope is rigid
-with frost and the party inexperienced in tying
-knots or reliable loops. It should be remembered
-that the sack has more than once protected the
-climber from serious injury by falling stones, and that
-a pound or two of extra luggage carried up to an
-Alpine hut may mean all the difference between a
-night of misery and a comfortable rest before an
-arduous expedition.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span></p>
-
-<p>I have mentioned that the middle route up the
-Central Gully leads by easy stages to the upper
-portion of the right-hand branch. Some three years
-ago a strong party effected an ascent of the chimney
-that points directly up to the top of the cliff from the
-high ledge between the two routes. We found the
-main difficulty was in traversing over an open slab on
-the right of the foot of the chimney. The slab was split
-by a narrow fissure, but the handholds were slight and
-rather insecure. To have trusted to one alone would
-have been dangerous, and I recall with amusement
-the spread-eagle attitude of the leader as he endeavoured
-to distribute his weight equally on four
-rickety points of support. The position was good
-enough in itself, but to move involved a dangerous
-increase in the stress on one of the supports. Fortunately
-the second on the rope was able to offer an
-axe-head as additional security, and the passage
-to the left was effected in safety. The chimney was
-narrow and its sides smooth, but with the exception
-of a loose stone near the finish, which rattled down
-and tended to disturb our wedging, nothing seriously
-interfered with our advance.</p>
-
-<p>But there was one amongst us who, in expectation
-of falling stones, had thrust his head and shoulders into
-the little cave at the foot of the chimney. When the
-leader shouted to him he did not hear, and the accompanying
-pull on the rope resulted in the hitching of
-his shoulders firmly in the cleft and the elevation of his
-legs only. The previous evening we had been having
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-a heated discussion as to the futility of naming the
-sides of a gully or cave after the manner of the banks
-of a river&mdash;<i>i.e.</i> of calling the ‘true’ right side of
-a gully its left and <i>vice-versâ</i>. Professor M., who
-was with us now, had been a listener to the discussion.
-Looking down from the top of the chimney
-and observing the unusual method of our friend’s
-ascent, he called out, ‘It’s all right, Jones, he is
-coming up well enough&mdash;the “true up.”’</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">South-east Gully.</span>&mdash;This in summer time can
-often be accomplished in half an hour if the climbers
-are few and in a hurry. Before December, 1896, I
-had not made a winter ascent; moreover, I had forgotten
-much of the detail. Thinking of climbing
-notes, I persuaded a small Christmas party to join me
-in exploring the gully under these new conditions.</p>
-
-<p>We were only a band of three ultimately, though
-at Kern Knotts, which we visited <i>en route</i>, our
-number was considerably larger. The other two
-were both experienced Alpine climbers, one a very
-tall man, the other very short. I was anxious to
-determine the advantages and disadvantages of size
-and weight, and to that end took the lead myself
-and placed the tall man second on the rope. We
-had but little wind, and the temperature was slightly
-above freezing-point.</p>
-
-<p>The climbing began almost at once, for in five
-minutes from the foot the gully walls were close
-together and were encrusted with thawing ice. The
-narrow bed was broken up into easy pitches, but to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
-avoid the stream of water that came down beneath
-the soft covering of snow it was necessary to use
-small ledges on either side, and span the gully like
-diminutive colossi&mdash;here I am referring only to myself
-and the little one. Now and again we would
-plunge up the gully for a short distance in loose
-snow. Occasionally the crystals became more compact,
-and two of us could manage to creep over its
-surface without slipping through. Rarely was this
-the case with our middle man&mdash;a sixteen-stone
-Teuton with a scientific training. If snow could be
-crushed he crushed it. He became so indifferent in
-the matter after awhile, that he made no attempt to
-distribute his weight evenly over the surface according
-to the rules laid down by Badminton. The little
-one, coming last, naturally suffered by this indifference,
-and was plaintive over what he called the
-‘fallacy of the undistributed middle.’</p>
-
-<p>The first pitch of any size occurred within 200
-feet of the foot of the gully, a perfectly vertical rise
-of twenty feet in the bed level with a slender waterfall
-interfering with our direct progress. The retaining
-walls were the least bit too far apart for the
-utilization of both simultaneously, and the right side
-commended itself to us as the easier to attack. Our
-only trouble again was the glaze on the rocks, a
-black, shiny veneer too thin for axe operations, too
-thick to be trifled with. Such ice always interferes
-more with the hands than with the feet, for sharp
-boot nails can roughen the surface of an ice ledge
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-enough for a foothold, whereas the hands can make
-no impression. If the ice is very cold, gloves must
-be worn as a protection against the frost. They
-have the merit of adhering slightly to the ice when
-pressed, and often in that way give the climber
-a safe-enough grip. With wet ice such regelation
-will not occur, and if the work is hazardous I prefer
-to climb with free hands, trusting to friction to
-restore circulation wherever an ‘easy’ may be
-called.</p>
-
-<p>Making slowly up this wall to a snowy ledge at
-the top level of the pitch, I called on the others to
-follow, and then worked back into the gully. Here
-we found ourselves facing the ‘divide,’ a high and
-narrow rib of rock that cut down into the gully and
-gave us a choice of routes. Our way lay up to the
-right, which a distant view from Sprinkling Tarn
-had shown us to be really the main line. The other
-branch ends somewhat abruptly out on the face, and
-involves a traverse into the main again. A few
-yards further up, and a very imposing pitch rose
-before us. It was in three portions, the gap between
-the second and the third blocked by a huge stone
-that bridged the gully. As on the lower fall, so
-here the water kept us off the centre-line of the
-ravine, and drove us to seek diversion on the right.
-On the first part we had the difficulty of snow and
-wet ice. Without comment I noticed the little one
-carefully wipe out a handhold with his handkerchief
-when it was his turn to mount. By the same
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-manœuvre he had some three years before shown me
-how to scramble up a small boulder in the Engelberg
-valley that I was forced to admit I could not climb.
-It was interesting to observe how little space he
-needed for his fingers. On a wall with diminutive
-ledges that might easily pass unnoticed, he could
-show us all what ‘walking up’ a face of rock really
-meant, though his short reach naturally handicapped
-him now and again very seriously. I believe a short
-man generally does best on rocks. His hands are
-as a rule stronger in proportion to his weight. The
-long climber can reach further but is often unable to
-utilize the distant grip to which he has stretched, if it
-is small or badly rounded. Moreover, he often finds
-himself in the attitude of a looping caterpillar, a pose
-that demands a firmer handgrip and that rapidly
-exhausts the muscles.</p>
-
-<p>We all reached the first ledge safely. Then came
-the passage of the bridge. If we passed under it we
-should get terribly wet and cold, though there would
-be no particular difficulty in getting through to the
-final chimney. Every inch of the boulder was glazed,
-and it offered very few excrescences to hang upon.
-But it had the making of an edge at its crest, and I
-gradually worked up the outside till I could reach
-this and pull up. There is one advantage of a glaze&mdash;possibly
-its only one&mdash;it offers no friction to one’s
-body in an arm-pull.</p>
-
-<p>Thence it was an easy step over to the final
-chimney. A small spout of water as thick as
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-one’s wrist was jetting from the top against the
-right wall, and we were inevitably in for a wetting
-in spite of the circumvention of the bridge. I
-essayed to finish the pitch before the others started
-from their ledge twenty feet below. A fairly good
-lodgment for the right foot was utilized and passed.
-The body had to be jammed across the chimney, the
-fingers seeking for a crevice high up on the right
-wall. When a slab is streaming with water and
-handholds can be found within easy reach, it is a
-good plan to keep ‘thumbs down’ as much as
-possible; for then the water will drain off by the
-thumbs, and run clear of the coat-sleeves. The
-strain is too great to operate in this way with arms
-at full length above the head. That was manifest in my
-trouble on the wall. The ice-cold water trickled down
-my arms and body, making me wet through in a
-few moments. But the horror of it came with the
-realization that I was unable to move backwards or
-forwards. The situation was almost critical, but not
-an unusual one for winter climbing in Cumberland.
-I could at any rate give it my cool consideration,
-and decide whether to call up the big one to help
-me or to try an independent descent. The men
-below saw me in trouble and made a move upwards
-towards the pitch. Then it occurred to me that
-the big one would not be able to force a way under
-the bridge, and that he might be a long time working
-over it, longer than I could manage to hold out.
-That decided me, and I started wriggling downwards.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-Luckily the hands were not yet benumbed, and by
-entire disregard of the main water-supply down the
-central line of flow, which now included the back
-of my neck, I managed to reach the platform again.
-Until my second came up it was useless to make
-another attempt, and indeed it was now eminently
-desirable that everybody should get wet. I am not
-an advocate for monopoly in such cases. With
-some slight inducement suggested by the rope, the
-big one pulled himself over the bridge and came up
-to the platform. Here he was invited to hold himself
-firmly against the wall, and give me his shoulders
-and head for elevating purposes. He was immediately
-drenched before I had effected a start up his mighty
-back, but there was a sense of perfect security now;
-it would be impossible to fall past him. As for
-the effect of cold and wet on him, we could neglect
-so small a consideration. In any case he would not
-feel it till the trouble was over. I thought of the
-old dynamics problem beginning: ‘Let a fly of mass
-m be crawling up the trunk of an elephant, whose
-mass may be neglected,’ and realized for the first time
-that there was some sense in the quaint hypothesis.
-Once on his shoulders I reached up to a dry ledge,
-dragged myself on to it, and thence strode across to
-the top of the pitch.</p>
-
-<p>The third man had managed to reach the
-platform during these operations, and now nobly
-offered his little all as a foothold for the giant. My
-heart sank when I heard it graciously accepted, but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-it rested with me to share the responsibility and let
-the rope take up some of the stress. The big one
-came up grandly with these small aids, and we
-hurried the little one to send along my camera
-sack and then himself. This pitch was the hardest
-part of the day’s work, and showed itself to vary
-much with existing circumstances. I can just
-remember enough of a former expedition to add that
-it needs care in summer time, though it cannot,
-rightly speaking, be called difficult.</p>
-
-<p>We then went upwards again over snow at a
-gentle angle till the third pitch was reached. This
-was of a simple design, just a cave formed by a fallen
-boulder, and no doubt it could be taken in many
-ways. We climbed up a six-feet wall on the right
-from the entrance to the cave, and scrambled easily
-into the snow-bed beyond. Thence to the top was a
-matter of only ten minutes, the single hindrance
-being a pile of boulders that were climbed by an easy
-tunnel that led to the crest of the left-hand wall of
-the gully. We walked out at the top just as twilight
-set in, after some two hours’ gentle excitement. We
-were naturally still damp, and felt no inclination to
-stay about on the ridge, so hurrying round towards
-Esk Hause we glissaded rapidly to the path and
-walked home.</p>
-
-<p>The left-hand variation in the gully is often
-taken, but is scarcely as interesting. Just after
-passing the divide we find another buttress of rock
-cutting the gully into two sections. Here the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-buttress is not much thicker than an ordinary brick
-wall; it is sometimes called the ‘curtain.’ There
-are pitches on each side of it, that on the right being
-more definite and more interesting. It leads up a
-steep chimney to the crest of the curtain, which is
-crossed to the left. The climber is then in the
-left-hand branch, and has no difficulty in ascending
-the gully till it dwindles down to nothing, and he
-finds himself looking into the main south-east gully
-just above the third pitch. It will be best, then, to
-climb down and finish by the usual route.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Cust’s Gully.</span>&mdash;The climbing in this is of the
-slightest character in summer time, there being but
-one short pitch beneath the natural arch, and very
-little in that. But with hard snow about there is
-scarcely a pleasanter way of playing at Alpine
-climbing above the snow-line than by taking Great
-End viâ Skew Ghyll and Cust’s Gully. The snow
-slope will alter in inclination from about 30° at the
-bottom to 70° at the top. If the pitch is but thinly
-covered, there is the fun of tackling a pitfall, and of
-bringing to bear on the safe crossing all the science
-that glacier crevasses may have taught us in
-Switzerland. Nor let any think that it is all make-believe
-and that of difficulty there is none. I have
-had grand times in Cust’s Gully, where we were
-actually tired out with the labour of cutting steps.
-The snow when fresh is soft and yielding. Give it a
-week or two to settle down, and it will bind together
-so as to offer firm support on scraped footholds.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-But let cold rain fall on hard snow and the temperature
-then fall below freezing-point, the surface will
-become icy and every step will require careful
-making. Then should the picturesque attitudes of
-step-cutting depicted in Badminton be imitated in
-all seriousness, and the axe wielded with the scientific
-swing. It has happened more than once that a bad
-axe has proved its worthlessness when tested on the
-Cumbrian fells in a winter expedition&mdash;a much less
-dangerous discovery than if it were taken new to
-the Alps and there found wanting. The difficulty in
-the latter case is that our axes are so rarely used
-for hard work, if we are led up the great peaks by
-competent guides. They delight in removing every
-obstacle in our way, and it may be that long usage
-of the axe has really been but a test of the <i>bâton</i>,
-not at all of the pick. Then comes a time when the
-leading weapon is broken, or carelessly dropped, or
-still more carelessly pitched up to a ledge of only
-suppositious safety. Do not imagine that these
-things never happen, for each has been within my
-own experience during the last three years; and woe
-to the party if the untested axe is a weakling when
-emergency calls on it!</p>
-
-<p>The upper part of Cust’s Gully when the snow is
-at its hardest may almost be regarded as a test of
-nerve for the novice. I once was starting to cut
-down the gully in such a state, with a young man of
-limited Alpine knowledge, who diffidently suggested
-that step-cutting was rather slow and that he would
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-prefer a glissade if I did not mind. I shuddered at
-the vision his naïve suggestion conjured up, of a
-species of chain-shot shooting viciously down the
-tremendously steep slope, ricochetting from wall to
-wall of the gully, and scraped very bare by the sharp-toothed
-icy surface. That novice had no nerves,
-and my remarks are not intended for him. The
-contention is that an amateur party cutting up the
-steepening slope, and forging a way through an
-incipient cornice of overhanging frost crystals at the
-top, will learn much of the genuine safety of an ice-slope,
-and will see how to divest it of its imaginary
-dangers. There are many Alpine climbers positively
-afraid of harmless slopes, that are not nearly so bad
-as they appear, and still less formidable than they
-show up in photographs. Such men have never led
-up steep snow.</p>
-
-<p>Near the foot of Cust’s Gully a branch passes up
-to the right, of less altitude and gentler inclination;
-its rock scenery is not so fine, and the place is rarely
-visited.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>GREAT GABLE. THE ENNERDALE FACE AND
-THE OBLIQUE CHIMNEY.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>Great Gable takes high rank among the hills
-of Britain for grace of form and for the beauty of
-the views it offers to the climber. It is a square
-pyramid in shape, and shows nearly its full height
-(2,949 feet) from the Wastdale level. It stands at
-the head of the valley, and when seen from the
-shores of the lake appears completely to shut off the
-valley from all approach by the north end. Its four
-main ridges offer fairly easy walking to the summit.
-The north-east ridge runs down towards Green
-Gable, Brandreth, Grey Knotts, and the Honister
-pass, a little <i>col</i> marking the lowest point (2,400 feet)
-between the peak and Green Gable. A moderate
-path leads the pedestrian from Borrowdale up by
-way of Aaron Slack towards this little pass, which is
-known as Wind Gap, and then bears up towards
-Great Gable. The pass may be crossed into Ennerdale
-and a rough descent taken to the Liza stream.</p>
-
-<p>The north-west ridge leads down towards Kirkfell.
-The broad depression between the two
-mountains is known as Beckhead (2,000 feet). It is
-often marshy in the neighbourhood of the diminutive
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-Beckhead Tarn. A wire fence that adorns the
-summit-ridge from Kirkfell can be followed for some
-distance up Gable. Thence to the summit is somewhat
-craggy, but not difficult for pedestrians.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_114" src="images/i_114.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Wastdale and Great Gable</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 114</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>The south-west ridge is called the Gavel Neese
-(Gable Nose), showing from Wastdale Head as a
-rounded grassy shoulder leading directly towards
-the peak. Up this shoulder we may make the
-shortest ascent of Gable from Wastdale, avoiding the
-easy crags of White Napes that face us where the
-upper limit of the grass is passed, by skirting round
-the screes on the left. An ancient path with the
-strange name of Moses’ Sledgate leads up Gavel
-Neese till the level of Beckhead is nearly reached,
-and then bears away on a traverse over the screes
-round to the middle of the Ennerdale side of the
-mountain, there to lose itself in the wilderness of
-stones that are bestrewn all over that desolate
-region.</p>
-
-<p>The remaining ridge to the south-east is scarcely
-definite enough to be worthy the name, though from
-Wastdale it seems to be at least as well marked as
-Gavel Neese. It leads towards the Styhead pass
-(1,579 feet) and offers a quick route to the top. Mr.
-Haskett Smith suggests ‘half an hour’s rough walking,’
-but that pace is too severe for most walkers.</p>
-
-<p>Of the four faces of the pyramid the north and
-south are precipitous, the west offers very little
-scope for the cragsman’s skill, and the east absolutely
-none. The north or Ennerdale face is practically
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-a single, exposed section of some 400 feet of
-rock, seamed with traverses and split with numerous
-gullies and chimneys. The south face is of a complicated
-design. Springing up from the 2,000-feet
-level, the Great Napes appears in the centre of the
-south face as a great rock screen belonging to the
-main mass of Gable. In reality it is well separated
-off by deep hollows cutting behind it to right and
-left. The highest point of the Napes is connected
-with the upper crags of Gable by the crest separating
-these two hollows, either of which may be
-followed down in safety by benighted wanderers who
-are past all wish to avoid screes, and whose one desire
-is to reach a low level in some inhabited valley.</p>
-
-<p>Let us more happily suppose for the present that
-we are upward bound and desirous of circumventing
-Great Napes. We can observe from Wastdale Head
-the line of lighter scree that comes down either side
-of the Napes. That to the left leads through a
-beautiful natural gateway between White Napes and
-Great Napes, and thence trends to the right up to
-the summit ridge connecting the latter to the final
-crags of Gable. The streak of reddish scree to the
-east leads up through larger portals into the very
-heart of the mountain, penetrating round to the
-back of the Napes, and thence up by the left to the
-same summit ridge. This hollow is floored with
-small red scree that glows with a marvellous richness
-of colour in the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>The passage between the foot of the Napes and
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
-a rock pinnacle at the entrance to the hollow is
-called Hell Gate. Philologists may be led to connect
-the name with the colour of the scree, for the primitive
-mind of the namer would have naturally associated
-redness with an infernal intensity of heat. The
-White Napes offers a little scrambling, but the Great
-Napes precipice gives us the best climbing to be had
-on the Gable; and if, after reaching the crest of this
-wall, we bear slightly downwards across the upper
-part of Hell Gate screes, we can finish our climbing
-by some excellent rocks that lead to the large Westmorland
-cairn close to the highest point of the mountain.
-These Westmorland crags, as we presently
-find it convenient to name them, are irregularly continued
-away towards the south-east and the Styhead
-pass, by Tom Blue, Raven Crag, and Kern Knotts.
-The last named are in two tiers, the lower being
-close to the Styhead path, and only some 1,200 feet
-above Wastdale Head. The upper Kern Knotts offer
-climbing of great interest and perhaps exceptional
-severity, and are rapidly becoming popular among
-the climbing fraternity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Ennerdale Face.</span>&mdash;Looking first to the
-north side of Gable it is a matter of regret that no
-satisfactory inclusive view may be obtained of the
-whole width of this mountain wall. Seen from the
-slopes of Kirkfell the face recedes in such a way that
-very little of its climbing can be prospected. From
-the ridge between Scarth Gap and Brandreth we
-have a front view of the crags, but they are much
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-dwarfed by distance, and their northern aspect is
-unsuitable for long range photography.</p>
-
-<p>From Kirkfell we can readily mark the Oblique
-Chimney which cuts deeply into the upper half of the
-centre of the face, and terminates at a right-angled
-notch in the sky-line. Some distance to the right we
-may with a good light identify the Great Central
-Gully that cuts the face from top to bottom. To the
-immediate right of this is an easy scree leading
-the whole way to the top of the crags. Near the
-foot of this on the right there used to be a slab
-pinnacle some fifteen feet in height that has since been
-completely disintegrated by rain and frost. A year
-or two ago the freshly exposed rock that bore witness
-of the recent departure of the pinnacle could be
-clearly recognised by contrast with the older face.
-This climb is now reported to have been exceedingly
-difficult; such will probably be the future reputation
-of the fast disappearing Stirrup Crag on Yewbarrow.
-A little higher up this scree slope, on a small platform
-out to the left, the remains of an old stone-walled
-enclosure could once be distinguished. It
-may have been the haunt of whisky smugglers or the
-hiding place of some miserable outlaw. It is to be
-regretted that the remains are now in too bad a state
-of repair to be recognised as artificial. Between the
-Oblique Chimney and the Central Gully lies the easy
-route or natural passage by which a mountain sheep
-of ordinary powers ‘might ascend’; though it not infrequently
-occurs that the perplexed climber roundly
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-declares that the mountain sheep of average mental
-capacity is not so foolish as to venture into such
-a bewildering region of small grass traverses, steep
-stony slopes, and ledgeless walls.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately to the left of the Oblique Chimney is
-the climb that leads past the Bottle-shaped Pinnacle
-and up the huge retaining buttress of the chimney.
-Further towards Wind Gap the sky-line suddenly
-drops at the upper level of Stony Gully&mdash;an easy,
-though rough, passage up broken boulders and loose
-scree, by which the crags can be outflanked. The
-wire fence that leads over Wind Gap to Green
-Gable and Brandreth begins here, and is a useful
-landmark in misty weather. Mr. Haskett Smith
-found in 1882 a ‘high level route’ across the face at
-about two-thirds of the way up. It is an excellent
-ramble, and full of strange surprises, passing along
-exposed ledges, in between towers of rock and the
-great upper wall, offering a peep into the black
-recess of the Oblique Chimney, and an easy digression
-up to the Bottle-shaped Pinnacle. It finishes
-close to the foot of Stony Gully, and can be recommended
-for a preliminary survey of the more difficult
-routes up the Ennerdale face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Oblique Chimney.</span>&mdash;From a few notes added
-to a sketch of the known routes up the Ennerdale face,
-which Mr. John Robinson inserted in the Wastdale
-Climbing Book, April, 1890, I derived my first impressions
-of the Oblique Chimney: ‘This has, I believe, not
-yet been climbed and is not very safe, owing to the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-jammed stones in it being loose, and the clean-cut
-walls on each side making these stones of consequence.’
-This description was realistic though brief,
-but I thought little of the place till the Christmas
-vacation of 1892-3, when I learnt that Mr. R. C.
-Gilson had proposed to attack the chimney one fine
-day, but was forestalled by Dr. Collier’s party. These
-latter took the precautionary measure of partly
-descending the chimney, so as to clear away the
-<i>débris</i> and loose stones that hovered over the edge
-of each pitch; they then returned to the foot of the
-chimney and forced a way directly up to the top.
-The important jammed stones required for the middle
-portion were quite firm enough for safe holding, and
-the party returned with a fuller praise of the beauties
-of the chimney than any one had anticipated.
-I was given an account of the expedition a day or
-two later, and was glad enough to get the opportunity
-of trying conclusions with the crags on that
-side of Gable, which till then was unexplored
-country for me.</p>
-
-<p>My companion that Christmas was a learned
-classic, weary of brain work, whom I had induced
-to take a little climbing in Cumberland as a tonic.
-Some people cannot take quinine, others apparently
-cannot benefit by rock-climbing. This latter I found
-to be the case with my friend, whose struggle with
-the <i>confracti rudera mundi</i> made him despondent
-instead of inducing a healthy exhilaration. The
-sore limbs and torn clothing he never seemed able to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-forget, far less to enjoy. Yet the ruling passion of
-phrase-making was strong even <i>in extremis</i>, and he
-longed to put his sufferings into words. Sometimes
-on the rocks I might casually turn to see that he was
-coming up well. His eyes would be gazing at
-nothing and his lips moving as if in prayer. But it
-was not prayer, it was a Greek or Latin quotation,
-preferably the former because of its rich vocabulary
-for description of scenery. On the whole he was
-enjoying the new experiences hugely in his own
-melancholy way, and I felt no compunction in insisting
-on his joining K. and A. when we planned
-our excursion up Gable by way of the Oblique
-Chimney. The day was rather cloudy and snow
-threatened, but we took plenty of provisions, and K.
-carried a pocket compass. We started somewhat
-late in the morning, and walked leisurely up Gavel
-Neese and round the Beckhead by way of Moses’
-Sledgate. But on reaching the wire fence we found
-that the mist completely enveloped the Gable crags
-and gave us no chance of identifying our climb from
-below. Then we skirted along the base in the vain
-hope of a momentary disclosure of the chimney by
-a parting of the mist, but no such chance offered,
-and we reached Stony Gully without making a
-start up. Here we saw the ‘rake’ or traverse
-that has been described as passing along the
-face about two-thirds of the way up. It was an obvious
-course to take, inasmuch as it led to within a
-few feet of the foot of the Oblique Chimney&mdash;so near
-that even the dense mist could scarcely prevent our
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-striking it. Here the classic assured us that he would
-much prefer ascending by Stony Gully to the top of
-Gable, and that it would give him extreme pleasure
-to carry our lunch up to the cairn and wait for us
-there. We let him go, and promised that we should
-join him again by three o’clock in the afternoon.
-Thus did we lose our lunch, not to find it again for
-another week. There was much ice and fresh snow
-plastering the rocks, and the so-called ‘easy’ traverse
-wanted all our care. K. was an expert Alpine
-climber, his friend A. a plucky young Harrovian with
-plenty of nerve and endurance in him, but at that
-time with next to nothing in the way of experience
-of the mountains. He came along well enough, but
-our pace was necessarily very slow. Three o’clock
-found us still working westwards on the traverse,
-but without a sight of the Oblique Chimney. I think
-in one place we must have descended too much. At
-any rate, we found ourselves in difficulties on a
-sloping slab of glazed rock that gave me serious
-pause. A. slipped on this, and started slithering
-away rapidly. Luckily he held his axe tightly, and
-was brought up by the rope with a jerk. Shortly
-after this, he pointed to some blood on the rocks,
-and solicitously asked me whether I had cut myself
-very badly. It turned out, after a hasty glance at
-my hands, that he himself was the wounded one.
-My little complaint was a slight frostbite in the
-finger-tips, my gloves having been worn threadbare
-by much scraping with the hands.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span></p>
-
-<p>At last we reached a pinnacle that promised us
-variety. We tried to climb up it by the outside edge,
-but found the ice too troublesome. Then, when
-resting on the shoulder half way up, we saw a deep
-and narrow cavern in the mountain wall behind the
-pinnacle. Surely that must be the object of our quest
-and our pinnacle the redoubtable ‘bottle-shaped.’
-Eagerly we scrambled over the shoulder and down
-a slight gully on to the scree that issues from the
-mouth of the cavern. It was getting dark, and we
-were very hungry. My jacket pocket still held the
-crumbs of a pulverized biscuit that I had taken up
-Snowdon the week before. These and a fragment of
-chocolate we scrupulously shared, and then began
-the attack in earnest. The conditions had much
-changed since Dr. Collier had effected his ascent, and
-though the gully overhangs too much to permit any
-drift snow to settle in it, the smooth walls of the
-gully were black and shiny with ice, and the damp
-cold of this dark hole tried our endurance to the
-utmost. It must be admitted that my ascent of the
-first part was slow and ungraceful. I had started
-with my back resting against the left wall, bracing
-my feet as firmly as the ice would permit against the
-diminutive knobs on the opposite side. Now in this
-position the back cannot be worked up an overhanging
-wall unless the hands have something definite
-to thrust against. The process went on fairly well
-for about twenty-five feet, working outwards as well
-as upwards, but then the two sides of the chimney
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-became perilously far apart and the smooth left wall
-commenced to overhang.</p>
-
-<p>Then ensued a few moments of awkward suspense,
-an uncertainty as to the best method of transferring
-one’s weight to certain small ledges against which
-the feet were now pressing.</p>
-
-<p>The process of ‘backing up’ is excessively
-fatiguing, the thrust necessary to hold oneself firmly
-<i>in situ</i> being as a rule much greater than the equivalent
-of one’s weight, and the whole of this thrust
-being at every slight lift transmitted through the
-arms. He who fails to realize the attitude I am
-describing may easily perform an experiment that
-illustrates the mechanical principles involved, by
-sitting down across a doorway or narrow passage,
-and attempting to work upwards by pressure of the
-feet against one side and back against the other. If,
-when some three feet from the ground, he waits a
-minute or two and then attempts to move again,
-either up or down, he will perceive that the simple
-holding in place has tired his muscles and made
-advance or retreat equally difficult.</p>
-
-<p>Our doorway had already extended up for twenty-five
-feet and yet another five remained before a
-comfortable halting-place could be reached. The
-cleft forming the chimney was so much undercut
-that the view vertically downwards included the
-scree some distance below the entrance to the
-cavern, and anything that I might have let fall,
-myself for instance, would have dropped some feet
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-further out than the two men waiting below. The
-halt was a mistake; there was only one course open,
-and that should have been taken at first. It was
-to work inwards until the doubtful jammed stones
-could be reached with the left hand, and then,
-trusting mainly to the footholds, hoist the body over
-to that side of the gully and thrust the hand into
-the recesses between the stones. K. shouted up
-some suggestion to this effect from below. How he
-managed to discern the proper place through the dim
-twilight I never was able to ascertain. But I resolved
-to try it, and in some strange way the cramped
-muscles that had appeared incapable of further effort
-were in a second or two relieved by the change of
-attitude, and the pull over to the right side that I had
-dreaded as the severest tax on my strength proved to
-be easy enough. With fists in two convenient little
-holes clenched to prevent the hands slipping out, I
-was able to take a momentary survey of the slightly
-rickety ladder of jammed stones that led to safety.
-The passage of these few feet was not at all pleasant.
-Had ours been the first climb of the chimney we
-might have reasonably decided to brave the perils of
-descent and return again by daylight, rather than
-fumble about in the dusk pawing at wabbly boulders
-that threatened to fall out with us at even a caress,
-much more promptly at a cross word.</p>
-
-<p>But the knowledge that others had tried them,
-and had learnt the futility of these threats, gave me
-some degree of courage, and, taking heart of grace, I,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-walked up the ladder and out of the first great
-difficulty. A. came up next, and as the hour was
-late and we were all a little anxious to finish, he did
-not scorn to use the rope at the bad corner just
-below the ladder. K. came up remarkably well,
-and I felt that if he had led us we should have
-mastered the pitch earlier.</p>
-
-<p>We were now able to walk towards the roof of
-the upper portion of the gully, which was as completely
-closed in as the cave below. The left wall
-everywhere overhung so much that there was no
-chance of climbing out by its aid. The right wall
-was nearly parallel to the left and showed a few
-more possibilities.</p>
-
-<p>Looking backwards we could see the two walls
-projecting several yards out, apparently a little
-nearer together at their extreme edges than they
-were in our upper chamber, which was now much too
-wide for any opportunity of backing up. But we
-knew that the second pitch was not so bad as the
-first, and started prospecting. I crept up as high
-into the cave as possible, and then felt round the
-edge of the roof for a firm hold. This came to hand
-almost at once, and with a step out on to the sloping
-wall, and probably a steadying hand from below, I
-worked up between the roof-stone and the right side.
-This led to a steep little snow-slope, evidently covering
-loose stones that might prove excitable in dry
-weather, and thence a few yards of broken rock
-extended to the summit of the crags.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_127" src="images/i_127.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE ENNERDALE FACE OF GREAT GABLE</p></div>
-
-<p>In five minutes we had assembled there, and
-decided that we were still distressingly hungry. I
-felt in my pocket for more crumbs, but only brought
-out stones. We hurried up to the cairn at the
-highest point of the mountain. It looked a picture
-of Alpine solitude. Not a trace of the classic, no
-hope of our lunch. Fresh snow had fallen during the
-last hour or two, and had obliterated all signs of his
-visit. Nay, worse, we had not that implicit confidence
-in his knowledge of the district to feel certain
-that he had found his way safely down to Wastdale,
-for he had never been on the mountain before; nor
-was he quite so familiar with the mountain mists as
-we proud climbers of the Oblique Chimney. But he
-had the laugh of us that night! We expressed
-sorrow for the poor man, and then with a sigh turned
-to consider our own position. It was a trifle unpleasant
-to be on the summit of Great Gable after
-six p.m. on a snowy winter’s night, with something
-of a wind blowing through us and very little to
-obstruct its free passage. But for all that we were
-happy enough, and arranged elaborately to steer by
-compass direct for White Napes and Gavel Neese.
-South-west by west was our direction. K. was
-positive of that fact, and offered to lead. Some
-twenty yards behind him came young A., still going
-well; then I followed at an equal distance behind
-him, just able by the reflected light from the snow to
-distinguish the leader and keep him in the straight
-line he was marking out for us.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span></p>
-
-<p>By the light of a match that we kept flaming for
-a sufficient time in an improvised tent of coats, he
-examined the pocket compass he carried, and was
-confident that ten minutes’ good going would carry
-us down to the grassy shoulder below the White
-Napes. On we went steadily downwards, and I
-wondered whether, if we took to running when the
-boulders were passed, we might get down in time to
-start dinner at the usual hour. Happy thoughts in
-this connection kept me from attending particularly
-to our route and its details, but when we got to a
-thicker mist I looked about for a landmark. Nothing
-could be recognised. The ground sloped rapidly
-down on the right; the left seemed to rise most
-oddly to a sort of ridge. But the strange thing was
-that there seemed to be another mountain fronting us.
-K. was at a complete loss, and took out his compass
-again. We erected the tent once more, and all
-crowded over the instrument to determine our fate.
-Alas, we had been travelling towards the north! K.
-had mistaken the two poles of the magnet. The
-mountain mass looming ahead was the Green Gable,
-and we were within a few feet of the Wind Gap. Our
-dinner was at least two hours further away than ever,
-and we were still hungry. There was nothing to be
-done but walk round the mountain by way of the Styhead
-tarn and pass. We had no lantern, and it would
-have been a legbreaking business to attempt to skirt
-the Ennerdale face and strike off the Moses’ Sledgate
-in the dark. The snow was soft all the way down
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
-Aaron Slack. I have often come down in daylight
-since and wondered what we could have found to
-tumble over that night; we were always slipping
-through snow pitfalls into water, or tripping over
-boulders and on to our heads in snowdrifts. Now
-and again we would find ourselves sitting side by
-side in the stream, the leader’s tumbling having been
-too sudden to permit of any warning to the others.
-Such occasions we generally seized on as suitable
-opportunities for halting, only to be ended by sleepy
-realization that the water was both damp and cold.
-And all the time the inexperienced classic was enjoying
-his dinner and his phrase-making in princely
-luxury and comfort at the inn.</p>
-
-<p>At last we reached the shores of the frozen tarn
-and turned wearily up to the right. The path was
-in a shocking state, and on arriving at the cairn at
-the top of the pass we found a continuous glaze of ice
-along our route. So, at any rate, it seemed to be
-that night&mdash;my first experience of crossing the Styhead
-in the dark. It was nothing less than actual
-hand-and-foot work in many an awkward corner.
-Subsequent opportunities of climbing down the path
-in the dark have often been given me, but that
-first night was the worst. How we managed to
-avoid broken limbs has ever been a mystery. We
-would suddenly slip over on the ice, and slide
-furiously down the path and into some obstruction
-below. We had tried to smoke, but pipes were too
-dangerous to hold between the teeth during these
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
-unpremeditated rushes. But time ends all things. By
-ten o’clock we were anointed with Vaseline and
-massaged with Elliman, with the prospect of substantial
-fare to follow. The classic slippered into the
-dining-room to report himself. He had waited on
-Gable cairn till half-past three, and then had returned
-by the way he had come. Our lunch he had
-left under a stone, and as a guide to our finding it
-had stamped the snow down and drawn with his
-finger several arrows or asterisks or other marks
-of reference in the snow. It was very clever,
-but the fresh fall thwarted his ingenuity only too
-effectually.</p>
-
-<p>The Oblique Chimney rapidly became popular,
-and has since been visited by many climbers. But
-it can never be regarded as an easy ascent.</p>
-
-<p>Some time during the summer following I looked
-down it to see how a descent might be managed.
-The loose stones at the top were most uncomfortably
-unstable, and the clamber down towards the
-entrance of the upper cave required great care,
-without being exactly perilous. A friend was with
-me who counselled waiting till we should find ourselves
-up there again with a rope, and ultimately
-his advice prevailed. Some eighteen months later,
-in January, 1895, a large party of Wastdale Christmas
-revellers made for the Oblique Chimney top.
-The crags were approached from the scree below,
-a few feet to the north of the entrance to the
-Central Gully. We took to a little chimney at once,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-and then up a grassy slope to another chimney that
-brought us to steep grass and scree with frequent
-outcrops of rock.</p>
-
-<p>Thence we made up towards the entrance to the
-Oblique Chimney then visible, and before reaching it
-clambered up an incipient gully on the left wall that
-bounds the scree just there. It led over the sharp
-crest of the buttress that supports the bottle-shaped
-pinnacle, and thence we had a steep but fairly easy
-descent of ten or twelve feet to a ledge that led round
-to the other side. The rocks were dry and very
-free from snow, so that each member of our party
-found himself able to pull up easily from ledge to
-ledge in the little gully till the notch between the
-pinnacle and the main wall was reached.</p>
-
-<p>Thence the leader turned up to the left, and recommenced
-a similar series of ledge-climbing operations,
-of which only the first from the notch could be called
-in any sense difficult. We had a magnificent view
-down the face, which is particularly steep just here,
-and the frequent halts rendered necessary by the size
-of our party afforded plenty of time to admire the
-huge slabs that separated the ‘sheep walk’ from us.
-A small stone-man marked our point of arrival at the
-summit of the crags, and after adding a block or two
-as our contribution to the cairn we turned right, and
-in a few yards had reached the rectangular entrance
-to the Oblique Chimney.</p>
-
-<p>The main difficulty in the descent was to prevent
-stones sliding on to the heads of men lower down,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-who were in the direct line of fire and rarely able
-to raise a protecting arm for themselves. The upper
-ones were continually cautioned by those in peril to
-keep an eye to the rope, and prevent its dragging
-over the bed of the gully. All passed down safely,
-but I remember making a mistake when descending
-the great overhanging pitch at the bottom, in
-assuming that it was an easy matter to climb down
-with a camera sack on my back. I had descended
-part of the ‘ladder,’ but then found the need of a
-back pressure, and hesitated about crushing in the
-contents of my sack. The rope is of no use to the
-last man in a place of that kind, and I therefore was
-permitted to untie the knot round my waist and fix
-on the sack instead, letting it down gently to the
-others by the left hand. The right was needed to
-hold on firmly to the ladder, so that the teeth were in
-requisition for the tying. The descent offers another
-instance of the ease with which a chimney that is
-exceptionally severe in the ascent may be traversed
-in the reverse direction. Where gravity helps the
-motion we have only to consider the best means of
-opposing it. During an ascent much strength is
-spent in the mere lift, to say nothing of the extra
-force needed to prevent slipping.</p>
-
-<p>At the foot we joined up again and traversed
-round to the ‘sheep walk.’ This was easy to discover
-but hard to describe. The route bore obliquely
-upwards towards the right, always well out in the
-open, giving us pleasant hand-and-foot work the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-whole way. We reached the top in safety, and then
-proceeded homewards by way of White Napes.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Haskett Smith says that the top of the easy
-passage bears 23° east of north when viewed by
-prismatic compass from the highest point of Great
-Gable. It probably means magnetic north, and the
-fact is of value to benighted climbers who know
-which end of the compass is the north pole.</p>
-
-<p>On April 3, 1896, a new variation route was
-found into the upper cave of the Oblique Chimney
-by Messrs. C. and A. Hopkinson and H. Campbell,
-who worked up a slightly marked gully in the great
-wall to the left of the sheep walk, and then, after an
-ascent of fifty feet, traversed round by the left into
-the chimney.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE ENNERDALE CENTRAL GULLY AND TWO
-LITTLE CHIMNEYS</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>There is no royal road to learning, and the converse
-proposition is equally true. There is no learning
-along a royal road. Some years ago I went up
-the Central Gully of the Gable behind an experienced
-climber, when conditions were at their best. It was
-a royal road to me, and I came away with but a
-vague notion of its difficulties, without having learnt
-anything. It is the leader that can give the truest
-description of an easy climb. Where the one man
-can do all the work, his followers go up without a
-thought beyond their rope’s length. When difficulties
-are shared discussion is necessary, and the
-memory is assisted by subsequent references to faulty
-moves or to troubles that all were instrumental in
-overcoming. It is astonishing how few men can
-recall the details of a rock climb to the extent of
-recapitulating the successive pitches in, say, two
-hours of gully work. And yet the faculty is well
-worth cultivating, inasmuch as it accentuates the
-pleasures of retrospection and may be called into
-active service by the inquiries of others wishing to
-follow. Indeed the best introduction to guideless
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-climbing is to ascend rock peaks that we have afore-time
-accomplished with guides in front of us, where
-we shall find our memories taxed now and again in
-the effort to recall the route taken previously. To
-lie in bed and remember every foothold on the
-Matterhorn may require more ascents than one; but
-however wicked it is for a Zermatt guide to indulge
-in such a pastime, the average amateur may well
-envy him his accomplishment.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p class="author">PLATE IV.</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE ENNERDALE FACE OF GREAT GABLE,
-<span class="small">Showing about 400 feet of Cliff.</span></p>
-<img id="i_135" src="images/i_135.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="small table">
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell">
- A Wind Gap.<br />
- B Stony Gully.<br />
- C The Oblique Chimney.<br />
- D The Bottle-shaped Pinnacle Ridge.<br />
- E The Sheep Walk.<br />
- F The Ennerdale Central Gully.<br />
- G Scree Gully.<br />
- </span>
- <span class="tcell">
- H The Doctor’s Chimney.<br />
- K An Easy Scree Gully.<br />
- L Gable Crag Traverse.<br />
- X Engineer’s Chimney.<br />
- <i>d</i> The Bottle-shaped Pinnacle.<br />
- <i>f</i> Chimney Finish of F.<br />
- <i>g</i> Smuggler’s Retreat.<br />
- </span>
- </span>
-</p></div>
-
-<p>Quite recently I had the opportunity of joining a
-party up the Central Gully. We had come over to
-Gable Crag after an hour or two on the Eagle’s Nest
-<i>arête</i> and the neighbouring rocks. Our plan was
-to get up the chief pitches in the gully, and then,
-instead of bearing up to the right at the foot of the
-final wall, to take to the narrow vertical chimney
-that passes up its centre and leads to the highest
-point of the crags&mdash;to treat it as an old friend with
-a new face.</p>
-
-<p>But before taking to the gully there was another
-little chimney to visit, that had been recently ‘invented’
-by Dr. Simpson and Mr. Patchell, on their
-way to the Great Central. It is a singular thing that
-this remarkably interesting way up Gable Crag should
-have so long remained undiscovered. The reference
-in the Wastdale book is as follows: ‘A walk of a
-hundred feet along a grass ledge from the point
-where the wire fence from Beckhead touches the
-rocks of the Gable, followed by a hundred feet of
-scrambling up a wild and much broken gully, leads
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-to a small cairn which marks the foot of a chimney
-on the left. This runs up in a direction parallel to
-the face of the cliff, and so is not clearly seen except
-at close quarters. It is very straight and narrow,
-especially in the middle pitch, and makes an
-interesting climb of about eighty feet.’</p>
-
-<p>We worked round the scree and broken rock from
-the top of the Napes to Gable Crag. Then by keeping
-fairly low down we arrived at the end of the wire
-fence from Beckhead, and were in a position to profit
-by the description already supplied. The fence ends
-abruptly on the face of a crag that is somewhat
-separated from the main mass of Gable. Between the
-two a scree gully runs downwards in the direction
-of Brandreth, and the Doctor’s Chimney is found to
-spring from a point a hundred feet up from the
-foot of this gully. The crag interferes with the view
-of the chimney from the neighbourhood of Beckhead,
-though from the nearer slopes of Kirkfell the
-little climb is almost as well marked as the Oblique
-Chimney.</p>
-
-<p>The hand-and-foot work begins on the right side
-of the recess, and the climber makes directly up to a
-little pinnacle about thirty feet above him. There
-is no need to back up the chimney at first. The
-pinnacle offers comfortable standing-room for one
-only, but the leader can manipulate the rope for the
-second until the latter is within a foot or two of the
-platform. Then by passing a few coils of rope
-round the top of the pinnacle he can make the second
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-safe while he effects the rather awkward passage
-back into the crack. Both hands seize an excellent
-hold on the opposite wall, perfectly safe but a trifle
-remote for a man with a short reach, and then the
-foothold is quitted and the body dragged into a good
-jamming position. The crack is very narrow, and
-extensive slipping is almost an impossibility. It
-now becomes necessary to wriggle up inch by inch
-with slight hold for the extremities and too much
-for intermediate excrescences. A few feet higher
-and the chimney is at its narrowest. Here follows
-an uncomfortable rearrangement of the system. The
-handholds have hitherto been best on the left wall,
-and the climber has accordingly faced that way.
-But now the holds dwindle down to nothing on that
-side and others appear on the right. We may
-either climb out of the crack and on to the buttress,
-or preferably effect a half-turn of the body and so
-get to face the right wall. This is most safely
-accomplished by working outwards a bit before
-twisting. A small stone is half jammed in the crack
-and may be used for a foothold, though too insecure
-for any hauling purposes. The struggling now
-becomes a little less irregular. The ledges are
-excellent for the hands, and in a few feet we reach
-the level of the floor of a little cave roofed in by a
-couple of overhanging blocks. This place again is
-only large enough for one cave-dweller to inhabit,
-and the leader has his choice of procedure&mdash;either
-to run out another twelve feet before the second
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
-man comes up, or to wait till his follower reaches the
-narrowest part of the crack. To avoid the trouble
-of re-arranging the rope, the latter plan is better,
-though it involves a little risk of peppering the crack
-man with small stones that are only too willing to
-lower their present level at the roof of the cave.</p>
-
-<p>The last move is moderately easy. By pulling
-up on to the horizontal ledge on the left buttress the
-loose stones are almost avoided, and then some easy
-steps land the leader in safety a few yards from the
-upper edge of the crags. When all are up, a traverse
-of about fifty yards to the right discloses a rough
-but quick route down to the scree gully and the
-wire fence, or the same traverse continued along the
-contour-line leads to the Westmorland crags and
-the beginning of the ordinary scree descent towards
-Gavel Neese.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor’s Chimney deserves to be popular.
-It is a perfectly safe climb, and offers excellent practice
-for the arms. On the whole it is probably a
-little easier than the Oblique Chimney, especially
-when descended, for it is so narrow that there is
-little need to seek footholds until the level of the
-pinnacle is reached. It has the advantage over its
-more famous rival of being easily hit off in misty
-weather; for a scree gully is then less mistakable
-than a rocky sheep walk, and a wire fence than a
-‘bottle-shaped’ pinnacle.</p>
-
-<p>Such, then, was our digression before making for
-the foot of the Central Gully. Another party of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
-friends had comfortably ensconced themselves in
-various corners on the small crag opposite the chimney,
-and were interested observers of our performance.
-They smoked cigarettes and offered advice freely;
-their day’s work was done, and to watch others still
-hard at it was perfect luxury. When we emerged
-panting from the top they threw away their cigarette
-ends and strolled down to Wastdale for tea. It
-required much moral strength to refrain from joining
-them, but there was the Great Central still on hand,
-and that other little chimney to prospect. If it were
-as difficult as report said, then we were bound to stay
-and climb it. So we worked round to the end of
-the wire fence and looked for our gully. Its name
-perhaps suggests a great gap in the mountain side,
-visible for miles round, and as unavoidable by the
-wanderer on this side of Gable as the Edgware Road
-is said to be by the Frenchman in London. But if
-this be so the name is misleading. Many people fail
-to find the gully in bad weather. Its entrance from
-below is narrow and its exit above is ill defined. A
-short distance to the east of the Doctor’s Chimney
-the scree-walk up the crag, that leads past the relics
-of the smuggler’s inclosure, insures a safe passage to
-the top of the cliff. This scree gully faces Kirkfell,
-and but for the usually poor light on this north face
-of the mountain it might be easily recognized from
-that side. Scarcely a hundred yards away from the
-end of the fence the narrow opening of the Central
-Gully may be found; from Beckhead it appears in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-profile, and is not-always manifest. Walking eastwards
-along the scree beneath the crags, it is the
-first really obvious passage into the heart of the
-mountain after leaving the Doctor’s Chimney; the
-easy scree walk is not much impressed in the face,
-and in a mist it has often been entirely overlooked.
