Outward Bound celebrates 70 years of coldplay!

    Next year,that great international outdoor institution Outward Bound with its roots in Mid-Wales celebrates 70 years of
    teaching personal development through the wilderness experience. Students are taught through a range of outdoor activities which promotes team building, survival techniques in a wild environment and the development of outdoor skills.

    More than one million young people have passed through The Outward Bound Trust since the first centre was established in Aberdovey, Mid Wales in 1941. To mark its 70th anniversary next year, the chief executive, Nick Barrett, is launching a campaign for former students to share their experiences, to tell a "million stories of personal growth, adventure and fulfillment".
    The trust was founded by the educationalist Kurt Hahn and shipping-line owner Lawrence Holt during the Second World War to help young seamen cope with the trauma of shipwreck. The first senior warden was Capt JF "Freddy" Fuller, a veteran of two torpedo attacks and 35 days aboard a life-raft in the Atlantic. 
    Outward Bound grew out of Hahn's work in the development of the Gordonstoun school and what is now known as the Duke of Edinburgh award scheme. Outward Bound's founding mission was to give young seamen the ability to survive harsh conditions at sea by teaching confidence, tenacity, perseverance and to build experience of harsh conditions.

    The name Outward Bound derives from a nautical expression that refers to the moment a ship leaves the pier. This is signified by Outward Bound's use of the nautical flag, the Blue Peter(a white rectangle inside a blue rectangle)

    In The Independent today,Jonathan Brown offers a personal account of a weekend of activities with children from an inner city school in Manchester, based at the organisation's Ullswater school.

    http://z6.co.uk/g37dtv

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Outward Bound celebrates 70 years of coldplay!


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Wind Farms: A dirty business ?

    The beautiful saddleback mountain of Wern Ddu before and after its Germanic makeover!

    Nothing divides people who consider themselves as 'Green' more than the contentious issue of wind farm construction. More especially in environmentally sensitive areas such as our uplands, coastlines and islands. It's interesting to consider the actual politics surrounding wind farms. Particularly with regard to the planning and appeal process. The UK government and the devolved administrations have been enthusiastic in giving their backing to the energy corporations who have gathered like Garadine swine around a feeding trough the take advantage of the governments largesse and it's appropriate to point out that the vast majority of these companies are based in Europe and the US. Now it’s fair to say with regard to this government that a lot of its policies appear to have been conceived on the back of a fag packet in the local pub. As far as its renewable energy policy is concerned; On the back of a fag packet in the pub after a large brown envelope has been passed under the table by a grateful energy company executive!
    Take just one development which typifies the governments’ approach to planning applications and it’s slavish devotion to big business and PR spin, the Wern Ddu wind farm which has just been constructed in the last month in NE Wales between Ruthin and Corwen. This development ostensibly by a locally based North Wales developer called Tegni Cymru Cyf is not quite what it appears to be. Looking at the accounts of Tegni its clear that even I have more money in my bank account than this company and I'm certainly not a wealthy man ! How does a tiny company with absolutely NO financial credibility build multi million pound wind farms and the extensive infrastructure ??? Well that bit is quite easy to explain. Tegni is a convenient front for the giant ‘Germania Windpark’  company. Having a Welsh front is useful of course when pushing through planning applications in North and Mid Wales or pursuing appeals.
    The application for four turbines on the beautiful 1500’ saddleback mountain of Wern Ddu was overwhelmingly opposed by local people when the application was made by the company. Every local community council opposed the scheme. Ditto the planning officer who recommended rejection. The Denbighshire Planning Committee did indeed reject the application by 19 votes to 1 and that- if you believe in local democracy- would be that. Not so.! The German developer appealed to the Welsh Assembly, The Assembly sent an UNELECTED civil servant down from Cardiff in the manner of a feudal king who sends one of his bailiffs to read the riot act to the restless peasants in the provinces. Not surprisingly this unelected lickspittle  did his master’s bidding and upheld the appeal on behalf of the developer; Presumably after being wined and dined beforehand.

