09.02.14
Oldchapel Hill (SN 976 807)
Oldchapel Hill (SN 976 807) |
Oldchapel Hill rises above the small community of Tylwch (SN 969 800) a
few kilometres from the larger town of Llanidloes in the heartland of mid
Wales. Its land is hemmed in to the west
by the Dŵr Tenau and to the east by the
Nant Feinion, two small water courses that feed in to the Afon Dulas as it
flows downstream toward the Afon Hafren (River Severn). Following the course of the Dulas are the
remains of the Builth to Manchester railway line, another vestige of railway
closer with the Cambrian Railways station at Tylwch closing in 1962.
I’d only visited the hill once before in January 2003 whilst doing a 13
mile circuit starting with 326m Gorn Hill (SN 968 845) and finishing with the
371m Brynposteg Hill (SN 960 822) and taking in four 300m P30’s and five Pedwar
hills.
Today’s walk was suggested by Mark who hoped to visit three HuMPs
interspersed with a pub lunch. This plan
was dependent upon the weather whose mood was supposed to be particularly foul
until the early afternoon.
Oldchapel Hill only just squeezes in to the category of HuMPs as it’s
listed with 100m of drop, based on a 426m summit spot height and an interpolated
bwlch height of 326m. Could Mark be
responsible for bagging a HuMP and at the same time deleting it from the list!?!
As we drove towards Llanidloes the quieter grey skies turned an ominous
deep and dark grey and the first signs of heavier squally rain started to fall. After finding a convenient parking place for
the ascent of the hill we drove a few hundred metres further down the road to
investigate the area of the bwlch.
Mapping suggests the critical bwlch is placed on or very close to the road
just eastward of a farm named The Cross.
Thankfully the narrow lane widened enough for us to park and investigate
where the critical bwlch lay. Either
side of the road are fields, that today were awash with water, so much so that pinpointing
the critical bwlch, a task we thought may prove difficult, was in fact very
easy as so much water had fallen over the winter months that each field, either
side of the road, had the start of a stream in it originating from the sides of
the road. All we had to do was connect
the two water courses and pick the highest road side grass verge. This proved to be beside a culvert, not
surprising as one would expect such a thing to be installed at the low point of
a road.
As the boundary hedge was adjacent to the road I set the Trimble up on
its pole, which was stuck in to the grass verge and awaited its 10 minutes of
data collection. Mark had sensibly
retired to the car as intermittent rain persisted to fall. The only passing vehicle was a tractor which
slowly made its way across the bwlch toward unknown pastures that wherever they
lie were going to be very wet.
The Trimble GeoXH 6000 set up on its pole at the critical bwlch of Oldchapel Hill |
The area of the critical bwlch with the only vehicle that passed during data collection |
Once the equipment was packed away we headed back to our parking place
for the ascent of the hill. This is when
the waiting game began, as showers were hurtling across the land. We’d occasionally sneak out of the car and
look south-west in to a great mass of evil looking murk knowing that it was
heading our way. Eventually we had to
make a move as that promised pub lunch could not wait much longer.
We followed a narrow lane up until a vehicle track made its way
southward across a field heading toward the summit of Oldchapel Hill. The ground was very wet and upon Mark’s
suggestion we both wore wellies, a very wise decision. As height was gained I looked back as Mark
followed and all I could see was grey hills in the background. The whole sky looked like thunder, a deep
grey hue pervading all around.
Mark on the ascent of Oldchapel Hill |
Once at the summit Mark set up his hand-held GPS and I placed the
Trimble on the highest bit of grass, we took two data sets from the summit with
the second on the highest bit of rock that was a part of the elegant rocky rib
that makes up the summit. By this time
the thunderous murk had well and truly descended upon us as the rain and wind
howled across the hill. I quickly
gathered handfuls of moss, squashed them tightly together and placed them
either side of the Trimble to try and secure it in place. Ten and seven minutes of data respectively
was collected. By the time the equipment
had been packed away my fingers were squealing out with chill.
The summit of Oldchapel Hill was a particularly soggy spot yesterday |
The descent was a soggy affair but soon we were back at the car with a
local farmer stopping to strike up conversation, Mark explained where we had
been and even asked about the name of the hill; Oldchapel Hill was confirmed
and no Welsh alternative was known. The
man then recommended the carvery in the Red Lion in Llanidloes and within half
an hour we were in the warmth of the pub with a full plate of food and outside
the rain continued to fall!
Survey Result:
Oldchapel Hill
Summit Height: 426.2m (converted to OSGM15)
Summit Grid Reference: SN 97602 80712
Bwlch Height:
325.7m (converted to OSGM15)
Bwlch Grid Reference: SN 98412 81808
Drop: 100.5m
Dominance: 23.58%
Dominance: 23.58%
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