-Even in cloudy weather the first pitch of our gully
-can be discerned a few feet above us, and identified
-by the buttress that partially divides it, the chock-stone
-in its right branch, and the fine-looking
-‘jammed-stone pinnacle’ that shows up a little
-higher on the left.</p>
-
-<p>The first clear account of the gully appeared in
-the Wastdale book: ‘In the great gully are found
-two pitches near the bottom. The top part may be
-varied by crossing a grass slope and joining the easy
-scree route, or the climb may be continued by going
-straight forward. This looks very hard, but on close
-inspection the difficulty entirely disappears; for the
-climber is able to pass behind a square tower of rock,
-and in this way to enter on the final bit of grass and
-rock that brings him out at the top.’</p>
-
-<p>We were a party of three, and managed comfortably
-with eighty feet of rope. The first pitch was
-easy, what with dry rocks and warm weather. Our
-guide started up the buttress that divides the gully,
-and at a convenient opportunity stepped back on to
-the loose stones in the bed. A few feet brought us
-to the second pitch, a trifle harder than the first.
-Again the leader worked up a buttress on the left of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-the gully, but this time well in the hollow. Near the
-top of the obstruction the left leg had to take the
-place of the right, a good handhold above serving to
-insure the safe transfer, and then a ledge could be
-reached by the right foot. The body was next
-swung over to that side, and so to the crest of the
-pitch.</p>
-
-<p>Here the gully looked very attractive. On the
-left rose the jammed-stone pinnacle, an easy chimney
-leading up to the cleft that separates it from the
-mountain. Two big boulders bridge the cleft near
-the crest of the little passage, the higher one offering
-a safe way to the summit of the pinnacle. It is from
-here that the progress or ‘rake’ can be made out
-across to the foot of the Oblique Chimney and on
-towards Stony Gully at the east end of Gable Crag.</p>
-
-<p>Just above us a third pitch barred the way. The
-gully was much wider here, and greater diversity of
-method was now possible. The guide counselled
-the direct attack of the short crack in front. The
-philosopher prudently suggested that time was an
-object and the crack a hard nut; we ought to take the
-easy corner on the left. The friend that completed
-our trio gave the casting vote in favour of overtime
-and ten hours’ work per day during holidays. The
-crack was certainly awkward. It was at first easiest
-to face towards the right and work up nine or ten
-feet. Then when the foothold was of the fanciest of
-orders it became desirable to effect a half-turn of the
-body so that the other side of the crack might be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
-faced. Once the turn was accomplished, a fine
-hand-hold made the rest easy; we could pull up the
-corner and walk out at the top, some twenty-five
-feet above the foot of the pitch. Our friend was
-thinking evidently of his casting vote when he
-followed the guide; for at the turning-point a slip
-cast him on to the rope and gave him an extra turn
-that he scarcely appreciated. But the leader was
-safely ensconced above, and the poor fellow hastened
-up to assure himself that the rope really had been
-held tightly. The philosopher eschewed the cause
-of this momentary retrogression, and came quietly
-up the grass and rock corner well to the left of the
-gully.</p>
-
-<p>We were now almost out on the face of the
-mountain. Very little remained of the gully as such.
-The ordinary walk away towards the right was
-perfectly plain. Mr. Robinson’s route upwards,
-described in the extract just quoted, was a little to
-the left, but not at all easy to locate, for the square
-tower of rock blocked the direct view of the climb.
-Straight up above us we saw a wall of about a hundred
-feet of apparently sheer rock, down the centre
-of which passed the crack or chimney that we were
-to take for our finish.</p>
-
-<p>Loose earthy steps led to the foot of the wall,
-and for a moment we thought with some apprehension
-that the first part was going to be seriously
-troublesome. At a height of twenty-five feet or so
-some narrow splintered boulders completely filled up
-the crack and overhung considerably. Just below
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-them the climbing was obviously awkward, by reason
-of the footholds that were not there, if the ancient
-Hibernianism may be tolerated, and the necessary
-leverage on the boulders when we were using them
-for all they were worth would imperil their stability
-and our own. But after mounting the first twelve
-feet with, perhaps, more case than we had anticipated,
-a narrow ledge showed up on the right wall for about
-ten feet, and we noticed with relief that at its further
-extremity another traverse led back to the crack in
-a slanting direction to a point just above the critical
-spot. This diversion we promptly accepted, and
-found it altogether satisfactory. The lower ledge
-was just wide enough for the feet, and handholds
-just good enough for the balance of the body during
-the transfer. At the further end it was easy scrambling
-to the upper ledge, which showed itself as a
-broad and safe path to a little niche where the crack
-was somewhat enlarged. The floor of the niche
-was formed of loose stones supported on the larger
-jammed blocks that had affrighted us below, and
-was sufficiently commodious for all the party to place
-themselves securely thereon. Probably the next
-part of the climb was the hardest. That, at any
-rate, was the opinion of those who had recommended
-the route to us, and after their kindly advice we
-were gratefully prepared to accept anything from
-them in the way of opinion. The chimney was
-vertical and its two walls almost holdless.</p>
-
-<p>Direct progress seemed barred by three thick
-plates of rock wedged into the crack and projecting
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
-outwards some three or four feet. Over these we
-had to make our way, and if their edges proved to be
-unsatisfactory for the fingers to grip or the arms to
-clasp, then we should have to return with the ignominy
-of defeat. On the one hand appearances were against
-us; the pitch looked impossible. But on the other
-we knew it had been climbed once or twice before,
-and assuredly under no better conditions than were
-vouchsafed to ourselves. Far away down at the foot
-of the gully we noticed a couple of men who had
-been walking Wastdale-wards after a hard day, but
-were gazing up at us in some curiosity to know how
-we were going to tackle our problem. It would
-never do to go back now.</p>
-
-<p>And thus, after sacrificing such time and small
-reflections to the reputed difficulty of the place as its
-admirers would have claimed of us, we turned our
-gaze upwards and climbed the pitch. It went off
-pleasantly enough. An easy clamber led to a second
-platform immediately below the jammed plates.
-A foot or two higher, and a ledge on the left
-could be used for the one hand, the edge of the lowest
-overhanging block with the other, while the left leg
-was swung up on to a shelf. The attitude was
-awkward just for the moment, but with both arms
-clasping the plate of rock, which was perfectly trustworthy,
-there could be no thought of falling for the
-leader, who had only to thrust himself forward
-into an upper recess and wriggle into safety.</p>
-
-<p>Here he discovered another level platform, neatly
-turfed and obviously constructed as a climber’s resting
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-place. It would have been easy to stay there and
-negotiate the rope for the other men below, but the
-next pitch was only ten feet higher up, and led to a
-still better corner. Therefore he went on by straightforward
-hand-and-foot work, and climbed the pitch
-by its left-hand branch. The chimney is here about
-eight feet wide, divided into two by a long and
-narrow boulder.</p>
-
-<p>The right-hand branch is just possible, but the
-sense of insecurity at one spot almost demands help
-from below. On the left a deep recess is floored
-with splintered blocks that threaten to break away
-but cannot easily manage it. The boulder offered
-enough assistance in the way of holds, especially a
-sharp edge at the top, and when overcome showed
-itself to be the last genuine obstacle in our course.
-We were soon all gathered together at the little
-notch that marks the top of the chimney, and after
-adding a stone to the cairn that stands there, we
-marched up some thirty feet of solid buttress and
-broke at a plunge through the thick cornice of old
-snow that yet remained as a token of the hard winter
-that had come and gone.</p>
-
-<p>The easy finish to the right of the last vertical
-wall passes up scree from the top of the third pitch,
-and takes us on to a ridge of rock above the
-Smuggler’s Retreat. Here it joins the Scree Gully,
-and we have a small piece of hand-and-foot work
-before it narrows, then curves away to the left, and
-finally ends on a ledge of broken rock close to the
-highest point.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE GREAT NAPES AND ITS GULLIES</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>It has already been explained that the Great
-Napes rises like a huge screen out of the southern
-slopes of Gable. Its crest runs from north-west to
-south-east. It is possible to travel along the whole
-length of the ridge from Hell’s Gate (called Deep
-Gill on the Ordnance map) to the White Napes
-scree at Little Hell Gate, and this route, religiously
-followed without divergence on to either face, will
-be found to offer many interesting pitches. The outside
-face of the Napes is cut by the Needle Gully,
-the Eagle’s Nest Gully, and the Arrowhead Gully,
-taken in order from east to west.</p>
-
-<p>The Needle Gully has two separate branches
-leading to the crest of the Napes, neither of them
-particularly difficult or interesting. The Eagle’s
-Nest Gully is in summer time little more than a
-scree walk. So likewise is the main Arrowhead
-Gully, which, however, has a branch up to the left
-leading to a fine-looking chimney and out on to the
-open face two-thirds of the way up towards the
-ridge. To the west of the Arrowhead Gully the
-Napes is much less imposing, and though small
-gullies cut it up considerably they are too indefinite
-to particularize.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_146" src="images/i_146.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Great Gable from LingmelL</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 146</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>The chief <i>arêtes</i> on the face are, taking them in
-order from east to west, the Needle ridge immediately
-to the right of the Needle Gully; the
-Eagle’s Nest ridge between the Eagle’s Nest Gully
-and the Needle Gully; and the Arrowhead ridge
-between the Eagle’s Nest Gully and the Arrowhead
-Gully. All these <i>arêtes</i> offer most enjoyable climbs.
-The Gable Needle (or Napes Needle) is a sharp
-pinnacle rising vertically from the lower part of the
-Needle ridge. It is a climb for experts only, with
-steady heads. The Bear rock is a smaller pinnacle
-a few yards to the west of the foot of Arrowhead
-Gully. Its ascent is a simple problem in rock-climbing&mdash;a
-pull up with the arms from the notch
-at the back&mdash;but it is worth visiting on account of
-its singular aspect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Arrowhead Gully</span> is almost entirely
-devoid of interest. It has not often been visited, for
-the reason that its material is loose, its one pitch is
-easy, and the neighbourhood is very rich in more
-inviting climbs. A large party went up it last
-April and were exceedingly unhappy so long as a
-single member remained in it. Our interest had
-been concentrated on the Eagle’s Nest ridge, and
-after some considerable time had been spent about
-the crags, we found ourselves at the foot of the
-Arrowhead Gully, afflicted with the unanimous desire
-to reach the summit of the Napes by a way that none
-of us had attempted before. There remained to us
-this gully and its branch up by the left. It soon
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-became manifest that we should have to divide, for
-the place was too small to hold us, and too narrow
-to permit free passage of loose stones that the higher
-members almost immediately began to dislodge. We
-lunched a few feet up the left branch, and were
-decidedly uncomfortable during our hasty meal.
-The ledges that we had chosen were so uncertain
-and the scree below so steep that all were glad when
-the sandwiches were finished and preparations commenced
-for roping-up. My own section of the party
-elected to follow the branch to its abrupt ending
-out on the face. The others kept to the main gully,
-and were busy chimney-sweeping most of their time.
-Their one pitch was straightforward, but loose blocks
-abounded and required careful treatment so long as
-their fall might endanger the safety of any one.
-Over would go a boulder as soon as the last man had
-passed it, smashing from side to side, and we in our
-gully vaguely wondered, at each successive bombardment
-of the Arrowhead, whether it would not be fair
-to give the next comers the credit of trying a new
-climb; the old gully was rapidly altering, and the
-change in its ancient landmarks testifying to the
-influence of man as a geological agent. But in spite
-of their extensive quarrying operations they reached
-their destination before us. We found that our
-variation involved some good climbing, spoilt, however,
-by a plentiful supply of dangerous <i>débris</i> on all
-its available ledges. I was leading, and therefore
-safe from bombardment; but those below me were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-now and again peppered, and my feelings hurt by
-their objurgations. Those who read this book as a
-literary production will, no doubt, sympathise with
-the writer in his difficulties with so limited a vocabulary
-as climbing affords. That words of primary
-importance are few is a fact patent to all students of
-the “Alpine Journal.” But in moments of excitement
-the climber is urged to expand his limits, and
-to call on other sciences (notably the theological) for
-suitable expressions that will relieve his feelings.</p>
-
-<p>We started by working up on the right to a ledge
-at the foot of the big pitch. Then followed a traverse
-across to a short chimney on the other side. This
-chimney was obviously a possible route, but for
-greater safety and in order to avoid a lengthening of
-the rope between the second man and myself, I worked
-up for a few feet and then rounded the buttress into
-the central portion of the gully, where a second
-crack started upwards. Six feet higher this crack
-terminated at the same level as the left-hand chimney,
-and some dangerously loose grass holds helped me
-to drag up into a small cave where moderate anchorage
-could be obtained. Unfortunately a block as
-large as my fist managed to escape past me and to
-attack deliberately the unlucky member of our party.
-He, poor man! has the reputation of never being
-missed by a vagrant stone, and on this occasion he was
-hit rather badly on the head. It was no use hurrying,
-but we feared a faint, and when two of us were
-squeezed well into the cave, the wounded man was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-engineered up to our level. He was a bit dazed, but
-on the whole seemed moderately jubilant at this
-latest proof of his case-hardened condition. When
-reassured as to his welfare we wriggled clumsily out
-of the narrow cave, feet foremost, and made our way
-easily by the left wall to the roof of the cave and the
-top of the pitch. The rest of the gully was little
-more than mere walking, and a few minutes later we
-joined our friends on the crest of the Napes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Needle Gully</span> has rather a bad reputation.
-My personal experience of it has not been altogether
-pleasant. I tried it in January, 1893, with the enterprising
-classic referred to in my account of the
-Oblique Chimney, and found the soft snow so
-troublesome in its steepness and want of tenacity
-that we decided to leave the gully for some more
-auspicious occasion. The opportunity came in the
-following August, after an ascent of the Needle, and
-with it came the conviction that in dry weather the
-gully possesses no interest to the climber pure and
-simple, if such an anomaly exists, but that it should
-be visited by those who take pleasure in rock scenery.
-The Eagle’s Nest ridge is a marvellously fine sweep
-of clean-cut rock bounding the western wall of the
-gully. The jagged outline of the Needle ridge on
-the eastern side is scarcely inferior in grandeur.</p>
-
-<p>We found two easy pitches to begin with, taking
-us to about the level of the Needle summit. Then
-a vertical wall interposed itself directly in our way.
-We scrambled in or near a slight cleft on our right,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-using rather treacherous grass-covered ledges, and
-distributing our weight over as many points of support
-as possible. That portion of the pitch was only
-about three feet high, and then came a momentary
-‘easy’ before another steep little bit of eight feet.
-The resting place is just large enough for one man.
-At the top of the second piece a ledge led round by
-the left past an awkward corner that seemed to
-alarm our more substantial members by its narrowness,
-and then two or three steep grass steps had to
-be taken directly upwards. There we found a projecting
-knob forming a convenient saddle for each to
-anchor as he manipulated the rope for the man below,
-a deep crack offering itself in the right position for
-belaying the rope. A foot or two higher, and we
-were able to traverse back into the bed of the gully,
-and thence find an easy way up screes and short rock
-slopes to the top. The climb along the ridge itself
-to the highest point of the Napes was pleasantly
-varied. We could readily distinguish the points of
-articulation of the chief buttresses, for the general
-angle was too steep to disguise the contours. When
-close to the connecting ridge between Napes and the
-Westmorland crags we bore down on to Hell’s Gate
-screes and crossed over to the opposite rocks to hunt
-out the little climb up to the Westmorland cairn.
-This was not so easy to find, and we wasted much
-time in attempting an attack by some smooth slabs too
-high up the scree. At last we found that the climb
-began in a small gully some distance down, which
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-bore upwards a little to the right till a short pinnacle
-was reached. Then from the neck behind the
-pinnacle we traversed across the face to the left for
-a few yards, before climbing hand over hand to the
-summit ridge. It came as a surprise that the ascent
-had such neatness; and we were all at the end
-willing enough to indorse the favourable opinions
-expressed in the climbing book. Be it remembered
-that the cairn at the top was built by the brothers
-Westmorland of Penrith, not for the purpose of
-indicating the finish of a climb, but to mark the
-coign of vantage for one of the finest mountain views
-in the country. Remember also that proposition of
-a well-known mountaineer that the view from a
-summit is much the same whatever be the route
-taken to get there; and apply it by visiting Westmorland
-cairn to look at the Napes, even if the
-expedition involves no troublesome climbing.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_153" src="images/i_153.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Ridges of the Great Napes</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 153</i>)</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE RIDGES OF THE GREAT NAPES</i></span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Needle Ridge</span> is usually taken from the
-foot of the Needle itself. It was explored first in
-1884 by Mr. Haskett Smith, who then made a
-general survey without actually completing the
-climb. Two years later he effected a descent of the
-whole route; and in 1887 Mr. Slingsby’s party
-made the first strict ascent, and were emphatic in
-their praise of its fine character.</p>
-
-<p>The introductory few feet from the notch behind
-the Needle are difficult, the problem being to climb
-up a steep slab of six feet or so to the foot of a slight
-grass chimney that slopes upwards to the right.
-Three fingers of the right hand can be inserted in a
-curious pocket in the slab; rather poor foothold is all
-that can be found for steadying purposes, and for the
-rest just enough will manifest itself to enable the
-climber to cautiously drag himself up to a small
-ledge, and thence to the foot of the chimney.</p>
-
-<p>This takes him easily to about the level of the
-top of the Needle. There a poised block is passed
-on the left, that used to give trouble. I once saw
-my leader attempt to climb directly over it. When
-in the very act of pulling himself on to its upper
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-surface it slowly swung round, as if pivoted at each
-extremity. Fortunately he was not tempted to let
-go, and it readjusted itself in a firmer position without
-quitting its niche. My friend led no more that
-day, and we afterwards solemnly warned folks
-against the boulder variation. The stone is yet
-there and is still insecure, but climbers pass round
-by the right and then work back on to the edge of
-the <i>arête</i> and up to the foot of the vertical wall that
-begins the second part of the climb. It is not
-unusual for the first part to take so long a time in
-severe weather as to convince a prudent party that
-it is expedient to utilize a grass traverse into the
-Needle Gully that here discloses itself on the left.
-This ledge takes them safely to a point in the bed of
-the gully above the chief pitch, and within a few
-minutes’ easy scrambling of the top.</p>
-
-<p>The first part of the Needle Ridge may be neatly
-varied by climbing the buttress up from the gully, or
-by working across to the same buttress from the
-Needle notch. These variations are a little harder
-than the usual climb, but both are safe in dry
-weather.</p>
-
-<p>As illustrating the way not to use a rope, an
-amusing story is told of the first difficulty on the
-Needle ridge. Two young fellows had walked up to
-the foot of the gully with another party of climbers,
-and had lazily discussed their lunch and their plans
-for the day while the others were busy on the
-Needle. After deciding that they knew the Needle
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-too well to learn anything by climbing it, they went
-on to examine critically, from a distance, the Eagle’s
-Nest opposite and to point out the way that they
-would insure their own safety in an attack on it.
-They scoffed at its reputed severity, and would
-really have then and there shown the neatest method
-of vanquishing it. On the other hand, it was a
-warm day, and they felt a little slack. Perhaps the
-Needle Ridge would tickle their jaded appetites a
-bit. Yes! they would walk up the ridge and get
-some fresh air 400 feet higher. Then they tossed
-up for leadership, and tied on their forty feet rope&mdash;one
-man at each end. Away went the leader from
-the notch, over the slab and up the chimney. When
-at the end of his rope it occurred to him to look
-back and see what his companion was doing. The
-poor fellow had stuck at the slab, and was in imminent
-danger of falling backwards. ‘Good gracious,
-man, what are you thinking of?’ shouted the
-indignant leader. ‘I am not going to be pulled
-down for any one!’ and promptly began to unrope
-himself. Then the man who tells the story hurried
-up from below, and fortunately arrived in time to
-prevent a catastrophe. Such an aspect of the utility
-of the rope need scarcely be commented upon, but I
-was not surprised a day or two after hearing the
-story to be characterized by a non-climbing acquaintance
-in town as a desperate venturesome individual,
-one who went about climbing mountains <i>with a rope</i>.
-By non-climbers a rope must indeed be regarded as
-a source of danger.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span></p>
-
-<p>The plainest view of the upper platform of the
-Needle and the awkward corner that rises from it is
-to be had at the expense of a few minutes’ digression
-from the ridge. It is best to climb from the top
-of the grass chimney over to the right, and then
-down a steep and loose recess to a grass platform.
-A photograph of the Needle from this point of view
-has been published, and is an interesting one to
-study.</p>
-
-<p>The second part of the Needle Ridge begins with
-a vertical wall of rock that from below appears very
-formidable. With ice about it is certainly difficult,
-and the traverse to the gully on the left is the wisest
-course to pursue under such conditions. But on
-close inspection a square corner discloses itself in the
-wall, and the fifteen feet of scrambling in the cleft are
-perfectly straightforward. At the top of the wall
-the ridge is broken up in a wonderful way, and huge
-blocks are distributed along the route in great profusion.
-The climbing becomes very easy, though
-retaining its interest to the finish at the top of the
-Napes; and the whole ascent may be disposed of
-summarily in half an hour from the Needle notch.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_156" src="images/i_156.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Upper Part of the Needle Ridge</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 156</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Eagle’s Nest Ridge</span> was climbed on
-April 15, 1892, by a strong party of cragsmen.
-They were led by Mr. G. A. Solly, who was well
-backed up by Mr. Cecil Slingsby. They left a
-record of the expedition in the Wastdale book, and
-let the climbing fraternity decide for themselves as to
-whether the ascent was worth repeating. No exception
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-can be taken to the rocks, which are perfectly
-sound and reliable, but an inspection of the ridge
-from the Needle shows how little hold there is
-for hands or feet. Moreover, the hardest part is so
-situated that a safe descent from it is well-nigh impossible
-for the unlucky leader who finds his strength
-or skill inadequate to cope with it. Nevertheless,
-I have recently discovered that with an exact
-knowledge of the available holds, and with the best
-conditions of the rocks, a man may safely tackle the
-ascent if well supported by a sturdy second. The
-situation is terribly exposed for the first 140 feet,
-and will try the nerves of even experienced mountaineers.
-Dependence is often placed on small footholds
-that slope slightly to the climber’s disadvantage;
-and on such ledges good nailed boots and
-perfect confidence are essential. The fact is that
-the ridge is not to be recommended; and its virtue
-is that there is no deception about it. The clean
-sweep of the sharp nose of rock from the green
-platform at the foot up to the patch of grass where
-the slanting chimney begins scares everybody away,
-tyros and experts alike. That almost vertical
-buttress looks impossible, and to nearly everybody it
-is so.</p>
-
-<p>It was a felicitous discovery of Mr. Solly’s, a
-day later, that the worst part of the <i>arête</i> could
-be avoided by taking to a chimney a few feet away
-to the left. Looking up at the ridge from the grass
-platform at its foot, the appearance presented is that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-of a vertical face of rock out by two chimneys each
-about a hundred feet long. The right of these is
-shallow and open, with tufts of grass interspersed
-with smooth slabs. Whether it can be climbed or
-not I have never ascertained. But the left chimney
-or gully is deeply cut into the wall. Its aspect is
-ferocious, but its disposition gentle. It can be easily
-reached and comfortably climbed. Solly’s original
-route was up the strict <i>arête</i> to the right of both
-chimneys. The <i>arête</i> to the left of both was investigated
-at Easter, 1895, and manifested an inclination
-to yield to the attack of a party. But the party has
-not yet preferred the attack, and the suggestion may
-be taken at its worth. Our gully is rather earthy
-for the first forty feet, and care must be taken by the
-leader to avoid dislodging stones on those below him.
-Then the rockholds change in character just above
-an outstanding pinnacle on the left, and there is an
-interesting passage into a niche at the back of the
-gully, a sloping and well-worn hold for the right foot
-offering the safest support as the body is dragged
-over into the corner. Hence the route is up the
-crack for a few feet and across a long slab to the
-right-hand wall, care being taken with a loose
-splinter that is generally seized as the handiest grip
-available. The rest of the gully is of grass and
-small scree, and at the top a view may be obtained
-down into the Arrowhead Gully. But for the ridge
-climb a divergence is made to the right almost
-immediately after the chimney pitch is passed.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span></p>
-
-<p>A split is noticed in the <i>arête</i>, forming a small and
-sharp pinnacle, just below which the shallow, grass-tufted
-chimney finishes in sorry fashion. The climber
-passes through the cleft, utilizing a large block that
-is not quite fixed. On the other side he finds the
-junction with the original ridge route, ten feet below
-the finish of the curdling part. His next move is
-awkward, over a smooth rock with unsatisfactory
-sloping footholds, but there is no real danger with
-the second man at the cleft, and the leader reaches the
-grassy recess where, in the words of the first explorers,
-the difficulties moderated. It is large enough for
-two men to brace themselves firmly, and manipulate
-150 feet of rope for an enterprising third man who
-may wish to come up by way of the outside edge.</p>
-
-<p>This route to the recess we shall now briefly
-describe, suggesting at the same time that no man
-should attempt to lead up it who has not already
-explored the ground with the safeguard of a rope
-from above. From the horizontal grass platform at
-the foot of the climb a narrow cleft runs up to the
-ridge in such a way as to separate off the first fifteen
-feet from the main mass. The cleft is mounted with
-facility by aid of numerous holds of first-rate quality.
-At the top we find ourselves on the strict ridge, but
-after mounting ten feet the holds disappear entirely,
-and the verticalness of the next seven or eight feet
-makes a slight divergence absolutely necessary. On the
-face of the ridge that bounds the Needle Gully below
-us two parallel cracks run up steeply about a yard
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-apart. They are so closed, and they run so obliquely
-up the wall, that good foothold is impossible in
-either, and handhold of even moderate quality
-requires much seeking. Nevertheless, they are both
-of immense importance, and are capable of giving all
-the required aid. The leader should here be joined
-by the second, and should belay himself to the
-highest effective part of the broken rock below him.
-His companion should be belayed independently.
-Then his next move is to work up for three feet on
-to the right-hand crack, with his fingers gripping the
-other, until the latter is felt to be good enough for a
-pull towards the ridge. The transfer of the right
-foot into the crack on the left is critical. I prefer to
-effect the passage without boots, as the toes can feel
-so much better where the crack is deepest. Then
-the outside edge a yard away to the left is within
-reach of the hand, and the leader, cut off from
-further assistance below, must manage very carefully
-to climb on to the ridge.</p>
-
-<p>His holds are obvious; the difficulty is not so
-much in finding the way as in keeping to it. Fortunately
-a little flat platform is now reached, on
-which he can sit in comfort and recover his strength
-before attacking the next part. It is at about the
-level of the top of the Gable Needle, and Mr.
-Slingsby tells me it is the spot that the first
-climbers named the Eagle’s Nest. It is just visible
-against the sky in the view facing page 153, 3&frac12;
-inches from the foot of the illustration. The awkward
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-part first ascended is scarcely twelve feet high, but
-is exceptionally severe if the leader takes it without
-the assistance of a second.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p class="author">PLATE V.<br /></p>
-
-<p class="small table">
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell caption w33">
- THE ARROWHEAD RIDGE.<br />
- From the South-east.<br />
- </span>
- <span class="tcell caption w33">
- THE EAGLE’S NEST RIDGE.<br />
- From the South-east.<br />
- </span>
- <span class="tcell caption w33">
- THE NEEDLE RIDGE.<br />
- From the North-west.<br />
- </span>
- </span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="small table">
-<i>a</i> Eagle’s Nest.<br />
-<i>b</i> Easy Chimney Route.<br />
-<i>c</i> Finish along the Ridge.<br />
-<i>dd</i> Severest Portion.<br />
-<i>e</i> Ling Chimney.<br />
-</p>
-<img id="i_161" src="images/i_161.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE GREAT NAPES RIDGES.</p></div>
-
-<p>The consequences of a slip in the next portion of
-the climb are more serious, but probably it is technically
-less difficult than the lower bit. The Eagle’s
-Nest is barely large enough for the leader to brace
-himself firmly when helping the second man up on
-the rope, and he may naturally prefer to mount
-higher without assistance rather than peril the
-safety of both for the sake of a helping shoulder up
-the next piece. There are no belaying pins, and
-traversing to either side of the buttress is seemingly
-impossible. If he cannot be certain of holding on to
-the rope when a slip occurs to his follower, he had
-better decide to advance another fifty feet before the
-second man moves from his secure position below.
-The first ten feet above the Nest are remarkable for
-steepness and smallness of holds. If the rocks are
-cold and the finger tips benumbed, the holds cannot
-be appreciated at all, and the place becomes horribly
-dangerous. Yet there is a sufficiency of grip for
-hands and feet, and bootmarks can now be detected
-on the chief ledges. With perfect coolness and the
-exercise of his best judgment, the solitary leader will
-gradually mount the ridge step by step, and the
-tension on his nerves and muscles will be relieved
-when the level of the narrow pinnacle to the left is
-reached, and he notices the numerous scratches on
-the rocks of those who have climbed to the junction
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-by the easy route. Mr. H. C. Bowen and I made
-the second strict ascent in April, 1898, with 100
-feet of rope between us.</p>
-
-<p>At the foot of the slanting chimney it again becomes
-possible for the leader to obtain assistance
-from his companions, though he is not the sort of
-man to require it if he has come up by the difficult
-way. The climbing is now delightfully safe and
-interesting. The holds are good and the ridge
-varied. From the top of the slanting chimney,
-which can be ascended without trouble, the true
-<i>arête</i> below looks desperately stiff. The remainder
-of the climb will be found to consist of alternating
-horizontal and vertical passages. It is often possible
-to pass down the grassy ledges on the left, but the
-ridge is much pleasanter, and in wet weather actually
-safer. The views down the vertical walls on the
-right into the Needle Gully are magnificent, and the
-Needle Ridge is seen at its best.</p>
-
-<p>The first party took two hours and ten minutes
-to accomplish their ascent. The ridge with the
-initial variation by the chimney has been climbed in
-half an hour by a party of three; hunger lent wings,
-for their lunch was waiting them on Gable.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Arrowhead Ridge</span> derives its name from
-a very prominent crag a short distance to the west
-of the Eagle’s Nest Ridge. It offers a very fine specimen
-of rock architecture, though the artist photographer
-has been known to express dissatisfaction at
-its outline, and to claim artistic license in modifying
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-his pictures to suit his theories. Many of those who
-have been attracted to the Great Napes in search
-of the original have been much perplexed at the
-discrepancy between the old photographs and the
-modern reality. Some in their wrath have desired
-to get the photographer and his camera below them
-in a rickety gully, where, as Dent puts it, no stone
-is left unturned in their struggle to reach the top.</p>
-
-<p>But if the artist cuts away a few thousand tons
-of rock from his negative with one fell stroke of his
-brush, if he commands the sun to stand still and the
-shadows to move on, if he subjects his angles to the
-influence of the personal equation of the climber
-instead of the mere observer, these weaknesses are
-not to be recorded against him. Mountaineering as a
-sport owes its advancement far more to the inaccurate
-descriptions of its literary devotees than to the
-simple statements of facts of the scientific, and its
-best pictorial advertisements have been those where
-art has assisted nature and laughed at science.</p>
-
-<p>This to some extent is what we all need, and
-what we all understand. From the top of the Kern
-Knotts’ crack the evidence of a freely hanging rope
-as to the direction of the vertical actually contradicts
-one’s best judgment. The Kern Knotts wall is perhaps
-15° from the vertical, but looking down it one
-would judge it perpendicular. Yet we never fancy
-a foothold horizontal when it is at a slope of 15° to
-our disadvantage, else the Eagle’s Nest Ridge would
-lose much of its terror. Rather are we then inclined
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-to magnify the angle, and the actual slope plus our
-own inclination make together something like the
-30° that would figure in a fancy sketch or a popular
-article.</p>
-
-<p>Education is a marvellously fine thing, and in
-mountaineering it works wonders. It enables men
-to interpret the barren truth in accordance with
-their own experience. Notes of new ascents in the
-‘Alpine Journal’ they can enjoy and assimilate; but,
-as in eating caviare, the taste needs cultivation, and
-many remain unequal to such food to the ends of their
-lives. Now because there are many false translations
-possible of the one true original, it must be
-easy with a knowledge of the truth to interpret it
-variously, and correspondingly difficult to get at the
-correct version from a bad translation. Even the
-mountaineering education fails to help us. All it
-does is to give us the taste for truth, and the sense
-of right to demand the genuine article. It might be
-printed in italics at the beginning of the chapter,
-like the usually inappropriate and obscure poetical
-references, and so isolated from the author’s personal
-exposition. This text and sermon notion has not,
-so far as my little library of Alpine books can tell
-me, been adopted by any popular writer on mountaineering,
-though the difficulty has been grappled
-with in other ways. Thus the Alpine historian or
-geographer may find the required facts neatly
-gathered together in a brief appendix, or still more
-briefly summarised in a letter published simultaneously
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
-with a review of the book in the ‘Alpine
-Journal.’</p>
-
-<p>The sale of caviare is strictly limited, and the
-demand for ‘Alpine Notes and New Ascents’ confined
-to the few. Hence mountaineering books
-intended to sell well are written for the uneducated
-many, not for teaching purposes, but for the satisfaction
-of their desire for tales of adventure. So
-long as climbers tolerate this professionalism introduced
-into mountaineering&mdash;and there is every
-reason why they should in all cases where the
-professional is recognized as such&mdash;they must necessarily
-give the artist a free hand, whether he writes
-or paints or takes photographs. Personally I should
-ask for information as to the treatment of any negative
-that has been employed for reproduction of
-pictures. ‘From a photograph by,’ nowadays
-suggests a bad camera, a shaky tripod, an amateur
-operator, a cunning artist, and a long purse. But
-‘truth is mighty and will prevail,’ so we may as
-well get on to the Arrowhead.</p>
-
-<p>Viewing this Arrowhead from the easy ground
-near the Bear rock, it is seen to bear some resemblance
-to the Gable Needle (see Chapter XI.). In
-each case the rock forms the lower extremity of a
-Napes ridge, and its sides are remarkable for their
-steepness and smoothness. The outside edge of
-each is broken by a well-marked shoulder, and the
-head of the Arrow may be fairly well likened to the
-top overhanging boulder on the Needle. Here,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-perhaps, the resemblance ends. Certain parts of the
-climbing on the Arrowhead must be characterized as
-insecure, whereas the Needle is firm throughout.
-The former may easily be attacked from the notch
-behind it, the Needle cannot be similarly treated.
-The original climb up to the shoulder on the Arrowhead
-was by a recess on the east side, that up the
-Needle by a narrow crack on the west. (See photograph
-facing page 153.)</p>
-
-<p>The first ascent dates from April, 1892, when a
-large party attacked the rock on the lines just
-indicated. The lower part of the buttress was
-mounted by a steep and open recess on the western
-side, a good climb leading directly to the shoulder
-half-way up, where the route was joined by the
-upper end of a corresponding chimney on the other
-side of the buttress. Thence the climbing was
-straight up the corner. It was not very difficult,
-but at a point a few feet below the final bit the
-rocks were insecure and the situation alarming.
-The stones are better now than formerly, but great
-caution must be used. In 1893 another party repeated
-the ascent, and showed that it was possible
-by passing round to the gap at the back to continue
-the climb along the ridge. The usual route nowadays
-is to reach the ridge by the scree gully between
-the Arrowhead and the Eagle’s Nest <i>arête</i>, climbing
-up the side wall to the notch, and so avoiding the
-Arrowhead itself. The wall is steep, but its ledges
-are conveniently disposed, and no trouble should be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-experienced in the ascent. Once on the ridge the
-climbing is delightful. The holds are good, and the
-narrowness of the crest along which we pass gives
-the spice of sensationalism that at all times offers an
-apology for easy climbing. The actual ascent of
-the ridge need take but twenty minutes, the descent
-about half an hour for a party of three, when conditions
-are favourable. There is one <i>mauvais pas</i> of
-moderate quality: a wall of ten feet must be mounted
-to reach the crest of a tower on the ridge. Then
-follows a long stride across the gap on the other
-side, and it is sometimes amusing to watch the timid
-climber who fears that he may not be able to swing
-the hind leg over when in the colossus attitude half-way
-across. Above this all difficulties soon disappear;
-the gullies on either side rapidly rise to our
-own level, and the ridge ends shortly before the
-crest of the Napes is reached.</p>
-
-<p>The view facing page 153 shows the Arrowhead
-at the left-hand top corner, the Eagle’s Nest Ridge
-against the sky, the lower half of the Needle Ridge,
-and the Gable Needle itself.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE GABLE NEEDLE</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The best-known rock problem in the district
-is offered by the Gable Needle. Its position has
-already been defined. As we walk towards Styhead
-from Esk Hause the Needle stands out from the west
-face of the Gable very plainly; but from Wastdale
-it is almost invisible against the background of the
-indistinguishable Napes rocks, and only those who
-know exactly where it should be are bold enough to
-say where it is. Very few people seem to have seen
-it before 1886, when Mr. Haskett Smith reached the
-top, though Mr. Wilson Robinson made a pencil
-outline-sketch of both the Needle and the Bear rock
-as long ago as 1828. Many even who were
-acquainted with the crags of the Napes had not
-noticed it. The fact is that a face of rock is very
-apt to look flat and void of detail at a short
-distance; and it is the joy of the rock-climber to
-discover its thousand beauties when he engages with
-it at close quarters.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_168" src="images/i_168.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Gable Needle</span></p>
-
-<p>(<i>Face page 168</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>The Needle is indeed a fine fellow as rocks go&mdash;just
-the sort of ornament for one’s back garden in
-town, a gymnasium in itself. It has now many
-admirers. The few footholds on the top boulder
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-bear the marks of many nailed boots, even its
-smooth face is scored by futile scrapes of the
-nervous, but it retains its charm for the Wastdale
-enthusiast. In his dreams he takes a hammer and
-chisel, and chips away an important hold, and with
-the dreamer’s ease swarms up the rock unaided.
-Again a hold is chipped away confidently with the
-faith that removes mountains, and again he glides
-up and down; till at last its small top draws him up
-without effort and he hastens down to Wastdale to
-invite the attention of climbers to the new edition
-of the Needle.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Haskett Smith climbed it alone in 1886 and
-left a handkerchief on the top. Those who have
-been once on the Needle will readily believe that
-this first ascent is one of the most daring things
-that have been done in the Lake District.</p>
-
-<p>He pointed it out to Mr. John Robinson one day
-when they were traversing the face of the Napes
-on to the Needle <i>arête</i>, and they both agreed
-that it had a future before it, that their successors
-in the field of climbing would make it their resort
-and perhaps even build a diminutive shrine on its
-crest to the discoverer. Nearly three years elapsed
-before Mr. Geoffrey Hastings made the second
-ascent. Then, in June, 1889, Mr. F. Wellford
-climbed it, and Mr. Robinson made the fourth
-ascent in August. In the following year Professor
-Marshall’s party attacked the climb, spending three-quarters
-of an hour in flinging a rope over the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-summit for the benefit of the leader. On that
-occasion Miss Koecher reached the top&mdash;the first
-lady, at any rate in modern times, to succeed in
-doing so.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. S. and I travelled down to Drigg one night.
-We breakfasted there early and walked the twelve
-miles to Wastdale, halting only for a plunge into
-cold Wastwater. After the manner of our kind, we
-inquired at once for the Climbing Book, to learn the
-latest news from the Fells. The ‘Pall Mall Budget’
-article of June 5, 1890, on the Needle, had been
-inserted, and we read how it might be vanquished.
-In the afternoon we worked our way up to the
-Napes. Being the more enthusiastic, I found the
-Needle first, and was breathless on the top of the
-crack when Dr. S. arrived. He threw a rope up
-from the small platform (seen at the bottom of the
-picture facing page 168) and came after me. The
-crack up the face seemed difficult that first time;
-most people find it so. The first movement obliquely
-up to the left is easy, but the next part is a trifle
-too safe for the new comer. He gets his left thigh
-almost hopelessly jammed into the crack, and can
-move neither up nor down. The best plan is to
-work more with the left foot and knee in the crack,
-both hands on the edge of the leaf of rock, and the
-right leg getting general support by pressure outside,
-until the most constricted bit half-way up is passed.
-Then the leaf of rock can be swarmed up with much
-greater ease, and the climber soon finds himself
-looking down the other side of the crack.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span></p>
-
-<p>From here the route for ten feet is directly up the
-right edge. The holds are not numerous, but good
-enough when the rocks are dry, and we find ourselves
-on a platform or shoulder, very conspicuous in most
-aspects of the pinnacle, that serves as an excellent
-take-off for the last struggle. The terrors of the
-crack often scare off people from the final piece. They
-almost did our little party. I found my watch-chain
-broken&mdash;some links still remain in the heart of the
-Needle&mdash;and my watch badly dented. The ‘Pall
-Mall’ had promised us that the last bit was the
-worst, and we thought for a moment that a little
-preliminary training for a few days would be the
-correct thing. However, I took off my boots, for
-they had no nails, and, standing on a shoulder of
-Dr. S;, stepped on to the right end of the ledge on
-which the top block rests. This corner is difficult
-to climb alone and exceedingly daring work, for the
-climber drags his body on to it over a sheer drop of
-a hundred feet, and feels no certainty of safety till
-he is up. It is like climbing on a narrow mantelshelf
-five feet high, that is only just wide enough to
-allow standing room. An ice-axe offers a useful
-take-off in the absence of a sufficiently responsible
-shoulder. The disposition of one’s centre of gravity
-must be carefully considered, and there is a sense of
-alternate peril and safety in inspiration and expiration.
-Once on the ledge the game was evidently in
-our hands, and traversing along it to the left I found
-a rounded boss of rock eighteen inches higher that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
-offered good hold for both feet. Then the left was
-brought well up to a little ledge nearly an inch
-wide, the right hand gripped the right edge of the
-boulder, and on straightening out the top edge could
-be grasped. An arm pull was helped by sundry
-roughnesses for the toes, and I sprawled half across
-the top triumphantly. In a couple of minutes Dr. S.
-was by my side. We had no intention of climbing
-higher that day, and willingly spent half an hour in
-examining the routes of the Napes’ ridges, two of
-which are seen to advantage from this spot.</p>
-
-<p>We descended without serious difficulty, Dr. S.
-going first. I half decided to fix our rope round
-the top block and use it for my own descent, but it
-would have been an awkward matter to detach it
-afterwards. Moreover, others had not found a fixed
-rope necessary, and we did not wish to have anything
-to reproach ourselves about subsequently. Dr. S.
-placed himself firmly on the shoulder, drawing in
-the rope as it came down. If I fell it would have
-been on to the rocks a few feet below him; he would
-experience no great shock, and could easily hold me
-in. The descent was by the exact route of the
-ascent. On reaching the crack again we re-adjusted
-our boots and slid down easily, the remembrance of
-the leg-clasping constriction preventing our jamming
-in the descent.</p>
-
-<p>Two or three days later we took other men up
-the Needle. It was like introducing an old friend.
-Though I had lost no respect for him, he was easier
-to manage and offered new features for inspection.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span></p>
-
-<p>The side of the Needle facing Lingmell exhibits
-an obvious alternative route to the shoulder. The
-climbing is twelve or fifteen feet longer, and rather
-more interesting. Facing the Needle at its foot with
-our backs to Lingmell, we bear to the right into a
-square corner. We pass up this on the left to a
-little level platform, reached best by an armpull and
-a foothold well away on the buttress. I have seen
-good men in much trouble on this corner. From here
-the route is straight up the wall, with a halting-place
-ten feet higher in a huge slit on the right. Then
-we climb the same cleft whose other side constitutes
-the first part of the old route. This side, however,
-is wider, and contains sundry jammed stones for
-convenience of passengers. The old route is joined
-without difficulty, and the shoulder reached as
-before.</p>
-
-<p>To effect the ascent of the top boulder without
-help it has always appeared to me easier to start by
-standing on the small shelf just under the left-hand
-end of the overhanging part&mdash;the shelf, in fact, that
-is occupied by the sitting figure in the view facing
-page 168. Practice on ordinary strong mantelshelves
-enables one to mount up this corner with a certainty
-of success, the right hand being thrust into a thin
-horizontal cleft rough enough to offer some friction
-for the back of the hand as well as the palm.</p>
-
-<p>If people are at the Needle and wish to explore
-it, they may like to know that Mr. W. H. Fowler
-has shown that the ‘outside edge’ can be followed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-from bottom to top. Also, that it is not so difficult
-to work from the foot of the ordinary route round to
-the other side of the cleft that splits the Needle.
-To photograph the Needle we usually get up the
-other side of the Needle Gully at the foot of the
-Eagle’s Nest <i>arête</i>. Indeed, this grass ledge is so
-popular for the observation of a performance that it
-is known as the ‘dress circle.’ One photograph exists
-of the Needle in which nearly all the climbing
-details are masked by a crowd of daring maidens
-swarming up it. Two have reached the top, and are
-supporting a terror-stricken man, who, poor fellow,
-had rashly undertaken to lead up. The picture
-suggests the old problem of the mediæval theologians&mdash;how
-many angels can balance on the point
-of a needle?
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>KERN KNOTTS</i></span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Kern Knotts Chimney.</span>&mdash;This is one of the
-prettiest things in the neighbourhood, and it photographs
-well. The small bunch of hard rock that
-crops out of the wilderness of scree on this side of
-the Gable was at one time rarely visited, though so
-near the actual Styhead path. Its name was almost
-unknown. I confused it with the Tom Blue crags
-higher up on the fell. Nowadays the good quality of
-the chimney attracts many visitors, and several come
-to see it who do not actually climb. The Knotts are in
-three parts&mdash;Raven Crag, and Upper and Lower Kern
-Knotts. The middle part is the steepest and longest.
-A prominent nose or buttress springs down its centre,
-and is visible in profile at a great distance. The
-buttress is split off from the main mass by a vertical
-crack extending from side to side, varying in thickness
-from three or four inches to a foot.</p>
-
-<p>The chimney had been inspected by earlier
-climbers before I had ever heard of it. The uninitiated
-of Wastdale often lament the secretiveness
-of those who know where new things exist but who
-keep the knowledge to themselves. Nestor is very
-reticent, and it is to be counted unto him for
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-righteousness that one Christmas week, after bad
-weather had deprived us of all the ordinary climbing,
-he announced to the engineer and me that there was
-a fascinating little thing, the fancy of an ‘off’ afternoon,
-lying conveniently close to the hotel, that he
-would show us how to climb. I was lying on the
-billiard table just then thinking of the different kinds
-of nothing. ‘Where is it?’ I asked. ‘In Tom
-Blue’ was the reply, and as this was yet but a name
-to me I wondered whether Tom’s blueness measured
-his difficulty. The engineer was enthusiastic, and
-declined to allow me to remain longer on the billiard
-table after hearing this news. So in the gentle rain
-we marched out of the inn that afternoon, and worked
-our way up the Styhead path till we had passed the
-little spring that crosses it near the zig-zag. There
-we saw the great rocks looming up on the left
-and were told that Tom Blue awaited us there. The
-steep slope leading up to our climb was strewn with
-huge boulders in chaotic confusion. We could
-either keep to these or else make for an interesting
-crack in the Lower Kern Knotts that stood directly in
-our way. To give us a foretaste we took to the
-crack, finding as usual that its aspect from a distance
-gave no clue to the wealth of useful detail in the
-shape of handholds. Then a few yards more of mercurial
-skipping from boulder to boulder and we
-reached a little terrace at the foot of the fine wall
-of the Upper Kern Knotts. Since that day a huge
-cairn has grown up on this terrace at an astonishing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-rate of development, to mark the beginning of the
-climb. Perhaps by the date of publication of this
-volume the cairn will have grown to rival the crags
-in height, the climb may be <i>viâ</i> the cairn, and Kern
-Knotts Chimney blocked up for ever. But for the
-sake of the afternoon strollers from Wastdale we pray
-that this may not be. The ascent is apparently in
-two portions, the lower one being the easier.
-Actually there is a third pitch, the one of perhaps
-greatest intrinsic difficulty, starting at the top of the
-split buttress and quite unnoticeable from below.
-For this reason the climb must be regarded as deceptive;
-it is one thing to struggle up the middle pitch
-with the impression that the worst piece is being
-tackled, and quite another to find a part of exceptional
-severity higher up. With that portion impossible
-the only alternative is to descend again, and that
-does not commend itself to many men who climb
-more for amusement than for instruction.</p>
-
-<p>To return to our narrative, we roped up with
-hopefulness and took to the lowest chimney. The
-rocks were streaming with water which rapidly discovered
-that its line of quickest descent was along our
-arms and bodies, with only a slight delay at the
-boots while they were filling up. The chimney was
-sufficiently well provided with small ledges, first in
-the middle, then on the right-hand side, to enable us
-to draw up easily. Then we worked round to the
-foot of the second pitch on a level platform large
-enough for us all to rest ourselves comfortably. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-chimney now became much narrower, just sufficiently
-large to receive the right thigh. With dry rocks
-the slight holds on the left wall now facing us would
-have been ample for the pull up to the level of a
-jammed stone in the crack; but they were now
-doubtful, and the obvious course was to insert the
-right hand beneath the jammed stone and utilize the
-grip it afforded. A loose block thus handled from
-within is much less liable to come out than when
-held by its projecting parts. In a climb where every
-jammed stone has been tested scores of times, sundry
-small precautions such as this may be omitted; but a
-new route should always be attacked with respectful
-caution, otherwise it may exact a speedy vengeance,
-and promptly repulse the careless climber.</p>
-
-<p>Just above the level of this useful block, which
-was immediately proved to be safe enough, the
-footholds were a short way out of the crack on the
-left wall, and were not particularly good in the
-heavy rain. The next ten feet appeared to be very
-hard, for the only hold was to be by the grip of the
-right thigh in the crack, and the next jammed stone
-(on which a climber is standing in the opposite illustration)
-seemed insecure. It was desirable to pass
-this without clinging to its outer edges, and to test
-it when its dislodgment could do no harm. The
-motion upwards in such a case is rather slow; the leg
-that does the work must not be thrust too far into
-the recess, or else the business of balancing is awkward,
-and the lift at each ‘stroke’ is insufficient.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
-The unemployed foot, as the skater calls it, can often
-help by a momentary purchase on a minute ledge;
-even the width of an eighth of an inch will suffice to
-steady the lift.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_178" src="images/i_178.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">KERN KNOTTS CHIMNEY</p></div>
-
-<p>The jammed stone offered a fair grip underneath,
-but the ledges were now on the right wall, and the
-turn towards them was difficult under the circumstances.
