Grough recently published an
article on the Trimble survey of the highest mountain in Y Berwyn; Craig
Berwyn. The original article and a link
to it on the Grough website appear below.
Thanks to Alan Dawson for
photos and details on Bernard Wright, Peter Collins for details relating to
Bernard Wright and Aled Williams for suggesting and having input in to the
article.
Hill sleuth
Myrddyn goes in search of the ‘missing’ Berwyn mountain
More than 25 years ago a party of 20
people from the Retired People’s Club were walking on the Berwyn Mountains in
northern Mid Wales.
The party was being led by Bernard
Wright, a former motor oils scientist from Tarvin in Cheshire. As they headed
up to the main Berwyn ridge they were confronted by a peak that was absent from
their Ordnance Survey maps.
Craig Berwyn |
Bernard and his friends were standing
beside the trig pillar on Cadair Berwyn looking south toward Moel Sych.
Both hills nowadays are given the same
metric height of 827m. When Bernard looked south the map told him that Moel
Sych was 1ft higher at 2713ft, compared to the 2712ft for Cadair Berwyn. But
something was wrong as the map indicated that these two summits were the highest
in the Berwyn, but between the two was another hill, a hill that looked higher,
but was not shown as such on any map.
The group visited the unknown and seemingly
non-existent hill and Bernard sat on its highest rock and peered out over the
top of Cadair Berwyn and Moel Sych.
A newspaper cutting showing Bill Wright on the mountain. Main Photo: Craig Berwyn |
This hill was definitely higher, but
why wasn’t it shown as such on the map? As the friends descended, they chatted
about the hill and someone proposed that they should name it Berwyn Wright, a
Welsh friend in the party suggested the name Craig Uchaf and, although an
appropriate name it has never caught on.
Research conducted for the ‘Y Pedwarau’
hill list (published by Europeaklist in 2013) revealed that the peak is known
to some of the local farmers and shepherds as Craig Berwyn, a name that already
appears on the Ordnance Survey map.
Bernard reported his find to the
Ordnance Survey and was told that the two 827m peaks were the highest points
for miles around. Dissatisfied with this answer, Bernard persevered and gave
detailed co-ordinates for the peak, which prompted the OS to examine their
large-scale mapping on which was found a tiny 830m ring contour that did not
appear on the publicly available 1:50,000 and 1:25,000 maps.
The news of Bernard’s ‘new mountain’
hit the headlines with articles appearing in The Guardian as well as the
Ramblers Association magazine, and soon the tiny 830m ring contour appeared on
the new OS 1:25,000 Explorer map.
However, one thing the Ordnance Survey
never did was to give the mountain an accurate absolute height, relegating it
to among the few principal Welsh mountains that do not have definitive values
for elevation.
As the summit is made up of a number of
embedded rocks, all jutting out of the ground, the height could well be higher
than thought. If an accurate height was given to the mountain, it would also be
the culmination of a story that first started over 25 years ago when Bernard
Wright and his friends came across a mountain that seemed not to exist.
The Trimble GeoXH 6000 perched on the very highest point of Y Berwyn |
Enter a hill sleuth with a new piece of
equipment: the Trimble GeoXH 6000.
This fancy piece of equipment only
weights 2lb and can achieve accurate height results in no more than five
minutes. The hill sleuth in question is Myrddyn Phillips who is a member of
G&J Surveys, those infamous independent surveyors who have discovered new
mountains and dethroned Munros.
Myrddyn said: “The Trimble Geo 6000 is
accessible to the G&J team and is proving to be a great piece of equipment
to ‘screen’ hills with, as its precision is +/- 0.15m when compared to our
Leica GS15 whose accuracy is +/- 0.05m when we collect upwards of two hours of
data.”
“Therefore any hill measured with the
Trimble whose height is close to a recognised threshold, such as 2,000ft or
3,000ft can then be surveyed to a higher degree of accuracy with our Leica
equipment.”
However, the hill was more than a lump
of rock that Myrddyn wanted to place a bit of surveying equipment on top of. It
held an emotional tie for him as he had scattered some of his father’s ashes
from its highest point and the height of the hill had intrigued him ever since
he had read the article about Bernard Wright’s new mountain years ago in the
late 1980s.
The trip to survey Craig Berwyn proved
quite an expedition as Myrddyn wanted to survey all eleven hills and their
respective cols that make up the Maen Gwynedd Horseshoe.
This is an extended walk he had done on
many occasions but never with the intent to carry out so many surveys. The hill
sleuth told grough: “Although I wanted to survey every hill on the horseshoe it
was the high point of Craig Berwyn that really interested me.”
The high Berwyn: Craig Berwyn, left, and Cadair Berwyn |
He set out on 21 June as the surveying
expedition would require many hours to complete and with the weather settled
and the notorious peat paths of the higher Berwyn dry, it meant that he
shouldn’t encounter any undue problems.
As the highest rocks of the Berwyn were
approached a slight breeze picked up, although it wasn’t strong enough to worry
Myrddyn as he placed the Trimble on the very highest point of the mountain
range, the same spot that Bernard Wright had sat and peered out over the two
adjacent and lower peaks all those years ago.
Mr Phillips said: “It was ideal as the
breeze was only light and the view from the summit took in all the higher
Snowdonia peaks to the west as well as the lower hills towards the English
border.”
As he arrived back at his car the
expedition had taken more than 12 ½ hours to complete.
Ten minutes of summit data were
collected by the Trimble GeoXH 6000 and later post processed, giving a result
of 831.98 +/- 0.15m. So over 25 years since Bernard Wright first discovered the
mountain its true height is now known, and at 832m it seems that little 830m
ring contour on OS maps is hiding quite a substantial rock under it.
Further details of this survey and
others can be found on Myrddyn’s Blog
Please click {here} to see the original
article published on the Grough website
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