Stuart Lade - 116685

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Winter Climbing Record

Details

Date : 26/01/2013

Grade : IV

Grade : 4

Style : Alternate Lead

Type : Mixed Climbing

Weather : Partially cloudy

Wind : Moderate wind

Camping Type :

Nights Camping : 0

Crag : Creagan Coire Cha-No

Climb : Anvil Gully

Flagged :

Description

Soloed up gully to the left to have a look at an unclimbed hanging chimney. Managed about 4m or so before retreating! Snow not very firm and more like drytooling. Finished up Anvil Gully.
Climbed with James Smith.

Area : Cairngorm: Northern Corries, Hell's Lum, Creagan Coire Cha-no, Lurcher's Crag and Outliers

This Area includes some of the most accessible (and some of the hardest) winter climbs in Scotland. Coire an t-Sneachda has an excellent variety of winter climbs, many in the lower to middle grades, while Coire an Lochain hosts classics of a range of grades and some extremely demanding test-pieces. This Area also includes the very accessible Creagan Coire Cha-no, Lurcher's Crag in the northern Lairig Ghru, and the training bluffs of the Chalamain Gap. Also included here are the cliffs of the northern side of the Loch A'an basin such as Hell's Lum, Stag Rocks and Stac an Fharaidh (as they are on the same general massif as Cairngorm), while cliffs on the southern side of Loch A'an are in the Ben Macdui, Carn Etchachan and Shelter Stone Crag Area of DLOG. The range's former name is Am Monadh Ruadh (the red hills), distinguishing them from Am Monadh Liath (the grey hills) to the west of the River Spey.

Location

Marker
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