-If we had known that the stone would
-hold we could have pulled straight up over it; but,
-out of desire to play the scientific game, I swung
-round by the hands so that the left leg was in the
-crack and the upper handholds visible just above my
-head. Next a pull-up enabled me to get the left
-knee well on to the stone, and finally to ensconce
-myself safely in the recess above it. Then our Nestor
-came up in splendid form, but with some anxious
-thought for the upper part of the climb. He asked
-me to mount up to the bridge above and see whether
-the remainder were feasible, for if not the best plan
-would be to descend at once. We disagreed over
-this, but being grateful for the introduction to ‘Tom
-Blue,’ and not knowing that it was Kern Knotts, I
-clambered up to please him while he was negotiating
-the engineer’s rope, and committed myself to the
-opinion that it was ‘all plain sailing from there.’</p>
-
-<p>From the jammed stone which Nestor was now
-testing, the route was out over the right face of the
-chimney, and round again to the left where the top
-figure is shown in the photograph. A big block
-forms a bridge, beneath which meet the two chimneys
-from the opposite faces of the buttress.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span></p>
-
-<p>We all reached the top of the bridge, and
-examined the final ridge that springs up for another
-hundred feet. The angle is not an easy one at first,
-and there is a scarcity of holds. The stylist who
-works only with fingers and toes would have much
-difficulty in getting up, even in dry weather. We
-one by one surmounted it by offering as many points
-of contact as possible to the rocks. They were
-streaming with water, and in a much more slippery
-condition than we should have preferred for a first
-ascent. The leader accepted a shoulder at the start,
-but he felt rather insecure till he was about twelve
-feet up, when a fine hold was found on the right.
-From that point the ground is more broken, and
-easy scrambling led to the top of the crags.</p>
-
-<p>I have been told since then that it is easier to
-work round to the left from the bridge, and then up
-to the right; but a recent visit convinces me that
-both ways have their difficulties when the rocks are
-wet. Both are safe in dry weather. The direct
-route up from the bridge has lately been simplified
-by an artificial step, evidently cut with a chisel. It
-is a pity the timid mason did not go round another
-way.</p>
-
-<p>To reach the main shoulder of Gable from here
-we may keep on towards Raven Crag and strike up a
-short chimney in its centre. It is not difficult, but its
-exit from the top takes time if the climber attacks the
-problem incautiously. Thence to the summit of Gable
-is a glorious walk.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span></p>
-
-<p>From the ledge at the foot of the Upper Kern
-Knotts there rises another buttress a little nearer
-the Styhead. Between the two buttresses a short
-gully is found which offers a satisfactory route
-of descent from the crest of these crags. The
-entrance to the gully is difficult if tried from the foot
-of the buttress, but easy and suitable for beginners
-if taken on the left. It was from this spot that our
-party had the first view of the ‘crack’ that was to
-offer such sport a year or two later. Nestor with
-his characteristic caution vetoed the whole affair,
-and vowed he would never speak to me again if I
-attempted to climb it. The engineer, on the other
-hand, thought that it could not be much worse than
-the chimney which we had just climbed in safety,
-and that it might be a good thing to keep in mind
-for settled weather.</p>
-
-<p>In December, 1895, I went up the chimney with
-Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Hill. The rocks were slightly
-damp, the weather misty and unpleasant. On the
-natural bridge I halted, and looked down the smooth
-wall of rock facing the Styhead. The crack was
-straight beneath, and Hill nerved me to the sudden
-resolve to descend by the rope and prospect the
-middle portion of the climb. We had only sixty
-feet of rope, but I was let down carefully and
-at full distance found myself in a splayed-out
-portion above the first pitch. The bit beneath looked
-very awkward, so awkward indeed that it seemed
-impossible to effect a descent on to the boulders
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
-below. There was only one course available, that
-of climbing up again. This was not so hard as
-I had fancied it would be, for with the sense of the
-perfect security in the rope that Hill carefully
-manipulated, came freedom of movement and a
-bolder style. This is the reason why many Alpine
-climbers who know not the joys of leading are
-entirely ignorant of their own powers; they as often
-err in underestimating as in overrating their skill;
-they can gauge their strength only by practice without
-rope from above. Emerging from the crack I
-joined up on the rope again and finished the rest of
-the climb, wondering the while whether a chance
-would ever come of penetrating the crack from below.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving the ordinary chimney, let it be
-added that the climb may have an initial variation
-by pulling up the vertical rocks to the west of the
-foot of the nose; the distance to the first big platform
-is increased about fifteen feet, but the way is
-pleasanter thus.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Kern Knotts Crack.</span>&mdash;One fine morning in
-April I started off for Keswick, grieved to leave Wastdale
-and feeling strong after a fortnight’s scrambling.
-Surely if the crack could be done at all now would
-be the time, with weather and physical fitness corresponding.
-Our party was small; two men were
-coming with me to look at Kern Knotts, and subsequently
-to exploit the Oblique Chimney, the where-abouts
-of which had puzzled them the previous day.
-It was a bargain between us that they should help
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-me in the crack and I should lead up the Oblique
-Chimney afterwards. The advantage was thus all
-my own, and their brotherly kindness drew me
-to them. It was in the preceding winter that Hill
-had let me down from the top of the crack for a
-distance of fifty feet to a small loose platform of
-rock, and I had with extreme effort managed to
-return without tugging the rope. Since that time
-there had been opportunity to reflect and decide
-that if I could get up to the platform from below
-and then help another to the same level, we could
-jointly manage the ascent of the crack without
-further aid. If the platform could not hold two, it
-would be a case of ascending the worst part of the
-crack, the splayed-out portion some twelve feet high,
-without assistance.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the spot things looked cheerful
-enough. The rocks were dry, and I found that
-imagination had somewhat magnified my early impressions
-of the wall. But the reality is bad enough.
-The wall is one side of a buttress about one hundred
-feet in height, and marvellously smooth to look at.
-It is out down from top to bottom by a clean-edged
-slit passing right through the buttress and forming
-on the other side, as I have already explained, the
-now familiar Kern Knotts Chimney. At a height
-of thirty feet or so from the foot is the little platform,
-the niche at the back of which looks as though
-carved out for the reception of a piece of statuary.
-The portion of the crack that leads up this first part
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-has a slightly different outlook; it is more open,
-and is provided with holds of a shaky description.
-Getting a companion to hold himself in this, I
-mounted his shoulder and felt about with the hands.
-There was nothing at all that seemed firm. So I
-called for the axe, and, remembering certain tactics
-in an awful rock climb in Northern Italy some years
-before, I rammed the axe longitudinally into the
-crack and endeavoured to use it as a hold. The plan
-is sometimes effective; it is not sufficiently often
-adopted <i>in extremis</i>; but on this occasion it would
-not act; the loose stones in the cleft were simply
-levered out of place, and I had to pass the axe down
-again. Then ensued a few moments’ fatiguing suspension
-from one arm with but poor foothold to ease
-the strain. It was no go this time; I had to let
-myself down and rest awhile. Next we sat on a
-boulder opposite the wall, and stared at it silently
-for a space. Surely that must be a foothold ten feet
-up on the edge of the crack. If, while I mounted his
-shoulder, the second man could hold the ice-pick in
-a minute fissure in the face, I might manage to step
-on to the axe-head and reach the edge of the platform.
-It would at any rate prove safer than the
-crack route. The plan commended itself to all, and
-we placed ourselves in position. It turned out that
-the axe was scarcely necessary, for with a little
-delicate balancing I reached the top hold with both
-hands and dragged up to the lower step in the
-ledge. Thence to the platform was an easy matter,
-and we all began to breathe freely.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_184" src="images/i_184.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">KERN KNOTTS CRACK</p></div>
-
-<p>It never occurred to me that I had made no
-mental note, in my previous ascent of the crack, of the
-method of getting up the next part. It was certainly
-a stiff struggle that Christmas, but I was then out of
-form, and might reasonably hope to succeed more
-easily now. Nevertheless, when it came to the test I
-found it impossible, three times in succession, to get
-my head above a certain projecting block at the top
-of the niche. Each time it caught me by the back
-of the neck, and would not release me till in desperate
-extremity I let myself down again&mdash;no easy
-matter with exhausted arms. After the first try my
-two friends went round to the other side of the
-buttress, and hastily climbed the chimney so as to
-be ready to help me. I could hear their every
-word through the fissure, and rather surprised them
-by making a quiet remark. On a small scale we
-were having the Funffingerspitze incident repeated.
-Neruda was climbing that famous Dolomite, the scene
-of his tragic death in 1898, by a new route and
-heard another party ascending by the older way on
-the other side of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>My pockets had been emptied out before the
-start. After these failures I flung away my coat
-and tied on to the rope that had been let down from
-above. With renewed confidence the fourth attempt
-was successful. When the first twelve feet were
-passed I found two wedged stones a short distance
-above my head. These forced my body out of the
-crack altogether, but they offered respectable holds
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
-during the process. Above these the next pitch
-involved a process of backing up, though the chimney
-was much too narrow to brace firmly across from
-side to side.</p>
-
-<p>I joined the other men at the top after a few
-more struggles, breathless and exhausted. Resting a
-few moments we descended the Kern Knotts Chimney
-and went down to lunch near the spring. Later on,
-when I effected the ascent without a rope, a rapid
-passage of the worst bit left me with enough reserve
-strength to climb up the rest of the way comfortably.
-The eighty feet and the descent by the chimney on the
-other side were then disposed of in seven minutes.</p>
-
-<p>The remaining passage upwards from the cave is
-by the <i>mauvais pas</i> of the ordinary route.</p>
-
-<p>The account of this crack has been given in much
-detail. It is the sort of thing for a strong party to
-climb on their way out of Wastdale, or some afternoon
-after a wet morning’s imprisonment in the
-hotel. The danger of the first pitch can be
-minimised for the leader by holding him with the
-rope from the right-hand recess of the wall. In fact
-there is a pinnacle in this recess at about the level of
-the niche, which could be utilized as a holding-place.
-A shoulder to start from and an ice-axe support in
-continuation are certain to be appreciated. Messrs.
-Reade and McCulloch have lately shown that the
-niche can be reached by the crack. On the worst
-bit which immediately follows I expect a steadying
-hand from below will be generally necessary.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span></p>
-
-<p>When a man can go up this without assistance
-from above he may well be regarded as fit for the
-Grépon crack. This latter is of the same length and
-general character. It is easier, but harder to enter,
-and it comes after more climbing; moreover, there
-may be ice in it to create trouble.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Kern Knotts, West Chimney.</span>&mdash;A note may
-here be added concerning the only remaining chimney
-on these crags that can claim to be a distinctive
-feature visible at a distance. It is about sixty feet
-to the north-west (or Wastdale side) of the ordinary
-route, and is plainly discernible from the lower part
-of the Styhead path. A diminutive cairn now marks
-the foot of the chimney; another stands on a flat
-ledge a couple of yards above the narrowest and
-hardest portion of the climb.</p>
-
-<p>There are two or three ways of reaching the foot
-of the main difficulty in the ascent, all converging to
-a point about twenty-five feet above the lower cairn.
-Here a vertical crack rises abruptly, varying from
-ten inches to nothing in width, and terminating ten
-feet higher in a right-angled corner of the rocks that
-will on no account permit any ‘backing-up.’ For
-some distance the recess looks as difficult to tackle
-as the corner of a room, and it is only when the
-climber gets to a height of fifty feet that his
-troubles appear to moderate. One wet day some
-twelve months ago our party could make nothing of
-the ascent, but shortly after last Easter (1897) I
-made another attempt on it. To help me on the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
-difficult pitch a second man was persuaded to
-scramble up to the foot of the crack, as I anticipated
-the need of a sturdy shoulder. But the platform on
-which I was waiting proved to be much too small for
-two, and when, by elevating myself a few feet, it was
-safe for him to follow, I was too high to use his
-shoulder and had to manage with his encouraging
-suggestions and the little excrescences on the right
-wall. The first pull up the crack was by an excellent
-hold for both hands on the left, using a narrow ledge
-with the inner side of the left foot, and the crack
-itself for the right thigh. It then became desirable
-to turn round so that the outer edge of the left foot
-should grip it without losing its support during the
-process of turning. This accomplished, the method
-of ascent became obvious. Small holds for hands and
-feet were distributed regularly up the right wall,
-perhaps three ledges for a rise of ten feet. During
-the latter part the left hand sought support in the
-grassy corner of the chimney, which here began to
-open up again. Then a long pull with the arms
-brought me up to the flat ledge that marks the finish
-of the difficulty. There a cairn was built with the
-loose stones that needed shifting, the second man
-coming up like a lamplighter to help in the
-operation.</p>
-
-<p>Thence our route was partly up the buttress, by
-rather exposed ledges, and partly in the chimney.
-The rocks were excellent and the open mountain side
-was reached in another fifty feet. The climb is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span>
-worthy of Kern Knotts. It is more risky than either
-the chimney or the ‘crack,’ but with a steady party
-and dry rocks it will go perfectly well. Nevertheless,
-I am far from willing to give it an unqualified recommendation.
-A slip of the leader on the awkward
-part would almost certainly cause the second to be
-pulled away from his hold, and the two would have
-an objectionable fall over twenty-five feet of steep
-rock. But the striking appearance of the difficult
-pitch is enough to keep away all weaklings.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE WASTWATER SCREES</i></span></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_191" src="images/i_191.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE SCREES AND WASTWATER</p></div>
-
-<p>Wastwater, the deepest lake in the district,
-occupies a flat-bottomed depression in Wastdale. It
-is just three miles long, and its very regular shores
-somewhat detract from the prettiness of its scenery.
-But the wild character of the hills that inclose it
-gives it a grandeur that is not possessed to an equal
-extent by any of the other lakes in the country.
-Its direction is north-east and south-west; Upper
-Wastdale is at its northern end. The road up the
-valley from Strands runs close to the lake along its
-north-western side, and is good enough for driving
-or bicycling as far as Wastdale Head. There it
-terminates as a driving-road, but paths lead to the
-north over the Black Sail Pass and eastwards over
-the Styhead. As we walk up the road, Buckbarrow
-towers in steep crags a mile away to the left; then
-on the same side we skirt the gentler slopes of
-Middle Fell, and after crossing Nether Beck, Yewbarrow
-exhibits a singular change of outline, from
-that of a steep and narrow pyramid to a long level-topped
-grassy ridge with no architectural pretensions
-whatever. On the other side of the lake is the ridge
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
-of the Screes, one of the most singular mountains in
-Britain. Its highest point is by no means striking to
-look at, a matter of 2,000 feet above the sea. For a
-length of three miles the ridge is broken away in a
-line of cliff of almost uniform height, towering
-1,500 feet over the lake. The character of the rock,
-and perhaps also an unusually great exposure to
-weathering influences, has caused an enormous wear
-and tear of the face of the cliff. Thus it is that
-huge screes have been formed that flow straight
-down into the lake. The action is still going on.
-If we take a walk along the edge of the cliff, and
-this way of enjoying the round of Wastwater may be
-strongly recommended to tourists, we cannot help
-noticing that at the heads of the big gullies which
-indicate the regions of maximum erosion, slight
-preliminary landslips have already occurred. The
-grassy ridge is marked in many places by curved
-terraces, showing definite subsidence and taking
-the general shape of the gully head. A few years
-ago a great mass of rock detached itself from the
-top of the cliff near its highest point, and thundered
-down towards the lake. It happened at night and
-nobody was there to see, but the terrific noise gave
-serious alarm to the inhabitants of the valley.
-It has been estimated that the volume of rock that
-broke away was as great as the Manchester Town
-Hall, but the comparison is perhaps worth little,
-for to many a north-countryman there is nothing
-greater than the Manchester Town Hall, and the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-expression may have been used merely to denote
-that the rock-fall was very big. The scar may still
-be seen on the face, if one knows where to look for
-it; the scree below it appeared fresh for many
-months. The rich colouring of red and yellow in
-the rocks has caused the scree itself to assume an
-astonishing variety of tints, and when viewed in
-sunlight the effects are most remarkable.</p>
-
-<p>From the climbing point of view this continual
-weathering is altogether unsatisfactory. The rocks
-are too uncertain, and in most cases the gullies are
-too much occupied by scree. But towards the lower
-end of the lake we find that certain different conditions
-obtain. The rocks are firmer, there is less scree
-at their base, and it shows plainly by its grass
-covering that the fresh supply is strictly limited.</p>
-
-<p>The last great bastion of the high ridge rises
-opposite Wastdale Hall. It is cut off from the
-crags on the left by the Great Gully, which runs up
-to the sky-line through a height of a thousand
-feet. On the right a slighter gully practically
-indicates the end of the precipitous portion of the
-face. Cutting deeply into the centre of the bastion
-itself is a third gully that is continued straight on
-to the sky-line; if anything it is a few feet shorter
-than the Great Gully, though much more difficult to
-climb. I propose to describe these two only. From
-all accounts it would appear that they represent fully
-the satisfactory routes up the Screes. The sketch
-in Haskett Smith’s book shows them as B and C (the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
-reader can let B stand for ‘big’ and C for ‘central’).
-That which is marked A in his sketch is no climb at
-all. It is just a gully and nothing more, but it was
-not quite so worthy of being labelled as the next
-great one to the left.</p>
-
-<p>The B gully was first climbed in the winter of
-1891-2 by Messrs. Collie, Hastings, and Robinson,
-and an interesting account of the ascent, contributed
-by Dr. Collie, appeared in the ‘Scottish Mountaineering
-Journal’ for January, 1894. A year later Mr.
-Mummery made the second ascent. Not so long
-afterwards Robinson showed me the way up with a
-large party of enthusiasts, whose strength and nerve
-were pretty well exhausted by the time we dragged
-ourselves over the last pitch.</p>
-
-<p>Concerning the early history of the attempts on
-the C gully I have not been able to gather much
-information. Many parties have started up it with
-the impression that they were undertaking the Great
-Gully, but they never succeeded in finishing it. On
-April 19, 1895, Messrs. Lawrence, Simpson, and
-Patchell, made a magnificent assault on it, and by
-the merest accident they had to give in almost at
-the moment of success. They climbed seven pitches,
-the gully getting harder at each successive pitch.
-Then, when worn out with fatigue and exposure to
-wet and cold, they misjudged the difficulty of the
-ninth pitch. It is certainly most formidable to look
-at from below the eighth, but on closer examination
-its difficulties vanish. That is to say, they become
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-insignificant for a party that can get over the
-seventh pitch. They saw two more huge obstacles
-looming above the ninth, and were completely disheartened.
-There happened to be an easy exit on
-the left, and they took to it. Once or twice since
-that date others have tried the gully again, but
-without effecting any further advance. In April,
-1897, Mr. H. C. Bowen accompanied me from Wastdale
-in an attempt. Circumstances favoured us
-throughout, and the gully yielded to our attack. I
-believe it is one of the hardest climbs that either of
-us has yet effected in Cumberland, but that may be
-because it is one of the most recent. Before
-attempting it visitors to the district should see first
-if they can comfortably manage the B gully.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Great Gully of the Screes (B).</span>&mdash;The
-usual way of reaching it from Wastdale Head is by
-the road as far as the second field beyond Wastdale
-Hall. There a path across the bridge can be found,
-and the course of the stream followed up to the lake
-side. The foot of the gully is reached in fifteen
-minutes by bearing obliquely upwards across ancient
-scree. Its aspect is such as to directly face the
-small peninsula across the water a trifle to the left
-of the Hall. The right edge of the gully extends
-further downwards than the left, and a small stream
-of water is usually finding its way down the rough
-scree bed.</p>
-
-<p>A few feet up we reach the first obstacle, in the
-shape of a broken waterfall altogether about thirty
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-feet high. It is usual to take to the steep grass on
-the left, a route that looks easier than it actually is.
-When the soil is damp the earth comes away like
-sand, and there is little reliability in the holds all
-the way up. We step with relief into the bed of the
-gully again, and look up to see what the prospect is.
-An easy slope leads towards a second waterfall, considerably
-higher than the first. Ordinarily there is
-no chance of surmounting it directly, but a way of
-avoiding it discloses itself as we approach. The
-gully divides into two, the main portion being to the
-left, and a fine branch passing up to a height of 150
-feet on the right. We start by climbing the first
-pitch in the branch gully&mdash;a narrow vertical corner
-in the wall down which a vigorous spout of water
-jets like a hydrant. There are a few ledges on the
-left side which enable us to avoid some of the water,
-but if there has been much rain before our expedition
-it is impossible to keep dry during the ascent.</p>
-
-<p>It was here that I saw a sinful act of revenge
-that grieved me much at the time. My companions
-had been with me up the Scawfell Pinnacle by the
-Deep Ghyll route on the previous day, and one had
-kept the others in painful attitudes on the cliff
-while he leisurely proceeded to photograph us. The
-partner of my woes vowed vengeance, and exacted
-it here on the Screes. His turn it was to manipulate
-the camera, and his wicked malice prompted him to
-insist on taking a photograph when his brother was
-half-way up the corner. We had given him the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
-right of choosing his subject and could not complain,
-especially as he was loud in his praise of the view
-and in his grief at his brother’s cramped and
-drenched condition. But he was in good humour
-for the rest of the day, and that was worth paying
-for.</p>
-
-<p>The position now is that a buttress separates us
-from the main gully. We have to clamber a few
-feet up this, next along a shallow, sloping scoop as
-far as it goes, and then traverse across to the head of
-the big fall. The leader is not able to derive much
-help from the rope in case of a slip, but it is as well
-for the second man to climb thirty feet up the right
-wall of the branch gully, so as to be higher than
-the pioneer. The buttress looks much broken from
-below, but the general slope is to our disadvantage,
-and the final traverse is along a crumbling ledge
-of earth and grass. Frost occasionally makes the
-climbing easier, by binding the earth firmly to the
-rock.</p>
-
-<p>The view across the lake from the top of the
-waterfall is very beautiful. The rich dark green of
-the pines that grow down to the water’s edge on the
-other side form a striking contrast to the gaunt and
-barren walls of black rock that close in the view.
-Buckbarrow fills up the background, the severity of
-its seamed precipices softened by distance.</p>
-
-<p>The branch gully, it may here be mentioned, has
-never been climbed throughout. It ends on the
-bastion at no great height above us, and is probably
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
-not very stiff. I tried it one Christmas Day with
-Messrs. Robinson and Fowler, but we rose no higher
-than the little notch on the thin curtain of rock that
-forms its right boundary. We got soaked in the
-little waterfall, and the bitter cold drove us back unsuccessful.
-We had difficulties with the awkward
-chimney above the narrow corner.</p>
-
-<p>Keeping up the main gully, an easy stretch takes
-us to the third pitch. It is a water-slide, and we must
-hurry up quickly if dryness is still any consideration.
-The best way is on the left. There are many holds
-under the water, and our efforts to prevent its trickling
-down our arms will be futile if we get flurried by nasty
-remarks from those behind. Almost before we can
-gain breath again we are confronted by a similar difficulty.
-The water-slide here is taken first on the right,
-until a slanting crack leads across to the other side.
-The climbing is rather stiff near the top, and careful
-search should be made for the safest footholds.</p>
-
-<p>The fifth pitch that we now approach is generally
-regarded as the hardest. It is undoubtedly difficult
-when taken by the route first discovered. A long
-wet slope of rock divides the gully into two parts.
-On the right there seems little likelihood of finding a
-way up. The great overhanging slabs are fifty feet
-high, and water is continually pouring down them.
-On the left the chance of success is greater. A
-slanting crack lies between the rock slope and the
-side wall. It leads straight up to a hole underneath
-a huge overhanging boulder that dominates the pitch.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
-There we can see a choice of route. The way first
-adopted is to wriggle up the chimney between the
-boulder and the left wall; but it is preferable
-to crawl out of the hole to the right and make an
-exit over rounded boulders to the top of the obstacle.
-The chimney is extremely stiff, the main difficulty
-being to make a start from the hole. If the cave
-had a level bottom the difficulties would be much
-moderated. There are no holds on the boulder itself
-and very few on the side wall, but those few make it
-worth while starting with the face to the wall. Six
-feet higher, when the climber is in the most exposed
-situation, he must turn half round and use both sides
-of the chimney. If the leader cannot get into the crack
-unassisted, it is a good plan for the second to hitch
-himself to a jammed boulder at the back of the cave
-and proffer a shoulder as a take-off. The first explorers
-had ice to contend against and proceeded in a
-still more cautious manner, all three combining their
-strength at the awkward corner. I have three times
-seen men swing off on the rope when half way up the
-chimney, and am bound to admit that there is too
-much touch-and-go for the way to suit any but very
-strong climbers. The easier way out of the hole&mdash;first
-taken, I think, by Messrs. Whitaker and Thorp&mdash;seems
-to reduce the difficulty considerably, and
-will probably become a favourite exit.</p>
-
-<p>Above the fifth pitch we step out into a huge
-amphitheatre of rock. It is difficult to decide which
-is the main gully, and many men are willing to conclude
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
-that there is no more hard work in front,
-and that a speedy passage out of the hollow will
-conduce most to their happiness.</p>
-
-<p>The real gully passes up on the left. A branch
-starts pleasantly enough to the right, but after one
-or two fairly easy pitches we are confronted by a
-blank, wet wall. The sides are steep and spiky and
-rotten; it was a most miserable hour I once spent
-getting over forty feet of this dreadful <i>cul-de-sac</i>, and
-ever since I have solemnly warned others from any
-such attempt to shirk the final part of the Great Gully.
-If they wish to get out, they should keep still more
-to the right, over steep grass and occasional slight
-rock. Traversing in a westerly or south-westerly
-direction, they pass across the heads of several gullies,
-above the worst portion of the C gully, and then out
-on the fell side, whence an easy run takes them down
-to the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>The three or four pitches that must be overcome
-in mounting to the head of the true Great Gully are
-short but difficult. The ghyll is narrow and wet
-and it is almost impossible towards the finish to
-avoid a drenching by the slender stream that
-monopolizes the direct route. The last pitch is
-ordinarily circumvented by passing up the nasty
-wall of loose earth and rocky <i>débris</i> on the left.
-This diversion leads on to an easy broken buttress
-from which we can walk into the gully again and up
-its scree finish to the crest of the precipice.</p>
-
-<p>On the occasion of my first ascent we were four
-and a half hours in the gully. A second expedition to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-the top of the fifth pitch took three hours; and half
-that time was spent at photography.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Central Gully (C).</span>&mdash;Bowen and I had
-been climbing together for some days last Easter
-(1897), and were reserving an attempt on the C gully
-for the latter end of our holiday, to give ourselves the
-chance of getting into good form and the place an
-opportunity for drying up.</p>
-
-<p>One fine morning we heard that another party were
-driving down the valley on their way to the Great
-Gully. They offered us seats in their wagonette. We
-gladly accepted, and had a pleasant drive along the
-lakeside as far as Wastdale Hall. The walk round to
-the foot of our climb occupied us the best part of
-half an hour, and we then left our friends to continue
-their journey, arranging to look out for them at the
-top of the Screes a few hours later.</p>
-
-<p>The gully was easy at the outset, but far up above
-us we could see difficulties in plenty, and we began
-the scramble with a sense of future bliss that rather
-detracted from our present enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p>We passed up on the left-hand side of the first
-pitch at 11-18, over fifteen feet of steep grass and
-rock. The holds were fairly good beside the waterfall.
-A few feet further on the gully narrowed at a
-second pitch&mdash;a steep gutter down which the stream
-endeavoured to smooth a way. We could use ledges
-on either side, and at the top a tree-stem that has lain
-there for some years gave us assistance. The pitch
-is about twenty-five feet high.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span></p>
-
-<p>Then there followed two easy ten-feet bits before
-we found ourselves compelled at the fifth pitch to
-quit the bed of the gully. This obstacle sent us
-off to the left up a steep grass bank before we could
-traverse back into the narrow chimney at an assailable
-spot. We were obliged to use our knees for
-wedging safely in the V-shaped corner, and thus had
-our introduction to the water-way. The ledges were
-few and slippery. Ten feet up the corner a jammed
-stone and a slippery slab guarded the head of the
-pitch. We reached the former actually behind the
-water, and hastened out to the left with but slight
-steadying holds for the hands.</p>
-
-<p>Then we halted a little and looked about us.
-We had gone through the preliminaries, and realized
-that our gully was now getting stiff. The view
-upwards showed the great seventh pitch, but nothing
-higher. Far below we could see the end of the lake.
-The prospect was not nearly so fine as that from the
-Great Gully; the rocks were not so boldly carved
-out, nor the outlook so fair.</p>
-
-<p>The next obstacle was formed by a jammed
-boulder thirty feet high, impossible to climb direct.
-It would perhaps have been best to take it on the
-right, but we advanced tentatively up the other side,
-and then, seeing that it would just go, kept on to the
-top. Our route lay up the narrow crack between
-the boulder and the side wall. A shoulder was
-useful for the leader at the start, but he had a bad
-six feet just above. The only hold for the right hand
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-was obtained by clenching the fist inside the crack
-so as to form a wedge. A far-away notch in the wall
-gave an oblique push-off for the left foot, the struggle
-being mainly to keep close to the crack.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulties now became almost continuous,
-and we were unable to define exactly the beginning
-of the seventh pitch. Some twenty feet of steep
-climbing up the bed of the ghyll first followed
-and we reached a little platform whence a branch
-gully of steep grass led out on the buttress to
-our left. The main gully was thirty feet across,
-narrowing a little higher up. An almost vertical
-rib of rock some six feet thick divided the gully
-into two parts. That on the right was a wide
-recess roofed in by a great stone nearly a
-hundred feet overhead. From our little platform
-we could see the water streaming over the edge
-of the roof, and forming a thin veil at the entrance
-to the cave. The left-hand side of the rib was a
-narrow crack sloping back at an angle of about 45°,
-but after the first thirty feet continuing to the top
-perpendicularly. The route we chose lay first up the
-crack, then across the rib and into the cave. A
-second start being made from there, we proposed to
-climb up the vertical rib, taking to the crack on its
-left whenever the difficulties became extreme. At the
-level of the roof of the cavern we were to traverse
-across on to it and make directly up its smooth slope
-and round by the left of a higher jammed block that
-overhung the finishing portion of the pitch. I think
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
-the route differs a little from that of the first party,
-who were somewhat assisted by a jammed stone then
-in the crack. In fact one member considered the
-stone essential for a successful ascent, and that its
-untimely removal closed the upper half for ever.
-But there can be no doubt that in a dry season the
-obstacle can be overcome by a moderately strong
-party, and that in the normal ‘streamy’ state of the
-gully the climber needs but the knowledge of a
-route and the nerve to follow it without hesitation
-and without regard to dryness.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p>I.</p>
-<p class="author">PLATE VI.</p>
-<img id="i_203i" src="images/i_203i.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE WASTWATER SCREES (p. 191).</p>
-
-<p class="copy">The height of CC is about 1,000 feet.</p>
-
-<p class="small table">
-A An Easy Gully.<br />
-B The Great Gully (1891).<br />
-C The Central Gully (1897).<br />
-D A Minor Gully, not very difficult.<br />
-<i>b</i> The Curtain.<br />
-<i>c</i> The Easy Traverse.<br />
-<i>d</i> Descent from Traverse.<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p>II</p>
-<img id="i_203ii" src="images/i_203ii.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">THE PAVEY ARK GULLIES (p. 208).</p>
-
-<p class="copy">The height of BB is about 400 feet.</p>
-
-<p class="small table">
-A Little Gully (1886).<br />
-B The Great Gully (1882).<br />
-C Easy Scree Gully.<br />
-D Jack’s Rake.<br />
-E Stickle Tarn.<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>We found the way easy up to the cave. There
-Bowen braced himself firmly amidst the bright green
-ferns and endeavoured to reconcile himself to the
-prospect of a long wait. He could not trace out my
-route upwards, for the curtain of water was between
-us, but now and again when troubles were thickest
-he would inquire feelingly after my condition.</p>
-
-<p>It was straightforward climbing out from the cave
-and up to the vertical buttress. But the absence of
-suitable holds in the crack on the left made the next
-twenty feet very severe, and I was glad to find at
-last a series of ledges across to the top of the cave.
-The holds were wet and my fingers benumbed. If
-the ledges had been anything but satisfactory the
-traverse would have been highly incorrect, not to
-say immoral. Then the rope had to be lengthened
-out and the wait was unpleasant. But the rock
-slope was a much simpler matter than it had appeared
-to be from below, and the rest of the pitch was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-scarcely more than a walk. I drew up over the last
-block with much relief, and paused to recover warmth
-and feeling before drawing in the rope for Bowen.
-He climbed with great rapidity and practically left
-out the traverse; it was rather vexatious to find
-that he emerged fresh and comparatively dry. It
-was now 12-34 <small>P.M.</small>, and so far we had advanced
-rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>A few feet in front was a long thin crack, looking
-easy but proving awkward at close quarters. We
-found it best to traverse up the smooth slab on the
-left and then crawl along a rickety ledge of grass and
-rock back to the gully again. Were we nevermore
-to find an easy piece? Almost at once a ninth pitch
-faced us, looking somewhat like the eighth. The
-gully suddenly narrows to a V-groove which springs
-up vertically for twelve feet, then slopes away at 45°
-for twenty feet, and finally is blocked by a few
-boulders before widening out again. Just before the
-constriction occurs, the walls of the ravine slope
-outwards at an easy angle, and the tangle of thickly-matted
-grass disguises the treacherous character of
-the rock underneath. This has been splintered and
-loosened by frost and sturdy vegetation. Great
-masses in many steep places are ready to fall at a
-touch, and scrambling is robbed of its pleasures
-by the sense of possible insecurity of every available
-hold. I tried at first to keep up the crack,
-but just at the corner where it trends obliquely
-upwards the difficulties of holding on proved too
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-great and a cautious descent had to be effected.
-Then we looked to the left up a steep little gully
-fifty feet high. It ended abruptly in the main
-wall of the ravine, but a great splinter of rock at the
-highest corner gave us a chance of belaying. Bowen
-clambered gingerly over the broken ground and tied
-himself to the rock. Then, slipping my rope round
-it, he prepared to hold me during the next move.
-Our plan was to clamber up the loose face on the
-left of the awkward pitch and traverse into the gully
-twenty-five feet higher. My rope was dragging
-along the wall, and would have dislodged a good
-deal if suddenly called upon to break my fall. The
-worst bit was the last six feet of traverse, which I
-very much loosened during the passage. The gully
-was then bestridden and both sides used for the
-finishing portion of the pitch. When Bowen came
-along, the traverse broke away at his touch, and it
-was rather alarming to see him start falling backwards.
-But the rope was tight above him and he
-simply swung round into the gully; it was the most
-expeditious mode of entering, but he bruised his leg
-a little at the final bump. We afterwards agreed
-that the second man ought to take the whole
-obstacle direct. Trying to repeat the ascent again
-in April, 1898, by exactly the same manœuvres, the
-slight remnant of traverse broke away with me and
-I had a bad fall. I was saved, of course, by the
-rope. The direct ascent of the watercourse has
-been proved to be possible, and is now much the
-better way.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span></p>
-
-<p>Such was the ninth pitch, probably the one
-misjudged by Dr. Lawrence’s party on April 9,
-1895. They had taken four hours to climb to the
-eighth, remarkably good going when one considers
-the bad condition of the gully during their ascent
-and the amount of new ground they managed to
-cover. We had mounted in a little less than an
-hour and three quarters; but we were only a small
-party and the circumstances very favourable. They
-saw a hundred-feet pitch following on a few yards
-higher and endeavoured to estimate its difficulties.
-From below the aspect is terrifying, and after a
-slight survey they decided to work out of the ravine
-by an easy exit up the left wall. Thence they saw
-a few more pitches higher up beyond the tenth, and
-were convinced that they had done right. But they
-were mistaken, as our experience proved.</p>
-
-<p>A little direct scrambling up the bed of the
-gully took us to the foot of the great obstacle. A
-water-shoot splashes on to the left wall eighty feet
-up, and is deflected into the cavernous depths of
-a black recess formed in the gully by a long buttress
-that divides it into two parts. The climb up
-through the splashing water appears to be almost
-hopeless, and a view from above of the last twenty
-feet shows that the risk would be extreme if the
-pitch were attacked on that side. But the buttress
-will be found on inspection to close in a sort of
-chimney on the right, fairly easy to reach and most
-comfortable to follow up to its finish three feet
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-above the level of the top of the waterfall. This
-branch chimney is safe and dry. There are no loose
-stones about, and the occasional glimpses of the
-furious shoot over the way are very pleasing. They
-were so to us, at any rate, who had been in fear and
-trembling lest we should be compelled to attack the
-pitch through the waterfall. We were surprised at
-our good fortune, and none the less on seeing that the
-difficulties above were insignificant. A short scree
-and an easy twelve-feet obstacle brought us up to the
-well-known traverse across the face of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>We could hear occasional shouting of our friends
-in the Great Gully. It tempted us to work over to
-them and finish on the final chimneys of their climb.
-But we felt constrained to keep straight up, lest
-any further pitches should linger unclimbed. The
-C gully was to acknowledge itself vanquished from
-beginning to end, and we set ourselves to finish
-the task. Little actually remained. A steep climb
-of thirty feet, using both sides of the gully, with poor
-holds near the top, virtually brought us to an end of
-its interesting and extended series of pitches. A
-scramble up the last water-slide and a muddy slope
-led to the long scree finish, and we emerged at the
-summit shortly after two o’clock. The walk home
-over Ill Fell took an hour and a half.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>PAVEY ARK</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The Langdale Pikes form a beautiful group of hills
-four miles to the east of the Scawfell Pikes. They
-lie at the head of Langdale, and the highest point,
-Harrison Stickle, is a prominent object in many a
-favourite landscape.</p>
-
-<p>Harrison Stickle is splendidly shaped, and
-manages to give an impression of much greater height
-than it really possesses (2,401 feet). Half a mile to the
-west is the Pike of Stickle or the Sugarloaf. It has
-a little climbing on the west face. Mr. Gwynne writes
-of it thus: ‘The Sugarloaf itself is a very fine peak,
-that, viewed from the valley, has very much the
-appearance of the Mönch. It runs down towards
-the Stake Pass in a spur, which must be the starting-point
-of most of the climbs on this mountain. There
-is a curious gully here, which is worthy of the
-climber’s attention. It does not run from top to
-bottom, but suddenly begins about the middle of the
-crag. The difficulty is to get at this gully, and some
-pretty climbing can be obtained in the attempt.’</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat south of the mid-point between
-Harrison Stickle and the Sugarloaf is the summit of
-Gimmer Crag. It overlooks the old hotel of Dungeon
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-Ghyll, and offers in dry weather a considerable
-amount of indiscriminate scrambling.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_208" src="images/i_208.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE PAVEY ARK GULLIES FROM STICKLE TARN</p></div>
-
-<p>One of the finest little tarns of the district lies
-900 feet below the summit of Harrison Stickle, on its
-north-east side. Stickle Tarn is almost as solitary as
-Easedale, and its surroundings are decidedly finer.
-It is about an hour’s walk from Dungeon Ghyll, by
-a small footpath keeping close to the stream that
-is fed by the lake waters. The view across the tarn
-is a delight to climbers’ eyes. The great cliffs of
-Pavey Ark, rising 700 feet above the lake, are
-darkly reflected in the still waters. They are deeply
-cut by two gullies that immediately arrest attention.
-Each marks a little notch in the sky-line. A third
-notch further to the left indicates the head of a
-slighter indentation in the face of the cliff, which, so
-far as I know, has not yet been explored. The right-hand
-‘Great’ Gully was first climbed by Haskett
-Smith in the summer of 1882. The left, called the
-‘Little’ Gully by way of antithesis, the same climber
-explored in June, 1886. A lady ascended the Great
-Gully in 1887, and later years have seen a steady
-succession of visitors to these crags.</p>
-
-<p>Well towards the north end of the cliff is a wide
-scree gully with a square notch at its crest. Near
-the foot of this a safe natural path may be followed
-obliquely across the face. This is the well-known
-Jack’s Rake. It starts rather steeply, but soon
-assumes a gentle, uniform gradient. It crosses the
-Great Gully a hundred feet below the top; there
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-then follows a rather awkward bit for the walker,
-who will need to scramble up a corner to get on to
-the last portion of the rake. It crosses the Little
-Gully within fifty feet of the Summit, and ends on the
-buttress just beyond. Two chimneys spring from the
-level of Jack’s Rake to the north of the Great Gully,
-which both look interesting. Our pleasant scramble
-is thus described by Gwynne: ‘This ledge [i.e. Jack’s
-Rake] offers a multitude of good opportunities to
-the climber. It runs obliquely across the face of
-the precipice, but it need not necessarily be followed
-throughout its length by the mountaineer who wishes
-for something a little more exciting. About half-way
-up there runs on to the ledge a chimney which&mdash;when
-it is not a small waterfall&mdash;forms a pleasant
-climb to some broken rock above, whence the
-summit is easily reached. If, however, the water in
-the chimney makes it uncomfortable and unpleasant
-for the climber, he may still arrive at the top of it
-by choosing a long bit of steep, smooth rock on the
-left. There are two clefts which afford fairly good
-hand-and-foot holds, and from there the top of the
-chimney is attained.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Little Gully.</span>&mdash;Some six years ago I paid
-my first visit to Pavey Ark. The accounts of the Great
-Gully were very enticing. One visitor spoke of it as
-having only one pitch, ‘but that was severe.’ Another,
-commenting on the first, remarked: ‘Yes! it has only
-one pitch, but that one lasts all the way up!’ Then a
-celebrated climber had estimated its height at double
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-the actual amount, which was a testimonial to its
-good qualities all the more acceptable because it was
-given unconsciously.</p>
-
-<p>There were tales of a leader pawing about for
-half an hour on the second man’s head and shoulders,
-in search of holds. Gloves and sticks and other
-impedimenta were understood to lie in profusion
-at the foot of the stiffest bit, left there by those
-who could climb no higher, or those who sadly
-expected that after their despairing attempts had
-failed they would have no further need for such
-articles. In short, there was a good deal of pernicious
-exaggeration concerning the Great Gully,
-and I went for it expecting great things. It was
-rather a long walk from Wastdale, over Great End
-and Bowfell. The descent to Dungeon Ghyll was
-taken for the sake of a look-in at the waterfall, and
-for the next half-hour hurrying up to Stickle Tarn, I
-felt to the full the futility of having run down from
-Bowfell to Langdale to save time. Arrived at the
-small dam that holds in the waters of the lake, I
-saw the two gullies on the other side, and concluding
-that the left-hand one looked harder, skirted the
-lake, and made for its foot. It was a foolish mistake,
-thus to confuse the two routes. The Little Gully
-was ascended that day, and until Haskett Smith’s
-book came out three years later, describing the
-locality in some detail, I fondly imagined that I
-knew the best thing on Pavey Ark.</p>
-
-<p>The gully is narrow at first. Its walls are red in
-colour, and a film of water generally covers them.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
-The holds are not particularly good, and the steepness
-of the gully renders extreme caution necessary. Both
-walls are used, and our advance is after the fashion of
-a man on a ladder. Then the gully widens, and the
-difficulties come in successive steps till a great overhanging
-boulder blocks the direct ascent. Here the
-right wall is sufficiently broken to offer a method of
-circumventing the pitch, but in wet weather the
-place is bad. Just above this I found a stick, conclusive
-evidence to the simple mind that the hard
-bit of the Great Gully was now being approached.
-It looked as though it had been there for years.
-The view backwards was most impressive, the tarn
-appearing almost beneath my feet. The second
-obstacle was now to be considered. The gully
-narrowed to a thin vertical corner plastered over
-with wet green moss. The take-off was earthy and
-disagreeably loose. The only holds were on the right
-wall near the corner, and were few and far between.
-I hesitated below for a long time, scarcely knowing
-how best to start operations. A big jammed stone
-came away in my hands as I made a first attempt,
-and crashed down the gully from side to side. At
-last I rammed the left knee tentatively into the wet
-corner, and edged up a few feet with the aid of
-sundry slight supports for the right foot. Ten feet
-higher an excellent hold was reached with the hand,
-and the chief trouble was over. Huge boulders were
-piled overhead confusedly, but they gave plenty of
-opportunities, and no longer had the smooth, almost
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-shiny surface that characterized the rocks further
-down. The top of the gully was reached three
-quarters of an hour after starting. It was half-past
-five, and snow was beginning to fall; I thought it
-desirable to hurry, and a steady trot westwards
-round the head of Langdale Combe and the further
-side of Black Crags brought me in three miles to the
-path at the Angle Tarn and the foot of the up-grade
-towards Esk Hause. Thence a steady two hours’
-walk in the dark brought me safely to Wastdale, in
-happy ignorance of the fact that I had only visited
-the Little Gully. But to this day I think it as hard
-as its neighbour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Great Gully.</span>&mdash;Shortly after Easter, 1896,
-I begged some friends to come over and climb the
-Great Gully with me. It was my last day at Wastdale;
-I was due at Coniston the same evening, and
-the Langdale Pikes offered a pleasanter walk to the
-Old Man district than is given by the Eskdale and
-Cockley Beck route. My friends stipulated that we
-should call a halt at Kern Knotts on the way out
-and attempt the ‘crack.’ This we managed with
-expedition, and continued the journey betimes over
-the Styhead and Esk Hause.</p>
-
-<p>The three miles from Angle Tarn to Pavey Ark
-are rather tedious, though the view of Bowfell and
-of Pike of Stickle relieves the monotony. It is a
-wild open moor that we have to cross, and its gentle
-slope is very deceptive. For a long time the sky-line
-in front of us, after rounding Langdale Combe
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-at the top of the Stake Pass, recedes as we advance,
-and it is not till the grassy ridge of Thunacar Knott
-is gained that we begin to see the upper crags of
-Pavey Ark. Nevertheless it is much better to
-approach the crags in this way from the Wastdale
-direction than to descend first towards Dungeon
-Ghyll. The great rocks strewn about the crest of
-the cliff are most singular in character. Their surface
-is as rough as that of the magnesian limestone
-in the Dolomites. If only the whole face of Pavey
-Ark were of this formation we should have a fine
-opportunity for practice with the scarpetti or rope-soled
-shoes used by the Tyrolese rock-climbers.</p>
-
-<p>We descended towards the tarn by an easy slope
-between the cliff and the north-east ridge of Harrison
-Stickle. Then at the level of the base of the crags
-we crossed a water-course, and traversed over the
-scree to the foot of the Great Gully, passing the
-entrance to the other on our way. The remarks
-already made, and reference to the diagram on page
-203, will perhaps give sufficient indication of the
-place at which we now found ourselves. In misty
-weather the locality can be identified by the branch
-gully to the left, that starts at once and loses itself
-200 feet higher up.</p>
-
-<p>The lower part of the climb very much resembles
-the corresponding portion in the other gully. The
-side walls are close together, the rock is steep, and
-hand-and-foot scrambling fairly continuous for about
-150 feet. When the rocks are wet some special
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
-care is necessary at a place thirty feet from the
-starting-point. Then comes the first pitch, a remarkably
-fine piece of rock scenery. An enormous boulder
-completely blocks the way, projecting at least fifteen
-feet at its upper part. The left wall is practically
-hopeless, but the other side shows a series of small
-ledges that enable the climber to work up to the
-flat corner between the boulder and the right wall.
-Formerly this bit was grassy. Only a few small
-tufts now remain, and the holds are therefore more
-obvious. A pleasanter way lies through the cave
-and out by a narrow tunnel in the roof to the same
-flat corner, which is just discernible from below.
-That way our party followed. The dripping water
-from the roof was a trifle unpleasant sometimes, but
-there was a great sense of security in adopting the
-through route. The tunnel required careful going
-until one’s eyes got accustomed to the darkness.
