Hill: Larriston Fell
Type: Sub2k
Height: 514m
A short but beautiful early morning drive through lovely Border countryside took me to the start of my ramble.
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Lots of signs to put you off at the start |
As I booted up under the trees the sound of the birds spring calling was amazing. I switched on the bird app and in the 5 minutes it took me to gear up it recognised 8 species, I wont say how many I got!
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Reached the farm and got my 1st sighting of the mast |
This is definitely a walk of two halves. The first section is a long straightforward walk up a hard packed surface up to a communications mast.
The forecast had been for the warmest day of the year and I had geared up for this, lightly.
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The long track heading away from the mast |
The lower section would have been more of a trudge but I had my binos and the bird app so was stopping regularly to listen and spot. Really enjoyable.
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Mast back in sight again |
But as I got higher the wind was rising along with the temperatures dropping by the time I reached the mast it was wild. Back to winter without the snow.
The other half of the walk was across rough moorland. I had read reports but had not fully appreciated just how bad the going was going to be. About a kilometre to the top nae problem I thought, think again old man.
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Slight track found beside the mast |
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Soon becomes this stuff |
A track starts on the left side of the mast but quickly disappeared as I headed towards a wall in the distance. I have walked many a poor terrain but the section between the mast and the top was easily up there with the worst ever. Closely packed tussocks, heather, boggy sections. All expected but not the depth I was plunging into with each step. At times I felt I was walking in deep snow with huge lifting steps.
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Big cairn on left which I thought was the high point. Actual high point cairn on the right |
I could see the pair of cairns on the ridge ahead, I thought that the worst was over but if anything this next section was the poorest walking of the ramble.
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View from big cairn over to Blackwood Hill |
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The smaller cairn is clearly higher from this viewpoint |
Half way across I stumbled on a foot wide track which gleefully I followed for a while before deciding it was not going where I wanted. So roughed it across to the larger cairn which from afar looked the highest point. This measured 512m but the smaller one looked higher from this perspective.
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View from summit back to mast |
With a sigh onwards I went and indeed it was slightly higher, measuring on both watch & Garmin GPS at 514m. There is another top with a trig marked on the map at 512m but from here it was definitely lower. As trigs are not always the high point I was not inclined to bash more crap terrain. The views were good but not great thanks to the hazy conditions. However one view across to England takes in part of the massive Kielder Forest with I presume Kielder Water glistening in the distance.
I was starting to get cold so I made my way back to the mast. Finding and losing narrow tracks all the time I was glad to get to it.
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After the mast the track might be boring but better than that stuff |
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Zoomed in to Blackwood Hill |
Then a straightforward ramble back down the track listening to the birdies and looking across to my next objective Blackwood Hill. From here, seeing the deforestation meant my original planning was out the window.
That's for an hours time as i slowed down and just enjoyed the lower level warmth for a little while.
Straightforward but still a wee toughie that deserves its Sub2k tick.
Ascent: 468m
Distance: 11.2km
Time: 2.46
Wildlife: Raven; Buzzard; Blackbird; Robin; Dunnock; Coal Tit; Blue Tit; Redwing; Chaffinch; Nuthatch; Pied Wagtail; Green Woodpecker; Grey Wagtail; Goldfinch; Wren; Goldcrest; Meadow Pipit; Skylark; Stonechat; Pheasant;
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