05.11.14 The Cold Piece (SO 338 996)
The Cold Piece (SO 338 996) |
As the early morning traffic passed through
Lydham on the A489 I was standing in a field with my back to a large tree as
the last of the morning’s grey showers scattered rain across the land. I looked toward the A road and the narrow
lane on the opposite side of the field that makes its way into More and
wondered what the passengers in the cars and farm vehicles would make of a lone
figure standing in a field in the early hours of the morning. Hill baggers and surveyors do seem to have
some unusual habits!
The survey in the field was to determine the height
of the critical col for Stiperstones (SO 367 986) which I’ll detail in a later
blog post, with the first hill survey of the day being to the rather well named
The Cold Piece (SO 338 996).
The Cold Piece is situated overlooking the Hope
Valley and the A488 as it makes its way between Bishop’s Castle and Minsterley
and is positioned on the land between Corndon to its south-west and the
Stiperstones to its east.
The hill has no name adjoined to it on Ordnance
Survey maps but through research conducted by Aled for The Fours it is listed under its locally known name of The Cold
Piece. The hill also has an interesting
uppermost height as it is included in The
Fours publication as current Ordnance Survey maps give it a tiny uppermost
c 400m ring contour. However, the old Ordnance
Survey 1:10,560 map gives it a height of 1,311ft (399.6m). We decided to include the hill in The Fours but would it now be relegated
to the ranks of Sub-Fours? Only time and
a Trimble survey would tell.
I parked to the south of the summit in the small
community of Shelve next to a picket fence having asked at a house and
instructed where to do so. As I got all
my clobber together a friendly young cat wandered up and followed me part of
the way up the lane as I headed east toward the hill’s critical col.
The critical col for The Cold Piece is
positioned on or immediately adjacent to the narrow lane just a few hundred
metres outside of Shelve. I chose a spot
on the grass verge on the north side of the road as it makes a swinging corner
and heads off toward The Bog. Two cars
and a roofed quad bike passed during data collection, with the latter doing a
circular loop and heading back the way it had come.
Gathering data at the col area of The Cold Piece |
A footpath sign pointed me in the direction of
the summit and once across a couple of foot stiles and wooden fences the small
path led up over closely cropped grassy fields toward the higher part of the
hill.
This way to the hill |
The morning’s showers had been replaced by
brightening skies, away to the east the castellated ridgeback of the
Stiperstones stood out with Nipstone Rock (SO 356 969) which I hoped to visit
and survey later in the day just visible as a pointy uppy thing on the horizon.
The upper part of The Cold Piece is moor and
heath, a welcome addition from its reclaimed lower ground of grazing
field. The high point of the hill is
interesting as it has what to my eye looked like an ancient stone circle with
an upright stone on its northern periphery that contested as the high point of
the hill. Its upper section is conical
in shape with a number of rocks / stones easily discernible, but I cannot find
any mention of an ancient structure on the summit of this hill on any Ordnance
Survey map that I’ve looked at.
I decided that the upright stone was probably
lower than the centrally positioned small embedded rock that to my eye is the
high point of the hill. Before placing
the Trimble on it I gave it a good kick, it did not move and therefore
constituted being a part of the hill.
Gathering data at the summit of The Cold Piece |
As the Trimble gathered its data I looked out to
the high lands of Shropshire, this part of the country really should be a part
of Wales, its landscape is an extension of its westerly neighbours and is made
up of some excellent hills.
Once five minutes of data were gathered I headed
down on a footpath that brought me out to the minor road just to the west of
Shelve and wandered back to the car wondering if The Cold Piece would remain in
the Fours or be relegated to the Sub-List.
Next stop; Walker’s Bank (S) 389 984).
Postscript:
Since the survey of this hill full LIDAR coverage is now
available. The LIDAR (Light Detection & Ranging) technique
produced highly accurate height and positional data that is now freely
available for England and Wales. Consequently the numerical details
for this hill has been analysed using this technique, resulting in the LIDAR
height and position for its col being prioritised over that
produced by the Trimble GeoXH 6000.
Summit Height: 399.5m (converted to OSGM15, Trimble GeoXH 6000) (Four reclassified to 390m Sub-Four)
Summit Grid Reference: SO 33849 99695 (Trimble GeoXH 6000)
Col Height: 341.8m (LIDAR)
Col Grid Reference: SO 34228 99099 (LIDAR)
Drop: 57.7m (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR col)
Dominance: 14.44% (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR col)
Dominance: 14.44% (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR col)
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