    That, I’m afraid, is how the Wind Energy companies play these applications. By attempting to ‘buy’ local politicians through inducements which range from entertaining planning committee members in a local restaurant to promises of financial support for local community projects.  Inevitably these projects which offer a mere pittance in relation to the vast profits they make will be guided and controlled by the company itself. So let’s run that by you again. An UNELECTED civil servant-Stuart Wild…let’s name and shame!.... overturned the decision of the locally elected planners who had overwhelmingly rejected the development. Yes I know. .It sounds like the way the planning system works in some Central American banana republic but it really is how things are in the UK 2010.
    The government has announced that it will in future circumvent the local planning processes of major developments by letting civil servants and apparatchiks deal with the planning applications at the DTI in London. This would include a huge development near Wern Ddu within Clocaenog Forest. The Spanish company RWE nPower have been given the green light for the creation of a super-farm...actually lets call a spade a spade-It's a massive power plant -which I'm told by my local member of parliament will see three quarters of Clocaenog Forest clear felled. The consequences of this will be a potentially devastating. A catastrophic impactation of the water table with the increased run off which will inevitably cause flooding in the market town of Ruthin which has already suffered damaging floods in the past few years. As if this isn’t bad enough the devestating effects on wildlife is of great concern to conservationists who fear the consequences of industrialisation of the forest.
    Apart from the common indigenous species which will have their habitat decimated such as Deer, Foxes, Badgers and birds of prey; rare species like Red Squirrels, Black Grouse and Pine Martens will be pushed to the edge of local extinction. But as Gordon Gecko might have said 'How can I make a lousy buck from a lousy Pine Marten!'
    And that really is what the 'Rush for wind' is all about...profits and easy profits at that given the way the government has skewed the market and suspended the economic laws of supply and demand to advantage its corporate chums in the energy industry. Wind Power would be dead in the water without this state manipulation of the market.
    Incidentally, The developers of Wern Ddu proudly boast that their four turbines will produce enough electricity for 4.500 homes. Yes....that really is Four and a Half thousand homes ! Abysmal and shameful as that stands it is nothing when you consider that onshore wind turbines operate at 30-40% capacity on average so for 4.500 homes read less than 2000 homes. I know...  pathetic isn't it given the huge degradation of the land and massive visual impact in an area of outstanding natural beauty. 'Like taking a Stanley knife to a painting by John Constable' to quote environmentalist Robert McFarlane.Then again, the currency of the wind industry is based on corruption and lies and hides behind public naivety and ignorance. The fact that it has the government in its pocket helps of course !

    * Since writing this piece, I learn that one of the Tegni directors has remarkably acquired a large part of the Wern Ddu site. Given the fact that the Germania Windpark company will almost certainly apply for planning permission to erect more turbines on this site and given the fact that landowners receive at least £6k per annum in ground rent for EACH turbine then someone has got themselves a nice little earner !

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Wind Farms: A dirty business ?


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Mountain off roaders targeted by campaign.

    The Llantysilio mountains of North East Wales have never been a popular destination for walkers who come to north Wales for their upland fix. Reaching no more than 1700', the undulating spine of heathery hills which contains the Dee valley to the east between the market towns of Llangollen and Corwen, offers no craggy features to speak of, or dramatic rock architecture which might capture the imagination. Sadly, the range's very gentleness and rolling mass has led it to suffer an all too common form of ecological vandalism. The blight of 4x4 off roaders but more seriously in this case; Motor Bike scramblers who have torn a great gaping wound across it's brow in the form of a wide rutted highway, 
    Now Denbighshire Countryside Services are urging walkers,riders and any low impact user of the range to report illegal activity to the police via a special hot line number.
    Burial chambers, hill forts and rare species are under threat from off-roaders churning up heather moorland. Now field Officer Nick Critchley has pleaded with lovers of the Llantysilio range to carry the number with them every time they venture onto the range.
    " We have a fantastic natural environment here which is under threat but we are fighting back.
    We are urging people who go out in our countryside to carry this number with them so they can blow the whistle on this illegal, dangerous and damaging menace.'
    The area covered by the project provides habitat for rare species like the black grouse as well as important grazing for sheep.
    Mr Critchley said Wales had lost 40% of heather moorland since World War II.
    He added: "On Llantysilio Mountains, illegal bikers have created a race track that is damaging the ramparts of an iron age hill fort at Moel y Gaer that was here before the Romans arrived, and the track crosses a bronze age burial mound that is over 4,000 years old."
    The scheme covers the Clwydian range area of outstanding natural beauty, the Horseshoe Pass and Llantysilio Mountain, part of the Ruabon/Llantysilio Mountains and Minera site of special scientific interest.
    It also includes the Berwyn and South Clwyd Mountains special area of conservation.
    The number campaign, featuring the phrase "don't leave home without it", is backed by North Wales Police, Countryside Council for Wales and Forestry Commission Wales. 
    The police telephone number is 0845 6071002 for English language callers or 0845 6071001 for Welsh language callers.

