Fine and flying on the Welsh 3000s
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
3M ago
There is a vicious simplicity to the snaking line of summits that make up the Welsh 3000s. This is hallowed turf and rocks: Crib Goch, the roof of a nation, the rock-desert of the Glyders, Tryfan, the quiet, high mountains of the Carneddau. It is a classic: an undertaking that is long and arduous, but eminently... Read More ..read more
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‘A lifetime aggregate of aptitude and commitment’ – how to complete the Frog Graham Round
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
7M ago
When Gary Tompsett became only the second person to complete Ramsay’s Round in winter he put his trust in a ‘lifetime aggregate of aptitude and commitment’. (His faith was well judged: his solo, unsupported time of 33 hours was not eclipsed for five years.) I was a much younger man when I first read Tompsett’s... Read More ..read more
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Running for sustainability: finding stuff-free
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
10M ago
‘The revolution won’t have an online entry fee, plastic medal or pointless goodie bag.’ I come back to Ian Campbell’s words time and time again. (Campbell once ran up Allermuir, a 493-metre hill in the Pentlands, 29 times over three days, clocking a cumulative ascent that would have seen him summit Everest from sea level.)... Read More ..read more
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A hill a day, every day, for 31 days
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
2y ago
An aspiration for March: summit a different hill every day, travelling on foot, by bike or on public transport, but never by car. ‘Why can’t we just be there?’ My daughter stared impatiently at me, returning my gaze in the car mirror. We were on the M6, somewhere between Edinburgh and Chester. It was a... Read More ..read more
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The curse of the split-second
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
3y ago
How strange that human lives – the best part of one-hundred years if we are fortunate – are shaped by the merest fragments of time. And yet so many moments go by meaning nothing, carrying utter irrelevance. And then there are others when time conspires against you in a way that seems ruthlessly pre-determined. I... Read More ..read more
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The curse of the split-second
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
3y ago
How strange that human lives – the best part of one-hundred years if we are fortunate – are shaped by the merest fragments of time. And yet so many moments go by meaning nothing, carrying utter irrelevance. And then there are others when time conspires against you in a way that seems ruthlessly pre-determined. I... Read More ..read more
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Everest on Allermuir: we were there
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
3y ago
It is a simple idea: take a hill or mountain of personal significance and see how many times you can climb it in 24 hours. For Christopher O’Brien, the hill in question was Allermuir, a 493-metre summit in the northern Pentlands overlooking Edinburgh. Mad? Certainly not. You will not find incredulity here. Hill and ultra... Read More ..read more
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2020 and the Rigby Round: the year of the almost-FKT
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
3y ago
I am the keeper of the records for the Rigby Round, an entirely self-appointed role and inherited from no-one, but inspired by the desire to maintain a list of those people who succeed in the dogged task of running a continuous loop of 19 Munros of the Cairngorms, ideally within 24 hours. The Rigby Round... Read More ..read more
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Round of the Pentland Hills: conceiving, planning, doing
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
4y ago
It was not a question of whether there should be a hill running round in the Pentland Hills – such an idea has been mulled over by a number of runners over the years. But what hills? Without obvious height classifications like ‘Munro’, Corbett’ or even ‘Donald’ in the Pentlands, you have to work harder... Read More ..read more
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They are still there
Heights of Madness
by heightsofmadness
4y ago
I went to the hills today. It was my ‘usual’: from my front door, two miles of pavement, park and alleyway, before reaching the barricaded car park at Swanston at the foot of the Pentlands. I looked up: the ‘T’ wood that climbs with the contours of the hillside, the crags and scree of Caerketton,... Read More ..read more
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