-Then the handholds could be distinguished and the
-platform reached in safety.</p>
-
-<p>The view outwards was most brilliant. Sunlight
-on the distant range of Fairfield and Helvellyn, the
-serpentine Windermere appearing here and there far
-away to the south; Langdale in all its loveliness,
-with the watch-tower of Harrison Stickle at its
-head; and the gloomy Stickle Tarn 500 feet beneath
-us. Our own situation was sufficiently striking for
-the recollection of this pitch to remain impressed on
-our memories. We stood (one at a time, by the
-way) on the very edge of the overhanging eaves
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-of the huge cave beneath. The side walls of the
-gully seemed to cut us off from all communication
-with the world. We could only realize the solid
-platform and the enduring rock to which we hung;
-all the rest might have been a fantasy. Even the
-bold fisherman down by the shores of the tarn, slowly
-manipulating his rod as he cautiously waded knee-deep
-in the water, seemed to belong to another
-species. It was incredible that I should be crossing
-London within twenty-four hours; and the thought
-of it only stirred slightly in my mind, without
-actually shaping itself until this present time of
-writing.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty was not quite passed. To reach
-the top of the pitch we had to haul ourselves up
-a tight little corner between the boulder and the
-side wall. Formerly the headroom was so limited
-that it was necessary to keep out a little, and effect a
-rather sensational haul over the front of the boulder.
-Since the first ascent a piece of rock has fallen away,
-and the corner is easier. There is no actual danger
-for the leader, as his rope can be securely held in the
-interior of the cave. In fact, he may, if he chooses,
-obtain any desired assistance from the second man
-properly belayed on the platform. The corner is only
-ten feet high and the rocks are very good.</p>
-
-<p>Almost immediately after the first pitch the gully
-undergoes a great change in appearance. It still
-remains narrow, but the bed has alternately vertical
-and horizontal stretches of wet and slippery rock. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-hardest piece is generally regarded as the second pitch.
-It consists of a long slab thirty feet high, constituting
-the true bed of the ghyll and the only available way
-up. It is set at a steep angle, and appears to be
-singularly devoid of useful holds. On the occasion
-of the first ascent it was ‘lubricated by a film of fine
-mud,’ and our own observations gave strength to
-the conviction that such was its usual condition.
-Loose gravel is being continually washed down the
-incline, lodging in a most annoying manner on the
-best holds. Small wonder that this ‘brant and slape’
-part gives pause to many climbers. Yet it has been
-climbed even when ice is about, thanks no doubt to
-good nails and cool judgment. We treated the pitch
-with the utmost respect, carefully clearing away the
-grit from each little ledge and working as close to
-the corner as the holds would permit. Fifteen feet
-up we passed the worst spot, ugly to look at but
-not bad enough to turn us back. Then the slope
-eased off and we could walk up grass and scree on to
-Jack’s Rake, a hundred feet above the pitch. The
-rake really terminates the gully. To the left is a
-small chimney forming a genuine little obstacle to an
-advance along the rake. That was certainly no
-suitable finish to our climb. A few yards to the
-right showed what we wanted, a gully that should
-lead out to the top of Pavey Ark. We found the rocks
-there presented the rough surface that characterised
-the boulders up above. There were several great slabs
-blocking our way at first, but it was a real delight to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-get over them. A short and narrow chimney followed,
-with such gripping powers that our clothes clung to
-the sides tenaciously. As Haskett Smith remarks, ‘it
-would be quite difficult to make a slip on them.’
-Then we walked out to the top, three-quarters of an
-hour after entering the gully, and while leisurely
-coiling up my rope we discussed the question of tea.
-Should the others accept my invitation to Dungeon
-Ghyll and then return to Wastdale at dusk, or should
-they make straight for Wastdale at once? To my
-sorrow they objected to the suggested extension of
-their walk and strode off to the west. My own course
-lay first to the foot of the crags, where my rücksack
-had been left, and thence to Dungeon Ghyll and
-Coniston.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Rake End Chimney.</span>&mdash;Besides the third
-chimney described by Gwynne as running half-way
-up on to the ledge, there is a short but excellent
-route up the crags starting near the foot of Jack’s
-Rake. The following note was supplied by Mr.
-Claude Barton:&mdash;‘The climb is in two pitches, the
-first being broken up into places where you can play
-up a second man. The <i>mauvais pas</i> is just at the
-top of this. A moss-grown wall and two jammed
-stones must be surmounted, and the leader may need
-some support. The second pitch is a fine chimney
-blocked by a large stone that is passed by the
-interior, and then used as a take-off for the final easy
-concluding portion. The climb is certainly harder
-than the Great Gully.’
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>DOE CRAG, CONISTON</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>This happy hunting-ground for the rock-climber
-is within an hour’s walk of Coniston. It forms part
-of the range of hills that includes Wetherlam and the
-Old Man, but unlike these great neighbours it has
-hitherto been left untouched by miners and quarry-men.</p>
-
-<p>From the Old Man we may look westwards across
-the upper end of Goat’s Water, and see the summit
-of Doe Crag almost at our level, some 900 feet
-above the lake. We are facing its grand precipices,
-and are in an excellent position to prospect the
-various gullies that cut deeply into the 500-feet wall
-of rock.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these, as we glance from left to right,
-causes the greatest impression in the sky-line, but is
-of the least interest to mountaineers. It is an easy
-scree gully, possessing a rotten pinnacle that was first
-climbed by Mr. Slingsby in 1887. The second is
-generally known as the Great Gully. It is much
-longer, and includes a fair amount of genuine hard
-work in its ascent. At a distance it appears to have
-a Y shape, by reason of the two branches that diverge
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-from a point about half-way up. The Great Gully
-was first climbed in July, 1888, by Messrs. Hastings,
-Haskett Smith, and E. Hopkinson, its first pitch
-being then taken by the ‘shallow scoop’ on the left of
-the great obstacle. Nearly a year later the brothers
-Hopkinson effected a direct ascent of the pitch by an
-ingenious utilization of the rope, to which we shall
-refer subsequently.</p>
-
-<p>To the immediate north of the Great Gully we
-see a huge buttress that springs further down the
-scree towards Goat’s Water than any other part of
-the crag. The lower 300 feet of this buttress exhibit
-a nearly vertical gully that may escape detection
-altogether unless viewed in a favourable light. In
-the view on the opposite page it is well marked by
-the deep black shadow of the rocks on its south side.
-Apparently it joins a sloping gully that leads up to
-the sky-line; but in reality it finishes abruptly on
-the face, at a small grass platform that stretches
-a hundred feet across the buttress. It is now
-known as the Central Chimney, and was first
-climbed in April, 1897, by Mr. Godfrey Ellis and
-myself. In the first edition of this book, the chimney
-was erroneously identified with one of Messrs.
-Hopkinson’s ascents of April, 1895. The route cannot
-be recommended except to experts, by reason equally
-of the genuine difficulties in the chimney and of the
-exposed nature of the awkward situations in it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_220" src="images/i_220.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Doe Crag and Goatswater</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 220</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>The next gully to the right forms the northern
-boundary of the great central buttress. It is but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-slightly marked at the lower end and possesses serious
-difficulties in the first half. We shall call it the
-Intermediate Gully. It was first climbed in April,
-1895, by Messrs. Campbell, and Edward, Albert,
-and J. H. Hopkinson, and described by the most
-experienced of their party as the severest climb he
-had done in the district. Mr. W. J. Williams and I
-went up it at Easter, 1898, when making a fairly
-complete survey of all these splendid, but practically
-unknown gullies.</p>
-
-<p>The Easter Gully now needs localization. It
-comes next to the preceding and is easy to identify.
-It has a huge cave pitch near the bottom, then from
-a great hollow in the crags a vertical chimney springs
-up over a hundred feet in a right-angled corner;
-above this the gully divides into two branches, both
-of which give good climbing until we are nearly at
-the summit-ridge. Careful inquiry enables me to
-say that this was first climbed by Messrs. Haskett
-Smith and Robinson in 1886; they avoided a considerable
-amount of the trouble, inevitable in a
-passage of the lower half of the direct ascent, by
-working up the great buttress on the right, and by
-traversing back into the gully when the opportunity
-disclosed itself. The first passage of the gully by
-the extremely difficult second pitch, and thence
-directly onwards, was made on Easter Day, 1895,
-by Messrs. Otto Koecher and Charles Hopkinson,
-who, however, circumvented the comparatively
-simple cave pitch at the foot. They thought they
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-were on entirely new ground; so did I when on
-Easter Day, 1898, Mr. W. J. Williams accompanied
-me over the first pitch, up a zig-zag course to left
-and right of the long chimney, and then along the
-direct finish to the summit.</p>
-
-<p>The sixth and last great gully is known as the
-North Gully, to see which it is necessary to go well
-towards Goat’s Hause. Three huge boulders block
-up the middle and form the only pitch. The gully
-was formerly supposed to be Messrs. Haskett Smith
-and Robinson’s climb of 1886; actually it is the
-place where Haskett Smith was let down on a rope,
-and gave tribute to the grandeur of the region by
-remarking on its ‘terrific aspect.’ In 1895 a party
-went up what they called the North Gully, but they
-encountered no difficulty during their ascent, and it
-seems more likely therefore that they climbed a
-slighter ghyll between the real North Gully and the
-Easter Gully. They traversed into the latter above
-its difficult chimney. It is hard to say what exploration
-has been made here. Mr. Williams and I
-descended the gully in 1898, and halted there
-sufficiently to convince ourselves of the feasibility of
-its ascent. But whether the climb has ever been
-taken upwards throughout its whole length is an
-open question.</p>
-
-<p>Climbers should visit Doe Crag more frequently.
-The rocks give magnificent sport, the scenery is more
-than ordinarily impressive even to the hardened
-cragsman, and there yet remains a great amount of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-exploratory work to be done. Only the gullies have
-hitherto been tackled. The buttresses are almost
-untouched.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Great Gully.</span>&mdash;The satisfactory part of this
-climb is that its greatest difficulty confronts us at the
-outset. Once the first pitch is accomplished we are
-perfectly certain that the combined skill of the party
-is sufficient to insure a successful ascent of the
-remainder. There is no gradual increase in the
-technical difficulty of the subsequent passages, to vex
-the soul of the conscientious climber with doubts as
-to the morality of advancing, when a critical position
-might be reached where descent is dangerous and
-further ascent beyond his powers. The first pitch is
-severe, and perhaps a little risky for the leader, but
-the remaining four are easy, and the method of tackling
-them obvious. This species of gully is suitable
-for those who tire quickly, or whose impressions of
-the work before them depend on the height they have
-attained. On the other hand, there are climbers who
-like to feel that there is always something serious
-looming ahead, who want the troubles to last them
-all through their climb, and rejoice in a <i>bonne bouche</i>
-at the most elevated situation. Such lingering sweetness
-they can find in the Central Chimney, but not
-here; it is not surprising that many men are satisfied
-with one visit to the Great Gully, and never make
-for it a second time.</p>
-
-<p>It takes us ten minutes to walk up from the lake
-to the entrance of the gully. Then a few yards of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-scree and broken rock lead into a cavern, below a
-chock-stone that offers much resistance to the direct
-passage up the pitch. A massive buttress encroaches
-on the left, and renders the gully almost narrow
-enough for both sides to be employed together; but
-close inspection shows that near the top of the pitch
-the walls are too far apart and the handholds too
-few. The climber does well to descend a few feet
-and prospect the buttress itself. This exhibits a safer
-route (see view on page 225). Close against the side of
-the vertical left wall the buttress shows a slight fissure,
-that starts from an easy grass platform and runs steeply
-up to a level some twelve feet higher than the top of
-the chock-stone. The difficulty lies in working up the
-corner, following the crack as much as possible, and
-taking sufficient care that the body does not swing
-away from the footholds. A stout individual is likely
-to feel handicapped at an awkward little ledge half-way
-up from the grass platform. The fissure can be
-followed straight up into the gully, but it is easier
-to contour round the buttress and on to the top of
-the true pitch. There is excellent belaying for an
-ascending party, the rope lying along the crack and
-gripping well at several points. It grips just too
-well for the safe belaying of the last man in a
-descent; he had better adopt the dangling method
-and work straight over the chock-stone. This latter
-direct route over the obstacle was tried once or twice
-before 1889, but without success. It was left to the
-brothers Hopkinson to show in that year that it
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
-offered a perfectly safe variation, though probably
-most climbers will agree that it needs more muscle
-than is wanted for the crack route. They clambered
-into the cave and thrust a rope through the small
-aperture in the roof. When a sufficient quantity had
-been poked up in that way, it fell over the front of
-the cave and was available for climbing. But it is
-very severe work to swarm up a thin rope; in this
-case there is slight assistance from the sides of the
-gully, and the transfer of hold from the rope to the
-rock comes when the arms are tired.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_225" src="images/i_225.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The First Pitch in Doe Crag Great Gully</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 225</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>After this difficulty is passed, some yards of scree
-lead to the second pitch. The gully is narrow, and
-the block is produced by two boulders one above the
-other. There is no trouble in working through the
-cave and on to the lower block, whence an easy pull
-over the upper stone takes us again to a long line
-of scree of the impulsive variety. This part of the
-gully is pleasant only when snow is about, when
-the ankle-twisting propensities of the scree are not
-permitted full play.</p>
-
-<p>We are near the point where the gully opens out
-considerably, sending a branch up on the right.
-But before that we have to mount two small pitches,
-the first taken straight up, the second by either right
-or left wall.</p>
-
-<p>The branch exit on the right has no serious difficulties,
-but it abounds in loose holds that the climber
-may find hard to avoid. It leads on to the great
-middle buttress of Doe Crag, above all its dangerous
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-parts, and within easy access of the summit. The
-direct ascent of the gully is interesting only at the
-last step, where a narrow chimney must be passed.
-Its right boundary is a long smooth slab, unusually
-deficient in holds. There are three or four wedged
-stones and the pitch is often wet, but by keeping
-close into the chimney and working up the right
-wall the trouble may be overcome. It is always
-possible, of course, to descend a little and climb out
-of the gully on the right.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Doe Crag Central Chimney.</span>&mdash;This climb
-is known to very few people. Many are aware in a
-vague manner that there is splendid climbing on the
-great buttress of Doe Crag, but only one or two
-cragsmen have learnt where to go for it. So far as
-my own experience is concerned it was almost a
-matter of accident that brought me soon after Easter,
-1897, to the foot of the Central Chimney. The
-previous day had been spent with Messrs. George
-and Ashley Abraham on Lliwedd, in the Snowdon
-district, and a tiresome cross-country night journey
-to Coniston had not tended to put the keenest edge
-on my hunger for adventure. My companion, Mr.
-Godfrey Ellis, and I were really intent on ascending
-by the ‘intermediate gully of terrific aspect,’ down
-which Mr. Haskett Smith had climbed in 1888.
-The Central Chimney certainly looked terrific, more
-so than anything else we could find about there. It
-was also reasonably intermediate, and we came to
-the conclusion that our gully was found. Later
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
-investigation showed that we had made a mistake,
-for Haskett Smith’s chimney is at the north end of
-the crags.</p>
-
-<p>The Central Chimney attracted the attention of
-Mr. Slingsby in 1887, but apparently ours was the
-first ascent. Messrs. Broadrick have been up it
-since, and I have been advised by one of their party
-that the top of the chief difficulty is dangerously
-loose.</p>
-
-<p>We had heavy rücksacks to carry over to Wastdale
-that day, and decided to leave them at the foot
-of the climb, rather than suffer the inconvenience of
-dragging them up with us. We had eighty feet of
-rope, and needed it all near the top.</p>
-
-<p>Our work started easily. Three obvious courses
-led in about thirty feet to a broad, grassy platform,
-from which the chimney made its proper beginning.
-Each of the three ways involved scrambling; they
-started a few feet to the left of the lowest part of
-the crags, and formed between them a very fair
-presentment of a gully entrance. But a glance
-upwards showed that, for some distance at least, we
-should have very little of the nature of a gully to
-guide us. From the platform sprang up the vertical
-wall that gives the central buttress its appearance of
-inaccessibility, almost unrelieved for several hundred
-feet. Our chimney commenced as a thin crack in the
-wall from the platform, only large enough for a hand
-to be thrust in, and so sharp-edged that one’s fingers
-were badly cut in climbing the first five yards.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-Then the crack seemed to widen gradually until
-from below it appeared sufficiently broad for
-wedging. Appearances would have been comforting
-but for the curious absence of retaining wall on the
-right-hand side of the crack. The left was excellent;
-on that side the rock stood out from the corner and
-formed the finest part of the great buttress. But the
-right wall was out clean away, leaving smooth slabs
-that were sure to give trouble when we should find
-the chimney too shallow for further progress.</p>
-
-<p>I started up the thin crack, and found the strain
-very severe on the arms. When it became wide
-enough to support a knee it was possible to halt and
-prospect a little. The next ten feet up the crack
-were obviously most difficult, and a glance at the
-north side showed that it would have been easier to
-work up the right wall for twenty feet from the
-platform before traversing into the crack again.
-Ellis suggested that he should come up to my level
-by means of a slight fissure in the right wall, and
-steadied by the rope that I had flung over a small
-projection some six feet above his head, he managed
-to reach a shaky, sloping ledge of grass, and then to
-manœuvre the rope for my own passage to the same
-resting-place. We next worked upwards into the
-chimney, and kept close in it for twenty feet or
-so. There were good holds on the right until some
-small boulders and <i>débris</i> formed a little platform,
-over the edge of which we were able to pull ourselves.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span></p>
-
-<p>The scenery about here was particularly impressive.
-Our resting-place was scarcely big enough for
-both, and a glance vertically downwards showed us
-the spot where we had commenced operations three
-quarters of an hour previously. The black depths
-of Goat’s Water formed a striking foreground to the
-view of Coniston Old Man across the valley, and it
-almost seemed as though the tarn could be reached
-by a stone falling from our tiny ledge. Up above
-us the crags loomed fearfully. They overhung
-considerably in places, and we saw that our only
-course was to follow boldly the line of our chimney
-till it abruptly terminated in the face. Fortunately
-the weather was good, the rocks dry and warm. To
-have attempted the chimney with much ice or water
-about would have been foolhardiness worthy of our
-wildest days.</p>
-
-<p>From the ledge we found the climbing splendid,
-keeping up the slight rib of rock on the right that
-formed the nearly vertical boundary of the chimney.
-The holds were just sufficiently large to give ample
-support, especially when the back could rest on the
-opposite side of the crack. ‘Backing up’ is usually
-a very constricted performance, with but limited
-views of the scenery around. Here on Doe Crag it
-seems as though most of the mountain is cut away
-excepting those parts of obvious utility to the climber.
-We crawled round the rib when the crack became
-too thin, and worked up several feet of slabby rock
-until the appearances seemed to indicate that an
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-actual gully was now about to manifest itself and
-commence a fresh run up the wall. We therefore
-traversed again to the left into a large recess, and
-after a little scrambling upwards found ourselves
-brought to a stop by a dead wall. The bed of our
-recess was loose and steeply sloping. Its sides were
-slightly iced, and considerable care was needed in
-settling securely down to consider the situation.</p>
-
-<p>The wall was about twenty feet high and too
-smooth to climb. On each side of us were huge
-overhanging buttresses that projected considerably
-beyond the latter portion of our route. It was not
-manifest which of these would offer the best way of
-surmounting the wall, and it might be that neither
-was suitable. We could see that a traverse out of
-the difficulty might be made in the northern direction,
-but it was very exposed and it led too far away
-from our chimney.</p>
-
-<p>Ellis braced himself firmly at the highest corner
-of the recess, and manipulated the rope with special
-care. I started working up between the two buttresses
-in a manner that recalled to us both the well-known
-picture of the Funffingerspitze chimney in
-Sanger-Davies’ book. When some twelve feet above
-him, it seemed safe to quit the left-hand side altogether,
-and a stride effected the change of style.
-But the return was now almost impossible, and in
-the anxious five minutes that followed I had time to
-repent the sudden resolve. The top of the wall was
-within reach, but it was fringed with loose grass
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-tufts that scarcely seemed secure enough to offer
-purchase in the upward heave that I wanted to give
-myself. However, the time spent in hesitation was
-sheer waste, for at the end the pull-up was perfectly
-safe and easy, and a little wriggling over rock and
-steep grass brought me to a long terrace, that
-naturally suggested a halt for the second man’s
-advance. In good time his head appeared above the
-grass tufts that formed the limit of my foreground,
-and a few seconds later he was sitting at my side
-and speculating as to the length of the difficult piece.
-The whole climb so far had been veritably one single
-pitch; we had had no interval of comparative ease,
-and were now eager to find some temporary freedom.</p>
-
-<p>That we found in perambulating our terrace. It
-was about a yard wide and fifty feet long, and gave
-evidence that our gully as such had practically terminated.
-We found it rather awkward clambering
-up the wall some thirty feet to another similar
-terrace. This stretched horizontally from the large
-ravine that now disclosed itself on our right, and
-across the face of the mountain towards the Great
-Gully. The former, we could see, involved some
-pretty climbing a hundred feet below us. At our
-level it was merely a scree-walk finishing at the
-highest part of Doe Crag.</p>
-
-<p>Our route lay up the rocks above the terrace.
-Two narrow clefts offered choice. We took the one
-to the right, about fifteen feet long and sufficiently
-tough to make us remember the place. Then
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-followed easy hand-and-foot work till we could distinguish
-the branch exit of the Great Gully. Down
-this we carefully picked our way, and then returned
-to gather up our belongings and make tracks for
-distant Wastdale. The round had taken three
-hours.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Intermediate Gully.</span>&mdash;We had a glorious
-afternoon for this climb. The previous night had
-brought us from town to Coniston, and we meant to
-give ourselves an easy day. But fearing that the
-weather might change we were tempted to seize the
-opportunity and start earnest business at once.
-Identifying the gully as the first to the right of the
-longest buttress of the crags, we entered it and began
-scrambling immediately. After five minutes of
-‘staircase’ work, using both sides of the gully, we
-came to a point where the left wall overhung a little
-and the gully closed in. A flank movement was
-then effected on the right, over steep rocks and unreliable
-grass ledges, returning by a narrow traverse
-into the gully at a point forty feet higher. The
-second man came straight up, finding two pitches
-confronting him, both of which he thought we could
-have taken directly if time had allowed us to risk an
-attempt. We kept in the ghyll for the next two
-pitches, both of them fairly simple. A fine flat stone
-at the top of the second offered a good standpoint
-for the inspection of the overhanging wall that now
-faced us. The gully had shrunk again into the
-merest crack in the wall. My friend called it the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-extreme pitch of refinement. On our left a smooth
-right-angled corner that probably thought itself a
-branch gully led up to the ridge separating us from
-the Central Chimney. Again it seemed desirable to
-take to the right by a course that was at any rate
-feasible, although it took us away from our direct
-line of ascent. After fifteen feet of traverse the
-buttress looked accessible, but recollecting the poor
-holds that we had encountered in a corresponding
-situation lower down, we went further away still,
-descending slightly to a level platform where the
-leader could be belayed during his direct ascent of
-the wall. Fortunately the rocks were quite dry, as
-otherwise the work that followed would have been
-risky. At first the handholds were unsafe, but in
-ten feet our industrious cleaning away of the grass
-and earth disclosed an excellent cleft in the wall, safe
-and sound. Thence the way was pleasanter, swinging
-upwards towards the left again by immovable
-rockholds. We had several yards of a narrow ledge
-tilted upwards at 30° before entering our gully again,
-and arrived in it just below a little pitch of the type
-that tries the elbow.</p>
-
-<p>Great caution was now needed. Not that the
-climbing was difficult or dangerous, but the gully
-had dwindled into little more than a slight indentation
-in a vertical wall, and each man had to move
-with the utmost deliberation. Holds were numerous,
-generally better on the left wall, but they were all
-rather wet. Soon we were engaged in a violent
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-struggle with a small angular jammed block that
-barred our way. It seemed loose at first, but we
-proved its stability that afternoon by many minutes’
-hauling and wrenching from below and above. The
-chief difficulty was to get the shoulders firmly fixed
-between the sides of the cleft above the jammed
-stone; with only the block to hold and no rest for
-the feet this manœuvre was very awkward to
-perform. Above this a few steps led to a narrow
-cave, which we climbed by its right edge and found
-to be a trying piece of arm work. Here the gully
-expanded into a large scree-bedded ravine with only
-two moderately easy obstacles between us and the
-top of the crag. To our left we could see the ledge
-that marks the end of the Central Chimney. Our
-own gully, looking backwards, seemed to be a
-vertical plunge straight down to the bottom, and as
-usual we caught ourselves wondering whether
-anything else could be called difficult after this.</p>
-
-<p>We reached the summit in two hours from the
-start, and then skirting the lower edge of the crags
-from Goat’s Hause, we made note of each gully as
-we passed its foot. An easy scree shoot, followed
-by a buttress set back at a gentle angle, but with
-splendid practice on it; the North Gully with its
-awe-inspiring middle pitch like the great obstacle in
-Moss Ghyll; a branch gully leading into the North
-Gully; a second branch, looking rather interesting
-but lacking definition higher up; the Easter Gully
-with its double centre portion; the Intermediate
-Gully; the Central Chimney; and the Great Gully.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Easter Gully.</span>&mdash;The same party came
-two days later to examine this climb. The weather
-was very unsettled, and we were forced to the conclusion
-that the main central chimney was too wet
-to be approachable. The scrambling was easy up to
-the cave; then we worked up the vertical left wall
-by diminutive ledges till the level of the cave stone
-was ours, whereupon an awkward bit of traverse
-brought us safely out of the difficulty. We were in
-the great hollow, and were astonished to find that
-in addition to the main chimneys on the right and
-left centre, there were splendid branch gullies up to
-the ridges on either side.</p>
-
-<p>I started up the left central chimney. It was
-dry, but its holds were fragile. In forty feet it
-divided into two parallel branches; that on the left
-was overhanging, and held a bunch of long splinters
-of rock forming a dangerous <i>chevaux-de-frise</i>, ready
-to fall at the slightest notice. So we left it alone,
-and looked to the right branch. For twenty feet it
-went very well, and there, where one man might
-safely wedge himself, it became practically impossible
-to mount any higher. My companion, therefore, came
-up while I worked out on the open face to the right.
-Without much trouble a small platform one foot
-square was reached, from which we proposed to mount
-the buttress that separated us from the right central
-chimney. I hesitated a long while before venturing on
-it; the place was assuredly difficult, we were not
-certain whether the upper portion would be feasible,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-and the strong wind, swirling mist, and intermittent
-rain sapped our courage and strength the more we
-deliberated.</p>
-
-<p>The stiff work began with a scramble up into a
-grassy corner, fifteen feet above my platform. It
-was too small to enter, but from it sprang a narrow
-cleft to the right, very much like the well-known
-‘stomach traverse’ on the Pillar Rock, but considerably
-harder to pass, and without an easy walk
-out at the further end. At its highest point the
-best course seemed to be up a vertical crack in the
-wall, and a stiff scramble here of ten feet brought
-me out on the head of the buttress. Here there was
-a chance of walking over to the right central chimney
-and finishing by the thirty feet or so that remained
-of its special difficulty. But that portion was naturally
-as wet as the lower part that we had purposely
-avoided, and we chose to cross the chimney and
-climb up its right wall.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>COMBE GHYLL</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>Many a pedestrian walking down Borrowdale
-from the Styhead pass, looking backward at the
-fearful descent of some 1,100 feet of rough fellside,
-reaches a point in the valley where he experiences
-difficulty in recalling his track. For the valley
-between Gable and Seathwaite Fell is hidden, and
-his choice hovers between the combe below Sprinkling
-Tarn, walled in by Seathwaite Fell and Glaramara,
-and the upland valley that nestles between
-Thornythwaite and Rosthwaite Fells. His perplexity
-is increased when he notices that neither hollow
-satisfies the condition of background. The one is
-barred by the crags of Great End, the other by the
-steep wall of Raven Crag, a high dependence of
-Glaramara; whereas the Styhead pass as seen from
-Grange ought to show distant Scawfell as a background,
-and be easily recognised. One of these two
-hollows the climber will do well to identify.</p>
-
-<p>Combe Ghyll is the name of the course that
-drains the north side of Glaramara, the stream
-making its way down the little valley that has
-already been described as lying between Thornythwaite
-and Rosthwaite Fells. At about the 1,000-feet
-level in the valley the land is flat and marshy;
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-with little provocation the stream could produce a
-respectable lake, and the tourist in wet weather
-feels that such absence of deception would be to his
-advantage. Above this level the mountain rises
-abruptly, and the ghyll has to acknowledge two
-sources. That which sends its supply straight
-down the centre of Raven Crag was the first to be
-regarded as Combe Ghyll. But the other is longer
-and more obvious. Looking up from the marsh the
-watercourse is very distinct away to the left, though
-the climb is equally in evidence on the right. When
-a short time since three curious cragsmen (including
-the curious writer) penetrated to the recesses of this
-almost unknown country to find the climb that
-Messrs. Robinson and Wilson had discovered and
-christened as long ago as September, 1893, we were
-compelled by that name to tackle the east branch,
-but vowed at the same time to go later to the west.
-Our conscientiousness was praiseworthy, though
-mistaken, but as events developed themselves our
-mistake had happy consequences. We managed
-both ghylls, and were probably instrumental in preventing
-a nasty accident to a couple of would-be
-mountaineers whom we discovered in difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>It was on a hot day in April. We had been disporting
-ourselves for photographic purposes in the
-Kern Knotts crack, and had sauntered down to Seatoller
-for some soda and milk to give grace to our
-jam sandwiches. Then we walked down the Rosthwaite
-Road as far as the bridge over the Derwent,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-and went across the opposite shoulder into the combe.
-It was very close down in Borrowdale, and we were
-glad to get out of the well of warm air and follow the
-water for a mile or so to the marshy upland. Here
-the walking was soft and pleasant. Water in our
-boots was no hardship, and we even hoped that there
-would be many waterfalls in our gully. Then came
-the dilemma and our decision to keep to the main
-stream. But the aspect of the Raven Crag gully on
-our right, as we skirted the boggy ground below us,
-was magnificent. Pitch rose above pitch apparently
-without any easy stretches, and the whole gully
-seemed to form just one vertical chimney in the
-rocks, five hundred feet high. Moss Ghyll itself is
-not grander than the Raven Crag gully as it appeared
-that afternoon to our longing gaze, and even now that
-the details of the latter climb are impressed vividly
-in my mind I can assure myself that it was one of the
-finest I have ever undertaken in Cumberland.</p>
-
-<p>We followed our watercourse right up to its
-beginning close to a little pass over towards Langstrath.
-In general appearance it somewhat resembled
-Piers Ghyll, with its slight gradient and short pitches,
-its rotten walls and unavoidable water. But in respect
-to the last consideration we were almost exempted
-from a wetting, for the ghyll was nearly dry, and only
-in the direct ascent of one pitch did we run any risk
-of a drenching. No doubt the normal state of the
-gully is very much worse than we found it.</p>
-
-<p>With hazy impression of a hundred-feet pitch we
-came provided with two eighty-feet lengths of rope, but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-managed our climb with one only. The first pitch was
-about fifteen feet high; the left wall was feasible, the
-direct climb involved the passage through a dripping
-cave and out by a hole in the roof, and the right
-side of the gully was of steep grass and insecure rock.
-We took to the latter, and with care managed the
-ascent without dislodging much that might help
-later climbers. Above this we had a view of a
-waterfall about fifty or sixty yards further up, and
-inasmuch as the rocks showed signs of nailed boots
-we were for some time prevailed upon to believe that
-we had really found our quest.</p>
-
-<p>The bed of the stream was rough but easy for a
-while. Two small pitches about six feet high scarcely
-gave us pause before we reached the foot of
-the waterfall that we had seen from the first
-pitch. It was about twelve yards high; the walls
-were four or five feet apart, and glistening with
-the wet. They did not appear to offer very excellent
-holds, but I found it possible to face the fall
-and utilize as footholds sundry diminutive ledges on
-either side. It was a case of spanning the gully and
-walking up. About twenty feet from the bottom the
-holds on the left wall were somewhat greasy, but a
-yard higher the ledges on the right had so much
-improved that it was a safe venture to pull over
-to that side and effect a traverse to the top of the
-double obstacle over which the water was falling.
-While the others were rapidly following, we were
-surprised to hear voices from above. I advanced a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-little, and discovered two young men perched precariously
-on the face of the steep wall to the right.
-Almost at the same moment a large stone fell from
-their feet towards us, and, in an ecstasy of fear lest
-they should bombard our last man, who was yet in
-difficulties bestriding the gully below, we shouted to
-them to stay still a bit and wait for us to advance to
-a place of safety. Then with all speed we clambered
-up to them, and let them down on the rope into the
-gully again. They were distinctly in peril; that side
-of the ghyll was as treacherous, with its loose splinters
-of rock and steep unreliable grass, as it could manage
-to be without falling by its own weight. The top
-was slightly overhanging, and could bear no extra
-pulling. The men were inexperienced; one of them
-had no nails in his boots; they had walking-sticks
-tied tightly to their wrists with string, and when we
-reached them they were tired out with the physical
-and mental strain. We reflected on our wonderful
-good fortune in choosing this gully, and thought with
-some bitterness that this was the way that the noblest
-of sports acquired its notoriety for great danger. It
-transpired that they had scrambled down into the
-gully at the side of the waterfall that we had just
-climbed, and saw no means of getting out of the
-hole excepting by this loose wall.</p>
-
-<p>We were now at the foot of a small pitch about
-twenty-five feet high. It was divided by a vertical
-buttress, and the water was flowing down to the left.
-The right-hand side seemed rather insecure, so I
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
-climbed some thirty feet up the wall of the gully
-again, and the second man clambered up the right-hand
-recess, confident in the support of the rope
-if his foothold gave way. He then traversed easily
-to the top of the pitch, and drew in my rope as I
-descended to his level and followed him. We asked
-the last man how were the passengers to be conveyed
-up the pitch. He replied, with perhaps just a touch
-of malice, that the direct passage through the water
-was the shortest, quickest, and cheapest route to the
-top, and we at the summit were of the same mind.
-Then our tourists were tied separately to the rope, and
-hauled up through the fall. It was very uncomfortable
-for them, but we got as wet ourselves later on.
-We hoped that their bedraggled condition would
-prompt them to a speedy descent and a relinquishment,
-for that day at least, of the joys of crag-climbing.
-That pitch was the last in the gully of any magnitude,
-and our friends were able to walk out easily on to the
-open fell and so down to Borrowdale. We ourselves
-gave one last look around for the hundred-feet fall
-that was to finish Combe Ghyll, and then, finding it
-not, we bore rapidly westwards across the mountain
-in search of the genuine article.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p class="author">PLATE VIII.<br /></p>
-<img id="i_242" src="images/i_242.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">PILLAR ROCK, EAST SIDE (p. 257).</p>
-
-<p class="copy">About 200 feet of Rock are shown.</p>
-
-<p class="small table">
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell">
- <i>a</i> Left Pisgah Route.<br />
- <i>b</i> East Pisgah Chimney.<br />
- <i>c</i> Right Pisgah Route.<br />
- <i>d</i> Start of Slab and Notch Route.<br />
- <i>e</i> The Slab.<br />
- <i>f</i> The Notch.<br />
- <i>g</i> The Ledge.<br />
- <i>h</i> Pendlebury Traverse.<br />
- <i>k</i> The Curtain.<br />
- </span>
- <span class="tcell">
- A High Man.<br />
- B Pisgah.<br />
- C Low Man.<br />
- D Jordan.<br />
- E East Jordan Gully.<br />
- F Great Chimney.<br />
- G Savage Gully.<br />
- </span>
- </span>
-</p></div>
-
-<p>As we skirted the foot of the crags we passed
-two small gullies that rose steeply above us, and that
-for a moment made us stop to consider their qualifications.
-In twenty minutes from the top of Combe
-Ghyll we came to the first deep and well marked
-watercourse. It was our Raven Crag Gully, and when
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-we peered up into its dark recesses we felt that good
-sport was at last before us. We finished the remnants
-of our lunch and drank a little water. It was
-not a tempting beverage, for the rocks just above
-were covered with objectionable vegetation, and the
-supply was so much below the average that the pools
-seemed almost stagnant. Also, I was haunted with
-the recollection of a dead sheep that we had passed
-in the other gully, lying on a ledge close to the
-stream. Mountain water is not always free from
-microbes, especially in those craggy regions where
-sheep come to grief.</p>
-
-<p>We started on the climb close by a little pool of
-water at the foot of a short and greasy pitch. It could
-have been taken direct, but we worked round the
-buttress on the left and entered the gully a few feet
-higher. Then, penetrating well into the recess, we
-were at once confronted by the first big pitch. A
-steep buttress divided the gully into two parts, the
-left-hand recess being cut deeply into the mountain
-and forming a long and narrow waterfall. This was
-the true bed of the gully. To the right of the buttress
-the recess was comparatively shallow, but its easier
-inclination somewhat compensated for its exposed
-position, and we found that the footholds were just
-sufficient to render a rapid advance possible. About
-forty feet up I craved the second man’s helping hand,
-but while he was advancing to offer assistance an
-easy way of swarming up the buttress commended
-itself; I found a resting-place at the level of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
-top of the pitch, eighty or ninety feet above the foot
-of the fall, where the second man could join me before
-I ventured on the traverse round to the bed of the
-gully. The traverse reminded us of the steps over
-the buttress from the Tennis Court ledge in Moss
-Ghyll, and was no doubt a place to respect in wet or
-icy weather. Our last man came up more directly,
-keeping on the inner side of the buttress for the first
-half of the climb and then working straight up the
-pitch. Excepting for an awkward bit of some three
-feet at the middle of the ascent, his route had
-advantages over ours. The rocks throughout were
-splendid, and their warmth and dryness made the
-scrambling easy.</p>
-
-<p>A yard or two further, over great boulders
-bestrewn in the bed of the gully, and we were
-brought up at the foot of the second great obstacle.
-Here the two side walls approached to within a
-distance of four feet of each other, and straight down
-the centre from a height of seventy feet dripped the
-weak promise of a second waterfall. Close to the
-water it was impossible to ascend, but some ten feet
-away from it suitable ledges on either side discovered
-themselves. These enabled me to use both walls
-in a directly vertical ascent for so long as they
-were within four feet of each other. Then I pulled
-over to a crack on the right and performed a safety
-wriggle to more open ground above, whence it
-was easy to clamber over the big boulders at the
-top of the pitch. The second man was asked to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-prospect the route on the other side of the left wall,
-and came up with the report that the traverse out
-of the main gully was easy and that the rest of the
-ascent, about eighty feet of solid rock, was just comfortable
-hand-and-foot work all through. While the
-third was adopting the same tactics which we afterwards
-remembered had been employed by a previous
-party from Keswick, I went on to inspect the next
-obstacle. It certainly was the worst-looking pitch
-in the whole ascent. A large cave was formed by
-two massive boulders jammed between the narrow
-walls seventy feet above our heads. The first-floor
-of the cave was fifty feet up, and from its roof dripped
-the inevitable water-supply to damp our daring
-ardour. The walls of the gully were close together
-and covered with wet moss. Holds were very scarce,
-and for a moment we considered the advisability of
-working out on the right as others had done
-before us, and traversing into the gully above the
-cave. But a tentative backing-up in the main
-chimney gave some hope of success in the direct
-attack; and abandoning all idea of making a final
-exit with dry garments, I cautiously worked up the
-inner face of a leaf of rock on the right wall, the
-others steadying my feet on sundry infinitesimal
-ledges so long as I was within reach, and then
-supporting me with words of encouragement and
-approval. When within six feet of the floor of the
-cave it became necessary to wedge well into the
-chimney, with back against the left and scanty hold
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
-opposite. Then a desperate wriggle gave me a lift
-of about eighteen inches and the handholds improved
-sufficiently for haulage. Leaving the left wall, I
-could just thrust my knee in a corner under the fall,
-and lever up to the opposite side. Next a few easy
-ledges brought me into the cave, and I paused to
-wring the moisture from my coat and cap before
-inviting the others to follow on. By regarding their
-manœuvres and subsequent criticism it impressed me
-as likely that I might have saved myself some exertion,
-and perhaps have better avoided the water, by
-keeping up the edge of the leaf of rock instead
-of attacking its inner face. But that course would
-expose the leader to a greater risk of slipping at a
-failing hold, and would demand more ingenious
-tactics.</p>
-
-<p>Our cave was large and airy; the water passed
-into it at the back, so that we could easily stay at
-the entrance and avoid the fall. High up above our
-heads were a couple of apertures in the roof, probably
-wide enough for our passage, but difficult to reach.
-The right wall of the gully was well broken up, and
-without ado we set ourselves at it and worked round
-the edge of the nearer overhanging block as a step
-to the other. Some thirty feet of my rope ran out
-before the second man advanced from the bed of the
-cave: not that the climbing refused to admit an
-earlier start, but that he was busy wringing out his
-clothes. I awaited his advance impatiently, for a
-bend in the gully prevented my seeing the next pitch
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
-above us&mdash;the last in the climb. But when he was
-firmly braced against the top boulder, hauling in
-the rope of the last man, I advanced to the end of
-my tether to steal an early glance at the pitch that
-report had spoken of so respectfully. Robinson’s
-account in the Wastdale book was succinct enough:
-‘A return on to the floor of the ghyll was made near
-the top of the third pitch, when a little scrambling
-led to a very fine waterfall more than 100 feet high.
-Here climb in the water as little as you can; then
-diverge slightly on to the right hand of the ghyll
-just where the water spouts over a small recess; next
-traverse across a rather difficult slab into the cave
-under the final boulder, which is climbed on the left
-hand and is the last difficulty.’ The only part of his
-prescription that I had carried in my mind was the
-‘climb in the water as little as you can,’ and we had
-been applying it all day with varying success. The
-trouble always is to make any headway at all against
-a descending mass of cold water, and we had come
-to regard the advice as indicative solely of the fact
-that an available route was only to be found in dry
-weather. To climb in the water as little as possible
-meant to choose a dry season and to mount by the
-usual line of flow. Another account that may prove
-interesting was given me by Messrs. G. and A.
-Abraham: ‘Some enjoyable scrambling in the bed
-of the ghyll brought us quickly to the last obstacle
-and certainly the finest part of the whole climb. The
-climber is immediately reminded here of the great
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-amphitheatre in the Screes Gully, for, although on a
-much smaller scale, we have the same gigantic
-buttresses and receding slabs, with three suggested
-exits. The most obvious way out here is up the
-waterfall as usual. This we attempted until the
-amount of water on the steep, slippery rocks forced
-us out on to the difficult right-hand wall, about
-seventy feet above the beginning of the pitch. Here
-we climbed straight upwards, and, traversing round
-a very awkward corner, landed right on the top of
-the pitch, the leader requiring considerable help for
-the last twenty feet.’ Our own experiences were a
-little different, a consequence of our fixed intention
-to force a route directly upwards without any
-traversing away on to the right wall of the gully.
-Also, we were relieved of the necessity of avoiding
-water, because it fell too diffusely to be avoided, and
-so small an area was left to any of us that could be
-affected seriously by further saturation. The first
-part of the pitch was perfectly simple. We could
-employ holds on either side and clamber up to a
-platform made by an un-jammed stone with rounded
-corners that had been caught in the cleft. It was safe
-enough for our purposes, and two men could lodge
-themselves conveniently above it. Straight up overhead
-was a formidable chimney that looked feasible
-in its upper portion but impossible to reach directly
-from below. A long block of rock twenty feet high,
-possibly part of the living mountain, prevented a
-passage up the pitch to the immediate right of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-chimney; but between the smooth slabs of wet rock
-that formed the right wall of the gully and this long
-boulder a narrow crack wound its way up to
-Robinson’s cave, and it occurred to all of us
-simultaneously that the crack might be negotiated
-and the awkward slab-traverse thereby avoided. But
-the crack was as nothing to begin with, and from our
-rickety platform we could obtain but scanty notion
-of its safety higher up. I suggested advancing a
-little to prospect, craving a shoulder to start from, and
-a steadying hand for my completer confidence on the
-doubtful little ledges that we were calling footholds.
-The first ten feet went very well, but although
-I found the crack useful for the left knee, it was
-unable to accept the responsibility of my complete
-stability. I sang out for another steadying hand,
-and my most admirable second clambered on to the
-shoulders of the last man without a moment’s
-hesitation. They plastered themselves flat against
-the slab, and I felt my right foot cease its uncanny
-trembling as the outstretched hand held it firmly in
-the niche it longed to use. This was downright
-luxury, and in my sense of security there stole a
-moment’s shame at the thought of so much dependence
-on the others. But there! in climbing as in
-football the combination is everything in the highest
-developments of the game, and though success may
-now and again be due to the unaided efforts of one
-man, the full satisfaction that should follow victory
-will only be felt by the whole party when all have
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
-contributed something to the manœuvring. Be it
-remembered that in crag-climbing two heads are
-better than one, even if the second head is only used
-as a foothold. But there we were, three links in a
-chain that reached from the platform to the widest
-part of the crack that was to lead us to the cave.
-The position was not to be dwelt upon, and I
-hastened to relieve the others of their common
-burden. In the crack and at arm’s length above me
-was a well-secured angular stone round which the
-rope could be passed. Using it as a hold I was able
-to quit the precarious foothold on the right and
-thrust the left knee well into the crack. The position
-was one that could admit of no slip, the leg being
-sufficient to hold the body well in; and before quitting
-that favoured spot I untied the rope and slipped
-the free end through the hole at the back of the
-jammed stone before tying on again. The others
-had descended by this time to the platform and were
-taking in all the slack. Whatever the difficulty of
-the few remaining moves to the cave, I was insured
-against a big fall and could trust to the belaying of
-the little angular block that had so neatly adjusted
-itself to our needs. As a matter of fact the precaution
-was scarcely necessary, though eminently
-proper under the circumstances. The ledges above
-me were good and firm, and with the rope gently
-paid out from below I reached the cave without
-more trouble.</p>
-
-<p>The floor was sloping; but a comfortable and
-reposeful attitude could be indulged in, well at the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-back, far from the dripping eaves of the cave. But
-I had committed an error of judgment with the rope,
-threading the hole from above the jammed stone
-instead of from below, before tying the bowline
-round my waist. At the time the importance of that
-consideration had not occurred to me, but now in my
-ease, hauling up the slack between myself and the
-second, I felt a sudden jerk. The rope was wrapped
-completely round the jammed stone, whose angularity,
-that had before commended itself to the hands,
-now introduced so much friction that the rope would
-no longer slip freely round it. We were perplexed
-for a while, till our enterprising middleman, who had
-many times before offered a key to our difficulties,
-proposed climbing up as a leader, with the second
-rope attached to his waist, and the fixed rope above
-him used for steadying purposes whenever necessary.
-We knew that the jammed stone that fixed the upper
-rope could not be dislodged easily, and indeed I
-was able to hold on to my end and oppose any dangerous
-leverage. He climbed up with every confidence,
-and reached the crack safely. Then, repeating my
-movement with the left leg, he held on while disentangling
-my rope, tying himself to its lower end as
-soon as the complications were unravelled. A few
-moments more gave me a companion in the cave, and
-built, as it was, for two persons only, he mildly
-suggested my withdrawal for the benefit of the
-third man. Thence our method of advance was
-practically identical with Robinson’s. We had a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>
-little walk of six feet over towards the left wall of
-the gully, by ledges that lay on the very verge of a
-sheer drop of eighty feet to the foot of the pitch.
-Then the ascent was continued by a narrow crack
-that commenced in a somewhat sensational manner,
-not so much by reason of its difficulty as by the
-feeling of nothingness to fall back upon in case of a
-slip. The second was at my heels, and he was firmly
-braced up by the sole remaining tenant of the cave.
-Lifting the left leg as high up the crack as possible,
-and accepting a push from behind, I reached over a
-slab on the right and dragged up on to it. That was
-to be the last big effort; the final pitch was all below,
-and the gully eased away above me to its open finish.
-I shouted the tidings to the others. With all eagerness
-they followed, the last man claiming with pride
-the discovery of a grand foothold that he had unearthed
-or unmossed at the lower edge of the slab.</p>
-
-<p>Well! we had had a rare little fight; the gully
-had taken us an hour and twenty minutes of continuous
-work, and we voted it a piece of solid good
-business.</p>
-
-<p>There remained the long walk back to Wastdale
-and to dinner. I proposed getting there in an hour
-and a half, and started on the journey with a pipe in
-my mouth. We had about three miles of rough, high-level
-skirting along the 2,000-feet contour to Sprinkling
-Tarn, two miles of descent to the Burnthwaite
-level, and a mile of valley walking at the finish.
-The consequence was that very little smoking was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span>
-enjoyed. We were a quarter of an hour behind time
-at Burnthwaite, a laudable spurt in the valley being
-abruptly terminated by the discovery of another
-climbing-party on the track. We had found that if
-two parties were late, dinner would await their
-arrival; hence our motive for haste was removed and
-we composed our gait and our thoughts for a more
-sedate entry into the hotel yard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Note</span>: In the first edition of this book, I followed
-Mr. Haskett Smith’s nomenclature and located
-the climb in Eagle Crag. It seems that this
-shoulder of Glaramara goes by the name of Raven
-Crag, and I have changed the name of the gully
-accordingly. There are many Raven Crags and many
-Eagle Crags in the district, but climbers need only
-be warned against confusing the Raven Crag Gully
-on Glaramara with the Raven Crag Chimney on
-Great Gable.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE PILLAR ROCK</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>Mosedale is closed in by Yewbarrow, Red Pike,
-Pillar, Looking Stead, and Kirkfell. These form a
-noble amphitheatre of dark mountains, a cordon
-through which it is not easy to break. Between the
-last two hills we can effect the passage of the Black Sail
-over into Ennerdale, which passes down behind the
-Pillar to the north-west. A more direct route to
-Ennerdale is by Wind Yatt (or Windy Gap), a pass
-2,400 feet high, between the Pillar and the Red Pike.