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Mountain off roaders targeted by campaign.


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The Purple House rises from the ashes

    Rigg Beck-better known as The Purple House- was a familiar sight to those passing over the Newlands Pass twixt Keswick and its environs and the Buttermere valley up until 2008. This imposing old clapperboard house originally built in 1881 as The Newlands Hotel, has at one time or another  accommodated quite a collection of illustrious visitors with Tenzing Norgay, Bob Hoskins,Ted Hughes and Doug Scott amongst those who have signed the guest book. However its purple period-metaphorically speaking- had long since gone and in the last two decades the house had gradually fallen into a state of disrepair.
    No one seems quite sure when Rigg Beck received its decorative purple makeover but one is for sure. This striking house with its Adams Family vibe certainly used to scare the be-jesus out of my youngsters when we regularly drove over to stay in Buttermere. More especially on a gloomy Friday night in winter! After falling into dereliction and becoming a target for vandals, The Purple House conveniently burned down in 2008. Now an impressive new structure is emerging from the ashes. Those viewing photo impressions of the new house will have their own view as to whether what is emerging improves on what went before? In its own way it is certainly as striking!
    http://riggbeck.org/

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The Purple House rises from the ashes


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Ed Grindley

    Photo: Ed Grindley climbing at Diabaig in 2009.Peter Duggan©
     
    As widely reported in the UK climbing media, Ed Grindley has passed away after suffering from an incurable brain tumour. Ed was born in England but is best known as a Scottish Climber, being based for many years in Argyll on the Scottish West coast. As a mountain guide and enthusiastic explorer of unexploited mountain crags, Ed recorded hundreds of first ascents however it was in the south west of England that he first made his mark. Frank Canning writing on a UK Climbing forum explained..
    Ed was one of the pioneering climbers in South West England between 1968 and 1971 when at Exeter University. He contributed over 40 new climbs, mostly in the VS/ HVS grades. He climbed harder starred routes seconding or through leading with Pat Littlejohn, such as E3 Cocytus at Ansteys Cove, the excellent HVS Sacrosanct on the Sanctuary Wall there and E2 Iconoclast at Babbacombe. In 1969 he accompanied Peter Biven and John Fowler on The Kraken; a 2-star sea traverse at Babbacombe at the height of the Torbay sea-traversing frenzy. Over the winter of 1970/71 he developed climbs at Berry Head Quarry with Beggar's Banquet E2, Paranoid E1 and the girdle Opus Dei E2 being among the starred routes.
    However Ed climbed all over the UK and on the continent despite being professionally based in Scotland

    An honorary member of The Climbers Club, Ed was the custodian of the club's Riasg hut close to his home at Roy Bridge. He was also a member of the Polldubh Club as well as being a guidebook contributor and writing for outdoor publications and journals.He authored the popular Winter Climbs on Ben Nevis and Glencoe.
    There will be a memorial gathering for Ed on the 20th February at The Moorings Hotel, Banavie, Fort William followed by a private cremation service.

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Ed Grindley


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It's the LLAMFF-ing season in North Wales !

    It's almost that time again. The 8th LLAMFF mountain film festival featuring some of the biggest names in the mountain creative arts...John Redhead, Stephen Venebles, Dave McCloud, Steve McClure et al. Set in the slate grey heart of Welsh climbing, Llanberis, the town is geared up to throwing open it's doors to what has become an ever increasing number of people from all over the world who will travel to Llanberis. LLAMFF mixes the accessible with the esoteric and provides a range of movies,speakers and exhibitions which will cater for all tastes. To quote the organisers......

