After the pre Easter snow storm we were determined to take
some days out on the hill, after a series of ‘Mondays bad, can’t do Wed, but
can do...’ texts. We settled on 3 of us managing to get the Thurs 28th
before Easter. The real problem was actually getting to North
Wales . Over the weekend of 23/24th the A5 was blocked
with snow at Ogwen. Llangollen remained closed until the Mon/Tues. Not wanting
to add to the emergency services statistic it did seem prudent to wait until
later in the week, time for the snow to consolidate a tad and the possibilities
of further improvements in the weather.
Overnight feedback from the ‘Winter Condition’ thread on the
UKC forum, still had Llanberis pass closed and chocked full of snow until the
Thursday morning. Weaving thru the collateral in Llangollen, some of the snow
is banked so high its going to take weeks to pool.
Met Office and MWIS had suggested that there was a potential
avalanche risk and a chance of windslab.
One more time then, let’s go for A then B then C, see how
the day goes. The road down to Ogwen cottage is not too bad; a couple of the
lay-bys have been partially cleared. Not many folks here yet today but had we
left it 10min later then no space. Chugging up to Cwn Clyd we meet a couple of
chaps on their way down. They were a bit concerned about the wind slab so
backed off any gullies. We press on… ahh its not so bad. Good, no tracks, so
nobody has been up this morning or maybe since the day before, always nice
treading new snow even if it’s old ground.
Heading round the East rim of Llyn
Clyd, the snow is blinding and its not even full sun yet. Some deep drifts on
the approach to the gully and is heavy going, the stream is around here
somewhere, ahh sh…yeah there it is, err chaps don’t step here ok. As the angle
increases around 700m the snow firms up slightly. OK, well the conditions look
ok at the moment, apart from a 25mm crust the stuffs pretty good underneath, no
significant slab and this is almost a North facing gully so it should have
stayed cold. It’s a grade 1 but we’re slightly cautious due the severity of the
storm the weekend before so decide to rope up from here. Deej sets off, me in
the middle, Andy on the end.
The first 100m gained are good and we get to the
junction where A, B split. Looking back down the tracks it hard to
believe were in North Wales , a pure White
carpet below. After a brief look at the state of each route we go for A Gully.
There is a bit of unstable slab and we need to cross it to get to the right
hand wall of the gully. After another 20m, things aren’t looking so solid. Ok
let’s go up the dividing spur of rock at last we can get some protection in.
Sounds like a plan. Deej soon finds its pretty nasty unconsolidated powder. A
Straight forward Grade 1 raised its game to a 2 which feels like a 3 to us. Over the
next 50m or so of mixed ground, we put in 4!!! short, but highly entertaining
pitches. A couple of good flakes provide bomber-ish belays but the foot
placements are shite to say the least. Andy been hanging on his axes for a few
min for balance and now his hands are cold, after bashing away the ice from
around a rump of rock I recon I can get a reasonable foot stance to bring him
up. “Oi Andy, your on belay, get goin mate”. A big chunk of rock that made my
stance look good now decides it wants to potter off down the gully. “Andy, get
your head dow…sorry mate” .
Deej is just some 6 or so metres tucked in above
me, his last pitch will take him up over what cornice there maybe. Andy comes
up to my previous stance and clips in. The winds picking up near the top and we
loose the sun, brrr Need to give Deej enough rope to get him well clear of the
cornice, so Andy bales out some more rope to me. Deej starts off, although the
last 10m or so are the steepest, the ice is now hard front point heaven. I
watch his poons disappear over the top. Brrrr, now for the cold wait as Deej
sets up and axe anchor and bucket seat. A few tugs on the rope and I’m off up…
wow nice stuff. It’s so good to top out into a blazing sun. Dam hard to tell
how big the cornice is today, the snow near the edge is hard and deep so I go
way back off the lip and set up a secondary anchor on some protruding rock. All
good, Andy starts on up allowing Deej a chance to get some pics.
It’s taken longer than expected but everyone’s safe and we
have had a great day. Although it’s a route know doubt been done before we
decide to call it ‘Ayit Gully’.
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