-On the northern or Ennerdale side of the Pillar mountain
-is the famous Rock, beloved of climbers great and
-small. It springs up vertically from the steep fellside,
-with a north face like a cathedral-front 500 feet high.
-From the summit of the fell a descent of 400 feet of
-steep rock and scree will bring us to the nearest part
-of the crag. From the Liza River at the bottom of
-the valley we have 1,100 feet of grass and scree to
-tackle before reaching the lowest buttresses that
-support the great wall.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<p class="author">PLATE IX.</p>
-<p class="caption">PILLAR ROCK, NORTH SIDE (p. 271).</p>
-
-<p class="caption small">The High Man is about 550 feet above the Nose.</p>
-<img id="i_254" src="images/i_254.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="small table">
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell">
- <i>a</i> Shamrock Gully.<br />
- <i>b</i> Great Pitch in <i>a</i>.<br />
- <i>c</i> Great Bridge.<br />
- <i>d</i> Shamrock Chimney.<br />
- <i>e</i> Walker’s Gully.<br />
- <i>f</i> Savage Gully.<br />
- <i>g</i> The Nose.<br />
- <i>h</i> Easy route, North Climb.<br />
- <i>k</i> Cave Pitch.<br />
- <i>l</i> Stomach-traverse.<br />
- </span>
- <span class="tcell">
- <i>m</i> Split-block.<br />
- <i>n</i> The Strid.<br />
- <i>p</i> The Hand-traverse.<br />
- <i>q</i> The Buttress-route.<br />
- <i>r</i> The Ordinary route.<br />
- <i>s</i> The Low Man.<br />
- <i>t</i> The High Man.<br />
- <i>u</i> The Great Chimney.<br />
- <i>v</i> Pisgah.<br />
- </span>
- </span>
-</p></div>
-
-<p>From below, the precipice is seen to be divided into
-two parts by a long, black chimney. This is Walker’s
-Gully, named after the young man who fell there in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span>
-1883. Its head is the point of convergence of sundry
-lines of scree from the upper fell. It suggests a
-funnel cut down along its centre-line, and scree
-frequently slides down the sides of the funnel and
-into the gully. This no doubt is the chief reason
-why Walker’s Gully has never been climbed until
-recently, when snow and frost diminished the risk
-from this cause. It would prove difficult under any
-conditions, and the risk of a battery of stones from
-above is too heavy a handicap for the cautious
-climber.</p>
-
-<p>The Pillar Rock itself is on the right of the gully,
-in our view from below. The crag on the left is
-considerably lower, and in fact scarcely rises high
-enough over the head of the gully to be visible from
-above. But from the east it presents an imposing
-appearance. Its outline partly suppresses that of
-the higher crag beyond, partly combines with it,
-audit is often mistaken for the actual Pillar Rock.
-Hence the name Sham-rock by which it has been
-known since 1882. It is a mere walk to reach the
-summit from the Pillar Fell. The climbing on
-the Shamrock is not quite so good as that on the
-neighbouring crag, but it cannot well be neglected.
-On the eastern side is the well-known Shamrock
-Gully, a magnificent looking cleft in the rocks, finishing
-with a huge <span class="large2">V</span>-shaped notch at the summit. A
-natural arch spans the gully half-way up, and
-an obstacle some few feet higher makes a pitch of
-unusual severity&mdash;‘one of the stiffest pitches in all
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span>
-Cumberland.’ It was first climbed by Mr. Geoffrey
-Hastings’ party in March, 1887, when a bank of
-snow below the pitch gave a little help. In December,
-1890, the climb was repeated by a party with the
-same leader, without the aid of snow, and since that
-date various ascents have been made with and without
-snow. Among others a new route over the
-obstacle was effected in December, 1896, by the
-writer and three friends. It is probable that the
-pitch turns back fifty per cent. of the people who
-essay to climb it.</p>
-
-<p>On the same eastern face, a few yards further
-away to the north, is the Shamrock Chimney, a thin
-crack running somewhat irregularly upwards to the
-summit ridge. The credit of the first ascent belongs
-to Mr. John Robinson, whose keen eye and sound
-judgment made the ascent an accomplished fact, on
-September 23, 1894, within a few days of his discovery
-of the chimney. Shortly afterwards Robinson
-showed me the route, and I was convinced at once
-that in difficulty and extreme interest it was far
-superior to the Shamrock Gully, and equal to the best
-climbing on the Pillar Rock. The third ascent was
-made by Dr. Lawrence in April, 1895. Not many
-parties have been up it as yet, and I am hoping that
-the full account of its details here supplied will
-tempt others to attack it.</p>
-
-<p>I have said that the Pillar Rock lies to the right
-of Walker’s Gully when viewed from below. It is
-bounded on the other or western side by a broad
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
-hollow in the fell, down which a slender stream flows
-without any abrupt change of level till the foot of the
-precipice is reached. There the ‘Great’ waterfall
-disturbs the even tenor of its way, and is said to
-offer a formidable obstruction to our approach of the
-west face from below.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_257" src="images/i_257.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE EAST FACE OF THE PILLAR ROCK</p></div>
-
-<p>From the Shamrock side we can get the best
-idea of the shape of the Rock. We have first the
-Pisgah rising out of the upper fellside, a pinnacle
-easily accessible and only forty or fifty feet high.
-Then to the right comes the actual Pillar Rock, the
-‘High Man,’ separated from Pisgah by a narrow
-vertical cleft, the ‘Jordan,’ that renders the ascent
-from Pisgah almost an impossibility. At the Jordan
-two gullies meet; one up the east side, short and
-easy, the other up the west side, longer and more
-difficult.</p>
-
-<p>The outline of the rock is marked by a notch to
-the right of the summit, where the Great Chimney
-finishes, and a little further northwards it shows a
-sudden drop to the level of the Low Man, the
-immense buttress that from below hides the true
-summit altogether. A cairn has been erected on the
-top of this buttress, and the outline to the right of
-this falls in one vertical drop of 400 feet to the
-foot of the rock. This is the great north wall. It
-is supported at the base by a minor buttress, the
-‘Nose,’ that stretches across the full width of the
-north wall, and along the top of which, immediately
-below the precipice, an easy terrace takes us across
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
-to the Great Waterfall from a point near the foot
-of Walker’s Gully. From the eastern end of the
-traverse rises the Savage Gully, a well-marked cleft
-with sundry branches, reaching to the top of the
-Low Man.</p>
-
-<p>On the western side the rock appears much more
-formidable. The chimney up to the Jordan looks
-black, and its crest is overhanging. The wall of the
-High Man itself is built up with long slabs of smooth
-rock, broken only by the smallest grass ledges, and
-its difficulties appear to increase near the summit.
-This side of the Low Man looks as inaccessible as
-the great north wall. Nevertheless a series of short
-gullies starting from the foot of the High Man lead
-obliquely up towards the left and offer a very easy
-route to the southern end of the Low Man, whence
-to the summit the climbing is but moderately
-difficult.</p>
-
-<p>The best ways of reaching the Pillar Rock are
-given in full detail by Mr. Haskett Smith. It will
-here be sufficient to remark that from Wastdale the
-usual course followed is to ascend by the path
-towards Black Sail Pass until about ten minutes
-beyond Gatherstone Beck, then to make for the
-ridge on the left leading over Looking Stead and up
-to the summit of Pillar Fell. Thence a descent of
-450 feet in a northerly direction brings us to the Pillar
-Rock. Sometimes Mosedale is followed straight up,
-and the steep slope climbed that leads to Windy
-Gap. Thence the ridge to the right takes us in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span>
-twenty minutes of easy going to the summit of the
-Pillar Fell. Both these routes involve an unnecessary
-ascent of 450 feet, and the ‘High-Level Route’ was
-designed to avoid this waste of time and energy.
-Looking Stead is reached as before from Gatherstone
-Beck, and the wire fence followed up for a few
-minutes as far as the head of Green Cove. Here a
-cairn marks the spot where a rough path starts down
-the cove. We descend only fifty feet or so, and then
-turn round to the left and skirt along the north-east
-side of the fell. It is unsafe to attempt the traverse
-for the first time in a mist, but with clear weather
-the various cairns that mark successive points on the
-route can be easily discerned, and a half-hour’s walk
-brings us to the wide scree gully running down by
-the eastern side of the Shamrock. To reach the foot
-of the Pillar Rock is a simple matter. The photograph
-facing page 271 was taken across this scree,
-and it will be seen that the route down to the
-Nose is only a walk round the foot of the Shamrock.
-A broad, sloping corridor in the lee of a
-steep rock-wall further up the fellside, enables us
-to steer clear of the Shamrock cliffs and to reach
-their head without any hand-and-foot scrambling.
-Thence across the scree descending to Walker’s
-Gully we see Pisgah and the High Man, and with
-care we can now make the traverse to the foot of
-the Jordan Gully. There we are in a position
-to start any of the ordinary short climbs on the
-Pillar Rock. The west route can be reached by turning
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
-Pisgah on the left and descending the west scree
-for 300 feet. The long climbs up the north face
-are started from the Nose.</p>
-
-<p>The Pillar Rock was first climbed by an Ennerdale
-cooper named Atkinson, who in 1826 ascended by
-the west side. The ‘slab-and-notch’ route on the
-east side, starting from the upper screes above
-Walker’s Gully, was devised by Messrs. Conybeare
-and A. J. Butler in 1863, though it would seem that
-the same side was successfully attacked a year or
-two before. Matthew Barnes, a Keswick guide, found
-a route across the eastern face to the Low Man, and
-thence back along the summit ridge to the highest
-point. He was climbing with Mr. Graves, of Manchester.
-Mr. W. P. Haskett Smith found in 1882 a
-direct way up to the High Man from the Jordan, and
-a second route straight up the wall a few yards to
-the east of the first. Two years later he reached the
-summit by a particularly hazardous course still further
-to the east, passing up close to the buttress whose
-lower end marks the start of the ‘slab-and-notch’
-route. In the same year he made the first ascent by the
-Great Chimney on the east side. Mr. Haskett Smith
-named the first three routes the ‘West Jordan,’ the
-‘Central Jordan,’ and the ‘East Jordan’ climbs
-respectively; the latter route is never undertaken,
-and the other two are often termed the ‘Left
-Pisgah’ and ‘Right Pisgah.’</p>
-
-<p>For many years Mr. Haskett Smith made visits to
-the north face, endeavouring to reach the summit of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span>
-the Low Man from the easy ledge at its foot. On
-the right his course was limited by the almost seamless
-wall of rock that gives the Pillar Rock its appearance
-of hopeless inaccessibility from Ennerdale.
-On the left the Savage Gully cut off all chance of
-traversing to the eastern side of the rock. The space
-between was strictly limited, and it narrowed as he
-climbed higher. Within thirty feet of an easy scree
-gully that obviously led to the summit of the Low
-Man, the only available course had dwindled down to
-a slender rib of rock in a dangerously exposed
-situation, much too risky to attack without guarantee
-of its feasibility.</p>
-
-<p>In 1891 this climber, with Messrs. Hastings and
-Slingsby, succeeded at last in finding a way of descending
-into the Savage Gully at that point. Their leader
-then mounted its left wall and worked easily across
-to the foot of the scree gully. The others followed,
-and the ‘long climb’ up the Pillar Rock became an
-accomplished fact. No published detailed description
-of the route is known to the writer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Shamrock Gully.</span>&mdash;This is rather an unpleasant
-climb for those who dislike loose stones. The bed
-of the gully is very steep and narrow. It is followed
-straight up the centre, by using horizontal shelves on
-either side that now and again flake off in a most
-unexpected way. Extreme care is necessary on the
-part of the leader, for his followers cannot avoid any
-fragments that he may dislodge. The climbing is
-otherwise easy, and very little distance should exist
-between the separate members of the party.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span></p>
-
-<p>Half-way up the gully the bridge is passed, high
-above our heads when no snow is about, but
-occasionally completely blocked by heavy drifts.
-Next the bed of the gully runs up into a little cave,
-formed by the huge jammed stone that presents the
-only genuine obstacle in the ascent.</p>
-
-<p>The block is long and narrow. It leaves just
-enough room on each side, between the walls of the
-gully, for a thin chimney. That on the right is very
-difficult to enter but comparatively easy to follow up.
-The other is designed differently; it leads the climber
-by a temptingly easy beginning into a position
-twenty-five feet up, that will in many cases pound
-him most distressingly, and his descent will be
-uncommonly awkward. Hence it is that the right-hand
-chimney was for nine years the only course
-adopted.</p>
-
-<p>The process of backing-up is, as a rule, safe,
-though fatiguing. In the case of the Shamrock
-pitch, the leader will never find his attitudinising
-comfortable. If he starts from the shoulders of a
-companion, he can at any rate enter the chimney;
-but its walls are undercut, and he needs all his
-strength to brace himself firmly between them. A
-little higher and there is risk of jamming too well.
-Twenty feet up he has to turn towards the block and
-work up over a shelf on to the scree above the pitch.
-It is not easy for his companions to follow on, even
-with the aid of the rope.</p>
-
-<p>The left-hand route was climbed in winter.
-Sundry weak holds were frozen into position, but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span>
-the rounded top of the great block was glazed completely,
-and the finish was of great difficulty. Dr.
-Collier had told me that he thought the upper
-portion just possible, and our party of December,
-1896, decided to try it. I started up the first
-twenty feet and then found the glaze of ice too
-heavy for further advance. It was not very difficult
-to traverse out of the chimney into a wider gully on
-the left; but after rising a few feet in this, the great
-smooth slabs in front completely barred the way,
-and I attempted to return to the chimney. This
-could not be effected, and hitching the rope over two
-small excrescences on the wall I climbed down the
-retaining ridge and rejoined my companions. This
-was very unsatisfactory, though I was glad enough
-to be in safety again. We had a long discussion
-about the pitch, and referred to many engineering
-principles. At last I suggested that the lightest
-member of the party, weighing not more than nine
-stones, should take the lead, and that I should follow
-on closely as far as the difficult spot. There I proposed
-to brace firmly in the chimney and thrust him
-straight up to the frozen grass above. He looked
-at me apologetically and said that he would go up
-if I insisted on it, but would rather hear of some
-different plan that deprived him of the honour of
-leading. Then a bold but heavy man spoke up and
-volunteered to take his place. It was my turn to
-decline, and we felt completely at a loss. At last
-I went up again to the turning-point of the previous
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
-venture, and for the sake of safety threaded my
-rope through two or three jammed stones in the
-chimney. Then followed the longest member close
-behind me, likewise threading his rope. I climbed
-on to his head&mdash;it had been tested many times
-before&mdash;and then got him to steady my left foot on
-a frozen hold half a yard higher. An ice-axe was
-then passed up from the cave, and the pick rammed
-hard into the frozen grass above the boulder. The
-handle then offered enough stay to enable me to
-pull up over the smooth icy surface of the boulder,
-and the pitch was conquered. I cut steps up the
-snow to a safe place for belaying the others, and
-they then followed singly on a long rope. The rest
-of the gully was simple walking.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Shamrock Chimney.</span>&mdash;This is shown very
-clearly in the photograph facing page 271, as a series
-of vertical pitches almost in a single straight line
-from top to bottom of the Shamrock. We take to
-the first set of easy rocks on the north side of the
-great gully, and for about 160 feet climb over
-irregularly disposed crags interspersed with grass.
-These are usually wet and slippery, and they finish
-at the extreme south end of the grassy terrace
-crossing the Shamrock face.</p>
-
-<p>We keep straight up and enter the lower extremity
-of a narrow chimney thirty feet high. Its
-two pitches are scarcely separated, and require careful
-climbing up to the narrow cavern on the next
-grassy ledge. The first real difficulty now lies in
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span>
-front. Ten feet of steep smooth rock are to be
-climbed before we can enter the foot of the next
-chimney, and the leader will do well to accept a
-shoulder-up and a lift with an axe in tackling this
-wall. It is practically impossible in icy weather.
-The chimney is easy enough, with plenty of jammed
-stones for a distance of twenty-five feet; but it then
-dwindles down to nothing, and a very exposed bit of
-work follows for the leader, who has to crawl up
-some six or eight feet of rock without any respectable
-holds. This brings him to another small cavern
-just sufficiently large for him to take breath and
-recover his strength. He cannot see his party below,
-and in manipulating the rope for the second man he
-will need to shout his directions. Then follow a
-short traverse to the right, and an upward scramble
-over more broken ground to an interesting splayed-out
-chimney.</p>
-
-<p>Thence a steep grass slope takes us up to an open
-gully with a great overhanging boulder. It may be
-passed straight over or by a through route, and we
-are then at the end of the chimney climbing. A
-turn to the right leads to a splendid ridge that runs
-to the top of the Shamrock, and offers a finish as
-charming as that of the Scawfell Pinnacle from the
-Low Man. The work is over when a perched flat-topped
-stone is mounted; and then we walk to the
-summit of the Shamrock and down by easy ledges
-to the screes above Walker’s Gully.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Pillar Rock, Jordan Climbs.</span>&mdash;Very easy
-scrambling from the upper fell will bring the climber
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
-to the summit of Pisgah. There is a short chimney
-on the east side that leads to the same spot; it is
-easy to enter, but the exit at the top is very stiff.
-The view of the near wall of the High Man is interesting,
-and there is ample opportunity for studying
-the two direct climbs before descending to the gap.
-They are both difficult, but the rocks are so much
-scratched by nailed boots that the difficulty does
-not consist in finding the way up. It is generally
-supposed to be impossible to descend into the gap
-from Pisgah, but inspection will show that there is
-a series of small ledges a little to the west, down
-which a safe passage can be effected. The Left
-Pisgah route starts up at once from the <i>col</i>. The
-holds are only moderately good for the first thirty
-feet, and fail to give satisfaction when wet or icy.
-Next it is possible to force the body into a narrow
-crack, and for a little while the climber can cease his
-strugglings and rest himself. Above this the rock is
-more broken and the holds are better. A thin leaf
-of rock is crossed and a downward view obtained of
-the Right Pisgah final chimney. Then the slope is
-eased off, and the cairn on the High Man is but a
-couple of yards away.</p>
-
-<p>The Right Pisgah route is generally started low
-down the East Jordan Gully. This offers pleasant
-hand-and-foot work, but no difficulty whatever up to
-the Jordan. But before reaching the gap a square
-recess on the right is entered, and then a passage is
-made over smooth rocks to a clean-cut right-angled
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
-corner forty feet high on the south-east side of the
-High Man. It is just possible to traverse round
-from the Jordan to the top of the square recess, and
-so up over the slabs to the corner, but the variation
-is not worth much.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_267" src="images/i_267.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">“Round the Notch”&mdash;Pillar Rock. East Side</span></p>
-
-<p class="small">(<i>Face page 267</i>)</p></div>
-
-<p>The crack climb that now starts straight up the
-corner is one of the neatest things on the Pillar
-Rock. The right wall is used for steadying purposes
-when, half-way up, a jammed stone makes it necessary
-to emerge from the crack. Some of the holds
-have splintered away during the last few years, but
-there are yet enough to satisfy one’s needs. The
-finish is a splendid pull up with the arms on to the
-leaf of rock already referred to at the top of the
-Left Pisgah climb.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Slab and Notch route.</span>&mdash;The upper part of
-the Great Chimney offers no difficulty to the climber.
-Its southern boundary is a long narrow buttress
-called the ‘Curtain,’ stretching from the top of
-Walker’s Gully, to the summit of the High Man.
-Viewed in profile from the Pillar Fell, the Curtain
-shows three distinct notches two-thirds of the way
-up; they are about thirty feet above a slab set at an
-angle of thirty degrees, and attainable by rough
-scrambling from the foot of the East Jordan Gully.
-The easy route passes along this slab, directly
-upwards to the middle notch and thence round the
-Curtain to the bed of the Great Chimney. The walk
-along the slab is to some people a critical undertaking,
-for a slip would have very serious consequences.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
-A thin crack on the line of march makes the course
-safer, unless ice or snow have filled it up, but it is
-not an unusual sight to see men tackling the walk on
-all-fours. The Curtain may be crossed at the lowest
-notch, the ‘Ledge,’ by good firm rocks, and the Great
-Chimney entered on the other side. Formerly it was
-the usual course to reach the bed of the chimney
-at the lower part of the steep grass by what was
-called the ‘Eight-foot Drop.’ But there is no need to
-drop at all; an easy traverse from either the Notch
-or the Ledge brings the climber above the steep
-grass, and virtually at the end of his cragwork. The
-chimney finishes with scree, and lands the climber
-within a few feet of the cairn on his left.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Variations on the East Face.</span>&mdash;It is possible
-to make a way straight up the Great Chimney from
-its foot, joining the easy route about a hundred feet
-up. Haskett Smith took this course in 1884, commencing
-the climb on the stepped buttresses of the
-Curtain. Since then the rock has had time to loosen
-a little, and climbers very rarely enter the chimney
-that way.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Pendlebury traverse</i> is an excellent variation
-of the ordinary route, a popular scramble first indicated
-by Professor R. Pendlebury, of Cambridge.
-From the slab the way lies straight up to the notch in
-the Curtain, and then along a horizontal ledge in its
-south face as far as the corner where it meets the
-High Man. Thence up the corner is straightforward
-chimney-work, and on emergence at the top the cairn
-will be visible close at hand on the left.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span></p>
-
-<p>The traverse looks difficult until it is closely
-approached, when it will be found that handholds
-abound on the wall, and that the ledge is perfectly
-firm and continuous across the whole width of the
-Curtain.</p>
-
-<p>The chimney in the corner of the south side of
-the Curtain can be entered much lower down. From
-the slab a way lies straight up into it, but the grass
-holds are not particularly pleasant if wet, and the
-first thirty feet are severe.</p>
-
-<p>From the head of Walker’s Gully a way may be
-found to the Low Man, below the immense slabs that
-crown the north-east buttresses. It is best to climb
-the Shamrock first and prospect the route. Sheep
-occasionally manage to get across, and the <i>Old Wall</i>
-was built many years ago to prevent their passage, but
-it is now ruined. Sometimes, ignoring Badminton,
-they still venture across without a rope, and their
-weaker members are liable to get crag-bound.
-Climbers can tell many tales of famished sheep found
-in appalling situations on the Pillar Rock. They are
-too weak to resist the slipping on of a rope, and are
-simply hauled or slung out of every difficulty till a
-safe pasturage is reached.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The West Climb.</span>&mdash;This was the route first
-discovered. It is much longer than any of the ways
-on the south or east side, and possesses but few
-interesting details. It is more popular as a descent
-than as an ascent.</p>
-
-<p>It is seemingly impossible to climb directly up the
-west wall of the High Man, but in the walk down the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
-west screes it will be noticed that the rocks of the
-Low Man are more broken, and that several short
-scree gullies sloping upwards to the left mark a
-rough route straight towards the Low Man cairn.
-The course is best examined from a distance, across
-the great western gully; it lies as close to the High
-Man as is possible without undertaking anything but
-gully scrambling. Not infrequently climbers find
-themselves astray on narrow grassy ledges too much
-to the right. I experienced the same thing myself
-when first attempting to find the way up, and found
-the ascent by no means so easy as report had
-credited the west climb.</p>
-
-<p>From the level of the Low Man the way lies very
-nearly along the sky-line to the highest point. The
-High Man is struck at the end of a square corner
-in the rock, and there is some excellent work for the
-arms during the next thirty feet of ascent.</p>
-
-<p>It is easier to turn over slightly to the east side,
-and up by the great jagged boulders on the crest of
-the ridge. The <i>Slingsby crack</i> is a short but rather
-stiff variation a little on the right or western side of
-this route and is particularly interesting. Formerly
-a loose block at its upper end gave the climber an
-occasional scare, but there is nothing unsafe now in
-the form of detached boulders, and the ridge can be
-followed with confidence to the High Man cairn.
-Nail marks are strongly in evidence all through the
-crag-work; the leader should not attempt the route
-if snow or rain prevents their recognition, unless he
-is already perfectly acquainted with the way.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_271" src="images/i_271.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE NORTH FACE OF THE PILLAR ROCK</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The North Climb.</span>&mdash;For several months after
-the first ascent it was difficult to learn anything of
-the details of the route up the Ennerdale face of the
-Pillar Rock. The only way was to persuade some one
-who had been up to take the lead and act as guide;
-for a complicated course that had taken Haskett
-Smith eight or nine years to work out was not likely
-to be mastered easily by any one who had not made
-a special study of the north face.</p>
-
-<p>My own chance came in the summer of 1893.
-Mr. John Robinson called for me at Buttermere one
-fine afternoon, and took me off to Ennerdale with
-another friend, Mr. F. W. Hill. We left the village at
-two o’clock, and were back again after a successful
-ascent by eight in the evening; whence it may be
-inferred that Buttermere is as good a starting-point
-for the Pillar Rock as Wastdale or Seatoller.</p>
-
-<p>Our guide led us rapidly by the shortest route
-over Scarth Gap, and across Ennerdale to the foot
-of the Pillar Rock. Then a fifty-feet length of rope
-made its first appearance; it had been hidden in a
-bag during our walk, lest we should alarm the folks
-about Gatesgarth. We tied ourselves up, and made
-for the eastern end of the terrace across the Nose.</p>
-
-<p>Robinson then started along the terrace, and in
-a few yards scrambled up to a shelf on the left, five or
-six feet high, which gave us easy access to the lower
-portion of the Savage Gully. This latter has never
-been climbed along its whole length. If the gully
-were moderately easy, the north climb would be far
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
-less complex. But for a great portion of its length
-the side walls are at right angles to each other; the
-corner is nearly vertical, and the only resting places
-are diminutive, grass-grown ledges placed too far
-apart for any safe employment of the rope. The right
-wall of the gully forms part of a conspicuous buttress
-on the north face, whose western side is much more
-broken and less dangerous to ascend.</p>
-
-<p>The route that was being shown us lay along the
-Savage Gully for about sixty feet, then across to the
-west side of the buttress and up a vertical branch
-gully with sundry small chimneys in it. Higher up,
-we were told, it would be necessary to round a cliff
-still further to the right, by means of the <i>Stomach
-traverse</i>, to render further ascent possible. We objected
-to the inelegant name, but were too far advanced
-to hesitate on the score of a faulty title. Above the
-traverse our climbing would be easier, until the course
-returned to the Savage Gully again. That was to
-be our <i>mauvais pas</i>, and after settling it the scramble
-to the Low Man, and thence to the highest cairn,
-would be scarcely more than a walk.</p>
-
-<p>So spoke our guide, and having delivered himself
-at some length, with an occasional appropriate
-anecdote thrown in, he concentrated his attention
-on the small pitch that marked our point of arrival
-at the Savage Gully. It was a wall seven feet
-high with indifferent grassholds at the top, and in
-scrambling up care was needed to avoid dislodging
-loose stones near the edge. It was then easy to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span>
-clamber into a small cave somewhat to the left, and
-out again by a twisted tunnel at the back. Thence
-Robinson worked upwards over broken ground for a
-few yards, until the point was reached where we
-were to leave the gully. The direct route looked
-feasible for some distance ahead, but there was no
-questioning the fact of its severity, and we had not
-come out that day for exploration.</p>
-
-<p>A divergence was made along an easy traverse
-towards the right, to a short and narrow chimney
-that already bore traces of many previous struggles.
-Wherever the rocks were clean and free from scree,
-we could plainly see the scratches of nailed boots
-along the route. It was here that we were rounding
-the great buttress of Savage Gully, and after a little
-rough-ledge work we arrived at a square corner with
-a grassy floor. Straight up from this floor a cleft
-offered safe passage. It was plentifully supplied with
-holds, though some discrimination was necessary in
-selecting the firmest. The climbing was delightful,
-and zest was given to it by the magnificent situation.
-The corner was not so deeply impressed in the
-buttress as to prevent our recognition of the vastness
-of the cliff we were slowly ascending. The view
-downwards just included the little grass platform,
-and beyond that the wild and steep fellside at the
-foot of the precipice, already some hundreds of feet
-below us.</p>
-
-<p>We kept up the direct route so long as we were
-able. Then the cleft in the corner suddenly dwindled
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span>
-down into the thinnest of cracks, and it was obvious
-that a change of tactics would be necessary. The
-left wall was faultlessly smooth. The right for the
-most part looked just as inaccessible. The grass
-ledge on which we were standing really seemed to
-suggest finality, the end of our upward progress, and
-I turned to Robinson inquiringly with the impression
-that some wonderful engineering process with the
-rope was now to be explained to us. We knew that
-such was necessary on the climb, and were prepared
-by the situation to see its application immediately.</p>
-
-<p>But the solution of the difficulty was of the
-simplest character. A few feet from the corner the
-smooth right wall was split by a single crack that
-passed up at an angle of perhaps thirty degrees and
-terminated at a notch that broke the clean-cut outline
-of the rock facing us. From the notch it certainly
-seemed as though nothing could be done further,
-even if we got so far. Nevertheless, we were assured
-that when once we were there all doubts would
-vanish, and we should have the easiest hundred feet
-of scrambling in the whole day’s expedition. The
-crack was the famous <i>Stomach traverse</i>; it was
-reached as long ago as 1884 by Haskett Smith in
-his early exploration of the north face; and the
-name, which had only recently been given to it, was
-intended to show how the passage was supposed
-to be tackled. One of Willink’s illustrations in
-the Badminton, showing an intrepid cragsman
-crawling along a ledge from left to right, is
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
-sometimes criticised as an exaggeration of the
-difficulties that rock-climbers have to overcome.
-This traverse before us was not so easy as the one
-so cleverly depicted by the artist. It sloped upwards,
-and the ledge was not wide enough for the
-whole body. We were in no sense precariously
-placed, for the cleft enabled us to wedge with
-security; but the right half of the body was outside
-the leaf of rock on which we hung, and the
-right leg found no support on the vertical wall.</p>
-
-<p>Some twenty feet of wriggling brought us each in
-turn to the critical corner, and there to our amazement
-we had merely to get up and walk away. The
-wall we had passed was the last obstacle separating
-us from a long stretch of steep grass chimneys and
-broken rocks. These extend from the Nose at the
-foot of the crags up to the final difficulty, now only
-a hundred feet above us, and offer the easier route
-up the north face. Our own course by the Savage
-Gully was by far the more entertaining one, and
-under most conditions decidedly safer than the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>From the notch we could either walk straight up
-to the cave-pitch in the corner now facing us, or
-work easily round a rib of rock on the right and
-join the other route. We chose the former, and
-found the pitch decidedly stiff, the main trouble
-being to get satisfaction out of the diminutive
-hand-holds on the upper surface of the top boulder.
-However, it was time to be thankful for small
-mercies, and confidence carried us up safely.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span></p>
-
-<p>A party coming up the easy way would start from
-the terrace on the Nose, close to its highest point.
-Their route would be quite straightforward, though
-occasionally the question as to the safest movement
-might introduce a slight digression. The great wall
-of the Low Man on their right limits in the most
-definite manner all westerly climbing, and their only
-trouble would be in negotiating two narrow chimneys
-and some of the grass ledges, where the tufts are
-unpleasantly loose and the slopes very slippery. The
-fact is that this way is not much to be recommended;
-until it joins the other there is little merit to justify
-the variation. If parties are certain they can finish
-the second half of the ascent, they can assuredly
-climb the lower portion <i>via</i> the Savage Gully and
-the Stomach traverse.</p>
-
-<p>We halted for a moment above our cave-pitch and
-looked around at the crags. From a distant survey,
-such as that indicated in the photograph facing page
-271, it is impossible to realize that so large an open
-space of easy ground can exist on the north face.
-But our opportunity for advance was strictly confined
-to one direction. Further westwards we could not
-go; the great wall was unassailable. To the east we
-could have perhaps traversed away until progress
-was barred by the narrow branch of the Savage
-Gully, which we had utilized lower down. The
-northerly direction of course led down the easy
-route, and the southerly pointed to an uncompromising
-extension of the great wall towards the
-Savage Gully.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span></p>
-
-<p>We were led straight up the small scree to the
-<i>split block</i>, a huge boulder at the foot of the wall.
-The leader disappeared into a deep crack, and after
-a few moments appeared at the top of the block,
-having mounted by a secondary fissure that cut into
-the left portion of the boulder. The movement was
-quite unexpected, and Hill and I were rather startled
-at the aspect of things from the summit of the split
-block. It stood at the top of the narrow branch of
-the Savage Gully already referred to, and the view
-vertically down this branch was calculated to make
-us hesitate before taking the next step.</p>
-
-<p>This was the <i>Strid</i>. Close up against the wall
-that blocked the head of the gully, a long stride was
-to be taken across to a narrow ‘mantelshelf’ on the
-other side. There was no difficulty in the step, but
-the consequences of any slip were so obvious that
-we were not surprised to learn how respectfully the
-Strid is usually regarded. The mantelshelf led us
-along under the wall for a few yards, and an upper
-ledge was mounted. We were now close to the
-Savage Gully again, and Robinson prepared to be
-let down into it on the rope. We were adopting the
-tactics of Haskett Smith’s party in the first ascent.
-Robinson was to climb down the wall of the gully
-by means of an irregular crack twenty-five feet long,
-using the rope to steady himself during the descent.
-At the foot of the crack he would be able to step
-into the bed of the gully, and thence, after mounting
-it for a few feet, effect an easy passage up the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
-opposite side. He was then to unrope, and Hill was
-to let me down in the same way, there being plenty
-of friction between the rope and the rocks to enable
-him to hold my weight in case of a slip. When
-safely landed in the gully, I was to take the rope up
-to Robinson and wait the issue of events.</p>
-
-<p>These went off without a hitch. The crack was
-difficult, though not impossible for one man to
-descend alone; but I am convinced that a man
-attempting the climb single-handed would be
-running great risk if he proceeded without some
-sort of belaying with a rope. The little story is well
-known of the youth who could not understand why
-he as third and last man of his party had to be left
-behind on the ledge; he had examined the crack
-and was certain he could climb down safely without
-support from above. Nay more, he insisted on
-demonstrating the fact, and when three-quarters of
-the way to the bed of the gully his feet slipped and
-his handholds failed. Luckily the others were able
-to prevent a serious fall, and the young man’s ‘climbing
-down’ was strictly metaphorical.</p>
-
-<p>Robinson then rapidly swarmed up to the left of
-the gully, and, after mounting forty feet, traversed to
-the right into a long scree-shoot that ended abruptly
-some twenty-five feet vertically above our solitary
-companion on the ledge. Upwards the scree led
-straight to the summit level of the Low Man, and
-two of us were of course in a position to attain this
-point in a couple of minutes. But there was the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
-third, to manipulate, and Robinson proceeded to take
-out a short, spare rope from his sack and expound
-the method of using the ‘stirrup.’</p>
-
-<p>He tied a loop on to one end of his spare rope,
-large enough for a foot to be comfortably slipped
-therein, and flung that end down to Hill. I operated
-with the other rope, sending an end down for Hill to
-tie round his waist in the usual manner. The object
-of the process was to get the third man up with the
-least expenditure of energy on our part; in fact, to
-make Hill do all his own lifting. The wall was not
-so complicated in design as to render it impossible
-to haul him straight up like a bale of goods. But
-neither he nor I had till then seen an application
-of the stirrup-rope, and we had come out to be
-educated. There are many places where the method
-is well worth employing.</p>
-
-<p>The operations commenced by Hill’s fixing a foot
-in the stirrup and lifting it a couple of feet as
-Robinson hauled up his rope. Then, with Robinson
-simply holding on firmly, Hill straightened himself
-on the stirrup, using it as a foothold, while I
-pulled up the couple of feet of slack in the waist-rope.
-Next it was my turn to hold hard as Hill
-raised his stirrup foot, and then Robinson’s to keep
-the foot firm while Hill lifted himself on to it. These
-two moves were repeated again and again alternately.
-All through the process the ropes were held as free
-from slack as possible, any upward movement of
-Hill’s engaged foot or body being responded to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
-promptly by Robinson or myself respectively. It
-will be perceived, if the description is as clear as I
-want it to be, that all the actual lifting of Hill’s
-weight he managed himself during the straightening-out
-on the stirrup, and that we others were at most
-called upon to hold only his weight. Even this
-much stress on our hands we could avoid by partial
-belaying, though in that particular spot there were
-no entirely suitable projecting rocks that could be
-utilized as belaying-pins.</p>
-
-<p>Bit by bit Hill worked up the wall, till at last his
-head and shoulders appeared over the rounded coping
-at our feet, and he scrambled on to the scree. Then
-we all sat down and Robinson told us tales about that
-particular locality. Among others he gave us one to
-emphasize the practical lesson we had just been having
-on the use of the stirrup-rope. A famous climber,
-indeed he was sometime president of the Alpine
-Club, and in a vague, traditional sort of way years
-before he had fallen some hundreds of feet down a
-vertical gully hard by, without coming to any harm
-except that of finding his name ever afterwards
-associated with the gully; well, this famous climber
-was coming up that same wall by means of the
-stirrup-rope, and the zealous operatives above more
-than responded to his slightest movements. He
-lifted his foot a few inches, they hauled up the
-stirrup-rope a few yards, and anticipating that he
-might find the alternations a little laborious, proceeded
-to pull him up by sheer strength of goodwill.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
-Thus his attached foot appeared first over the edge,
-and the remainder of his person followed in some
-confusion. So, at any rate, the story went.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting as we were with our faces towards Buttermere,
-the great wall bore away to the left, and our
-scree gully marked its eastern limit. A horizontal
-crack extended for several feet across the wall,
-starting from the top of the pitch below us. Only
-its end could be seen, but by carefully working
-down to the corner on the left, and looking across
-the face, we could see the way it cut clean into the
-rock. This was the notorious <i>hand-traverse</i>, by
-which it was just possible to reach our scree gully
-from the ledge below without the preliminary descent
-into the Savage Gully.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes’ halt and we continued our course.
-There was no doubt or difficulty in reaching the
-Low Man, and thence following the ridge to the
-junction with the West Climb. A quarter of an
-hour saw us at the High Man cairn, and another
-five minutes at the foot of the Central Jordan. The
-ropes were stowed away again in the sack, and
-Robinson rapidly strode across the screes and down
-the corridor behind the Shamrock. In a phenomenally
-short time we were crossing the Liza stream,
-and, without being allowed to halt, a bee-line was
-drawn for us over to Scarth Gap by our untiring
-leader. Luckily for his followers, the name of this
-pass, which is sometimes called Scarf Gap, reminded
-him of a very good story concerning another famous
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
-climber who went to an evening party without a
-dress-tie. We were told the story and recovered
-breath sufficiently to continue our journey to Buttermere.
-I wish now that I had not been so fatigued,
-so that I might have remembered the whole anecdote
-and given it here in all detail.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Hand-Traverse.</span>&mdash;Nearly two years after
-the ascent described in the previous section, Dr.
-Collier showed me a way of avoiding the Savage
-Gully in the North Climb by following a direct
-route to the upper screes. The plan is to work to
-the extreme east corner of the ledge that succeeds
-the ‘mantelshelf,’ and when a narrow overhanging
-chimney is reached, to swarm up the steep buttress
-on its left. It looks particularly dangerous, but there
-is an excellent hold for the hands just round the corner
-of the buttress, and when the first three feet of ascent
-are accomplished the rest feels comparatively easy.</p>
-
-<p>On the same occasion we each in turn ventured
-on the <i>hand-traverse</i> from above. The place has
-already been referred to; it was known for some
-time that the crack could be reached from the
-terrace below, and Mr. Solly showed in 1891 that it
-could be followed to its left-hand extremity at the
-scree gully. It is so named because the climber
-hangs by his hands, with no footholds at all for the
-greater part of its length, and traverses across the
-face by sheer strength of his arms. Collier and I
-were well satisfied concerning the security of the
-crack itself. We went to the further end and back
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
-again, without coming across any place where the
-holds were treacherous. They were probably more
-satisfying to the grip than an ordinary horizontal
-bar, on account of the acute edge of the rock.
-On the other hand, we had no opportunity of trying
-the ascent from the terrace, which promised to be
-rather fatiguing for the arms, and which might
-render them useless for the traverse itself.</p>
-
-<p>On Whit Monday, 1896, a chance came for
-tackling the pitch in this new way. It had been
-successfully accomplished once, and twice had the
-climber’s strength of grip failed him when half-way
-across. So, at any rate, we learnt by hearsay at
-Wastdale. Perhaps it ought to be added that in
-one case it was the leader of the party who fell off,
-and the rope saved him in a manner scarcely short
-of miraculous; in the other case the rope was held
-from the scree gully, and the climber only swung
-out on it. Our Whitsuntide party were willing that
-I should try, and carefully measured out just a
-sufficiency of rope for me to reach the crack. Then
-two of them stood together at the western extremity
-of the terrace, and shouldered me up the first bad
-bit. There was every reason to be quick, as resting-places
-were absent where the strain on the arms
-could be eased. In twenty-five feet I reached the
-crack and halted for a moment on a scanty foothold
-before trusting to the ledge. Then came the swing
-off and a hasty sliding of the hands along the sharp
-edge. The first bit was about eight feet long; then
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
-that particular crack terminated abruptly in the
-wall, and another, two feet higher, continued across
-in the same easterly direction. The lift of the body
-up to the second crack was trying, but beyond this
-critical point the movement was horizontal. It was
-somewhat clumsy&mdash;the scraping of the body along
-the rough surface of the rock, with the legs held
-clear; but my sole thought was to reach the end of
-the traverse twelve feet away, and no consideration
-of style was entertained. In a very short time,
-though it seemed far too long, the end of the wall
-was attained, and it only remained to drag myself
-up to the scree.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the party preferred to mount the
-buttress by Collier’s route indicated in a previous
-paragraph. I think the hand-traverse has not been
-attempted since, and it is perhaps just as well. It
-is scarcely less than suicidal to try conclusions with
-this variation unless the climber has full confidence
-in his strength of grip, and unless he has already
-tested his powers of endurance of long-continued
-strain in the arms. But with the leader of the party
-already at the head of the pitch, no matter which
-way he got there, it involves no serious risk for the
-others to follow by this route. The last on the rope
-had better come up over the buttress.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>NOTES ON REMAINING CLIMBS</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>In this chapter it is proposed to deal summarily
-with a few remaining rock-climbs that have not yet
-been described. Some are rather awkward to reach,
-others are perhaps too slight to be worth the time
-spent in reaching them unless they actually turn up
-in the day’s march. One or two I have not visited,
-and am reluctant to accept the responsibility of
-guiding people up them. But</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">What he thought he might require,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">He went and took&mdash;the same as me!<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>is too general a motto among book-writers for me
-to hesitate long before incorporating other people’s
-notes, and the attempt will be made to acknowledge
-the source in each case.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Piers Ghyll.</span>&mdash;This is a fine-looking ravine on
-the north side of Lingmell, occasionally visited by
-climbers. It has four or five comparatively easy
-pitches before the big bend, but at the point where
-the main gully is bridged by a great mass of rock
-the whole width of the ravine is occupied by a waterfall
-fifty feet high, and any attempt to force a passage
-up this pitch is peculiarly unsatisfactory unless a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
-rainless season has much diminished the volume of
-water passing down. Such a season was that of 1893,
-and in April of that year Dr. Collier led the first
-party up the whole length of the ghyll. Even under
-those favourable circumstances the climb was very
-difficult, and no other party has succeeded in repeating
-the ascent. Dr. Collier tells me that the hardest bit
-is up the narrow pitch before reaching the great fall.
-The latter offers a choice of two or three routes.</p>
-
-<p>Piers Ghyll is conspicuous from a distance, and
-many a tourist knows the place. Hence it has a
-reputation of its own even as a climb, which it can
-scarcely be said to deserve. If, as Haskett Smith
-expresses it, it is in nineteen seasons out of twenty
-wholly impossible to get over the great obstacle, it
-cannot rightly be called a climb. The scrambling up
-to the bend is mostly unpleasant by reason of the
-water and the loose character of the rock. An exit
-can there be made up the wall on the right, but the
-friability of this wall makes its ascent positively
-dangerous except at one spot where a scree gully
-runs nearly to the top of the cliff.</p>
-
-<p>A most interesting account of the ghyll, giving
-certain of the adventures that explorers have encountered,
-may be read in ‘All the Year Round’ of
-November, 1884. It was contributed by Mr. C. N.
-Williamson; other parts of this article dealing with
-Cumberland climbing have already been referred to.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">High Stile.</span>&mdash;The north side of this mountain is
-precipitous, and two or three short but interesting
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
-gullies can be followed up to the ridge. Two of them
-can easily be recognised from Buttermere village.
-The central gully faces towards the north-west and
-is to the right of the highest point on the mountain.
-It has two well-defined pitches, the second being very
-severe. The writer climbed it in 1893 with Mr.
-John Robinson, before taking the chimney described
-in the next paragraph, but seemingly it has rarely
-been visited since.</p>
-
-<p>To the left of the central gully a wide black
-chimney can be seen, leading up close to the summit
-of High Stile. It offers a short but very difficult
-scramble; in pulling up over the edge of the great
-pitch care must be taken to avoid the loose stones.
-In the first ascent the leader had a bad encounter
-with three boulders that slipped over on to his head.</p>
-
-<p>A long, easy gully in the north-east shoulder of
-the mountain offers a pleasant route down from the
-summit to the shores of Buttermere.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Buckbarrow.</span>&mdash;The side of this hill facing
-Wastwater has sundry attractions. Climbers who
-are not pressed for time, on their way from Wastdale
-to the nearest stations on the Furness Railway, can
-be recommended to visit the crag.</p>
-
-<p>The first main gully at the northern end was
-climbed at Easter, 1892; two short parallel chimneys
-terminate the ascent, that on the left being supposed
-to be the harder. Besides this route, there are a few
-ways of tackling the face further to the west; but
-details are not at hand by reason of the rarity of the
-visits to Buckbarrow.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Sergeant Crag Chimney.</span>&mdash;This was first
-ascended by Mr. John Robinson and the writer in
-September, 1893. The crag itself is reached by
-walking up Langstrath from the village of Rosthwaite
-for about a mile and then bearing to the left. Close
-to the stream, at the point where we leave the track,
-is the Gash Rock, an isolated boulder that offers
-considerable resistance to any one attempting to
-climb it. It was climbed first by the writer in 1893.
-A good hold has recently been cleared at the critical
-point on the boulder. The scramble is said to be
-quite easy now.</p>
-
-<p>The gully in the crag is in sight half-a-mile below
-the Gash Rock, and is well worth the visit of a
-strong party. It was noticed in 1886 by Mr.
-Haskett Smith, but seven years elapsed before the
-first ascent was made. Curiously enough, the
-second ascent was effected a day or two later by
-Messrs. Phillimore and Anderson, in entire ignorance
-that the gully had so recently been overcome.</p>
-
-<p>Information embodied in the following notes of
-the successive pitches has been supplied by the
-brothers Abraham of Keswick, whose interesting
-photograph of the great pitch in the middle of the
-ascent is reproduced facing page 286.</p>
-
-<p><i>First Pitch.</i>&mdash;Chock-stone about fifteen feet high,
-passed to the left on the face of the rock. Good
-hand and foot holds.</p>
-
-<p><i>Second Pitch.</i>&mdash;Small chock-stone. Both hands
-are reached up to the top of the stone and a straight
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
-pull over effected with the arms. The obstacle is
-about nine feet high.</p>
-
-<p><i>Third Pitch.</i>&mdash;Sundry boulders forming a block,
-about fifteen feet high. The right-hand side of the
-gully is ascended until the leader is well wedged
-under the block. Then he can pass out to the left
-and over at the top.</p>
-
-<p><i>Fourth Pitch.</i>&mdash;This is the most severe of the
-whole set, and the direct climb up the left wall is
-probably as stiff a problem as can be found in the
-district. Two immense boulders, one over the other,
-separated by a gap of four feet, form the roof of a
-cave. The retaining walls of the gully form the sides
-of the cave, and the ascent is to be effected on the
-left. From a short distance this appears to be a
-smooth vertical slab; even on close inspection the
-holds it offers appear to be of the most minute
-dimensions.</p>
-
-<p>The second man on the rope should mount as
-high up the interior of the cave as possible. After
-climbing under the first boulder the leader takes a
-long step out to the left wall, on a sloping ledge.
-Then using side holds on the boulder itself, with his
-feet or knees against the main wall, he has to work
-up gradually to a little jammed boulder two feet
-above the lower one. This is an extremely fatiguing
-operation. On to this block he must lift his knees,
-and then he can cautiously drag up so as to stand
-on it.</p>
-
-<p>The upper boulder is then passed by throwing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
-the left leg across to a slight foothold, whence a
-thrust forward of the body is effected through wet
-soil and tufted ferns. This is particularly unpleasant
-after rainy weather, and is probably at all times
-somewhat risky. The height of the pitch is thirty-two
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>A variation has been found which makes the
-passage of this obstacle much more feasible. It
-leads first downwards to a grassy ledge on the right,
-and then up by succeeding shelves until the upper
-level of the pitch is reached, when the return
-traverse back to the bed of the gully can be easily
-managed. Hitherto all parties, except the first and
-third in the chimney, have preferred to avoid the
-fourth pitch, and their preference is most reasonable.</p>
-
-<p><i>Fifth Pitch.</i>&mdash;This is an easy chimney twenty
-feet long, lined with grass and ferns, and marked at
-the summit by a fallen tree.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sixth Pitch.</i>&mdash;Two wedged stones one above the
-other form a pitch about twenty feet high. The
-route is first into the cave between the stones, then
-up a short chimney and over the upper boulder.