    'LLAMFF, Llanberis Mountain Film Festival originated back in 2002 starting life as a bi-annual event, it has now stepped up a gear and become an annual one. LLAMFF dedicates itself to exploring mountain culture and inspiring adventure, through the medium of film, photography, literature and lectures. Its aim is to stimulate, invigorate and motivate during a long weekend of sensory bliss dedicated to the mountain environment and wild places in general. LLAMFF is one of the few film festivals where you can be in the mountains while at the event, it is also unique in the way it is not afraid to be eclectic and embrace the outdoor culture and enviroment as a whole, this helps to give it an edge that others seem to miss. Match this with the wide range of athletes, journalists, photographers, film makers and activists in the area and you have a unique recipe for a unique film festival.'

    LLAMFF TICKETS

    LLAMFF has a ticketing policy that allows you to watch or see what you want when you want in respect to capacity, it is a policy that has evolved over the life of the festival and has worked very well. We sell tickets to ‘sessions’; there are six sessions in the entire weekend:
    • Friday Evening: (1 session).
    • Saturday: (3 sessions): Morning, Afternoon, Evening.
    • Sunday: (2 sessions): Morning, Afternoon.

    There are three session lengths that can be bought, these are:

    • Full Weekend Pass (Adult or Family) – this gives you access to every session, all 6 for the entire weekend.
    • Three Session Pass – this gives you access to any three sessions during the weekend.
    • Single Session Pass – this gives you access to any single session.

    All access is subject to capacity; arrive early if you feel it will be oversubscribed.

    We also offer concession tickets these are available to people on Income Support, OAPs and Students. Advance concession tickets will be sold at the full advanced weekend price. A refund on the difference may be obtained at the festival reception on production of proof of concessionary entitlement, along with your booking reference number.

    Ticket purchases are subject to a £3 booking fee per transaction, that means if you buy 1 ticket or 10 you will be charged a £3 booking fee.

    Children are classed as 16 and under.

    The prices of tickets are as follows:

    Adult Full Weekend Pass £45.00
    Family Full Weekend Pass (2 Adults + 2 Children) £90.00
    Any Three Session Ticket £25.00
    Single Session Ticket £10.00
    Under 16 Full Weekend Pass £30.00
    Full Weekend Pass Concession £30.00
    LLAMFF Party Ticket £10.00

    'The' Party will be held at the Fricsan - Snowdon Inn on the Saturday night this year, which is situated at the foot of Llyn Padarn. As usual it will start to kick off around the time that the rest of the festival starts winding down for the evening. As for its duration, usually unknown but if your game you should see the sun rise on Sunday morning! It will be a limited access and a ticket only event.

    Tickets can be obtained through either of our partners, Joe Browns or V12 Outdoor, just click on one of the links below to buy your tickets now.

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It's the LLAMFF-ing season in North Wales !


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Another take on 'Rock Climbers in Action'

    Nice to see the excellent 'Those who Dared' blog run by Guardian and Observer Chief Librarian Richard Nelsson who is also the author of 'The Guardian's book of mountains' offering his own take on the Footless Crow feature, 'Rock Climber's in action in Snowdonia' Forty years on. Interesting to see those extra shots of the book itself and the Al Alvarez Observer feature as well reading Richard's take on this legendary tome.

    Those Who Dared: Rock Climbers in Action in Snowdonia

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Another take on 'Rock Climbers in Action'


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Gunfight at the Ka Corral

    Helyg showing the current car park to the right of the picture. The new car park will be on the hut side of the A5 on the open land in front of the right edge of the wooded area.

