We met up with my friend,Lyndsey (who is in the army as a Mountain Ranger Instructure).
We've been climbing together for about 8 or 9 years now.
I have wanted to do Suilven ever since I saw that it has this huge stone wall that has no
reason to exist up there'
You can see a portion of it in the upper left. That slope is about 40 degrees. (if not more)
Suilven looms like the monolith it is.
We carried full packs for 2 hours to the Suileag Bothy. Which was to be our base.
After 30 minutes trying to decide if we wanted to hit the peak now. Or in the morning,
which would mean that have we'd walk out the same day.
Go now was what we decided.
Getting closer we could see the way up: That gully in the center for this shot.
And it is as it looks:Straight up
The summit is still way to the right in this shot.
half way up.
The Wall.
It extents down to the left about 30 meters.
On the right about the same:Only it has a corner wall on it'
My (every uneducated) guess is that those rectangular blocks
weigh between 400 and 500 kgs.
So who? And why?
Passed the wall there is a path and some scrambling to reach the top.
Which is way beyond the point in this shot.
Jeanni.Me. Lyndsey
Lyndsey and her 3 dogs heading back the way we came after
passing through the wall.
By the time we got back to the Bothy.
7 hours had gone bye.
We all slept very well.
=
Live every day like you will die to-marrow.
For some day that will be true.
Nancyann, jaysway, NWtrax, RichP, mike, Geezer
Live every day like you will die to-marrow.
For some day that will be true.
Yes.
The walk into the Bothy is along a road of sorts.
We felt fortunate that the Bothy was empty.
We were also glad that the snow wasn't an ice sheet.
Live every day like you will die to-marrow.
For some day that will be true.
0
Live every day like you will die to-marrow.
For some day that will be true.
It's called "the Destitution Wall", explained in the annotation to this Flickr set. A 19th century "make work" project for the poor. Didn't matter if it served a useful purpose; pure charity was considered morally corrupting. Extended article here: Highland potato famine. Apparently Ireland wasn't the only place that had one.
"There are yahoos out there. It’s why we can’t have nice things." - Tom Mahood
mike
"There are yahoos out there. It’s why we can’t have nice things." - Tom Mahood
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