-The second on the rope should ascend as high as
-possible in the cave and, with splendid anchorage,
-pay out the leader’s rope carefully. Sundry loose
-stones are lodged on the right, and should be left
-discreetly alone.</p>
-
-<p><i>Seventh Pitch.</i>&mdash;This is a chimney thirty feet
-high containing many loose stones. It is crowned
-by a chock-stone. The ascent is directly up the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
-first part, and then over loose and dangerous rock
-on the right for another twenty feet.</p>
-
-<p>Steep grass leads out to the top, 500 feet from
-the base of the cliff.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Blea Crags and Mouse Ghyll.</span>&mdash;The Blea
-Crag climbs in Borrowdale can be reached from
-Grange in thirty-five minutes; a fine general view is
-to be seen from the picturesque bridge spanning the
-Derwent. There are three gullies of interest; one
-to the south is now known as Mouse Ghyll, climbed
-and christened in the autumn of 1897, by Mr. W.
-Cecil Slingsby’s party; a second less-defined gully
-leads up the centre of the crags; and to the north
-of this a third takes us by loose and rather unsatisfactory
-pitches to the summit ridge.</p>
-
-<p>Mouse Ghyll starts very narrow, with smooth
-walls running up to a great height on either side.
-An easy pitch of ten feet brings us to a little platform,
-whence a steep, double staircase, with good
-steps for each foot, gives safe access to a great cavern
-sixty feet higher. Here the real difficulties begin.
-The pitch is formed by two huge, overhanging
-boulders, one above the other, with a grassy ledge
-between them. The leader can be well anchored by
-his party, and makes a start up to the left from the
-top of the rib of rock that supplies the ‘staircase.’
-It is sensational work up to the grassy ledge, where
-again the leader requires anchoring, and perhaps also
-a helping shoulder for the next little chimney of some
-fourteen feet, between the upper boulder and the left
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
-wall. When the first party were here, a startled
-mouse sprang from the grassy ledge over the leader’s
-head, and dropped safely at the bottom of the staircase
-ninety feet below. May it live long enough to
-learn that the ghyll has been named in its honour!</p>
-
-<p>On emerging from the chimney three routes show
-themselves. The first is up two easy pitches that
-remain in the gully. To the right a chimney leads
-by an open buttress to the top of the crags, and can
-be ascended without trouble. But on the left a
-prominent chimney, succeeded by a narrow crack,
-gives seventy feet of extremely tough climbing. It
-was ascended by Messrs. George and Ashley
-Abraham, who made the second ascent of Mouse
-Ghyll.</p>
-
-<p>The central gully starts with a chimney, best
-taken on the right, and continues with short and
-easy pitches until some large boulders wedged in a
-vertical crack offer better fun. There are no further
-obstacles.</p>
-
-<p>I am indebted to Messrs. George and Ashley
-Abraham and to Mr. Slingsby for the information in
-this section. They assure me that the climbing in
-Mouse Ghyll is of a first-rate order, and the scenery
-of lake and fellside almost unsurpassable in the
-country.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">APPENDIX.</h2>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="APPENDIX_I">APPENDIX.</h2>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Walker’s Gully, Pillar Rock.</span>&mdash;The Christmas
-of 1898 at Wastdale was marked by heavy rain
-and unseasonable conditions. Several large parties
-of climbers had come to the hotel, and, after a day
-or two of smoking and grumbling, had departed;
-until, at the New Year, Mr. Jones and myself were
-the only climbers left there. To keep ourselves in
-training, we struggled up through the powdery snow
-of the Central Gully on Gable Crag, performed many
-rash feats on the end of the barn and the billiard-table,
-besides leaving a considerable quantity of our
-clothing on the ‘Mosedale Boulder.’</p>
-
-<p>Early in January we walked over to Keswick;
-and found, on returning, that another party had
-arrived, amongst whom was my friend Mr. A. E.
-Field. We greeted him as warmly as we could
-under such cold conditions; and when, later in the
-evening, we disclosed our intention to climb Walker’s
-Gully, he was quite ‘keen’ on undertaking the very
-necessary duties of ‘third man.’ Our party was now
-complete; but the heavy rain-clouds still rolled up
-from the sea, and the weather continued persistently
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span>
-bad. We were forced at last to the conclusion that,
-if Walker’s Gully had then to be climbed, it would
-have to be done regardless of bad weather and
-personal discomfort.</p>
-
-<p>As a result of this reasoning, the early morning
-of January 7th, 1899, saw the three of us trudging
-patiently up the Black Sail Pass in a tremendous
-downpour of rain and sleet; but, notwithstanding
-this, with the climber’s cheery optimism, a ‘fair-up’
-was confidently prophesied. As an exception to the
-general rule, our prophecy was fulfilled; for, just as
-we reached the soft snow on Looking Stead, the
-huge banks of mist rolled up from both valleys, and
-far away in the north we saw ‘hoary-headed old
-Skiddaw’ bathed in sunshine, while a keen dry wind
-blew up out of Ennerdale. We trudged along
-through the snow on the High Level, and about
-mid-day were facing the ice-covered slabs and
-snow-wreathed ledges on the north-east side of the
-Pillar Rock. Little was said as we scrambled to the
-foot of Walker’s Gully; for each of us fully recognised
-what was ahead, and it was better to be silent, than
-to utter discouraging remarks.</p>
-
-<p>The rope was put on at the foot of the crags,
-Field being the ‘anchor’ of the party, whilst I, as
-usual, was placed next to Jones, to serve as a special
-buttress when hand and foot holds should become
-scarce. A strong jet of ice-cold water came rushing
-down over the first pitch, so that, not wishing to
-have our enthusiasm cooled so early in the day, we
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span>
-climbed up the wet, slippery slabs on our left.
-About fifty feet higher we had some difficulty in a
-shallow sloping chimney, down which a mud
-avalanche seemed to have fallen quite recently, and
-here our leader remarked ‘we ought to have been
-equipped with mud-guards.’ We were soon facing
-the main gully, with its tremendous chock-stones
-rising one above the other, over which streamed
-large quantities of water, suggesting a somewhat
-too rapid cleansing of our mud-stained garments.
-We entered the chimney and found it just wide
-enough to back up, with both feet on the right-hand
-wall; the falling ice-chips apprising us of the fact
-that hard work was in progress higher up.</p>
-
-<p>We climbed very rapidly for about fifty feet,
-close together, until almost within touch of the
-uninviting stream of water falling over the first
-jammed boulder, which was now just above our
-heads. Knowing this to be one of the most difficult
-pitches in the lower part of the climb, a short
-‘council of war’ was held, for all seemed desirous
-of avoiding a cold bath as long as possible. Then,
-screwing up his courage, Jones made a bold dash
-through the waterfall to the back of the cave.
-Knowing his objection to monopolising pleasures of
-this kind, we followed him, and were soon all
-gasping and shivering below the jammed boulder.
-After further consideration and experiment, the
-only safe course, apparently, was for me to
-stand under the waterfall and give the leader a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
-shoulder over the <i>mauvais pas</i>. As our ablutions
-seemed likely now to be very thorough, we ate our
-lunch and watched, for a time, the falling water,
-which, in my opinion, to some extent spoilt the
-view. The discomfort of our position, however, soon
-impressed upon us the necessity of moving. Field
-therefore held me firmly from the back of the cave,
-whilst I stood under the shower-bath; and Jones
-mounted on my shoulders, from whence he reached
-a hold on the top of the boulder, over which he
-pulled himself with an exclamation of delight. I
-then retired to the cave with considerable alacrity.
-Sounds from above warned us that the leader was
-scarcely yet secure, so we steadily paid out about
-forty feet of his rope, until he reached safe anchorage
-at the top of the three boulders forming the pitch.
-In following we wasted very little time under the
-waterfall, and soon joined Jones on a little snow-patch,
-from which we could study the situation. A
-hundred feet or so higher, and apparently overhanging
-our present position, was the top jammed
-boulder. Evidence was not wanting, however, to
-show us that we were not safe from falling objects;
-for, stuck in a curiously upright position in the snow
-in front of us, were three walking-sticks, with two
-pairs of torn gloves and some much-worn socks lying
-by their side. We thought at first a party of tourists
-had somehow reached here and forgotten their
-‘impedimenta;’ but our leader remembered that
-some friends, having climbed the Pillar Rock at
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
-Christmas, had thrown their sticks and luggage
-down into Jordan Gap before descending themselves.
-The snow proved harder than they thought, their
-property making an unexpected descent into
-Walker’s Gully, and here were we confronted with
-the opportunity of acting as a rescue party; but,
-not thirsting for fame, we decided to leave the relics
-undisturbed.</p>
-
-<p>Jones now led us up several small, wet pitches,
-until we came to a sudden stop in a great cave,
-where there was no apparent way out, except
-through a very small hole high up in its roof; an
-outside route being practically impossible on account
-of the accumulation of ice on both walls. Jones
-remarked that he was not going ‘to emulate the
-camel that failed to go through the eye of a needle;’
-so, to reduce his bulk as far as possible, he emptied
-his pockets and left his wet jacket for Field to sit
-upon. No holds on the side of the cave were available,
-so the leader climbed upon my shoulders, but
-he could barely reach his arms through the hole.
-Field, meanwhile, was smoking and making the most
-of his comfortable position. With somewhat insincere
-apologies, we called on him to form an additional
-buttress, and, from his shoulders, I was able to force
-the leader through the hole, amidst the sound of
-tearing clothes and muffled remonstrances from their
-owner.</p>
-
-<p>I shall not readily forget my own sufferings in
-that hole. The first attempt, from Field’s shoulders,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
-was a complete failure, because the upper part of my
-body absolutely refused to fit the shape of the hole.
-After several fruitless efforts and much wasted
-energy, I happened to look up and saw Jones smiling
-down at me. “That is not right. Go down and
-have another try,” said he. He then loosed the
-rope rather suddenly, whereupon I made an unexpected
-descent upon Field, who was standing below
-enjoying my troubles; and there was much confusion
-in the cave. After extricating ourselves, Field again
-kindly placed his shoulders at my service, but from a
-somewhat higher level than before, and this, with
-the aid of his ice-axe applied from below, ultimately
-landed me at the top of the hole feeling very roughly
-handled. Field then sent up our jackets, and, after
-the hole had been slightly enlarged by removing
-some loose rocks, he came up himself in good style.</p>
-
-<p>We were now at the foot of the formidable top-pitch,
-which had never been climbed. A sudden
-seriousness settled on us all as we looked up at it,
-and remembered that this pitch had defied some of
-the finest cragsmen of our time. The walls on both
-sides were perpendicular, and the rounded appearance
-of the rocks suggested an unusual absence of
-hand and foot holds, whilst the presence of ice in
-several places caused us much uneasiness. There were
-three large flat chock-stones piled irregularly right
-across the chasm. Towards the upper one, which
-overhung considerably, the two walls converged so
-much that it seemed possible to ‘back up’ the last
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
-part of the climb, if the leader could only reach it
-safely. The only other alternative would be to
-climb up on the right wall, close under the lower
-chock-stone, and traverse outwards and upwards
-until suitable holds could be found. A troublesome
-sleet was beginning to fall; so that we were glad to
-climb into the cave directly beneath the chock-stones.
-A firm ‘hitch’ was discovered in the back of the
-cave, by which Field could anchor us; and he settled
-himself in a wet corner where his attention was
-occupied in dodging the drops of falling water and
-directing our movements.</p>
-
-<p>Our first efforts were on the left wall; and by
-means of an ice-axe fixed in a narrow corner, Jones
-skilfully and safely wedged himself in a crack which
-led almost to the top of the first boulder. However,
-for the next half-hour his attempts to make further
-progress were in vain, for a hand could not be spared
-to chip the ice off the rocks; and it was found
-necessary to abandon this left wall and to try the
-opposite one, which now occupied our attention for
-some time. Jones made several attempts from a
-shoulder to effect a lodgment below the chock-stone.
-Then, whilst enjoying a well-earned rest, we espied
-a small rock, wedged high up in the crack between
-the main wall and the roof of the cave. That small
-rock proved to be the key of the situation, for, after
-probably the finest piece of climbing I have ever
-witnessed, a rope was passed through the hole behind
-it, and we were in a position to attempt the climb
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
-safely. We were all suffering acutely from cold,
-especially Field, on account of his inaction, though
-he declared that the excitement of our movements
-kept him warm. Notwithstanding this, our leader,
-taking off his boots and jacket, prepared for a long
-struggle on that icy wall, whilst I padded my head
-to gain an inch or two in height. Jones now swung
-up as high as possible on the hitched rope; then,
-while standing on my head, he found a very small
-hold for one of his toes, and after ascending a few
-feet was hidden from our sight by the intervening
-chock-stone. The next few minutes were anxious
-ones; we shivered with cold, and held the rope firmly
-in case there should be a mishap higher up. Almost
-immediately there was a rush of falling snow far out
-over the pitch, and it scarcely needed our leader’s
-jödel of success to assure us that at last Walker’s
-Gully had yielded to the onslaught of the climber.</p>
-
-<p>We pushed the leader’s boots into his jacket
-pockets and sent up all our ‘luggage.’ Owing to
-the half-frozen condition of our fingers, tying the
-various things on the rope took so long a time, that
-we called forth an impatient exclamation from above.
-Eventually we, in turn, landed safely at the top,
-after swinging ignominiously on the rope, in much
-the same way as our ‘luggage’ had done. However,
-the great hitherto unclimbed pitch of Walker’s Gully
-was below us, and there followed the usual congratulations.
-Our progress up from the screes had
-been slow, something like three hours, but much
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
-time had been spent in reconnoitring under extremely
-bad conditions.</p>
-
-<p>The situation was still rather serious, for we were
-perched on a narrow snow-ledge on the very brink of
-the upper chock-stone; and the three of us were
-almost in a state of collapse from cold and the
-saturated state of our clothes. The forced inaction
-of the leader, whilst we were finishing the climb,
-had made him so benumbed as to be almost helpless,
-and he was sitting with his feet in the wet snow,
-ineffectually trying to put on his boots. We had
-carefully kept some stockings and gloves dry in the
-rücksack; but the opening of the sack with half-frozen
-fingers proved unfortunate, for its contents
-escaped, and, with the other relics which had come
-down through Jordan Gap, now adorned the snow-patch
-far below. It was then agreed that this
-narrow, exposed ledge was, under the circumstances,
-not a suitable dressing room; so we gathered up
-our belongings, including our leader’s boots, and
-carefully ascended the snow until we came to a safe
-resting place. Here we resorted to the usual means
-of thawing ourselves, and our leader’s boots were
-restored to their appointed places.</p>
-
-<p>The race up the steep snow seemed to revive our
-spirits, and, by the time the dry rocks below Great
-Doup were reached, our sufferings gave way to the
-glow of success. One little excitement was still in store
-for us, for Jones told us that he was threatened with
-frost-bite in both feet. On removing his boots we found
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span>
-that his statement was true, so we rubbed his feet
-with soft snow, and, before putting on his boots, the
-troublesome feet were placed as far as possible in the
-pockets of the warmest member of the party, until
-circulation was thoroughly restored.</p>
-
-<p>Night was drawing on apace; so we bade farewell
-to our ‘vanquished foe,’ and were soon scampering
-along the High Level, bound for the well-earned
-comforts of Wastdale.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Iron Crag Chimney.</span>&mdash;Towards the head of
-the Shoulthwaite Valley, which is 3&frac12; miles from
-Keswick, near the road to Ambleside, may be seen
-high up on the right-hand side, a magnificent
-couloir. It runs up the south side of one of the
-steepest faces of rock in the district, and is called,
-after the rock, Iron Crag Chimney. We had passed
-in sight of the Crag scores of times, but the chimney
-is so cunningly hidden away on the far side from the
-road, that it was not until Mr. J. W. Robinson told
-us of it, that we dreamt of there being anything
-worth climbing there. He and my brother went to
-prospect it in March, 1896, but found it in such a
-very bad condition, that after climbing the comparatively
-easy first pitch, they were forced to beat
-a retreat. They came back, however, with a glowing
-account of the second pitch, and spoke very excitedly
-about ‘“a thing” at least 100 feet high, wet, mossy,
-and with an overhanging stone half-way up, from
-which the water dropped out four yards into the bed
-of the gully, 40 feet below.’ They thought, however,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span>
-that a small ledge, up to which they had climbed,
-would continue far enough along the left wall of the
-gully to enable them to traverse well out from under
-the stone, and so reach the top of it. Of the nature
-of the climbing above that they knew nothing, but
-were both anxious to try it and confident of success.</p>
-
-<p>Continued bad weather hindered another attempt
-until June of the same year, when Mr. F. W. Jackson
-and I joined the other two and we set out to attack
-this formidable ‘hundred-footer.’ The day was fine
-and the rocks in perfect condition, and we succeeded
-in climbing the chimney throughout. I intend to
-give more detail of the second ascent; but it may be
-as well to mention here that the second pitch only
-yielded after several attempts, by more than one
-member of the party, and only with the aid of a
-shoulder, given from the little ledge, was the leader
-able to climb to the top of the ‘chock-stone.’ After
-this another thirty feet of chimney brought us to the
-top of the pitch, and great were the rejoicings that
-we had, after a very severe struggle, mastered it. I
-shall never forget how white the face of one member
-of the party was when it appeared over the top of
-the pitch, how he yelled to us to ‘haul in the taut,’
-how he ‘quoth “nevermore,”’ and how impolitely
-he spoke to the leader for having climbed it at all.
-Altogether this second pitch gave us a good deal of
-trouble, but the top part of the chimney, though
-very rotten and steep, and liable to come away in
-small quantities, was climbed with comparative
-ease.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span></p>
-
-<p>After this, except some exploration of the Crags
-by Mr. H. W. Blunt, it was not visited again by
-climbers until the New Year of 1899, when Mr. O.
-G. Jones, with my father, my brother, and myself,
-found ourselves standing at the bottom of the first
-pitch. We had expatiated on the difficulty of the
-second pitch, and Jones was very keen on trying it,
-having, in fact, come over from Wastdale with us for
-that purpose. <i>En route</i> to Iron Crag we had climbed
-a gully on the west side of the <i>massif</i>, which consisted
-of a series of very interesting chimneys, the
-pleasures of which were greatly enhanced by magnificent
-views of Derwentwater. This had made us somewhat
-later than we anticipated, and an animated
-discussion was held at the bottom as to whether,
-considering the lateness of the hour and the bad condition
-of the gully, which was streaming with water,
-it would not be advisable for two of the party to stay
-below or go round and join the others at the top.
-This was decided against; ‘all or none,’ said Jones,
-so we roped up with him leading. He soon reached
-the small ledge under the stone, and then stopped
-to take breath and prospect. ‘Shall I come up to
-you?’ shouted my brother. ‘No thanks! I’ll have
-a try from here alone, and you would get wet through
-in no time up here,’ returned he. This consideration
-for my brother was utterly unlike him, for, amongst
-other similar occasions, I well remember one on
-which, in a gully&mdash;or rather waterfall&mdash;in Wales, he
-got wet through on the first pitch, and insisted on
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span>
-our finishing with him all the eight pitches. His
-look of glee when we emerged from the top of each
-pitch with the water running down us was a thing
-to be remembered. However, to return, he jammed
-his left foot against the left wall of the gully and
-pressed his back against the other, and almost before
-we had time to see what had happened, was smiling
-down on us from the top of the pitch. It was very
-disgusting to see him just ‘romp’ up the place we
-had found so difficult the year before, and when I
-had climbed up to him he smiled sardonically and
-said, ‘Is that your pitch? Well, really&mdash;&mdash;!’ A
-small handhold had weathered away since the time
-of the first ascent, which somewhat simplified the
-passing over the ‘chock-stone,’ but even now I think
-most people would find it difficult. We could only
-apologise and feel small, but, had we known it, there
-was a surfeit of excitement and difficulty in store for
-us higher up.</p>
-
-<p>The pitch we had just climbed was composed of
-most excellent rock, but up above, where we now
-were, everything was changed, and the upper rocks,
-which had been rotten enough before, were now, as
-a result of the heavy rain, of the worst description
-imaginable. Great pieces as large as one’s head
-came away at once, and every step had to be most
-carefully tested before we could proceed. Now was
-the time for us to appreciate our leader, for a less
-careful man would have ‘pounded’ us severely before
-we had made any progress worth mentioning. As it
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span>
-was, several big pieces had to be removed, and some
-came whizzing past in much too close proximity to
-be pleasant.</p>
-
-<p>After the second pitch the chimney continues
-straight up and is fairly wide for two hundred feet
-or so; but there is no good anchorage until the level
-skyline is reached. Towards the top it narrows
-down to a thin, rotten and very steep crack. By
-slow and very careful progress we reached this
-crack, which had been climbed straight up on the
-first ascent; but after Jones had tried it a few times
-he evidently thought it hopeless, for he shouted
-down to us, ‘It won’t go to-day. The rain has
-made everything too rotten. We shall have to go
-back.’ It was four o’clock, raining heavily and
-nearly dark, and to go back meant in all probability
-sleeping on the top of the second pitch, an idea
-which none of us relished. So my brother climbed
-up to Jones and, after consulting for a while, they
-decided to climb out of the crack on the right-hand
-side. To do this a shoulder would have to be given,
-from a small shelving ledge, to enable the leader
-to reach the firmer and less steep rock up above.
-This was the most obvious route of ascent, but the
-ledge looked very unstable and rotten, and vibrated
-a little on being tested. However, Jones thought
-it might hold if stepped on in the right way; so
-my brother climbed up on to it and Jones followed.
-By utilising the side of the crack, they were able to
-put very little pressure on the ledge; Jones climbed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span>
-on to his companion’s shoulders, and, when he had
-cleared away a few of the loose rocks, was, after an
-anxious moment or two, able to draw himself up on
-to the skyline and disappear from our sight. After
-a few seconds he gave a cheer and called to my
-brother to follow him. This he had just begun to
-do and had left the ledge about five feet, when I
-heard a dull ominous crack, and, on looking up, saw
-the whole thing coming down. There was no time
-to do anything but squeeze into the chimney and
-warn my father. I succeeded in getting far enough
-inside to escape serious damage, but the heel of my
-left boot, which projected a little, was torn entirely
-away. My father’s escape was more marvellous, for it
-seemed that nothing could save him; but on looking
-down I saw the great rock strike a projecting piece of
-the chimney only a few inches above his head, and
-spread out like a fan into a thousand splinters
-which shot far out into the air, falling again near
-the foot of the chimney; and thus we escaped with
-only a few slight bruises. One shudders to think
-what would have happened if the ledge had fallen
-when Jones and my brother were on it. It may be
-of interest to say here that during the whole of our
-climbs with Jones, this was the only approach to an
-accident we had, and under his leadership the
-possibility of anything going wrong seemed, and
-always was, very remote indeed.</p>
-
-<p>After this we were not long in joining the other
-two at the top. By this time it was nearly dark
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span>
-and still raining heavily, and on the crest of the
-chimney we were faced by a bitterly cold wind.
-Jones, who had been exposed to this during the time
-we were ascending, was shaking with cold, and he
-shouted through the storm&mdash;‘Hurry up! Coil the
-rope and then we’ll do a sprint.’ On looking round
-we found that he had gone. We finished coiling the
-rope and hurried up to where he had been, but could
-not see him anywhere. We shouted again and again,
-but got no answer. After peering about and
-shouting several times we came to a standstill. ‘Is
-he subject to fits?’ inquired my father in a most
-doleful tone of voice. We had never heard of anything
-of the sort, so set off down the side of the
-crags in the hope of finding him awaiting us below.
-A miserable hour was spent in walking about the
-bottom of the crags calling his name; but the
-whistling of the wind in the rocks above, and the
-swishing of the rain were the only answers we got;
-so we set off down the fell-side, and, after floundering
-about in the dark, over the stone-walls and through
-the river, we found ourselves at last on the main
-road to Keswick. We were very anxious to know
-what had become of Jones, so hastened home, where
-we found him, ‘dressed up in all his best,’ toasting
-his feet in front of a comfortable fire. ‘Where have
-you been?’ ‘Dinner has been waiting an hour,’
-and so on, were the thanks we got for our weary
-hunt among the crags for him, and the query of my
-father’s about his taking ‘fits’ became one of his
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span>
-favourite jokes. After proposing the ‘sprint’ to us
-he had run round a projecting shoulder of rock to
-leeward, and started off to Keswick over the moor,
-by the route we had taken earlier in the day. We
-had expected him to go down to the Shoulthwaite
-Valley, and in this way had missed him.</p>
-
-<p>So finished one of the most exciting days we
-ever spent with Owen Glynne Jones; and its events
-are indelibly stamped on my memory. But, full of
-incident as the day had been, my pleasantest
-recollection is of the evening that followed; when,
-by the fire and over our pipes, we fought old battles
-over again, recalling to life happy days and exciting
-moments on the fells, ending with the songs and
-glees Jones loved so well to sing, and across the
-space of years, taking us back into the ‘dear, dead
-days,’ will come into our ‘mind’s eye’ the picture of
-him kneeling by the piano, singing with the keen
-enthusiasm which characterized everything he did,
-his favourite hymn&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Lead, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">...<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">O’er moor and fen, o’er crag and torrent,<br /></span>
-<span class="i8">Till the night is gone.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Engineers’ Chimney, Gable Crag.</span>&mdash;This
-new and interesting climb is situated about midway
-between the Oblique Chimney and the Central
-Gully. The beginning of it lies at nearly the same
-level as that of the Oblique Chimney, and can be
-reached by traversing some easy ledges from the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span>
-‘Sheep Walk,’ or by ascending directly from the foot
-of the Crags. Although the chimney was well
-known to many climbers, its ascent had, curiously
-enough, not been seriously attempted until July
-30th, 1899, when Messrs. G. T. Glover and W. N.
-Ling made the first ascent. Since then it has been
-ascended on two other occasions, and it seems likely to
-become as popular as any of the Gable Crag climbs.
-The scenery is magnificent and the climbing throughout
-of a most interesting character, and in the centre
-of the lower part of the chimney a loosely wedged
-stone adds an element of risk and difficulty, which is
-absent from the other chimneys on this face. About
-eight feet from its commencement the chimney
-divides into two branches, but the route lies up the
-left-hand one. A good resting place for the second
-man is to be obtained in the right-hand branch, and
-he ought to stay here while the leader is negotiating
-the very difficult passage over the chock-stone. In
-all the ascents so far it has been found advisable to
-pass a rope behind and over this stone, to improvise
-a handhold, and even then this ten feet or so will be
-found quite difficult enough for most people. After
-this, another twenty-five feet of careful climbing
-brings one to a broad, sloping ledge where a rest can
-be taken. From here two routes are available.
-One is to keep to the chimney, which continues
-straight upward for about forty feet, and the other
-is to traverse out round the left-hand buttress for a
-few feet and then bear upwards, joining the ‘Sheep
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span>
-Walk’ near the top of the Crags. The former of
-these involves about twenty feet of fairly easy
-climbing, until the small cave, roofed over with the
-stone which dominates the chimney, is reached.
-From this cave the easiest method of ascent is to
-utilise a thin crack in the left wall into which some
-small stones are firmly jammed and which may be
-reached by wedging across the chimney and traversing
-outwards, a slight projecting ledge affording
-some help in the process. The ‘take-off’ into the
-crack is somewhat delicate and decidedly sensational
-on account of the scanty foothold, but once gained
-ten to twelve feet of further climbing practically
-finishes the chimney. The traverse route round the
-buttress is much easier, but it entirely evades the
-most sensational part of the climb.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">West Wall Climb, Deep Ghyll.</span>&mdash;For climbers
-of Deep Ghyll who ascend the second pitch by the
-right-hand exit, this new route is probably the best
-way out of the Ghyll. After thus passing the second
-pitch, the West Wall Climb starts from a point about
-twenty-six yards below the entrance to the Great
-Chimney. By climbing over two small ledges and
-up a conspicuous thirty-feet chimney, a broad ledge
-is reached, where further direct progress is not
-advisable.</p>
-
-<p>The best way lies around a corner to the right
-and up a series of easy ledges, working gradually
-back again to above the commencement of the climb.
-About half-way up ‘The Wall’ an undercut pinnacle
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
-is reached and ascended on the left before a lodgment
-can be effected on its outside edge, and some
-enjoyable work follows until a spacious ledge on the
-right can be utilised. When Messrs. J. W. Robinson,
-J. H. Doncaster, and H. W. Blunt first made the
-ascent, in the September of 1898, this portion of the
-climb was considered difficult, and it is probably the
-only part where special care is necessary. Above
-this the climbing can be varied considerably, but the
-direct ascent of a rock ridge, straight ahead, is to be
-recommended. The course throughout is well within
-the powers of most climbing parties, and the magnificent
-views of Scawfell Pinnacle and Deep Ghyll
-add additional interest to the ascent.</p>
-
-<p>We are indebted to two friends for the notes on
-the following climbs:&mdash;To Mr. G. T. Glover for those
-on the Ling Chimney, and to Mr. W. R. Reade for
-those on the West Jordan Gully.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Ling Chimney, Eagle’s Nest Arête.</span>&mdash;In
-the first edition of his book Mr. O. G. Jones
-mentions that there are two chimneys on the left-hand
-side of the Eagle’s Nest Arête, ‘the right of
-these is shallow and open ... whether it can
-be climbed or not I have never ascertained.’ On
-October 15th, 1899, Messrs. W. N. Ling, C. E.
-Martineau and G. T. Glover made the first recorded
-ascent of it, after a preliminary exploration from
-above. From the top of the small grass gully which
-commences the <i>arête</i> climb, one traverses about ten
-feet across some rock to the left, being then in a
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span>
-direct line below the final chimney. Going straight
-upwards, by steep rock steps, an upright slab is
-swarmed up with the hands and feet on each side,
-until a platform is reached, on which the second man
-can join the leader. About fifteen feet above this
-is another platform at the foot of a narrow chimney
-which needs careful climbing for about ten feet, until
-a foothold can be utilised on the sharp edge of the
-left wall.</p>
-
-<p>From here some stiff pulls on the arms land one
-out either on a broad ledge above the easy gully
-route, or up a continuation of the chimney to the
-right-hand side of the narrow pinnacle at the finish
-of the true <i>arête</i> climb. The ascent, as a whole,
-requires more care than the gully route.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The West Jordan Gully, Pillar Rock.</span>&mdash;This
-deeply cut gully, or, more correctly speaking,
-chimney, is a striking feature of the Western face of
-the Pillar Rock, and, together with the East Jordan
-Gully, the head of which it meets at Jordan Gap,
-cuts off the actual Pillar Rock from Pisgah. Probably
-many climbers have examined the West Jordan
-Gully, but it does not appear to have been seriously
-attacked before July, 1898, when Mr. W. P.
-McCulloch and the writer climbed it. Walking up
-the bed of the gully we passed a tempting looking
-crack on the North wall which ends in a small cave;
-above this cave the gully is ‘chocked’ by several
-overhanging stones which from below seem very
-formidable obstacles. We, however, avoided the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span>
-crack and, mounting a series of jammed stones,
-reached the innermost recesses of the chimney. We
-were now almost on a level with the top of the crack,
-and, the gully being here narrow enough to brace
-firmly across, we backed upwards and outwards for
-about fifteen feet, reaching the cave without great
-exertion. So far we had done well, but still the
-great jammed stones, round which we had to pass,
-loomed black overhead. Holds for the traverse outward
-looked anything but satisfactory, so Mr.
-McCulloch, after passing the rope round a conveniently
-placed jammed stone, climbed on to my
-shoulders and, with considerable difficulty, dragged
-himself into a small cave about fifteen feet above.
-As this cave would only accommodate one man, I
-climbed to Mr. McCulloch’s level, with a little
-assistance from the rope, and took the lead. Traversing
-outwards for about fifteen feet, I climbed a sensational
-forty-feet chimney, which we had surveyed from
-above several days previously, and landed safely in
-the bed of the gully past all difficulties. The height
-of the whole pitch is slightly under 100 feet, and,
-from beginning to end, the climbing is of a most
-interesting character. The second ascent was made
-by the brothers Broadrick, in August of the same
-year, but there is no record of it having been climbed
-since.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="APPENDIX_II">APPENDIX II</h2>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_1">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE PILLAR ROCK AND ITS PURLIEUS
-UP TO DATE</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>In conformity with its deserts as the grandest
-mass of crags in Lakeland, the Pillar Rock has, of
-recent years, received most attention from those in
-search of new routes and variations. So numerous
-and intertwined are some of the latter that it
-would be difficult to say by how many different
-ways the top of the famous rock can now be
-attained. There are certainly a score that possess
-the merit of individuality. However, though there
-is one important exception, that of the New West
-Climb, the old routes still monopolise the bulk of
-the traffic. With the development of the craft
-of rock-climbing the once popular, easy routes,
-such as the Old West Climb or the Pendlebury
-Traverse, have become less used than formerly.
-For a moderate party with an expert leader the
-North Climb is now the favourite course, though
-the ‘New West’ has become recognised as the
-finer climb. This recognition will, probably, in
-due course make the latter outrival in popularity
-its older compeer. But the ‘Slab and Notch,’ with
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span>
-the finish up the left wall of the Great Chimney,
-still takes most Pillarites to the goal of their
-ambition. In the other extreme stands the New
-North West Climb, and fortunately so. It is too
-difficult and dangerous to attract those climbers
-who truly realise that they have a life to lose.
-Famous experts&mdash;one of whom made the descent
-alone&mdash;declare the New North West Climb to
-be unjustifiable. For the descent of the Rock,
-especially after reaching the top by one of the
-longer climbs, the Central Jordan Crack is most
-generally used. Even under the worst conditions
-of storm, ice, or snow a rope looped around the
-top retaining wall of the crack allows downward
-escape to be made with comparative ease and
-safety.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_318" src="images/i_318.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Pillar Rock from the West Side</span></p>
-
-<p class="small table">
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell">
- A The Low Man.<br />
- B The High Man.<br />
- C Pisgah.<br />
- D The top of Easy Scree Gully.<br />
- PP New Pisgah Routes.<br />
- <i>aa</i> The original old West Route.<br />
- </span>
- <span class="tcell">
- <i>bb</i> The New West Climb.<br />
- <i>dd</i> The West Jordan Gully leading up to Jordan Gap.<br />
- <i>ee</i> Screes bounding the base of Pisgah.<br />
- <i>ff</i> Scree-slopes leading down to the Waterfall.<br />
- <i>s</i> The Slingsby Crack. Old West Climb Variation.<br />
- </span>
- </span>
-</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The New West Climb.</span>&mdash;Taken chronologically
-in this section, if for no other reason, this course
-demands first attention. Its outstanding features
-are sound, clean rocks, sensational situations with
-magnificent views, and secure belays at each section
-where they are really required. The climbing
-begins about 20 yards down the screes from the foot
-of the West Jordan Gully; the exact point is just
-below some large boulders which abut against the
-base of the main rock. Large hand- and footholds
-enable the steep lower rocks to be easily climbed,
-though at one point, about 60 feet above the start,
-there is a smooth place that gives trouble when ice
-is present. About 20 feet higher, a well-marked
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span>
-ledge leads to the right and out of the groove up
-which the climb has thus far run. Some turfy
-ledges then soon conduct the climber up to an
-impending nose of rock. After struggling up a
-short, steep pitch in the base of this, it becomes
-obvious that a traverse to the left is advisable.
-The place is vertical, but bulky and numerous
-holds enable the passage to be made in comfort.
-The traverse finishes abruptly on a steep buttress,
-with turf ledges at its foot. On the right a convenient
-crack provides means of upward progress
-for about 30 feet; then an all too short scramble
-up a steep arête gives access to two small ledges
-with accommodation for one climber only on each.
-The rocks directly ahead overhang threateningly,
-and a traverse to the left into the base of a steep
-chimney&mdash;the key to the climb&mdash;becomes advisable.
-This movement is sensational, but the handholds
-nowadays are ample for the swing across. Yet it
-is advisable to take the precaution to hitch the
-rope over the splendid belay at the beginning of
-the traverse, especially if the conditions are adverse.
-Once across this section, a large chock-stone in the
-foot of the chimney can be utilised as anchorage
-whilst the leader moves upwards. The upper part
-of this 30 foot chimney is probably the most
-awkward part of the whole climb. If the back
-be kept on the left wall throughout, numerous small,
-but sufficient, excrescences can be found on the
-confronting side of the chimney. It would seem
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span>
-advisable to keep as much as possible in the narrow
-cleft.</p>
-
-<p>A secure resting-place, with room for three or
-more climbers, is shortly gained, and the chimney,
-which becomes loose and repulsive-looking higher
-up, should now be deserted in favour of an interesting
-traverse to the right. The passage around the
-vertical corner is impressive, but careful use of the
-feet prevents the awkward attitudes so often seen
-here. The movement across the face to the right
-is still continued over capacious ledges in a slightly
-upward direction to some prominent shattered
-rocks. Good anchorage is available here. The final
-section begins above the shattered rocks, and lies
-up a small, shallow crack which closes in about
-15 feet higher and necessitates a delicate step across
-a smooth slab on the right. A well-marked, grassy
-recess is thus eventually gained. The ascent
-finishes up this, and emerges within a few feet of
-the summit of the Pillar Rock.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Savage Gully.</span>&mdash;The direct ascent of this great
-rift, the aspect of which is familiar to all who visit
-the Rock by way of the North Climb, is too risky
-and dangerous to deserve serious attention from
-rock-climbers. Yet from a historical and topographical
-point of view the description of the
-first ascent by Mr. P. A. Thompson may prove of
-interest. Though this indefatigable pioneer was
-finally safeguarded by tying on a rope lowered from
-near the ‘Nose,’ the party who made the second
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span>
-ascent&mdash;Messrs. Barton&mdash;conceded the honour of
-precedence to Mr. Thompson, saying that the rope
-thus held could not be considered any aid. On
-the lower 110 feet, resting-places have since been
-found, and at no point is it necessary for the
-leader to take out more than 60 feet of rope.
-Under the date June 3, 1909, Mr. Thompson
-wrote:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘Savage Gully was climbed right through by
-me to-day after I had examined the route, held
-from the top of the Nose by Mr. L. J. Oppenheimer.
-The almost vertical portion immediately beyond
-the point where the ordinary North Climb diverges
-is by far the hardest part of the climb. The leader
-must run out 110 feet of rope, and there are no
-hitches or convenient resting-places on the way.
-The gully is divided by a narrow rib of rock,
-between which and the right-hand wall the climb
-starts. The first 25 feet present no great difficulty,
-but beyond this point the climbing becomes
-severe. Backing up does not appear to be possible,
-and the holds lie sometimes on the right and sometimes
-on the left of the rib, which was crossed in
-all five times. These crossings were always sensational,
-and, one from right to left, about half-way
-up, was greasy. At the top of the pitch a platform
-was reached, and an excellent holding ground found
-in a small cave between the continuation of the rib
-and the left-hand wall of the gully. Here I sent
-my boots down, and unroping, waited while Mr.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span>
-Oppenheimer climbed by the ordinary route to the
-top of the crack leading down into Savage Gully,
-from which point he threw down a rope. With
-a second man in the cave to give a shoulder the
-best route would probably lie directly up the crack
-on the left of the rib, but this was too difficult to
-try alone. On the right the gully was comparatively
-easy for some distance, and climbing up for
-30 feet I reached the rope and tied on. This
-branch of the gully then became too steep and
-narrow to follow, and another traverse had to be
-made across the rib, here expanded to a considerable
-buttress, on a shelving ledge, wide enough
-to kneel on, and with small handholds. This
-traverse is the only serious difficulty in the upper
-part of the climb. The moral support of the rope
-was inconsiderable, as 10 feet of slack had to be
-taken in before the traverse could be made. On
-reaching the left-hand branch of the gully 30 feet
-more of climbing up slabs which, in stockinged feet,
-proved easy led to the foot of the crack. The final
-steep little chimney was wet, but otherwise not
-very difficult. Mr. Oppenheimer came up over
-the Nose, rejoining me in two hours after the start
-from the foot of the gully.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The New North West Climb.</span>&mdash;This exceptionally
-severe course was first climbed on the
-8th of June 1906 by Messrs. F. W. Botterill,
-L. J. Oppenheimer, A. Botterill, and Dr. J. H.
-Taylor. It is only suitable for experts, who, moreover,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span>
-would be well advised to come to it in perfect
-form after a lengthy climbing holiday. Success
-depends on the skill of the leader. He can receive
-scanty support from his companions at the places
-where such aid is really required. Absence of a
-dependable belay for the long lead up the difficult
-upper section of the face militates against any
-claim for safety the expedition may be said to
-possess.</p>
-
-<p>The course starts from the westerly end of the
-Green Ledge. This is marked <i>g</i> on Mr. Jones’ line
-drawing facing p. 254. By a curious error he
-named it the Nose. The rocks are comparatively
-easy at the outset; some short chimneys lead up to
-a sloping slab, where a traverse to the left is made
-into a more obvious chimney. This gives about 45
-feet of interesting back and knee work until it is
-possible to work out to the right, and then up easy
-rocks to the crest of the buttress, where stands a
-prominent cairn. Broad, grass-covered slabs lead to
-the base of the nose of the Low Man, where the real
-difficulties begin.</p>
-
-<p>The route at first bears away to the west up some
-slabs, and then returns around a corner to a good
-ledge several yards long, whereon stands a prominent
-cairn. Anchorage is available at this point. The
-ledge is traversed to its extreme easterly end, and,
-after rounding a projecting rock, an ascent of about 10
-feet allows a <span class="large2">V</span> shaped recess to be gained. This has
-been called ‘Le Coin.’ Above this important stance
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span>
-there are three distinct ledges to be gained. The
-first of these entails about 15 feet of difficult ascent
-from ‘Le Coin’; probably the best way lies up the
-right wall. The first ledge possesses a sound belay,
-and the second is recognizable by a larger belay,
-which is cracked, but safe at present. A party
-of three might foregather here. An ascent of quite
-35 feet then leads to a ‘triangular’ ledge, possessing
-practically no dependable belay. The key to further
-progress here is the negotiation of a sensational
-stride around a corner to the left and thus into an
-open, exposed chimney nearly 50 feet high. Above
-this there is a difficult and risky traverse back to the
-right, mostly on a small, grassy ledge. A broad
-recess slightly higher soon gives ample resting space.
-From the second ledge above ‘Le Coin,’ whereon
-stands the ‘cracked belay,’ to this point entails
-a lead out for the first man of about 90 feet. The
-difficulty and danger of this section will undoubtedly
-militate against the North-West Climb ever becoming
-‘an easy day for a lady.’ The ascent to the
-crest of the Low Man is made up a conspicuous
-cleft, Oppenheimer’s chimney, which is reached
-after crossing some broken rocks to the right. Two
-projecting chock-stones facilitate the ascent.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_325" src="images/i_325.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">“OVER THE NOSE”&mdash;THE PILLAR ROCK</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The High Man from above the Nose on the
-North Climb.</span>&mdash;This ascent can be made in several
-different ways, some of which were made in the earlier
-days, but, like many variations on the Pillar Rock,
-never recorded by the pioneers. Yet Stony Gully,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span>
-which gives the usual route from the Nose up to the
-Low Man, is best avoided should the climbers find
-themselves ‘under fire’ from another party who have
-thoughtlessly gone on in advance. There have been
-several narrow escapes from falling stones hereabouts.
-At such times knowledge of the alternative ways
-up the High Man may be useful. After surmounting
-the Nose, Stony Gully should be crossed and left
-immediately. Easy grass and rock ledges then
-afford rapid upward progress to be made to the base
-of the steep rocks of the High Man. All the way up
-the sharp, rocky, north-east arête of the peak is conspicuous
-overhead, and the point to aim for is a
-deeply cut chimney somewhat to the left of a line
-directly below the summit of the arête. This chimney
-was climbed some years ago; its recesses are narrow
-and steep below, but higher up there is a broad
-ledge on the right, whence the pull over the
-dominating chock-stone can be taken. The climber
-emerges on the great, sloping slabs which slant down
-the upper right-hand wall of the Great Chimney.
-They are an unmistakable feature in the view of the
-east side of the rock from the Shamrock. The slabs
-may be crossed more easily than their appearance
-would indicate, and thus the usual upper section of
-the Great Chimney entered on a level with the
-ledge leading around and below the Notch.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, these slabs can be avoided by
-climbing upwards to the right to a broad ledge and
-then around the prominent perpendicular nose of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span>
-the High Man to join the easy, ordinary route
-from the Low Man. There is yet another way to
-the top of the Rock, which was used by Mr. Botterill’s
-party in 1909. This runs almost directly up the
-nose of the High Man from the broad ledge previously
-mentioned. The place is steep and sensational
-enough to warn off novices, but the rock is firm
-and yields sufficient hand and footholds, though these
-are awkwardly spaced. The same party reached
-this nose from below by climbing up the outer right-hand
-wall of the chimney first mentioned. This is
-probably the easier of the two routes, for the rock
-is deeply split into convenient clefts for hands and
-feet. Incidentally it might be mentioned that those
-ascending the Rock by the Old Wall Route, from
-near the top of Walker’s Gully, pass below these
-more difficult climbs and take a slanting course up
-to a small square-looking chimney, above which the
-usual way from the Low Man is gained. This
-was one of the earliest ways up the Pillar Rock,
-and the ascent involves less real hand and footwork
-than any other route.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Curtain and Arête.</span>&mdash;This forms the left-hand
-wall of the Great Chimney, and may be
-climbed from bottom to top. At the beginning
-there is a variation which slants up to the crest of
-the Curtain from a point a few feet below the beginning
-of the fine pitch in the Great Chimney. A
-still more interesting method of attack lies up an
-unmistakable cleft behind a huge detached obelisk
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span>
-on the south or left-hand side of the Curtain. Above
-the cleft a narrow crack affords a very pleasing exit.
-Once on the crest of the Curtain the work is
-straightforward, the ordinary tracks from the east
-side being crossed <i>en route</i>. The final stretch of the
-arête, which lands the climber on the top of the
-rock, involves some exhilarating arm-swings on
-capacious holds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The West Jordan Crack</span> and the <span class="large2">Far West
-Jordan Climb</span> were discovered in 1909 by Messrs.
-H. B. Gibson and W. B. Brunskill. A poised block,
-which stands a few feet west of the foot of the old
-West Jordan Climb, marks the base of operations.
-From this the ‘Crack’ route slants upwards to the
-left over the top of a steep slab to a diminutive
-ledge at the foot of a vertical corner, up which rises
-a narrow crack. The ascent of this 20 foot corner
-is the crux of the climb; above it the summit cairn
-is only a few feet away. The Far West Jordan
-Climb is somewhat the easier of the two problems.
-From above the poised block previously mentioned,
-the route diverges at once to the left, and, after
-crossing a grass-floored depression, it makes for a detached
-spike, about 5 feet high, close to the left sky-line.
-This affords good anchorage for the second
-climber whilst the leader tackles the ensuing somewhat
-exposed section from the top of the detached
-spike. This consists of a passage up a crack to the
-right of an overhanging block. Above this a fine
-arête is gained which leads to the summit.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The West Ridge of Pisgah.</span>&mdash;The Pisgah
-problems have never been considered seriously by
-climbers, but this longer course up the whole length
-of the west side of the prominent little peak is
-worthy of passing mention. The route shows to
-advantage on the line drawing of the west side
-of the Pillar Rock. At the point of divergence,
-about 45 feet above the screes, the left-hand way
-is the easier of the two; it regains the direct route
-by way of a detached rock-pinnacle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Walker’s Gully.</span>&mdash;Since it almost seems customary
-nowadays to become benighted in this magnificent
-gorge, a few notes may be given as to altered
-conditions. Those who pay their first visit to this
-exceptionally severe course would be well advised
-to avoid the ‘watery’ first pitch on the left. If
-abnormally dry it may be overcome direct, but this
-probably involves more severe climbing than anything
-encountered in the higher main bed of the
-gully. The best course for those who wish to add
-this initial pitch to their laurels is to start up
-the buttress a few feet to the right of its foot.
-About 30 feet higher a grass ledge is reached,
-where a short traverse can be made to the left, and
-then the way lies up a narrow sloping scoop for
-nearly 25 feet. At the top of this the holds are
-rather deficient, but it is soon possible to step across
-on to the upper part of the big chimney and thence
-struggle up directly over the capstone.</p>
-
-<p>The great cave below the mass of tumbled
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">329</span>
-boulders in the upper part of the gully has recently
-given serious pause to at least two parties of experts.