    Retiring Climbers Club president, Smiler Cuthbertson has thrown his weight behind the club's controversial plans to build a new car park at the historic Helyg Hut in Ogwen Valley, North Wales. The project has divided members and has become something of a peasant's revolt with the majority of committee members supporting the development and the majority of rank & file members opposing.
    The plans submitted to the National Park planning authority by the committee propose the construction of a new lay-by on the A5 with a new gated entrance to the club's grounds. A new driveway being bulldozed through the mixed woodland and bog with a circular car park being constructed to south.The project would involve heavy plant access and removal of boulders and earth and the felling of part of the mature coniferous woodland which remains one of the few wooded areas in the largely denuded Ogwen Valley.
    Temporary traffic lights would have to be installed on the busy A5 during part of the construction work.
    The original application was rejected by the planning authority but it is felt that the re-submitted proposals with modifications will be accepted by the National Park planning Committee.
    The current Helyg car park with it's garage-itself bigger than some climbing club huts-is situated on the opposite side of the A5 to the hut and in recent years has become somewhat overgrown and prone to flooding. Furthermore, access at the hut end of the car park is something of a dangerous manoeuvre; particularly in high summer when visibility is impaired and those exiting have to nose out into fast moving traffic. Critics of the scheme point out that this can easily be rectified by building a new access point at the far (south) end of the current car park and constructing a new walkway alongside the garage which would emerge opposite an old gated access point on the hut side of the A5.
    Given it's unique location at the heart of Ogwen Valley which itself is the historical heart of Welsh climbing,the proposals will certainly impact on anyone who lives in or uses the valley for recreation,artistic inspiration or earning a living.Critics point out that those who look out from the old road twixt Capel Curig and Ogwen Cottage or who climb and boulder under Gallt yr Ogof's beetling cliffs will no longer look to a stone cottage nestling amid woodland and fragile bog; they will look upon a vista violated by a collection of multi coloured vans,people carriers and cars. Given the raison-de'tre behind the scheme is to attract more visitors to Helyg by providing better facilities it is argued by those opposing the scheme that a club whose membership consists of outdoor activists might have been expected to attach more value to aesthetic amenity than commercial considerations.
    Watch this space.

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Gunfight at the Ka Corral


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Peter Hodgkiss: 1936-2010

    Heaven forbid, but if my library of mountain books were to catch fire right now with just a few minutes to rescue treasured volumes, I'd rifle the shelves for those with the image of a Gutenberg-era screw press on the spine – the distinctive logo of The Ernest Press.

    There would be none of mountaineering's best sellers among them, no Into Thin Air or Eiger epics, rather a collection telling climbing's story via The Ordinary Route, to employ the title of one The Ernest Press's real gems.

    Of course, proprietor Peter Hodgkiss must always have hoped to make money from his titles, and to an extent he did, with a successful run of mountain biking guides. But look at the chances he took with new authors, even an extraordinary prose-poem imagining the final hours of George Mallory, and it is clear that profit was not his guiding star. Hodgkiss was a romantic who published out of a love of mountains and the climbing game, and a belief that if the writing was of quality then that book deserved to be in print. The result was that The Ernest Press enjoyed critical acclaim, its authors picking up a disproportionate number of mountain literature prizes without anyone getting rich.

    However Hodgkiss's presence in the background of British climbing went way beyond the output of The Ernest Press. Ask about him in the senior clubs – the Alpine Club, Scottish Mountaineering Club, Climbers' Club, and Fell & Rock Climbing Club – and many will know the name without knowing precisely what this modest man did. "I think he helped with the guidebooks," would be a likely reply.

    All four clubs produce climbing guides – the AC to the Alps, the SMC to Scotland, the CC to Wales and southern England and the FRCC to the Lake District. But to say Hodgkiss "helped" would be to understate his role. For decades he provided the link between club guidebook editors (often amateur volunteers) and printing firms; advising editors on what was practical in terms of format, paper quality, reproduction of diagrams and photos and so forth, meanwhile negotiating an acceptable price with printers, usually these days in the Far East.

    The happy conjunction of two strands of Hodgkiss's life made him ideally suited to this task – a long career in print and a passion for climbing. Born in Leeds, Peter Hodgkiss was one of three brothers. The family moved to Nottingham, where Peter attended school in West Bridgford. Hodgkiss senior was a printer; Peter followed him into the craft, serving a six-year apprenticeship.

    Tall and lean, at school he was an enthusiastic rower; his introduction to climbing came at 17 on an Outward Bound course. In addition to climbing and hillwalking, he became a keen cyclist and he and his wife Joy would go on cycling holidays, Scottish islands being a favourite destination.

    He and Joy both came from Catholic families and the romance began at the Church of the Good Shepherd in Woodthorpe. Hodgkiss was certainly blessed in the partnership, Joy supporting Peter when the vicissitudes of the printing trade brought unemployment; her computer expertise was a boon to The Ernest Press and she endured his frequent absences in the Alps or Highlands. The couple moved to Glasgow in 1961, Hodgkiss working for the Clyde Paper Co and later for other firms. Apart from an unhappy 12 months' exile in Blackburn in the early 1970s, the family have remained on the South Side of the city, first in Netherlee and then in Giffnock.

    Before the founding of The Ernest Press in 1985, Hodgkiss's work, or lack of it, followed the fortunes of his troubled industry. But climbing and the hills were a constant. Joining the Glasgow section of the Junior Mountaineering Club of Scotland in the mid-1960s, he found partners for long days on Highland crags. His determination to get out whatever the weather could cause exasperation. If the rock was too wet for climbing he would urge companions over a clutch of Munros (hills exceeding 3,000ft in height). Rain was dismissed as "just condensation".

    A Hodgkiss day on the hills would usually start and end in the dark, plus two or three hours' driving from Glasgow and back. He loved the classic lines. One long day, recalled by Mike Thornley, they linked the great "trad" routes of Ben Nevis – climbing North-East Buttress, descending Tower Ridge, ascending Observatory Ridge and down Castle Ridge. One of those routes would constitute a "good day on the Ben", let alone all four. "Actually that day was a bit untypical for Pete,'' Thornley added. "It was a bit showy."

    Hodgkiss wasn't interested in pushing the grades or in self-advertisement. He rock-climbed up to Very Severe and operated on snow and ice at around grade V (roman); Ron Hockey recalled a great day on Eagle Ridge – "the Queen of Lochnagar's winter routes" according to the 2008 edition of the SMC's Scottish Winter Climbs guidebook, one of the last Hodgkiss would have a hand in.

    While Joy was at mass, Peter would be on the hill, excusing himself to the children as an agnostic. So regular was this routine that one daughter told friends her father didn't go to church "because he's an agnostic – that means he goes climbing on Sundays".

    The hills had become akin to a religion to Hodgkiss; he loved their remoteness, a place to lose and stretch himself. It's no surprise that while unemployed around 1980 he became involved in the so far successful campaign to prevent the expansion of the Cairngorm ski area into Lurchers Gully. In the only book that bears his name as author, the SMC's district guide to The Central Highlands (1984) Hodgkiss bid all those who enjoy a sense of wilderness "to be both vigilant and active in protection of that value".

    Hodgkiss's alpine seasons were a reflection of this mountain-wanderer approach rather than bagger of trophy routes. He shunned Chamonix and Zermatt, preferring the quieter valleys off the Val d'Aosta in north-west Italy. His partner in the 1970s was Ted Maden; they would camp with their families in the Gran Paradiso national park and take off every few days. One notable ascent was the north ridge of La Grivola (3,969m). The poet Giosuè Carducci called it "l'ardua Grivola bella" – the arduous beautiful Grivola, which seems to make it a natural Hodgkiss mountain. Later, he had seasons with Richard Gibbens, who contributed photographs to The Central Highlands. Gib-bens remembered days off the beaten track, Hodgkiss "gliding with absolute poise", and long conversations about classical music, photography and grammar. Leafing through Central Highlands as we spoke, Gibbens came across a note from Hodgkiss thanking him "for good company in the Alps, good conversation when required, peaceful quiet at other times".

    Hodgkiss's entry into publishing grew out of his enthusiasm for mountain literature and the discovery at the bottom of a box of books bought at auction of some volumes on Antarctica that he didn't want. He was advised to contact Jack Baines, an antiquarian book dealer. The two met in the back room of Hodgkiss's house and sat drinking tea and talking about old classics they would like to see back in print. Each wrote a cheque for £1,000 and The Ernest Press was born. First off the press was a facsimile copy of Twenty Years on Ben Nevis by W.T. Kilgour, out of print for 80 years.