-The hole at the back of the cave is blocked
-by fallen rocks, and considerable difficulty has been
-encountered in making the upward way on the exposed
-outside edge of the jammed boulders. It may
-be mentioned that the blocking of this hole is probably
-only temporary; it has occurred before, and
-been removed by wary experts. During the first
-ascent the hole required considerable enlargement.</p>
-
-<p>The fact that the final obstacle can be overcome
-by first climbing up the right wall until the left
-wall can be reached to assume a backing-up attitude
-would seem to be unknown to many parties.
-Even a moderately short man can utilise this
-method. Failure to realize this has resulted in
-more than one party spending a night in the
-damp recesses of the gully. Yet they would probably
-find the magnificent scenery ample reward
-for the discomfort involved. The great black walls
-of the gorge loom gloomily on either hand. To
-watch the moon’s rays casting a pervasive gleam
-athwart the distant peaks is indescribably beautiful.
-But this is only ‘moonshine,’ especially to those
-who have watched and waited.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Shamrock.</span>&mdash;The climber who emerges
-safely from Walker’s Gully may be glad to know
-that there is a pleasant scramble thence to the
-lower peak of the Shamrock. This acts as a welcome
-muscular sedative after the previously severe
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">330</span>
-exercise in the gully. Just to the left of the top
-of the great upper pitch a crack will be noticed
-slanting to the left up the wall of the Shamrock.
-This yields about 30 feet of ascent, and then,
-turning to the right, the climber mounts, first
-on clean rocks, and later over grass-crowned ledges,
-to the summit. After a short descent across the
-head of the Shamrock Gully, it is possible to mount
-the opposite wall and emerge quite close to the
-cairns which mark the downward path by the
-Shamrock Traverse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Shamrock Buttress</span>, by the original
-route, affords a pleasant excursion in winter time,
-when the gully and greater climbs close at hand
-are scarcely approachable. The course starts up
-a small but well-defined gully a few yards to the
-right of the wide entrance to the Shamrock Gully.
-It continues straight up the Buttress, until a high
-slice of smooth rock suggests a slight descent and
-traverse to the right to the foot of an obvious
-chimney pitch with prominent chock-stones. Above
-this another short pitch gives the approach to the
-foot of a steep rib of rock which is crowned by a
-loosely wedged stone. The easy bed of the Shamrock
-Chimney is now entered and followed beyond the
-short, final pitch which, except under snowy conditions,
-possesses a ‘through route.’ To avoid
-this pitch an interesting variation can be made
-up the steep crack on the right-hand wall, from
-the summit of which there is a short traverse to
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">331</span>
-the left to the foot of the usual arête finish of the
-Shamrock Chimneys Climb. Curiously enough this
-latter course is seldom visited nowadays, yet it is
-by far the finest expedition on the Shamrock.</p>
-
-<p>In 1909 a party led by Mr. H. B. Gibson made
-a variation on the Shamrock Gully side of the
-buttress in its upper part. After ascending a 25
-foot slab and some easier rocks, they entered the
-gully above the great pitch. From a pile of loose
-boulders, since swept away, they continued up the
-right wall of the gully, bearing at first to the
-right, and finished at the top of the original Shamrock
-Buttress course. An extensive fall of rock
-has taken place on this final stage of the climb;
-the place is now decidedly unsafe, and should
-be avoided. It might be noted that the falling
-masses and previous natural weathering have altered
-the structure of the great pitch of the Shamrock
-Gully. The left-hand route may now be considered
-the easier of the two ways of overcoming
-the obstacle.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">332</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_2">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>NEW CLIMBS ON GREAT GABLE, SCAWFELL, AND
-AROUND WASTDALE HEAD</i></span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Abbey Ridge</span> ranks as the best discovery
-on Great Gable since the ascent of the Ling
-Chimney in 1899. In the present work (p. 158)
-there is a reference to the rocks to the left of
-the ordinary West Chimney route up the Eagle’s
-Nest Ridge. This attracted the attention of
-Messrs. F. Botterill and J. Hazard with a happy
-result&mdash;the annexation of a new climb. This was
-in the April of 1909.</p>
-
-<p>The lower part of the new ridge is well defined,
-but above the broad ledge, almost on a level with
-the exit from the ordinary West Chimney, several
-routes are available. This section was climbed
-many years ago on more than one occasion, notably
-when the deep, black chimney on the west side of
-the ridge was visited. This fine cleft is well seen
-from the Arrowhead Ridge, rising above the big
-boulder pitch in the Eagle’s Nest Gully. The
-ascent is not difficult.</p>
-
-<p>The latter remark scarcely applies to the new
-portion of the Abbey Ridge, especially if the direct
-ascent of the <i>mauvais pas</i> be made. A long ‘run
-out’ for the leader at this point warrants the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">333</span>
-warning that the lofty sanctuary of the Abbey
-is only for the expert who is in perfect training.
-The climb begins easily, either at the very bottom
-of the ridge or by joining it at a point almost on
-a level with the beginning of the Eagle’s Nest
-Ridge. The ascent to the top of a conspicuous
-detached mass begins to suggest difficulty. But
-the real work starts directly above this, in gaining
-a narrow grassy ledge which stretches across the
-face for several feet. From the extreme left of
-this ledge the way lies up the arête until a
-steep, grassy gully slightly more to the left affords
-a finish to the upper ledge on a level with the top
-of the Eagle’s Nest Chimney. This is the easier
-of the two exits. The direct route bears away to
-the right below the steep and grassy gully until
-an overhanging block rises above the climber. It
-is important to make sure of this position, as the
-rocks are now very well scratched. The key to
-the situation is a good hold for both hands right
-under the overhanging block. Progress beyond
-this crucial point is scarcely safe unless this grip
-is secured, but once above this ‘step’ the rest
-is comparatively safe and easy. The rock throughout
-is of the usual Gable quality.</p>
-
-<p>Two other small variations on the Napes may
-be mentioned in passing. In the autumn of 1910
-Messrs. H. R. Pope and E. T. W. Addyman found
-an interesting problem on the right wall of the
-ordinary West Chimney on the Eagle’s Nest Ridge.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">334</span>
-From the big belay half-way up this cleft it is
-possible to traverse out to the right on to a steep
-rock face which forms the left-hand wall of the
-Ling Chimney. This wall can be climbed to the
-top on ledges which lead across to the right-hand
-edge and then back to the left again. The finish
-can be taken directly upwards.</p>
-
-<p>It is scarcely advisable to say that anything
-new can be found on the Needle Ridge. However,
-Messrs. A. G. Woodhead and J. Laycock have
-accentuated the fact that this much-trodden ridge
-can be climbed straight up from the lowest point.
-The last 15 feet before the old route is gained
-require skilful treatment.</p>
-
-<p>Numerous small and unimportant variations on
-the ever-attractive Needle have been made. Records
-of personal gymnastics are best omitted here, though
-the best of all may be mentioned&mdash;that of the
-beginner, who ‘climbed’ the top stone by a
-really new method. This enthusiast assumed a
-position of repose on the mantelshelf, and for half-an-hour
-pored over the view over the edge and
-down the impressive scree slopes of Gable. At last
-the patience of the lusty leader on the top became
-exhausted. Though the novice hung on with his
-hands, he ‘had to come,’ which he did feet first.</p>
-
-<p>The attractions of the Ennerdale Face of Great
-Gable have been increased by the discovery of a
-splendid course by Dr. J. S. Sloane and Messrs.
-M. Gimson, A. J. Gimson, and J. E. Henderson
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span>
-in the April of 1909. They appropriately suggested
-that the rift might be called the <span class="large2">Smuggler’s
-Chimney</span>, and this name has been adopted. The
-hand and footwork starts about 100 feet west
-of the foot of the Central Gully, with about 20
-feet of ascent of steep rock. The chimney proper,
-which is vertical and about 85 feet in height, now
-begins. It is in three stages, and the first part
-gives 35 feet of engrossing climbing before a cave
-is entered. The hardest part of the climb occurs
-where there is an undercut bulge of rock about
-10 feet below this resting-place. At this point
-it is probably best to forsake the back and foot
-method and allow the arms and knees to do most
-of the work. The second section of the chimney
-above the Cave consists of a narrow, vertical, deeply-cut
-crack which bears some resemblance to the
-Monolith Crack in North Wales. This stretch&mdash;though
-squeeze might be the better word&mdash;is 25
-feet in height. The final pitch is almost the same
-height, but its extra width will prove gratifying
-to stout climbers despite the somewhat constricting
-final wriggle afforded by the hole of the
-‘through route.’ Easy, grassy ground is now
-encountered, which leads past the ‘Smuggler’s
-Retreat,’ and thus to the crest of the crags.</p>
-
-<p>In the September of 1908 Messrs. G. H. L.
-Mallory and G. L. Keynes found two ‘little
-climbs’ on the Ennerdale Face to the left of the
-Bottle-shaped Pinnacle Ridge. They can be reached
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span>
-from the Scree Gully&mdash;marked B on the line drawing&mdash;by
-traversing upwards from the fork towards
-a large overhanging crag. This is a prominent
-feature of this side of Gable Crag. The new
-climbs are claimed to be the nearest routes which
-can be found to the left and to the right of the
-overhanging crag. Cairns mark the start of each
-course, that to the left being the easier of the
-two, and giving about 150 feet of climbing. On
-the right a steep crack affords for the most part
-the means of ascent. The difficulty is concentrated
-in the first 80 feet. Where the crack
-becomes easier and wider higher up, it is probably
-better to end the climb by traversing on to the
-right buttress.</p>
-
-<p>A few other minor points of interest on the
-Ennerdale Face may be worth mention. For
-instance, Messrs. H. V. Reade and G. Arbuthnot
-have shown that the vertical crack rising from
-near the foot of the Oblique Chimney to the gap
-behind the Bottle-shaped Pinnacle may be climbed,
-but not without difficulty. The disappearance of
-the much discussed ‘rocking-rock’ in the Engineers’
-Chimney has not made the ascent any easier; in
-fact, the relative difficulty of this section remains
-about the same.</p>
-
-<p>In misty weather the foot of the Central Gully
-was often difficult to locate, even though the
-climber happened to be sitting at it. Recognition
-is now a simple matter, for a huge boulder has
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span>
-fallen and bridged the foot of the gorge most
-picturesquely. Other slight alterations have also
-occurred in the bed of the gully. For instance,
-more holds have developed on the steep crack in
-the middle part of the gully, where the usual easy
-route slants up to the left to the Staircase Pitch.
-The ascent of this crack is now frequently made.
-For those who do not essay the ‘Direct Finish’
-there is a steep but not difficult crack just to the
-left of the great nose of rock which so boldly
-divides the upper part of the Central Gully. The
-ordinary route is still further to the left, but there
-are variations galore hereabouts.</p>
-
-<p>’Tis a far cry from Wastdale to the head of
-<span class="large2">Mosedale</span> to find an outcrop of wet slabs less than
-200 feet high. Yet several parties of enthusiasts
-have developed the art of finding diminutive new
-climbs in remote corners. There are two main rifts
-splitting the Mosedale Rocks. These are known
-as the East and the West Cracks. The former is
-the more difficult of the two; in fact, the pitch near
-the top would seem to require the use of a lowered
-rope from some friends above if the ascent is to
-be made safely. It has not yet been climbed without
-this aid. At least two routes have also been
-found directly on the face between the two cracks,
-and two smaller rifts to the right of the East Crack
-have been added to the list of conquests. All are
-well marked and easier to find than to climb,
-for the experts of the Fell and Rock-Climbing
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</span>
-Club, usually under the skilled leadership of Mr.
-H. B. Lyon, have specialised on the Mosedale
-Rocks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Great End. The Brothers’ Crack.</span>&mdash;Glorious
-as is Great End in the winter time, it has never
-appealed largely to the rock-climber pure and
-simple. But these latter will be entertained excellently
-if they join the brotherhood of the new
-crack, which owes its exploitation to those well-known
-judges of a sound climb, Mr. G. F. and Rev.
-A. J. Woodhouse. The crack rises about 60 feet
-to the north of the well-known Brigg’s Cave Pitch
-on the east end of the crags. The actual crack
-itself is nearly as high as that on Kern Knotts. It
-is situated in a corner, and rises vertically from a
-large grass ledge. This take-off is reached by
-ordinary scrambling, though the final landing is
-made by means of a short crack. The real climbing
-up the main crack, which is here too narrow to
-admit one’s body, begins with a slabby section in
-two parts, in all about 20 feet high. The crack
-now widens, and is available for wedging purposes.
-After a short stretch of ‘back and knee’ the most
-difficult portion is reached, and for this the leader
-would be well advised to thread the rope behind a
-jammed stone. The final obstacle possesses an overhanging
-chock-stone, but good ledges on the left
-wall simplify the finish. The climb is undoubtedly
-severe, for the leader can nowhere receive any help
-from his companion.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Scawfell.</span>&mdash;Of late years but little new climbing
-of any magnitude has been done on Scawfell. This
-is no doubt entirely due to the fact that in the
-early days Scawfell was the most attractive and most
-exploited of all the Lakeland crags. The present
-decade has produced first-rate climbers to an unlimited
-extent, but their best efforts have been
-restricted by the rocks themselves, and, where these
-have been forced to yield climbs, what they have
-given us are in many cases just beyond the line of
-safety, even for the best parties. Another effect of
-this strenuous search after new routes has been the
-discovery of many variations, and some of these are
-worth description, although necessarily brief, in a
-work like the present.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Scawfell Pinnacle climb direct from Upper
-Deep Ghyll.</span>&mdash;The start of this climb is described
-by Mr. Jones on p. 88. After the first 15 feet
-or so he traversed away to the left on to the arête
-of the Low Man.</p>
-
-<p>Messrs. A. G. Woodhead and W. L. Collinson
-climbed this lower difficulty in August 1907, after
-which they bore straight upward over shelving and
-fairly difficult ledges for a hundred feet or so, until
-impending rocks forced them away to the left.
-When almost in a line with the top of the Pinnacle
-they struck straight upward from a broad platform
-(where a cairn now stands) over a bulge of rock,
-necessitating a good arm pull, until a belay was
-reached. Thence a grassy gully led them without
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span>
-difficulty to the top of the High Man. The climb
-is one of much merit, and deserves more popularity
-than it enjoys. The exceedingly difficult start may
-have acted as a deterrent, but it may be an encouragement
-to leaders to know that once they
-have overcome this <i>mauvais pas</i> the higher rocks
-contain climbing of a much easier order.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Scawfell Pinnacle from Deep Ghyll, Variations.</span>&mdash;A
-somewhat easier way of reaching the
-Low Man from the <i>firma loca</i> (p. 81) than that of
-the arête followed in the first ascent, was found
-and climbed by Mr. A. H. Binns alone in August
-1904. This is now called Gibson’s Chimney route,
-after Mr. H. O. S. Gibson, who repeated the ascent
-in June 1907, and left a lucid description of it in the
-Wastdale Climbers’ Book.</p>
-
-<p>From the <i>firma loca</i> a traverse is made in the
-direction of the arête until a crack sloping up to
-the right is reached. This is followed for about 15
-feet, and the upper reaches of the chimney described
-by Mr. Jones as ‘hopeless’ (p. 82) soon attained.
-Here a leaf of rock, with good holds on its edge,
-affords moderately difficult and strenuous climbing
-for 30 feet until the chimney becomes impossible.
-It is then abandoned to the left, along a traverse
-which leads past a good belay to the arête. The
-first step upward on this gives a pretty problem in
-an exposed position. The holds are small but good
-until the vertical piece is scaled. Thence the going
-is comparatively easy to the crest of the Low Man.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span>
-Other variations have been found from the <i>firma
-loca</i>, but, while some of these many prove useful to
-a leader unable to follow Mr. Jones’ route, the
-original climb is by far the most entertaining for
-strong parties.</p>
-
-<p>A good belay about 40 feet up the lower
-crack has dispelled many of its terrors, and now
-renders the long initial run out on the part of the
-leader quite unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Deep Ghyll, Second Pitch.</span>&mdash;It is of interest&mdash;a
-melancholy interest perhaps&mdash;to know that it is no
-longer necessary to climb up the left or right side of
-this famous pitch in the historic manner, and that
-an inglorious ascent can now be made through a hole
-at the back of the cave. Stones drop straight down
-this hole from the Ghyll above, perhaps as a hint to
-climbers to play the game in the old-fashioned way!</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Moss Ghyll, Upper Variation.</span>&mdash;This starts
-some 20 feet to the right of the foot of the Great
-Chimney. A few feet up the face a crack is
-reached, and this can be followed to a small cairn.
-Here a choice of routes offers, one back to the top
-of the Great Chimney, and the alternative one to
-the Pisgah Ridge. A strong party led by Mr. F.
-Botterill first proved the possibilities of this variation,
-and described it as slightly more difficult than
-the direct exit up the chimney.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Mr. Botterill’s Climbs.</span>&mdash;The long sloping
-cracks, the upper parts of which were followed in
-the Collier’s and Keswick Brothers’ climbs, were
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span>
-ascended in their entirety at Whitsuntide 1903 by
-Messrs. F. Botterill, H. Williamson, and E. Grant.</p>
-
-<p>The crack nearest Mickledore Ridge is difficult
-throughout, and is, moreover, somewhat earthy and
-friable; there is no record of a repetition of its
-ascent. The companion crack was the scene of a
-remarkable <i>tour de force</i>. Mr. Botterill’s account
-of his exploit,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> and the warning note sounded by
-a party of great skill and experience which unsuccessfully
-essayed the second ascent, will probably
-acquaint climbers with sufficient details to cause
-them to take the climb itself ‘as read.’ It is in a
-class apart, and, basing our judgment on a survey
-made on a rope from above, we do not recommend
-it.</p>
-
-<p>After a lapse of nearly twenty years, and repeated
-onslaughts by many parties, <span class="large2">Piers’ Ghyll</span>
-was ascended throughout for the second time in
-September 1910. Mr. H. R. Pope, admirably
-backed up by Mr. R. B. Sanderson, succeeded in
-leading a large party up the various wet and friable
-pitches that go to make the climb. From a vivid
-description, written by Mr. Sanderson in the current
-number of the Fell and Rock Club <i>Journal</i>, we gather
-that, in spite of the constantly falling rocks in the
-Ghyll, the narrow pitch below the Bridge Rock
-is practically unaltered, and is still the greatest
-difficulty. It is necessary to stand immediately
-below the waterfall in order to work up a shallow,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</span>
-almost holdless groove. This is very steep; the
-rocks are, of course, wet and slippery; added to
-these is the uncertain nature and paucity of the
-holds&mdash;altogether a combination of difficulty, disagreeableness,
-and danger that most parties will
-care to court but very seldom.</p>
-
-<p>During the same holiday Messrs. Pope and
-Madan climbed from Tennis Court Ledge to the
-Fives Court on Pisgah Buttress by traversing
-from the right-hand end of the Ledge for a short
-distance. Thence they climbed directly up a steep
-rock-face for 15 feet or so to the Fives Court, a
-somewhat easier but much more exposed route than
-that up the crack utilised in the first ascent.</p>
-
-<p>Other variations of a minor character have been
-made on many of the older climbs; indeed so
-thoroughly has the face been scoured, that it would
-be a very rash man who would nowadays come
-down to the Wastwater Hotel and say that he
-had made a new route up Scawfell.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_3">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>THE BUTTERMERE CLIMBS, AND THOSE IN
-OUTLYING DISTRICTS</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>For strong and experienced parties of climbers,
-with a penchant for boating, fishing, and long
-mountain tramps on the ‘off days,’ Buttermere
-is well-nigh ideal. Moreover, the <i>blasé</i> ‘Wastdale
-Header’ will find amongst the fine corrie-like
-combes of High Crag and High Stile, and above
-the great hollow of Warnscale, climbs of an entirely
-different nature from most of the nail-scratched,
-polished courses of his former haunts. Many of
-the Buttermere climbs are still to all intents and
-purposes virgin ascents. The rock of which they
-are formed does not take nail-marks so readily,
-and the blatant, scratched foothold, which positively
-shouts at one ‘here am I!’ is as yet an alien in
-these parts. The texture of the gullies is very
-different; it is always necessary to be on the alert
-for unsteady chock-stones; every hold needs testing;
-in fine, care and experience are essential to safe
-ascents.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. L. J. Oppenheimer, in his book ‘The Heart
-of Lakeland,’ has made out a strong case for the
-claims of Buttermere as a centre for the more historic
-climbs, and justly says that ‘after Wastdale
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</span>
-Head&mdash;though no doubt a long way after&mdash;it is
-one of the best centres in Lakeland.’ The Buttermere
-Hotel is in every way a most excellent house,
-and to those whose leaning is towards a simple life
-the farmhouses in the valley are second to none.
-So much granted, it is perhaps as well to review
-the work that has been done here, chiefly, it may
-be stated, by Mr. Oppenheimer and his friends and
-brethren of the Rücksack Club.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Gullies of Warnscale.</span>&mdash;When standing
-in the huge, green hollow at the edge of Buttermere,
-one has on the north the great face of Fleetwith,
-with a long prominent gully almost in the
-centre&mdash;Fleetwith Gully. A point of the compass
-further round is a bulging outcrop of rock, a
-prominent feature in all the photographs of the
-Head of Buttermere. This is Green Crag, and up
-its left-hand side runs Green Crag Gully, reminiscent
-of the late J. W. Robinson, who, with Mr. W.
-A. Wilson, made its first ascent in 1899. To the
-right of this, and on the Crag itself, is an unmistakable
-black rift, which is now known as Toreador
-Gully. Further round still, and facing Fleetwith,
-is the well-known Haystacks Mountain. Well to
-the left of the striking cones which have given the
-mountain its name is a steep rock-face seamed by
-three vertical rifts, one of which forks into two
-branches about a third of the way up the Crags&mdash;the
-Y Gully. The middle rift is Warn Gill, an
-‘exceptionally severe course,’ whilst the one to the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</span>
-right is Stack Ghyll, probably the best and most
-useful climb in the valley.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Fleetwith Gully</span> is somewhat disappointing
-on close acquaintance. There are at least six
-pitches, but only two have any claim to individuality.
-These are generally moist, and are scarcely
-ever climbed, because they can easily be avoided on
-either side. Vegetation, water, and loose stones
-are the impressive features of the gully.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Green Crag Gully</span> suffers from a drawback
-common to some others of the Buttermere climbs&mdash;in
-all but the driest weather a very considerable
-stream of water tumbles down it. As a climb it is
-somewhat disappointing, but the first pitch, a fine
-vertical rise of about 70 feet, is quite entertaining.
-Above this the going lacks character
-and is comparatively easy, although care is needed
-on account of the quickly disintegrating rock. Of
-a very different character is its companion climb,
-<span class="large2">Toreador Gully</span>. After some exploration work,
-during which a dangerous huge block was dislodged,
-a party of Fell and Rock Club Members,
-led by Mr. H. B. Lyon, subsequently made its
-ascent in August 1908.</p>
-
-<p>After a somewhat difficult start, the gully eases
-off and seductively leads the climber upward to
-an 80-foot wet chimney, which is the crux of the
-climb. The walls are set at a convenient distance
-apart for ‘backing up,’ and for a while all goes
-well. However, just when the leader, who has
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">347</span>
-worked upwards with his feet on the right wall
-and back on the left, is beginning to feel fatigued
-and in need of a rest, the difficulties increase, and
-it becomes necessary to transfer the body across
-and face the opposite wall. Of anchorage there is
-none, but the second man can back up to below the
-leader, and, firmly braced across the chimney, can
-at least support him by the encouragement of his
-proximity; whether he could hold his companion
-in the event of a slip is somewhat doubtful. By
-most careful balancing, and an exceedingly anxious
-time for the second man, the leader can effect a
-lodgment facing the left wall, whence, with great
-difficulty, he can work over the crest of the pitch.</p>
-
-<p>Above this are two obstacles of a comparatively
-mild nature. There is no record of a second ascent,
-although we understand that this climb is quite
-justifiable for a really strong party.</p>
-
-<p>The three remaining gullies above Warnscale
-Bottom are those on the Haystacks, to which we
-have already made reference. Of these, the left-hand
-or Y Gully can be summarily dismissed as
-containing too much loose and dangerous rock.
-The next cleft to the right, <span class="large2">Warn Gill</span>, suffers
-somewhat from the same fault, and, moreover, is
-generally wet. It was reserved by Messrs. Oppenheimer,
-Scott, and Shaw as a <i>bonne bouche</i> for Mr.
-F. Botterill to lead up, and, as the former naïvely remarks,
-‘it proved rather more than difficult enough.’
-After climbing six excellent pitches, one of which,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">348</span>
-a long chimney raked by a waterfall, proved to be
-abnormally severe, they were forced to abandon
-their project when about 40 feet below the top
-of the gully. A way of escape was found about
-60 feet lower down on the right-hand side.
-This lay up a steep rock and heather buttress
-leading to a small chimney which took them to the
-top of the crags. The climbing throughout is of
-great difficulty, quite apart from the instability of
-some of the holds, and there is no doubt that this
-was a failure far surpassing in achievement many
-a climb which has been brought to a successful
-issue. It is perhaps well to note in passing that
-the name is a corruption of Warnscale Gill, and was
-not given with any idea of deterring subsequent
-parties.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Stack Ghyll</span>, the next rift to the right, is a
-very different proposition. From below it looks
-most alluring. Peeping over the top of the ‘capstone’
-of the first pitch is such a succession of
-chimneys as is bound to arouse the keenest feelings
-of pleasurable anticipation in a climber’s breast.
-One can well sympathise with the tantalising way
-in which this comparatively short, first pitch repelled
-all the earlier efforts to overcome it. All
-kinds of theories were evolved, but all were proved
-fallacious by the smooth, overhanging chock-stone.
-It seemed to be quite impregnable until, after
-repeated efforts, a small hole was found on the
-right of the stone. This ultimately proved to be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">349</span>
-the key to the pitch, and, as was but a just reward
-for many previous disappointments, Messrs. Oppenheimer
-and Craig succeeded in passing an ice-axe
-through the hole, and, by using the shaft as a handhold,
-emerged successful. A short time previous
-to this the pitch had been turned on the right,
-up some grassy ledges, and the gully entered fairly
-high up, whence it was followed to the top.</p>
-
-<p>The going immediately above the first pitch is
-fairly easy, and leads by way of a narrow chimney,
-liberally supplied with chock-stones, to a small scree
-patch. Immediately beyond is a pretty 40-foot
-chimney, amenable to back and knee methods,
-which gives out on broken rocks. Above this an
-outcrop of rock bars the way, and after passing
-this on the left, one is soon confronted by the last
-obstacle.</p>
-
-<p>The gully is here spanned by an unbroken wall
-of rock except in the right-hand corner, where is
-a fine cave, overhung by a huge block. This is too
-high to reach, but off a sturdy shoulder a handhold
-can be grasped on the right. A trying drag up,
-chiefly on the arms, then enables the leader to
-effect a lodgment above the pitch, in readiness for
-the others, who will derive much strenuous exercise
-unless they pocket their pride and accept a tug
-from the rope&mdash;an excellent gully and, if climbed
-during dry weather, but little inferior to the best
-in Lakeland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Birkness Combe Climbs.</span>&mdash;The wild
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">350</span>
-upland hollow dividing High Stile from High Crag
-contains one of the many Eagle Crags of Lakeland.
-This is the finest rock around Buttermere, and
-recalls very strongly in shape, height, and general
-contour the famous Cyrn Lâs buttress of Snowdonia.
-The rock of this Eagle Crag is of a much
-better type, however, from the climber’s point of
-view, and the fine climb, <span class="large2">Birkness Chimney</span>, made
-in August 1903 by Mr. L. J. Oppenheimer and
-Dr. Norman Sheldon, is much superior to anything
-on Cyrn Lâs.</p>
-
-<p>A good climb also is that up the prominent
-black rift which faces High Crag. This is known
-as <span class="large2">Birkness Gully</span>, and it affords about a couple
-of hundred feet of climbing, the upper part of which
-is fairly difficult. The initial stages are quite
-simple, and the interest is not fairly aroused until,
-high up, a huge cave, roofed in by huge boulders,
-is reached. About 15 feet below the dominating
-boulder is a huge, wedged rock which bridges
-the gully; the climb on to this behind sundry
-smaller jammed stones is very pretty. It is well
-for the second man to pass the leader when on a
-level with the main bridge and traverse outwards
-on to it. He can then climb up to a higher cave
-immediately below the great capstone and belay
-the rope. The leader then comes out to the bridge
-and scales the vertical right wall immediately
-above it. The holds are small but sufficient, and
-the proceeding is rendered safe by the rope held
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">351</span>
-by the second man. Above this nothing remains
-save a descent to the foot of the Gully, with a view
-to an assault upon <span class="large2">Birkness Chimney</span>. This is
-a climb of great severity, and, but for the possibility
-of threading the rope to belay the leader at the
-worst part, might be dismissed as unjustifiable.
-As things are, however, a strong&mdash;one should
-perhaps say a <i>very</i> strong&mdash;party will find great
-sport and a reasonable immunity from risk. The
-Chimney proper branches from the Gully described,
-at a point just below the serious climbing in the
-latter. It is entered by way of a steep, grassy
-corner, dominated by a chimney, generally moist,
-of about 20 feet in height.</p>
-
-<p>The next pitch, a chimney, is rather more so
-than that passed, both as regards height and
-moisture. It can be obviated by the rocks on
-either hand, however. Above it is a steep wall of
-rock surmounted by a crack. The wall can be
-climbed direct or by way of a chimney on the left,
-either of which routes is interesting, but not as
-stiff as the crack above. Beyond this is the difficult
-pitch. High up, a huge mass of rock protruding
-from the right wall breaks the continuity of
-the chimney and forms a cave. Away outwards,
-at about the level of the cave, is a shallow groove
-with no bottom; the difficulty is to get into this.
-And a very serious difficulty it is. Fortunately
-a small stone is tightly jammed inside the cave,
-and the leader’s rope can be passed behind it. He
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">352</span>
-then traverses outward, aided somewhat by his
-second, and after a long stretch upward, in a most
-awkward position, a handhold is reached. Then
-occurs a most strenuous arm pull, with the feet
-dangling helplessly, or vainly seeking support on
-the smooth rock-wall. Elbows, arms, and shoulders
-are simultaneously requisitioned ere a hold for the
-feet can be found in the groove. Once this is
-gained, however, the work is easier until the top
-chock-stone is reached. This demands another effort,
-and the pitch is vanquished.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Sheldon, who led the first ascent, was much
-impressed by its difficulty, and likened it to the
-top pitch of Walker’s Gully, which he had climbed
-a short time previously. There remain two more
-obstacles before the steep wall at the top is
-reached, neither of which call for special comment.
-Near the angle of Eagle Crag there is a long
-straight Gully which so far has not been climbed
-in its entirety. It repelled a party of exceptional
-strength some years ago, after an assault upon it
-lasting for seven hours.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Bleaberry Combe</span>, carved out of the breast of
-High Stile, contains the small tarn whence issues
-Sour Milk Ghyll, beloved of the Buttermere day
-excursionist.</p>
-
-<p>As he stands at the door of Buttermere Hotel
-and gazes upward at the crags above the water
-slide, a fine rift is open to his view. This, which
-by the way can also be seen from near Keswick, was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">353</span>
-the first climb made on the Bleaberry Combe Crags.
-It is the <span class="large2">Black Chimney</span>, and was first climbed
-by the late O. G. Jones and J. W. Robinson (what
-a lot we Lakeland climbers owe to those two!) in
-the early days of their acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of its promising appearance it contains
-but two pitches, both of which are fairly simple.
-Further along the crag to the right, and hidden
-from sight of the hotel, is the <span class="large2">Central Gully</span>.
-This lacks continuity throughout the greater part
-of its length, but possesses two pitches of considerable
-difficulty. Further round still is a long narrow
-chimney. At present it is known as Bleaberry
-Chimney, but we would suggest <span class="large2">Oppenheimer’s
-Chimney</span> as a more appropriate name, for Mr.
-Oppenheimer was in the large party that first
-climbed it in 1908, and the fraternity will welcome
-this permanent means of identifying him with
-the fine work he has done in its vicinity. To
-quote his own words, ‘the chimney is the longest
-and most enjoyable climb on these crags.’</p>
-
-<p>Two long, easy gullies on the north-west side of
-Grassmoor, suitable for beginners, and another on
-Dale Head facing Honister, complete the tale of the
-Buttermere climbs, which, as the famous courses
-around Wastdale become more familiar, are sure to
-attract more attention in the future, and deservedly
-so, than they have done in the past.</p>
-
-<p>It cannot at present be said that the outlying
-climbs of the Lake District receive much attention,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">354</span>
-thus few of them are kept in a good state of repair.
-Perhaps the Borrowdale courses are most visited,
-notably Sergeant Crag Chimney and Mouse Ghyll.
-Considerable alterations have taken place in the
-former course since Mr. Jones’ days. The difficult
-central pitch, or, rather, the upper part of it, has partially
-collapsed. Though the ascent is much simplified,
-the place needs respectful treatment. At least one
-leader has fallen here quite recently. There is one
-Borrowdale climb which seems practically deserted.
-This is <span class="large2">Black Crag Gully</span>. This fine, narrow rift
-splits the face of the cliff at the easterly head of
-Troutdale, and looks very striking when seen across
-the Borrowdale Valley from Mouse Ghyll. Unfortunately
-there is a loose section almost half-way
-up which would prevent the ascent from being
-recommended except to advanced experts. The two
-pitches below this danger zone are quite good. The
-ensuing pitch, about 30 feet high, is singularly
-smooth, and few sound holds are available. The fall
-of a well-known leader not very long ago tested the
-strength of an alpine rope here. Luckily it was
-belayed around a tree, and, though in the hands of a
-beginner, it held securely, despite a fall of over 20 feet.
-Even trees on a climb may be sometimes useful.
-Above this dangerous portion the climb is most
-enjoyable, and unique for the lake views it affords.</p>
-
-<p>In the early days parties of keen campers and
-scramblers frequented the beautiful dales around the
-head of <span class="large2">Ullswater</span>. But nowadays, after everything
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">355</span>
-has been explored thoroughly, it cannot be said that
-there is much in the vicinity to attract cragsmen.
-On Helvellyn, St. Sunday’s Crag, and Fairfield there
-is plenty of indefinite scrambling to be found, but
-this is never continuously good, rather the reverse.
-Despite its huge bulk Helvellyn possesses few rocks
-that favour the climber. Dolly Waggon Pike, at the
-head of Grisedale, is the best of all. It contains two
-gullies which may be reached from Patterdale in
-about an hour and a half, or from the top of Dunmail
-Raise on the Grasmere side in less than an
-hour’s time. In these days of motor mountaineering
-this fact is worth remembering. The best-known
-course, <span class="large2">Dolly Waggon Pike Gully</span>, lies rather towards
-the westerly end of the crag, and rises, narrow
-and steep, just to the right of a series of big scree
-gullies which unite and send a conspicuous talus of
-scree down the mountain side. Some short introductory
-scrambling leads to the real climbing, where
-an almost vertical crack rises on the left in the true
-bed of the gully. A shallow scoop on the right gives
-the best route for about 15 feet, when it may be
-advisable to traverse back to the left into the crack
-above the steepest part. This is now followed by a
-patch of scree above a series of slabs, and short
-boulder pitches lead to the final chimney, which rises
-slightly on the left. About 300 feet east of this
-somewhat easy course there is a much more imposing
-opening in the crags. This was noticed many
-years ago by the pioneers, notably by the late Tom
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">356</span>
-Westmorland, whose name all climbers remember
-with respect in connection with the early days on
-the Pillar Rock, and the building of the Westmorland
-cairn or Great Gable. The great rift in Dolly
-Waggon Pike, though often attempted, was not
-climbed in its entirety direct until so recently as
-1910. Strange to tell, it fell to the lot of the
-pioneer’s son, Mr. Horace Westmorland, to lead
-the first party. His companion was Mr. John
-Mounsey. Their friends have named the place the
-<span class="large2">Penrith Gully</span>.</p>
-
-<p>There are four difficult pitches in the gully,
-three of them being of the cave and jammed-boulder
-variety. Unfortunately a grassy terrace
-divides the lower pitches from the upper portion,
-making it easy to leave the gully above the
-second pitch. This somewhat spoils the continuity
-of the climb. The first pitch is not difficult,
-and may be passed directly over the chock-stone
-after first backing up on the left. The second
-obstacle is more trying. The best plan is to
-‘back up’ as far as the recess under the capstone,
-and with the second man in this secure
-resting-place the leader may negotiate the awkward
-exit over the boulder on its right-hand
-side. The third or ‘Great Pitch’ starts from
-above the intervening ledge. Eighty feet higher
-a huge boulder has become jammed across the
-gorge, with a smaller mass below it. There is no
-cave below these, and as the place is very steep,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">357</span>
-somewhat smooth, and always rather wet, it ranks
-as much the most difficult part of the climb. A
-shallow scoop just to the right of the bed of the
-gully enables the lower chock-stone to be reached.
-Some anchorage is available here, and the rope may
-be threaded to secure the further advance of the
-leader. The final exposed section is best climbed
-to the left of the crack, which is formed between
-the big boulder and the left wall. The final pitch
-is vegetation-covered, and possesses a fine bridge-rock,
-but the whole of the gully is loose, and the
-finish somewhat unpleasant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Dove Crags, Patterdale.</span>&mdash;This cliff looks
-tempting when seen from below the Kirkstone
-Pass and near the Brotherswater Hotel, which
-provides the best starting-point. Climbers have
-more than once essayed the ascent. ‘An impossible
-face’ and ‘an inaccessible gully’ seemed
-to be the only result until October 1910, when
-Messrs. H. Westmorland, J. Mounsey, and W.
-A. North discovered a complicated route up the
-rock-face. This was about 100 feet to the right
-of the really ‘inaccessible gully.’ The overhanging
-sections were avoided by some skilful traversing,
-and the situations often proved sensational. In the
-local newspapers it was stated that a doctor was
-present at the foot of the crags.</p>
-
-<p>Small cairns mark the route, which, once correctly
-started upon, can hardly be missed, for
-there is scarcely another available.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">358</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_4">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<span class="large"><i>RECENT CLIMBS AROUND LANGDALE
-AND DOE CRAG</i></span></h2>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Pavey Ark.</span>&mdash;Despite the exploitation of
-Gimmer Crag and other smaller local attractions,
-this fine mass still ranks as first favourite with most
-climbers who stray Langdalewards. Yet, though it
-becomes more and more scarred and scratched with
-the marks of ‘hob-nailers,’ one curious feature must
-impress those who visit the crags after several years’
-absence. This is the curious encroachment of vegetation.
-Beautiful as are some of the plants and
-grasses which cling to the face, the cragsman revels
-most in seeing and climbing the stern, bare crags.
-The rarest botanical specimen, if it cumber a handhold,
-is treated with scant respect. Fortunately
-the more popular routes are practically free from
-dangerous vegetation, but recent adventures on
-some that are less frequented would suggest that
-a warning note be struck.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Crescent Climb</span>, which begins around
-the corner a few yards to the right of the Great
-Gully, is much spoilt by the exuberance of plant
-life. The first 200 feet lie altogether up a grassy
-slope or opening. There are steep, shelving rocks
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">359</span>
-on the right, but these are not approached until an
-overhanging portion supervenes. Then the main
-feature of the Crescent begins. This is a traverse
-below the impending portion. The place is exposed,
-but the hand and footholds are ample, whilst the
-anchorage is all that could be desired. After crossing
-the rocks for about 60 feet, the heathery slopes can
-be gained that lead up to Jack’s Rake at rather
-more than half of its length. The deep, narrow
-rift of <span class="large2">Gwynne’s Chimney</span> will now be noticed
-right ahead, and this gives a splendid finish to
-the course. In fact, were it not for this attraction
-the Crescent would scarcely be worth the attention
-of climbers. The Chimney has walls of exceedingly
-rough rock, and an oblong-shaped mass of rock may
-roughly be said to divide it into two portions. The
-exit is made on the right, and an easy ridge leads
-upwards. There is plenty of indefinite scrambling
-until the highest point of Pavey Ark is reached.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Buttress between the Great and Little
-Gullies</span> at first sight suggests first-class climbing.
-Closer acquaintance, however, reveals the presence
-of so much vegetation and such an indefinite rock
-structure that the place is disappointing. The ascent
-had been made many years ago, but no record
-would appear to have been made until early in
-1910, when the late J. Anton Stoop and Mr. Douglas
-Yeomans discovered a route, which has the merit of
-individuality. They started from the foot of the
-buttress about 50 yards to the left of the Great
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">360</span>
-Gully, and adhered as closely as possible to the
-main ridge, gradually slanting up to the left towards
-the head of a small side gully which springs out
-of the Little Gully. The last 80 feet consisted of
-a vertical face, with a very conspicuous overhanging
-stone at the corner. The face was climbed by a
-chimney which had been seen from below, just to
-the left of the corner. The chimney consisted of
-two parts, with a chock-stone at the top. Above this
-the climb can be varied considerably; the upper
-rocks of Pavey Ark are famous for their wonderful
-gripping and ripping qualities, and they are here
-at their best.</p>
-
-<p>A good deal of indefinite scrambling has been
-undertaken on the walls of the deep opening at
-the easterly end of the cliff&mdash;marked C on Mr.
-Jones’ line drawing facing p. 203. Two routes on
-the left-hand wall are worth passing mention.
-<span class="large2">Gibson’s Chimney</span> is a well-marked cliff in the
-upper part of the opening. Large cairns mark the
-start and the finish. There are two definite pitches,
-which in all afford about 50 feet of straightforward
-backing up practice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Benison’s Chimney</span>, which rises between
-Gibson’s Chimney and Rake End Chimney, is built
-on a different mould. It consists of a series of ill-defined
-scoops somewhat resembling the Shamrock
-Chimneys on the Pillar. The place is nearly 200
-feet high. It reeks with danger and rank vegetation;
-moreover, loose holds occur at crucial points.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">361</span>
-The most difficult section occurs about 150 feet
-above the start. A steep bit of rock about 15 feet
-high has to be ascended. There is practically only
-one satisfactory hold on this stretch; the ulterior
-support is grass; and the base of operations is a
-quivering, turf ledge, which threatens to come away
-momentarily. Thus no help can be afforded the
-leader, whose troubles are further accentuated by
-a lack of anchorage. The writer trusts that few
-climbers will be attracted by Benison’s Chimney.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Gimmer Crag</span> has of late years received much
-attention from rock enthusiasts. The shapely
-buttress is a conspicuous feature of the Langdale
-Pikes, especially when seen from the direction of
-Blea Tarn. The full height of the crag, which is
-singularly firmly weathered, is nearly 400 feet. It
-thrusts itself aggressively forth from the grassy
-spur which joins Pike O’ Stickle with Harrison
-Stickle. Yet, until the late Andrew Thomson, of
-genial memory, described its opportunities so recently
-as 1901, climbers scarcely seemed to realise
-the existence of Gimmer Crag. There are now
-three distinct climbs of exceptional merit and two
-important variations, whilst on either side of the
-main crag plenty of indefinite scrambling and short
-gully problems can be enjoyed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Gimmer Chimney.</span>&mdash;This obvious cleft
-starts at the foot of the Crag to the right of, and
-lower down than the nose of, the buttress. The first
-serious difficulty occurs about 40 feet up, where
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">362</span>
-the direct ascent of the chimney becomes impossible,
-and a traverse is made to the right. After an
-awkward upward movement has been made it is
-possible to force a way back into the chimney by
-swinging on a good handhold. The second obstacle
-is of the strid variety, followed by a shallow groove,
-with the best holds on the right wall. This gives
-out below a well-defined chimney, which is difficult
-to enter, being, as its engineering discoverer aptly
-described it, ‘bell-mouthed.’ Above this a traverse
-to the right is made, whence a chimney with holds
-on the right wall enables some grassy higher ledges
-to be reached. The final chimney is wide at the
-beginning, but narrows near the top, where a rib
-of rock protrudes and leaves a narrow but safe
-passage on the right.</p>
-
-<p>The two face routes <span class="large2">A</span> and <span class="large2">B</span>, with their variations,
-start from a terrace, which extends for
-some considerable distance across the face. This
-is about 90 feet above the commencement of the
-Chimney Climb, and may best be reached by way
-of a small, slanting gully filled with bilberry bushes,
-now known as the Bilberry Shute. It may be
-most convenient first to mention the most direct
-ascent up the nose of the buttress; this is known
-as Oliverson’s variation of the A Route. This
-starts just to the left of the ‘Nose,’ and after
-about 40 feet of steep practice on comparatively
-small holds, a ‘three-step’ traverse is made to the
-right on the crest of the ‘Nose,’ whence the way lies
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">363</span>
-directly upwards to the ‘belay.’ To follow the
-original A and B Route from the terrace a course
-to the right of the ‘Nose’ is followed up a rough
-slab crowned with broken rocks, beyond which a
-sloping rock ledge is gained. This may be recognized
-by its having a shallow ‘crevasse’ separating
-it from the main crag. At the further and lower
-end of this ledge from the point at which it is
-reached a leaf of rock, abutting against the base
-of a depression in the wall above, marks the start
-of a short pitch, which brings the climber to the
-ledge where the routes divide. This has been
-called Thomson’s Ledge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">A Route.</span>&mdash;From Thomson’s Ledge a traverse to
-the left is made in order to continue the A Route;
-a recess is soon entered, out of which the way lies
-almost directly upwards for quite 40 feet to the
-‘belay,’ where Oliverson’s Variation joins the old
-route about 80 feet above the terrace. A traverse
-to the left is then made to the foot of the shallow
-Lichen Chimney, the ascent of which is the stiffest
-part of the course, and almost 60 feet of rope is
-used by the leader before the second man can be
-brought forward from the ‘belay.’ The last pitch
-consists of a narrow chimney, with the best holds
-on the right wall, which finishes abruptly at the
-top of the crag.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">B Route.</span>&mdash;Starting from Thomson’s Ledge a
-traverse is made to the right in an upward direction
-until a corner is turned and the foot of Amen Corner,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">364</span>
-a 15-foot pitch of extreme severity, is reached.
-This is a slanting crack on a rock wall that overhangs,
-as also does the other wall, which forms the
-corner. The best method of surmounting this is to
-grip the upper edge of the crack and walk up the
-other edge with the body nearly horizontal at first,
-and the hands and feet close together.</p>
-
-<p>From the top of this pitch a ledge, known as
-the Gangway, which slopes outwards and upwards,
-is followed for about 30 feet to a small grass platform,
-and the Green Gully rises straight overhead.
-This is awkward to enter directly, and it may be
-better to ascend some 15 feet on the right, whence
-a stride can be taken into the bed of the gully.
-For quite 70 feet the ascent is not difficult, and
-at that height the leader reaches the anchorage
-of the Crow’s Nest. This is a small hollow in the
-right wall, and it is attained by making a short
-traverse, where the hands do most of the work.
-Very little assistance can be given to those following,
-as the rope tends to pull the climber from his
-holds, but anchorage can be found by threading the
-rope behind the handholds which were used on
-the traverse.</p>
-
-<p>The gully can be climbed to the summit, but
-being grassy and loose in places, it is preferable
-to finish up the sound arête directly above the
-Crow’s Nest.</p>
-
-<p>A variation which finishes up with this section
-can be made by way of an upward traverse to the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">365</span>
-right from the top of the 40-foot corner on the
-A Route, and this would join the Green Gully
-about 15 feet below the Crow’s Nest. It might
-also be mentioned that both above and below
-Amen Corner traverses can be effected to the right
-to join the Gimmer Chimney.</p>
-
-<p>The deep, wide gully to the left of the main
-crag possesses one cave pitch, which may be passed
-on the right of the chock-stone, but this may be
-avoided altogether by keeping to the right throughout.
-The other gullies on the west side of Gimmer
-Crag afford good scrambling, but here again the
-difficulties are too easily obviated.</p>
-
-<p>Climbers staying at Langdale could spend an
-enjoyable day by walking over to Grasmere and
-thence visiting the crags in Easedale or Deer
-Bield’s Crag in Far Easedale. After the climb is
-over it makes a delightful finish to the day to
-return to Langdale over the fells by Codale and
-Stickle Tarns.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Tarn Crag</span> above Easedale Tarn is a
-prominent feature in a favourite landscape. Quite
-recently Mr. J. Stables unearthed, literally, a route
-thereon which gives about 200 feet of quite good,
-sound climbing. The beginning lies in a line below
-the left of the highest point, and cairns now mark
-the way. The passage from the first chock-stone
-pitch to the recess, with the ensuing face traverse,
-will be found the most difficult section of the
-ascent.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">366</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Deer Bield’s Crag</span> in Far Easedale is quite
-an hour’s walk away from Grasmere. Its height
-is nearly 300 feet; and a buttress runs up the
-centre, with impossible-looking chimneys on either
-side. That on the left is still unclimbed, but the
-one on the right yielded to the attack of Messrs.
-Stables and Turner in 1908. They found at least
-half-a-dozen difficult pitches, the fourth proving
-to be the stiffest of all. The rock on Deer Bield’s
-Crag is firm and reliable, but singularly free from
-good ledges for hands and feet. Upward progress
-is made by using the numerous cracks which are
-a curious feature of the structure.</p>
-
-<p>For an off-day there is no more pleasant spot in
-Langdale than the vicinity of the Oak How Needle,
-which is perched on the side of Lingmoor, below
-the upper crags. Its situation is almost opposite
-a point on the coach road about half a mile beyond
-Chapel Stile when going towards Dungeon Ghyll.