    Today The Ernest Press has some 50 books in its catalogue – a good many of an esoteric nature that few, other publishers would touch. Top of that list must be Charles Lind's An Afterclap of Fate: Mallory on Everest, a haunting prose-poem in the imagined voice of George Mallory. It has not sold 1,000 copies but won the prestigious Boardman Tasker Award for Mountain Literature in 2006. Hodgkiss has also championed the novelist Roger Hubank. Climbing novels are a gamble, but Hubank's Hazard's Way won the BT and the Grand Prize at the Banff Mountain Literature in 2001. Four Ernest Press titles have won the BT and others have been shortlisted.

    I first spoke to Peter Hodgkiss in January 1997 before interviewing the critic Janet Adam Smith. Hodgkiss had enjoyed a long correspondence with Adam Smith and had just republished her engaging Mountain Holidays (1946). He warned me to keep my wits about me. Although in her nineties, this grande dame of the Alpine Club had an incisive mind and was a stickler for facts and grammar. And so was Hodgkiss, as I was to discover five years later when I was persuaded to become editor of the Alpine Journal.

    Peter had been elected to the Alpine Club in 1988 and in 1993 the Ernest Press became joint publisher with the club of the AJ, an annual 450-page book of essays on climbing trips, mountain environment and cultures, reviews and more. It is the oldest mountain journal in the world, dating back to 1863; Hodgkiss gave freely of his time to ensure that the AJ looked its best. We spent countless hours on the phone, digressing from production headaches to recent climbs or books old and new. Had I read René Daumal's novel Mount Analogue? (A metaphysical adventure.) "Oh you must." And two days later it arrived in the post.

    Our last meeting was at his home six days before he died. Despite cancer he remained erect and dignified, insisting that we talk in his office, business as usual rather than retiring to the sitting room. "Growing old isn't for softies," he would say when asked how he felt. Peter Hodgkiss was never a softie, and he was involved with production of the Alpine Journal until his final days.

    Peter Hodgkiss, printer, publisher and mountaineer: born Leeds 7 May 1936; married 1959 Joy Pycock (two daughters, two sons); died Glasgow 31 January 2010.


    Stephen Goodwin© Published in The Independent Feb6th/2010

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Peter Hodgkiss: 1936-2010


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Peter Greenwood 1930-2010


    The death of ‘Bradford Lad’ Peter Greenwood after battling illness marks the closure of yet another chapter in the stirring history of post war climbing in the UK. A romantic period which threw up so many characters in contrast with the rather self promoting one dimensional breed of activist abroad in the 21st century.
    Legend has it that Greenwood took up climbing to impress a girl.His natural aptitude impressing a band of Bradford Lads so much he was quickly invited to join them in their activities on the Yorkshire Gritstone crags and further afield on foreign shores.....well... The Lake District! Teaming up with superstar of the day Arthur Dolphin, this perfectly balanced partnership which blended Dolphin’s guile and technique with Greenwood’s necky tenacity, saw the pair quickly establishing some of the hardest climbs of the day. Contemporary test pieces like Bowfell’s Sword of Damocles and Scafell’s Hell’s Groove; both ‘extreme’ climbs capable of stopping the modern tiger in his/her tracks!
    Fiercely loyal to his friends and partners,Greenwood was so outraged by Lancastrian Joe Brown’s placing of a peg on Dolphin’s classic Kipling Groove that the proud Yorkshireman spat on the peg as he passed it on the third ascent to the wild cheers of the watching crowd of climbers from the white rose county!
    Remarkably, after just four intense highly creative years which saw him establish around 30 hard climbs in the Lakes, he suddenly gave up the ghost and retired from climbing. Handing over his gear to a dumbstruck Don Whillans. In the late 1980’s early 1990’s he did enjoy a swansong of sorts after being cajoled back onto the rock face by David Craig and fellow Lakeland legend Paul Ross. However,anyone looking back on his career could only ask ‘what if’ his climbing career had been extended? It is probably not too far short of the mark to suggest that his name would be spoken of in the same hushed reverent tones as those used to describe Brown and Whillans such was his huge talent.