-The outstanding mass makes a good photograph.
-The ascent of the short side is easy, but a crack
-on the front of the rock may be considered decidedly
-difficult.</p>
-
-<p>The outline of <span class="large2">Bowfell</span> as seen from near the
-head of Windermere is one of the most massive and
-picturesque in Lakeland. The Langdale Pikes are
-perhaps more arresting at first sight, but a longer
-study of the mass to their left conveys a sense of
-grandeur and stability lacking in the more famous
-‘twin peaks of Langdale.’
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">367</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Links of Bowfell</span> are well worth a visit
-from climbers passing from Dungeon Ghyll to Wastdale,
-for they offer a pleasant contrast to the exposed
-buttresses of Gimmer Crag. Unlike most of our
-rock-faces, they have a southerly aspect, overlooking
-Eskdale and Three Tarns. The gullies, starting
-at the eastern end of the crags, are numbered from
-one to eleven, but only Nos. 4, 5, and 6 contain
-good climbing. The others are a suitable practice
-ground for novices.</p>
-
-<p>It is well to start operations in No. 4, which
-has two pitches of interest, and then descend by
-way of No. 3 to the foot of No. 5. The large
-pitch at its foot is quite entertaining, and upon
-the occasion of its first ascent, on a day of
-pouring rain, offered a stubborn resistance before
-capitulating on the right. Above it, easy going
-takes one quickly to the top of the crags, and
-thence around to the foot of No. 6.</p>
-
-<p>This also possesses a good pitch of the chock-stone
-variety near its foot. The way up it lies
-straight to beneath the ‘capstone,’ which bars
-direct progress. It is then feasible to work out
-under the stone on the right until an upward
-move can be made to the top of the pitch. On
-the occasion of the first ascent, in September 1897,
-by Messrs. C. R. B. Storry, G. H. McKilburn, and
-the writers, the upper part of the pitch was topped
-by loose stones; even nowadays it is well for the
-following climbers to take cover under the capstone,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">368</span>
-both for their own safety and to belay the
-leader as he scales the pitch.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">The Bowfell Buttress</span> is a more serious proposition,
-and as a climb the route found up it, in
-December 1900, by Messrs. Shaw, Oppenheimer,
-Craig, Hargreaves, and West, compares in point
-of difficulty and length with the North Climb on
-the Pillar, if the latter ceased immediately above
-the Nose.</p>
-
-<p>The Buttress faces N.N.E., overlooking Mickleden,
-and is best reached from Langdale by following
-‘the Band’&mdash;the long, grassy spur running down
-towards Stool End Farm&mdash;about two-thirds of the
-way to the top of Bowfell. From here it is best
-to contour around to the right and thence along,
-bearing obliquely upward, to the foot of the Crags.</p>
-
-<p>The work starts at the lowest point of the
-Buttress, and, to quote Mr. Oppenheimer’s lucid
-account, ‘after 30 feet of broken rocks, the foot
-of a long chimney is passed, and a 10-foot chimney
-to the right of it, with an awkward pitch,
-taken. This leads, in another 10 feet, to a small
-terrace running down to a gully on the right.
-The next 50 feet is an upward traverse to the
-left, into the long chimney, soon after entering
-which a good sentry-box affords a stopping-place.</p>
-
-<p>‘After 40 feet straight up the long chimney
-the latter ends on a grass terrace, which slopes
-down to the right and broadens considerably;
-following this, for 20 feet, a rather difficult vertical
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">369</span>
-crack is reached. From the shelf at the top
-of the crack 50 feet up, bare rough rocks lead
-to a grassy corner. Here there is a very convenient
-large block, to which the second man
-should belay himself as the leader advances to
-the left along a very exposed upward traverse,
-with little handhold, into a small rock corner.</p>
-
-<p>‘The best plan here is to climb to the right,
-away from the corner, and then to the left over
-the top of it, on to a grassy patch sloping away
-to the left, beside a fine belaying pin. To the
-right of this a chimney starts: 40 feet up there
-is a small pitch; then another 40 feet on sloping
-slabs to the right with a wall to the left, leads to
-the top of the Low Man, where a cairn has been
-placed.</p>
-
-<p>‘Twenty feet more of easy scrambling leads to
-the top of the buttress, which is separated from
-the mass of Bowfell by a narrow neck, from which
-scree gullies descend on either side.’</p>
-
-<p>A few short scrambles can be found amongst the
-crags above Angle Tarn on Hanging Knott, but the
-terrace-like formation of the rocks hereabouts is of
-greater interest to the geologist than to the climber.
-Flat Crags, and the wild recesses of Hell Ghyll and
-Crinkle Ghyll, have been visited by the fraternity,
-but their reports of these localities are quite unfavourable,
-except as regards their scenery.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Doe Crag.</span>&mdash;At the time of the writing of Jones’
-chapter on this fine cliff, most of the routes up the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">370</span>
-best rock faces in the district were exhausted, and
-short variations had become the order of the day.</p>
-
-<p>Doe Crag was the one great climbing ground
-which had many new, unexplored courses upon it,
-and the almost certain knowledge Jones had of their
-existence is evident to all who read his chapter in
-the present book. These delightful descriptions of
-the gullies are in every way accurate at the present
-time, except that the Intermediate Gully is now
-ascended direct over every pitch; it is only necessary
-in this Appendix to carry the tale through
-another epoch&mdash;the Buttress epoch.</p>
-
-<p>This started in March 1903, when Mr. F. Philipson
-and the writers made the ascent of the two
-most prominent buttresses. Since that time the
-various remaining buttresses and their subsidiary
-ridges have been ascended in such detail and
-thoroughness as characterize the nail-scratched
-rocks of Scawfell and the Pillar. These courses are
-now described, irrespective of merit or difficulty, as
-they occur from left to right as one stands facing
-the crags at a point slightly above Goat’s Water.
-The nomenclature is that adopted by Mr. G. F.
-Woodhouse in his excellent monograph, and by
-those who later made virgin ascents on this
-magnificent crag. It but remains to be said that,
-whereas the gullies are almost exclusively for
-expert and ultra-expert parties, the buttresses offer
-climbs which in many cases may be safely undertaken
-by parties of moderate strength.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">371</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_370" src="images/i_370.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Doe Crag, seen from across Goat’s Water</span></p>
-
-<p class="small table">
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell">
- <span class="large2">A</span> A Buttress.<br />
- <span class="large2">B</span> B Buttress.<br />
- <span class="large2">C</span> C Buttress.<br />
- <span class="large2">D</span> D Buttress.<br />
- <span class="large2">E</span> E Buttress.<br />
- <i>f</i> Easy Gully.<br />
- <i>g</i> Great Gully.<br />
- <i>h</i> Central Chimney.<br />
- <i>j</i> Intermediate Gully.<br />
- <i>k</i> Easter Gully.<br />
- <i>l</i> North Gully.<br />
- <i>m</i> A Buttress Climb. <i>Original Route.</i><br />
- <i>n</i> A Buttress Variations.<br />
- </span>
- <span class="tcell">
- <i>o</i> B Buttress. <i>Broadrick’s Route.</i><br />
- <i>p</i> The Lion’s Crawl.<br />
- <i>q</i> Easy Terrace.<br />
- <i>r</i> B Buttress. <i>Original Route.</i><br />
- <i>s</i> B Buttress. <i>Woodhouse’s Routes.</i><br />
- <i>t</i> C Buttress Climb.<br />
- <i>t</i>^1 C Buttress Climb Variation.<br />
- <i>t</i>^2 Branch exit from Intermediate Gully.<br />
- <i>v</i> D Buttress Climb.<br />
- <i>w</i> Blizzard Chimney.<br />
- <i>x</i> Easter Gully. <i>Jones’ Route and continuation up E Buttress.</i><br />
- <i>y</i> Easter Gully. Broadrick’s Crack.<br />
- <i>z</i> E Buttress Climbs.<br />
- 3 The Real Chimney.<br />
- 4 Woodhouse’s Crack.<br />
- </span>
- </span>
-</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="large2">A Buttress</span> is the magnificent bastion which
-separates the Easy Scree Gully from the Great
-Gully. Unlike the other buttresses, which afford
-good climbing only for about 200 feet above their
-bases, the best sport is to be obtained in its
-higher reaches. The climbing starts at about the
-centre of the buttress, where is a cairn, but a
-vast overhanging precipice forces the climber away
-diagonally to the left along a narrow, grass ledge,
-which dwindles until, at a considerable height
-above the screes, an awkward corner is rounded.
-This can be reached by two distinct variations
-starting lower down and to the left of the route
-described, both of which are very stiff. Above this
-a thin crack is ascended for about 30 feet until
-a large ledge is attained. Here a choice of routes
-is available. A cave pitch straight ahead can be
-ascended on the right wall and, after ascending
-some broken rocks, a traverse to the right discloses
-an interesting chimney, above which the serious
-climbing ceases. An easy gully leads to this cave
-pitch direct from the Easy or Little Gully.</p>
-
-<p>For very strong parties a fine variation is to
-traverse diagonally upward to the right from the
-large ledge, treading the upper edge of the huge
-overhanging crag already referred to, until a fine
-chimney is entered. This is difficult, but the
-anchorage is good. A few feet above it an exposed
-traverse is made away to the right until the foot of
-a most sensational crack is reached. This can be
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">372</span>
-climbed, or the traverse continued somewhat further
-until upward progress can be made by a zigzag
-course almost overhanging the upper confines of the
-Great Gully. To Messrs. Ormiston-Chant, Craig
-Gordon, and Parker most of the fine variations on
-this buttress have fallen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">B Buttress</span> offers several good climbs, the most
-recently discovered of which&mdash;the Giant’s Crawl&mdash;starts
-at the foot of the Great Gully and, after
-striking straight upwards for about 100 feet of
-exceptional severity, follows a well-defined slab
-diagonally to the right for about 250 feet. It
-then doubles back to the left and thence to the top
-of the crags.</p>
-
-<p>Some years ago Messrs. R. W. and H. C.
-Broadrick made a very fine climb up the crest of
-the retaining wall of the Great Gully. This started
-from the same point as the Giant’s Crawl, but instead
-of continuing across the face to the right they
-struck upward over some poised and shattered blocks
-and came upon the well-defined crest referred to;
-thence, by continuously steep and sensational rocks,
-which, however, afford good holding, they forced a
-way to the crest of the crags&mdash;one of the best and
-longest routes up the Buttresses.</p>
-
-<p>A few feet below the foot, and to the right of
-the Great Gully, a wide broken terrace or rake
-gives easy access to the heart of the crags, and
-all the other good climbs on B, C, and D Buttresses
-to be described, finish on this terrace.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">373</span></p>
-
-<p>Some considerable distance below the start of
-the terrace, and at about the lowest extremity of
-B Buttress, a thin crack starts up to the
-right. This marks the start of the route by which
-the Buttress was first climbed. The crack gives
-out upon a grass ledge about 30 feet above the
-screes. Beyond this a somewhat awkward stretch
-of climbing brings one below some overhanging
-rocks, which entail a flank movement to the left
-until a conspicuous recess is reached. The continuation
-above this is most exhilarating, a steep
-exposed face of rock which takes the climber into
-an ideal situation, and which claims his entire attention
-in the continuation of its enjoyment. Two
-chimneys on either hand have both been climbed,
-but the ascent of the rock-face should not be missed.
-It finishes on the Easy Terrace. Above this the
-Buttress evidences a lack of continuous climbing,
-and the time will be better spent by descending
-the terrace and thence round to the foot of the
-Central Chimney.</p>
-
-<p>After ascending the easy rocks at its foot for
-about a hundred feet, a detached pinnacle is a
-prominent object on the left. Messrs. Woodhouse
-found that by passing behind this a fine chimney
-could be entered and ascended to a grassy ledge at
-its top. A pleasing variation is to be had by passing
-below the pinnacle, whence a steep slab recommends
-itself to the gymnast, and, after a strenuous
-pull on the arms, lands him at the foot of the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">374</span>
-chimney mentioned above. From the grassy ledge
-above it the route can be varied in many ways,
-but the best sport lies across to the left for a
-few feet, where a chimney of real difficulty forms
-the lowest of a series of pitches of great
-merit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">C Buttress</span> separates the Central Chimney
-from the Intermediate Gully, and throughout its
-entire length is set at a very high angle. It
-offers little temptation to stray from the line of
-least resistance, and the climbing is better defined
-than on most of the Buttress routes. For a hundred
-feet or so the holds are large and plentiful,
-but the climbing is interesting withal, until further
-progress in the same line is barred by impending
-rocks.</p>
-
-<p>After traversing slightly to the right some steep
-slabs provide excellent sport until a good belaying
-pin is reached. Again discretion suggests a flank
-movement, this time slightly downwards to the
-left, and thence, after rounding a corner, upward
-progress is made to a grass ledge.</p>
-
-<p>The scenery hereabouts is magnificent, and a
-few minutes can be well spent in viewing the
-formidable difficulties of the Central Chimney,
-the greater part of which is now visible. It appears
-anything but inviting, and most people will
-be content with merely looking. Our Buttress
-also has become difficult, and the next move up
-some steep slabs, which terminate on a wide grassy
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">375</span>
-ledge awkward of access, is one necessitating considerable
-care and skill on the part of the
-leader.</p>
-
-<p>A little beyond this, on the right, is a steep
-chimney leading downward to the Intermediate
-Gully, at a point immediately below the difficult
-pitch. This branch chimney was first ascended by
-the brothers Woodhouse, and is stiff.</p>
-
-<p>The continuation of our climb now begins to
-lose interest, and before long we find ourselves at
-the foot of the final pitch of the Central Chimney,
-whence the going is comparatively easy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">D Buttress</span>, separating the Intermediate and
-Easter Gullies, is, in the writers’ opinion, the most
-entertaining and prettiest problem of all. In its
-lower reaches it is quite easy and apt to disappoint
-until, at the same height as the difficult pitch of
-the Intermediate Gully, it rises almost vertically
-for above a hundred feet.</p>
-
-<p>The way lies up a vertical arête, which recalls
-most strongly some of the Coolin Ridges. The
-holds are sound and rough, but none too large&mdash;just
-sufficient to leave a fair margin of safety in
-a very exposed position. This delightful stretch
-gives out at an excellent belay, beyond which
-the interest continues unabated for 50 feet or so,
-until it ceases on a wide grass platform. Shortly
-beyond this the Easy Terrace is again reached.</p>
-
-<p>Before dealing with the easy climbs of the E
-Buttress, mention must be made of three fine chimneys,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">376</span>
-two of which have been climbed since Jones
-wrote his description of the Easter Gully. On
-page 235, after he had ascended the first pitch
-of the Gully and attained the ‘great hollow’
-above it, he refers to ‘splendid branch gullies
-up to the ridges on either side.’</p>
-
-<p>Two of these branch gullies were climbed many
-years ago, that on the left-hand wall, now called
-the South Chimney, by Mr. H. C. Broadrick, and
-its counterpart on the North Wall by the brothers
-Woodhouse.</p>
-
-<p>This latter is known as the Black Chimney. It
-is deeply cut, and looks most forbidding. A closer
-acquaintance dispels most of its terrors, for the
-holds are excellent, and the fearsome upper capstone
-can be rounded on the right-hand side with
-comparative ease. It is, however, well worth a
-visit, and the continuation up the E Buttress is
-not lacking in interest.</p>
-
-<p>Lower down than the South Chimney&mdash;a pretty
-problem in ‘backing up’&mdash;a rectangular opening
-in the crags, almost immediately above the first
-pitch of the Easter Gully, claimed the attention
-of Messrs. Woodhouse, Westmorland, and the
-writers in April 1910. A heavy blizzard of snow
-and hail, which fell at the time they made its first
-ascent, suggested the name <span class="large2">Blizzard Chimney</span>,
-and this was adopted. It has always seemed rather
-a pity that the majority of the names on Doe Crag
-are so prosy; the latter-day climbers have lacked
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">377</span>
-the happy knack of giving distinctive names to
-their exploits.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="i_376" src="images/i_376.jpg" alt="" />
-
-<p class="small table w100">
-<span class="tcell">G. P. Abraham &amp; Sons, Photos</span>
-<span class="author tcell">Keswick</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">THE BROADRICK’S AND HOPKINSON’S CRACKS
-DOE CRAG</p></div>
-
-<p>The most awkward part of the Blizzard Chimney
-is at its foot; to effect an entry is not easy,
-but once attained and an exposed bulge climbed
-by the crack on the left, the rectangular opening
-is reached, and the way lies up the left-hand
-wall of this. After about 90 feet of moderately
-difficult climbing the chimney gives out on the
-D Buttress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">E Buttress</span> presents a variety of fairly easy
-climbs. None of these possess sufficient individuality
-or difficulty to demand a detailed description;
-the routes of greatest interest are shown on the
-outline drawing facing p. 370. These climbs supply
-a real want on Doe Crag, and render the climbing
-upon it, from ‘easy’ to ‘exceptionally severe,’
-graded to an ideal degree.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the North Gully there is no climbing
-of sustained interest, but the <span class="large2">Real Chimney</span>, a
-curious cleft enclosed on all sides, possesses unique
-features. It is about 150 feet above the foot of
-the crags, some distance to the right of the North
-Gully.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="large2">North Gully</span> itself was first climbed in
-1901 by the Messrs. Barton, and again by the
-writers two years later. Since then it has been
-visited several times. After climbing to the under
-side of the chaos of jammed boulders which form
-the great pitch, a narrow ledge will be noticed
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">378</span>
-running outward along the left wall. The feat of
-traversing along this with practically no support
-for the hands, and a fearsome drop below, led to
-the inclusion of the Gully amongst the ‘exceptionally
-severe’ courses, and rightly so. Just when
-the ledge dwindles to nothing, a good hold can be
-reached with the left hand, and then a severe
-struggle upwards discloses good holding above.
-Thence the going is easier, and the top of the
-boulders can soon be attained. Away at the
-opposite end of the crags, a hundred feet to the
-left of Slingsby’s Pinnacle in the Great Gully, and
-at about the same level is a fine crack which the
-brothers Woodhouse first climbed in 1905. The
-lowest 35 feet are of about the same standard
-of difficulty as the Doctor’s Chimney on Gable
-Crag; indeed the crack as a whole is about as long
-and of as great merit as its more popular counterpart
-on Great Gable, and is very well worth a visit.</p>
-
-<p>It but remains to be said that the first pitch of
-the Great Gully can be climbed direct up the left-hand
-side of the boulder without the aid of a
-threaded rope&mdash;a most strenuous effort&mdash;and that
-the two pitches of the Intermediate Gully (which
-Mr. Jones obviated in the manner described in his
-chapter) are amongst the very finest in the whole
-of the Lake District.</p>
-
-<p>Other climbs in the Coniston district have been
-discovered recently by enthusiastic members of the
-Fell and Rock-Climbing Club.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">379</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Sylvan Chimney</span> is one of the best of these.
-It lies to the left of Church Beck, and is the most
-conspicuous cleft in the splintered mass of rock
-between Boulder Valley and Lever’s Water, being
-situated 300 or 400 yards below the tarn.</p>
-
-<p>(Boulder Valley is the fine upland hollow running
-from the foot of the falls below Low Water
-in the direction of Lever’s Water.) The Chimney
-affords about 120 feet of fairly difficult climbing.</p>
-
-<p>A few yards to the left of Sylvan Chimney is
-<span class="large2">Gouldon Gully</span>, which gives a rather longer but
-somewhat easier climb. A slab of about 70
-feet provides excellent practice in neat footwork.
-Above it a 100-foot chimney proves interesting,
-but unfortunately is somewhat earthy in its
-interior.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large2">Colonel Crag</span>, the boss of rock at the foot of
-Paddy End, at about the same height as Sylvan
-Chimney, has also been thoroughly explored and
-climbed, but is scarcely worth a visit; indeed it
-is to be feared that the proximity of Doe Crag
-would lead to the utter desertion of vastly more
-entertaining places than these latest additions to
-the Coniston climbs.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">380</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 class="xx-large" id="INDEX">INDEX.</h2>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<ul class="index table"><li class="ifrst">A</li>
-
-<li class="indx">A Gully, Pike’s Crag, <a href="#Page_3">3-5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Wastwater Screes, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aaron Slack, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abbey Ridge, Great Gable, <a href="#Page_332">332-333</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abraham, Messrs., quoted, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Addyman, Mr. E. T. W., <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘All the Year Round’ quoted, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Alpine Journal,’ <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ampezzo Dolomites, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Angle Tarn, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ark, Pavey, <a href="#Page_208">208-218</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358-361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arrowhead Branch Gully, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Gully, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Ridge, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162-167</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">B</li>
-
-<li class="indx">B Chimney, Pike’s Crag, <a href="#Page_7">7-10</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">B Gully, Wastwater Screes.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Great Gully</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Backing-up,’ <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baddeley’s Guide Book, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Badminton ‘Mountaineering,’ <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barton, Messrs., <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bear Rock, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beckhead, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beckhead Tarn, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belaying Pin, Moss Ghyll, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Birkness Combe Climbs, <a href="#Page_349">349-352</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Chimney, Bleaberry Combe, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Crag Gully, Borrowdale, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Crags, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Sail Pass, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blea Crags, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bleaberry Combe Climbs, <a href="#Page_352">352-353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blencathra, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blue, Tom, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Tom Blue</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boot, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Borrowdale, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Botteril, Mr. F., <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Botteril’s Cracks, Scawfell, <a href="#Page_341">341-342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bottle-shaped Pinnacle, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Ridge, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowfell, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Buttress, <a href="#Page_368">368-369</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>The Links, <a href="#Page_367">367-368</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brandreth, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Broad Stand, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32-37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Descent, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown Tongue, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brunskill, Mr. W. B., <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buckbarrow, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burnmoor, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burnthwaite, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buttermere, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buttermere Climbs, <a href="#Page_344">344-353</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">C</li>
-
-<li class="indx">C Gully, Pike’s Crag, <a href="#Page_5">5-7</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Wastwater Screes, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200-207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cairn, Hopkinson’s, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Westmorland, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Central Chimney, Bleaberry Combe, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Doe Crag, <a href="#Page_226">226-232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Central Gully, Gable Crag, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138-145</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336-337</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Great End, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91-104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Wastwater Screes.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See</i> C Gully</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Central Jordan, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Christmas climbing, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Climbing in England,’ <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cockley Beck, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collie Step, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collier’s Climb, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55-65</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Chimney, <a href="#Page_51">51-52</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collinson, Mr. W. L., <a href="#Page_339">339</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colonel Crag, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Combe Ghyll, <a href="#Page_237">237-242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coniston, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corner, the Scawfell Chimney, <a href="#Page_41">41</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Court, the Tennis, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crack, Kern Knotts, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182-187</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crack Grépon, <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Craig, Mr. G. H., <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Mr. Alan, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croda da Lago, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curtain and Crête Climb, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_326">326-327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curtain, the Great End, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cust’s Gully, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111-113</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">381</span></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">D</li>
-
-<li class="indx">D Gully, Pike’s Crag, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Decoy Pinnacle, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deep Ghyll (Hell’s Gate), <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deep Ghyll, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12-28</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deep Ghyll Cairn, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deer Bield’s Crag, Easedale, <a href="#Page_366">366</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Derwent, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Derwentwater, <a href="#Page_93">93</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Divide,’ the, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doctor’s Chimney, <a href="#Page_136">136-140</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doe Crag, <a href="#Page_219">219-236</a>, <a href="#Page_369">369-378</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>A Buttress, <a href="#Page_371">371-372</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>B<span class="p4">”</span><a href="#Page_372">372-374</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>C<span class="p4">”</span><a href="#Page_374">374-375</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>E<span class="p4">”</span><a href="#Page_375">375-376</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Blizzard Chimney, <a href="#Page_376">376-377</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Central Chimney, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226-232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Easter Gully, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Great Gully, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223-226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Intermediate Gully, <a href="#Page_232">232-234</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>North Gully, <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dolomites, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dress Circle, the, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drigg, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dungeon Ghyll, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">E</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eagle Crag, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eagle’s Nest, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Gully, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Ridge, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156-162</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Easedale, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">East Jordan, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Gully, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Easter Gully, Doe Crags, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Eight-foot Drop,’ <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">End, Great.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Great End</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Engineer’s Chimney, Gable Crag, <a href="#Page_311">311-313</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Engleberg Valley, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ennerdale, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Face of Gable, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117-119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Pillar, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Pillar Rock</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Esk Hause, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eskdale, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">F</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Facework, difficulty of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fairfield, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Far West Jordan Climb, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fell and Rock-Climbing Club, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fives’ Court, Pisgah Buttress, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fleetwith, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Gully, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Freshfield’s Italian Alps, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fünffingerspitze, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Chimney, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Furness Railway, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">G</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gable Crag, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334-337</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Central Gully, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138-145</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Oblique Chimney, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119-132</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Sheep Walk, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131-133</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Traverse, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gable End, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Needle, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168-174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gap, Wind, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Windy (Wind Yatt), <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gash Rock, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gatesgarth, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gatherstone Beck, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gavel Neese, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gibson, Mr. H. B., <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gimmer Crag, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361-365</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>A Route, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>B Route, <a href="#Page_363">363-364</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Amen Corner, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Chimney, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gimson, Messrs., <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glaramara, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goatswater, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gouldon Gully, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grainy Ghyll, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grasmoor, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Great Chimney, Deep Ghyll, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24-26</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Great End, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89-91</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Brother’s Crack, <a href="#Page_338">338</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Central Gully, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92-103</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>South East Gully, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104-111</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Great Gable, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114-117</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Gable Crag</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Great Gully, Doe Crag, <a href="#Page_223">223-226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Pavey Ark, <a href="#Page_213">213-218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Wastwater Screes, <a href="#Page_194">194-199</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Great Napes, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Waterfall, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green Cove, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Crag Gully, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Gable, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Ledge, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grépon Crack, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">382</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grey Knotts, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guideless climbing, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gwynne quoted, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gwynne’s Chimney, Pavey Ark, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">H</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hand Traverse, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282-284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harrison Stickle, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haskett Smith, ‘Climbing in England,’ <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hause.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Esk Hause</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haystacks, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hazard, Mr. J., <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Heart of Lakeland,’ <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hell Gate, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Helvellyn, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">High Level Route, Great Gable, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> ”<span class="p4">”</span> Pillar, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">High Man, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">High Man from the Nose, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_324">324-326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">High Stile, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hollow Stones, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Honister Pass, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hopkinson’s Cairn, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horse and Man Rock, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">I</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ice-axes, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">applications of, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ill Fell, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Iron Crags, <a href="#Page_304">304-311</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Italian Alps,’ Freshfield’s, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Italy, Northern, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">J</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jack’s Rake, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jammed-stone Pinnacle, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jenkinson’s Guide Book, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jordan Gully, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Scawfell Pinnacle, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Journal, ‘Alpine,’ <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> ‘Scottish Mountaineering,’ <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">K</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kern Knotts, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175-189</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Chimney, <a href="#Page_175">175-182</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>Crack, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182-187</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>West Chimney, <a href="#Page_187">187-189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keswick Brothers’ Climb, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66-68</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirkfell, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knotts, Grey, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knotts, Thunacar, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">L</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langdale, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langdale Combe, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Pikes, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langstrath, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laycock, Mr. J., <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Le Coin, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Ledge,’ the, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Tennis Court, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Left Pisgah, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ling Chimney, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lingmell, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Little Dru of the Lake District,’ <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Gully, Pavey Ark, <a href="#Page_210">210-213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Hell Gate, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liza Stream, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lliwedd, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Looking Stead, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord’s Rake, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Low Man, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Low Man, Scawfell Pinnacle, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Low Man Cairn, Scawfell Pinnacle, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> <span class="p4">”</span> <span class="p4">”</span> Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lower Kern Knotts, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lyon, Mr. H. B., <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">M</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manchester Town Hall, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Mantleshelf,’ the, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marshall, Prof. Milnes, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Matterhorn, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mauritius, Pieter Botte, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mickledore, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Chimney, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See</i> Scawfell Chimney</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Screes, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mönch, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mosedale, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Rocks, <a href="#Page_337">337-338</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moses’ Sledgate, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moss Ghyll, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43-53</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mouse Ghyll, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">N</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Napes, Great, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146-147</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> White, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Needle, Gable, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168-174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Gully, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150-152</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Ridge, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153-156</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neese, Gavel, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nether Beck, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">383</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New North West Climb, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322-324</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New West Climb, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318-320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">North Climb (Pillar Rock), <a href="#Page_271">271-282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span>(Penrith), <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Nose,’ the, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> Scawfell Pinnacle, <a href="#Page_74">74</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Notch,’ the, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">O</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oak How Needle, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oblique Chimney, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119-132</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Man, Coniston, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span>Wall, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oppenheimer, Mr. L. J., <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oppenheimer’s Chimney, <a href="#Page_353">353</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Outside Edge,’ Gable Needle, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">P</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Pall Mall Budget’ quoted, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parson’s Gully, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pavey Ark, <a href="#Page_208">208-218</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358-361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> Benison’s Chimney, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> Gibson’s Chimney, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> Gullies, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> Great Gully, <a href="#Page_213">213-218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> Little Gully, <a href="#Page_210">210-213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pedestrians, Notes for, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pelmo Traverse, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pendlebury Traverse, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Penrith Climb. <i>See</i> North Climb</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Petty’s Rift, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Photography and Climbing, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pier’s Ghyll, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285-286</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342-343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pieter Botte, <a href="#Page_69">69</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pike of Stickle, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pike’s Crag, <a href="#Page_1">1-11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pikes of Scawfell, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pillar Fell, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Rock, <a href="#Page_254">254-284</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317-331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pinnacle, Bottle-shaped, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Jammed-stone, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Scawfell, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69-88</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pisgah Buttress, <a href="#Page_53">53-55</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Left, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Right, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Scawfell, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Playground of Europe,’ Leslie Stephen’s, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pope, Mr. H. R., <a href="#Page_333">333</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pressure on Loose Stones, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Professor’s Chimney, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Progress, Rake’s, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29-32</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pulpit Rock, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">R</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rake End Chimney, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Ennerdale Face, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Jack’s, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Lord’s, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rake’s Progress, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29-32</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Raven Crag, Chimney, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> Glaramara, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> Gully, <a href="#Page_242">242-253</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> Great Gable, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reade, Mr. H. V., <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robinson, Mr. J. W., quoted, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robinson’s Chimney (Deep Ghyll), <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Gully, Great End, <a href="#Page_90">90</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rope, How <i>not</i> to use it, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Length of, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Special application of, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rossett Ghyll, <a href="#Page_33">33</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rosthwaite, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Fell, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rothhorn, Zinal, <a href="#Page_73">73</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rücksack Club, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">S</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sack, Carrying the, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sanderson, Mr. R. B., <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sanger-Davies’ Book, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Savage Gully, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320-322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scarpetti, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scarth Gap, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scawfell, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339-347</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Cairn, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Chimney, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39-42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Crags, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Pikes, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>. <i>See</i> Pikes of Scawfell</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Pinnacle, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69-88</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> by Deep Ghyll, <a href="#Page_76">76-84</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> by Steep Ghyll, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span><span class="p4">”</span> from Upper Deep Ghyll, <a href="#Page_339">339-340</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Scottish Mountaineering Journal,’ <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Screes, Central Gully, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200-207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Great Gully, <a href="#Page_194">194-199</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Wastwater, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190-207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seathwaite Fell, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seatoller, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seatree, Mr. George, quoted, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">384</span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Sentry-box,’ the, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sergeant Crag Gully, <a href="#Page_288">288-290</a>, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shamrock, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329-330</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Buttress, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Chimney, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264-265</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Gully, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261-264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Sheep Walk,’ the, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shoulthwaite, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skew Ghyll, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skiddaw, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slab and Notch Route, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267-268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slack, Aaron, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sledgate, Moses’, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slingsby’s Chimney, Scawfell, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Crack, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sloan, Dr. J. S., <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smuggler’s Chimney, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Retreat, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Snow, Heavy, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">South-east Gully, Great End, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104-111</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Split Block,’ <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spout Head, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sprinkling Tarn, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stack Ghyll, <a href="#Page_348">348-349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stake Pass, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stand, Broad, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32-37</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Steep Ghyll, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Step, Collie’s, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stickle, Pike of, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Tarn, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stirrup Crag, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Rope, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Stomach Traverse,’ <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stones, Hollow, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stony Gully, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strands, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Strid,’ the, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Styhead Pass, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Tarn, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sugarloaf, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Switzerland, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sylvan Chimney, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">T</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tarn Crag, Easedale, <a href="#Page_365">365</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taylor, Dr. J. H., <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennis Court Ledge, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thompson, Mr. P. A., <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thornythwaite Fell, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Thumbs Down,’ <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thunacar Knott, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tin Box on Pinnacle, <a href="#Page_72">72</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tom Blue, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tongue, Brown, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Toreador Gully, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Traverse, Gable Crag, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Hand, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Pelmo, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Pendlebury, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘True Up,’ <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">U</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ullswater, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Upper Eskdale, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Kern Knotts, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">W</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walker’s Gully, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295-304</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328-330</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warn Gill, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347-348</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warnscale Gullies, <a href="#Page_345">345-349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wastdale Church, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Climbing-book, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Head, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wastwater, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Screes, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190-207</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waterfall, Great, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">West Chimney, Kern Knotts, <a href="#Page_187">187-189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Climb, Pillar Rock, <a href="#Page_269">269-271</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Jordan Crack, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Jordan Gully, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Wall Climb, <a href="#Page_313">313-314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Westmorland Brothers, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Cairn, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Crag, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Mr. Horace, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wetherlam, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">White Napes, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Williamson, Mr. C. N., quoted, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Willink’s Illustrations, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wind Gap, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="p4">”</span> Yatt (Windy Gap), <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Windermere, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Window,’ the (Moss Ghyll), <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woodhouse, Messrs., <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_370">370</a>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a>, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Y</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yatt, Wind, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yewbarrow, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Z</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Zinal Rothhorn, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">385</span></li></ul>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="table">
-<h2 class="xx-large">WASTWATER HOTEL,<br />
-
-<span class="x-large">WASDALE HEAD, CUMBERLAND.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p>This HOTEL is charmingly situated at the head of
-Wastwater Lake, and is the chief centre of Cumberland
-Climbing&mdash;the Pillar Rock, Great Gable, Great End, Scafell
-and the Pikes, all being within an easy walk.</p>
-
-<p>The arrangements of the Hotel have been made specially
-to suit the requirements of Climbers and Tourists.</p>
-
-<p class="caption">A First-Class DAUPHINE GUIDE and CLIMBER
-has been engaged, who will conduct Climbers on the various Climbs in the
-District at a Moderate Charge.</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<h3>SMOKE AND BILLIARD ROOMS.</h3>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="caption">Conveyances can be sent to Seascale Stations to meet Visitors,
-if so desired.</p>
-
-<p class="author">
-J. RITSON WHITING, Proprietor.</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="table">
-<span class="smcap tcell">Terms on Application.</span>
-<span class="tcell"><span class="smcap">Letters</span> <i>via</i> <span class="smcap">Carnforth</span>.</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="caption"><i>Agent for Beale’s (Buckingham’s) Celebrated Three-Strand Alpine Rope&mdash;60,
-80, 100 feet lengths always in Stock; also for Simond’s Ice-Axes.</i></p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p>ALSO AT&mdash;</p>
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">Rowhead Temperance Hotel,<br />
-
-<span class="x-large">WASDALE HEAD.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="caption">(Three Minutes’ Walk from the <span class="smcap">Wastwater Hotel</span>.)</p>
-
-<p class="caption">Beautifully situated at the foot of Kirkfell.</p>
-
-<p class="caption">RE-FURNISHED THROUGHOUT.</p>
-
-<p class="caption large">CLIMBING PARTIES SPECIALLY CATERED FOR.</p>
-
-<p class="table">
-<span class="tcell">Three Sitting-rooms.</span>
-<span class="tcell">Eight Large Bedrooms.</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="caption"><span class="smcap">Terms on Application.</span></p>
-
-<p class="author">
-J. RITSON WHITING, Proprietor.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">386</span></p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="table">
-<h2 class="xx-large">SUN HOTEL,<br />
-
-<span class="large">CONISTON.</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium">(Quarters of the Fell and Rock-Climbing Club.)</span></h2>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<table id="sun">
-<caption>TARIFF.</caption>
- <tr>
- <th />
- <th>S.</th>
- <th>D.</th>
- <th>S.</th>
- <th>D.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Breakfast</td>
- <td>1</td>
- <td>6</td>
- <td>2</td>
- <td>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Luncheon</td>
- <td>1</td>
- <td>9</td>
- <td>3</td>
- <td>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dinner</td>
- <td>2</td>
- <td>0</td>
- <td>3</td>
- <td>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Teas</td>
- <td>0</td>
- <td>6</td>
- <td>2</td>
- <td>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Bedrooms (Single)</td>
- <td>2</td>
- <td>0</td>
- <td>3</td>
- <td>0</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Bedrooms (Double)</td>
- <td>3</td>
- <td>6</td>
- <td>4</td>
- <td>6</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="table w100">
-<span class="trow">HOT AND COLD BATHS.</span><br />
-<span class="trow tdc">PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SITTING-ROOMS.</span><br />
-<span class="trow tdr">SEPARATE DRAWING-ROOM FOR LADIES.</span></p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<h3>T. SATTERTHWAITE, Proprietor.</h3>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">LODORE HOTEL, Borrowdale,<br />
-
-<span class="large">KESWICK.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/r_0002.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p>This HOTEL is close to the Lake and surrounded by
-Beautiful Scenery&mdash;Quiet, and a Good Centre for Walking and
-Climbing.</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="copy">Electric Launches on the Lake. Garage. Telephone No. 2 G.P.O.</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="author">
-J. S. HARKER, Proprietor.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">387</span></p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="table">
-<h2><span class="xx-large">JAEGER</span><br />
-
-<span class="x-large">PURE WOOL<br />
-
-Complete Outfits in Pure<br />
-Wool for Climbers.</span></h2>
-
-<p class="small table figleft">
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell bbox">
- <i>Alpine Outfits<br />
- a Specialty.</i>
- </span>
- </span>
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell bbox">
- Shirts,<br />
- Spencers,<br />
- Sweaters,<br />
- Alpine Mitts,<br />
- Puttees,<br />
- Camel-hair<br />
- Sleeping Bags,<br />
- etc.<br />
- </span>
- </span>
- <span class="trow">
- <span class="tcell bbox">
- Illustrated Price List<br />
- Post Free.<br />
- </span>
- </span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">JAEGER PURE WOOL
-WEAR</span> is never oppressive,
-while always protecting
-from chill. Expert
-Athletes, of both sexes,
-know from experience that
-it is the most suitable
-covering, and the wide
-World knows the JAEGER
-Name and Trade Mark as
-guarantees of Pure Wool,
-High Quality and Good
-Value.</p>
-
-<table class="left">
-<tr>
-<td>LONDON&mdash;</td>
-<td>126 Regent Street, W.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td />
-<td>456 Strand, Charing Cross, W.C.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td />
-<td>30 Sloane Street, S.W.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td />
-<td>102 Kensington High Street, W.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td />
-<td>115 Victoria Street, S.W. (close to A. &amp; N. Stores).</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td />
-<td>85 and 86 Cheapside, E.C.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2">MANCHESTER&mdash;18 King Street, and 10 Princes Street.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2">LIVERPOOL&mdash;58 Church Street, and 4 Castle Street.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="copy"><i>Address in other towns sent on application.</i>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">388</span></p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="table">
-<h2><span class="xx-large">H. HARDEN,</span><br />
-
-PRACTICAL ALPINE BOOTMAKER.</h2>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="caption"><i>Boots made from an old one as pattern and nailed complete
-with best small and large Alpine Nails, Swiss Pattern.</i></p>
-
-<p class="figcenter">Our Boots are already well known and used by most Expert Mountaineers.<br />
-
-<img src="images/r_0004.jpg" alt="" /><br />
-
-Boots Ready in Stock, Nailed and Complete, for Immediate Delivery.</p>
-
-<h3>PRICES ON APPLICATION.</h3>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<h2><span class="smcap">St. John Street</span>,
-KESWICK, CUMBERLAND.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">389</span></h2></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="table">
-<h2><span class="xx-large">BURBERRY</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">WEATHERPROOF CLIMBING KIT</span></h2>
-
-<p class="figright"><img src="images/r_0005.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p>CLIMBERS REALISE
-the vital importance of
-clothing that meets the
-exigencies of this strenuous
-pastime, and agree that
-BURBERRY successfully
-solves the problem of the
-most healthful, comfortable,
-and serviceable
-equipment.</p>
-
-<p>BURBERRY MATERIALS
-are especially woven
-and scientifically weather-proofed
-by Burberry processes
-for the set purposes
-of:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Affording natural
-warmth by diverting
-cold winds.</p>
-
-<p>Preventing penetration
-by rain, sleet
-or snow.</p>
-
-<p>Maintaining normal
-temperature under
-the most
-divergent conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Combining ability
-to withstand the
-rough wear and
-tear of climbing
-with remarkable
-light weight.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>BROCHURE “Y”
-clearly sets forth how all these are accomplished.
-A copy will be sent on
-request with patterns of cloths made
-especially for climbers.</p>
-
-<p class="xx-large figleft">BURBERRYS</p>
-
-<p>The Haymarket, S.W., LONDON;
-10 Boulevard Malesherbes, PARIS;
-Basingstoke; and Agents in Provincial Towns.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">390</span></p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 class="xx-large">ARTHUR BEALE,<br />
-
-<span class="large">Late JOHN BUCKINGHAM,<br />
-
-194 SHAFTESBURY AVENUE, LONDON, W.C.</span><br />
-
-<span class="copy">IS THE ONLY MAKER OF THE CELEBRATED</span><br />
-
-<span class="xx-large">ALPINE CLUB ROPE,</span><br />
-
-<span class="copy">WHICH IS ALMOST EXCLUSIVELY EMPLOYED</span></h2>
-
-<p>By the <b>Leading Mountaineers</b> of the time. It is made of the Best
-Manilla Hemp, and the new Rope now being made, which from tests taken
-(Admiralty proof) is of a much greater breaking strain than formerly, is marked
-by three red worsted threads, one in the centre of each strand to distinguish it
-from others on the market, and not one thread only in the centre of the Rope
-as heretofore (see the Report of the Special Committee on Ropes, &amp;c., in
-Vol. I., No. 7, of the <i>Alpine Journal</i>). Each length is tied with Red Tape
-bearing my Name.</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><i>BEWARE OF FRAUDULENT IMITATIONS.</i></p>
-
-<h3>ARTHUR BEALE (late <span class="smcap">John Buckingham</span>),<br />
-
-194 Shaftesbury Avenue, London, W.C.<br />
-
-ICE AXES by English and Foreign Makers kept in Stock.</h3>
-
-<p class="table">
-<span class="tcell"><span class="smcap">Rücksacks, Belts, Slings</span>, &amp;c.</span>
-<span class="tcell"><span class="smcap">Price Lists on Application.</span></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><i>Diploma awarded for Alpine Rope at the Bergen Sports Exhibition 1910.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="table">
-<h2><span class="xx-large">JAMES S. CARTER</span></h2>
-
-<p class="caption x-large"><i>The Alpine Bootmaker</i>,<br />
-
-16 South Molton Street (First Floor),<br />
-
-LONDON, W.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft">
-<img src="images/r_0006.jpg" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">45/-</p></div>
-
-<div class="table">
-<p class="caption x-large">Specialist in Boots for<br />
-<b>Climbing &amp; Touring</b><br />
-For over 50 years Maker to the</p>
-
-<p>ENGLISH,<br />
-<span class="i4">CONTINENTAL,</span><br />
-CANADIAN and CAPE<br />
-<span class="i4">ALPINE and CLIMBING CLUBS.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="copy"><i>Illustrated Price List on application.</i>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">391</span></p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="figleft"><img src="images/r_0007a.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="figright"><img src="images/r_0007f.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="figright"><img src="images/r_0007b.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="caption"><i>Es’ablished nearly a Century.</i><br />
-
-<span class="large">HILL &amp; SON,</span><br />
-
-4 Haymarket, London, S.W.<br />
-
-<span class="copy">(<i>Opposite His Majesty’s Theatre.</i>)</span><br />
-
-London Manufacturers of Sporting, Table, Toilet<br />
-and Pocket Cutlery, Alpine Ice Axes and<br />
-Accessories, Skates and Fine Steel Work.</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><b>H. &amp; S.</b> have a very Interesting Stock of Mechanical Contrivances and
-Useful Inventions for Everyday Wants.</p>
-
-<p class="caption">Utilities of all Sorts for Travellers and the Household.</p>
-
-<p class="caption">
-<span class="small">Specialities for the Garden.
-<span class="i4">Jewellery, Silverware and Electroplate.</span></span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="caption">ALL LISTS FREE.</p>
-
-<p class="caption"><i>Alpine Ice Axes&mdash;Various Patterns for Ladies and Gentlemen.</i></p>
-
-<div class="table">
-<div class="tcell">
-<p>Rücksacks. Several Patterns,
-With and Without
-Outside Pockets.
-Of Foreign Manufacture,
-from 12s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p>London Make,
-17s., 18s. 6d.
-and 22s.</p>
-</div>
-<div class="tcell">
-<p>Alpine Expedition Stick,
-as Illustration,
-with Steel Head and Point,
-and Leather Head Case,
-23s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p>Ash, Hazel, and Oak
-Mountaineering Sticks,
-with Steel Points,
-9s. 6d., 10s., 11s.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="table">
-<span class="tcell"><img src="images/r_0007c.jpg" alt="" /></span>
-
-<span class="tcell"><img src="images/r_0007d.jpg" alt="" /></span>
-
-<span class="tcell"><img src="images/r_0007e.jpg" alt="" /></span>
-</p>
-<p><span class="smcap">Boot Furniture.</span>&mdash;No. 6, Mummery Spikes, 1s. 3d. per dozen. Nos. 1, 2, 5, 6d. per
-dozen. Swiss Side and Centre Nails, 1s. 6d. per 100. Larger Side Nails, 4s. 6d.
-per 100. <i>Postages extra.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2><i>LANGDALE.</i><br />
-
-<span class="xx-large">Dungeon Ghyll New Hotel</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium">(Quarters of the Fell and Rock-Climbing Club).</span></h2>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="table">
-<span class="tcell">
- <i>The Hill Climbers’ Paradise.</i>
-</span>
-<span class="tcell">
- <i>In the Heart of Lakeland.</i>
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="table"><i>The Place for a Restful Holiday.</i></p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="large table">PERFECT BATHROOMS AND SANITARY ARRANGEMENTS.</p>
-
-<p class="table">NEWLY FURNISHED THROUGHOUT.</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="table">
-<span class="tcell">
-<i>Postal Address</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Ambleside</span>.
-</span>
-<span class="tcell">
-<i>Telegraphic Address</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Elterwater</span>.
-</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="table x-large">J. COWPERTHWAITE</p>
-
-<p class="copy">(<i>Of the Prince of Wales and Rothay Hotels, Grasmere</i>), <span class="smcap">Proprietor</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="author">
-J. FOTHERGILL, Manager.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">392</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>MOUNTAIN <small>AND</small> CLIMBING
-PHOTOGRAPHS.</h2>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="drop"><span class="uppercase">Our</span> Unique and Well-known Series now include
-the following Districts and their Surrounding
-Peaks: Zermatt, Chamonix, Grindelwald, Arolla,
-<b>Pontresina</b>, Oetzthal and Stubaithal; also the
-<b>Dauphiny Alps, the Dolomites and the
-Grand Combin</b>.</p>
-
-<p>The British Series include the English Lake
-District, North Wales, Scotland, and Skye.</p>
-
-<p>In Platinotype, 8&frac14; by 6&frac14; ins., at 1s. 6d. each;
-Set of 50, £3, 10s. Other Sizes also, up to
-40 by 30 ins., in Carbon and Platinotype.</p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="caption">We Specialise in High-Class</p>
-
-<p class="caption x-large">LANTERN SLIDES</p>
-
-<p class="caption">of any Subject in the above Series.</p>
-
-<p class="caption">Price, <b>2s.</b> each; Set of <b>50</b>, <b>£4, 10s.</b></p>
-
-<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/hr.jpg" alt="" /></p>
-
-<p class="caption"><i>Lists and Full Particulars from</i></p>
-
-<h2>Messrs. G. P. ABRAHAM &amp; SONS,<br />
-
-<span class="large">Victoria Buildings,</span><br />
-
-KESWICK.</h2>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">1</a>
-Not in Jones’ List.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">2</a>
-In the Wastdale Climbers’ Book.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h3>Transcriber’s Note:</h3>
-
-<p>Obvious printer errors corrected silently.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROCK-CLIMBING IN THE ENGLISH LAKE DISTRICT***</p>
-<p>******* This file should be named 56043-h.htm or 56043-h.zip *******</p>
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