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Peter Greenwood 1930-2010


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Memories of Dolphin: Review

    Memories of Dolphin: The life of a climber remembered. Compiled and edited by Tom Greenwood. Green Woods 2009
    First things first; this privately published slim volume is not a biography . The definitive ARD (Arthur Rhodes Dolphin) biography awaits publication. Sadly, the one man working on this task and from whom a section of this work has been re-assembled- Dave Cook- like his subject, also died prematurely in a tragic accident. His notes now with Bill Birkett who writes the forward for this book. As the title suggests, this is a collection of thoughts and anecdotes from many of his closest friends and associates, padded out with extracts from club journals written by Dolphin himself, lists of ARD climbs,obituaries, newspaper reports,club notes and rather tantalisingly,brief extracts from what survives of Arthur’s diaries...frustratingly now lost. Contributions from people like Joe Brown, Harold Drasdo and Pete Greenwood, all a degree younger than ARD, show just how revered and respected he was amongst his contemporaries. As a university educated Yorkshireman from the lower middle classes, Arthur managed to effortlessly bridge the social divide through his multi club memberships which included the loose association of working class climbers,The Bradford Lads, One of the arms of the climbing establishment, The Fell & Rock Club, The Gritstone Club and The Yorkshire Mountaineering Club. His membership of the F&R included stints as a guidebook author.An area where he was unstinting in his endeavours. However, it was his membership of the Yorkshire based Gritstone Club that inspired author Tom Greenwood -himself a member- to put together this volume. Tom has energetically pulled together all the threads to produce a work from which the proceeds will go into the ‘Jack Bloor Fund’. Jack Bloor being a close friend of ARD and climbing/running partner upon whose death in 1984 a memorial fund was established to enable those of modest means to pursue their dreams in the great outdoors. For those unfamilar with Dolphin himself, it is no exageration to describe him as one of the era’s greatest climbing technicians. Inately conservative, ARD embraced developments with regards to footwear and equipment rather reluctently where others who might be considered rivals were quick to take on board any short cut to pushing up their standards. As a strikingly blonde six foot man of athletic build, Dolphin was every inch the super star of his day. His self effacing modesty and puritanism rather touching and curiously old fashioned, especially to the more ribald Bradford Lads who found themselves self censoring their earthy humour when in his company. Supremely talented on gritstone and Lakeland rock, ARD also displayed his talents on his visits to the Alps in the company of people like Jack Bloor where he repeated many of the Alpine test pieces of the day despite suffering terribly from the effects of altitude sickness.His ambitions however lay in the greater ranges where he saw himself treading in the footsteps of Mallory and Shipton. Tragically these ambitions were never to be realised. Rejected by the appalling snobs that composed the Everest recruitment committee for the 53 expedition, he took solace in the Alps where tragically,in the year of Everest celebration he met his death. His demise was cruelly ironic given the fact that he had just completed a hard climb with a young Belgium climber and was descending easy ground when apparently over burdened by a heavy rucksack he slipped and banged his head on the one solitary rock protruding through the easy angled snow slope. He was buried in the village of Courmayeur where he had based his Alpine activities that fateful summer.His funeral attended by less than a dozen or so of his climbing friends including Greenwood,Bloor and Drasdo.
    Anyone looking through the list of Dolphin climbs today will observe how the majority of his climbs were consistently hard by the standards of the time.The majority being of VS and above with many being in the ‘extreme’ grades. Quite outstanding when one considers the rudimentary footwear and equipment being used at the time. His partnership with the tenacious Peter Greenwood could well have matched Brown and Whillans had fate not intervened. With many photographs and sketches complimenting the text, as well as a short DVD film made by Reg Hainsworth which shows amongst other scenes, Dolphin climbing probably his best known route, Kipling Groove, ‘Memories of Dolphin’ will be appreciated by anyone who is fascinated by that lost golden age which bookended the war years. A period which threw up so many legends and heroes.
    Copies can be ordered from...... Alan Moss, Memories of Dolphin, 7 Chandos Garth, Roundhay, Leeds, LS81QY. Priced at £11.99 (P&P up to 2 copies £2.25) Cheques payable to ‘The Gritstone Club’

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Memories of Dolphin: Review


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