07.03.17
Cribyn (SO 198 917) and Wood Field (SO 206 916)
Cribyn (SO 198 917) |
A peaceful serenity
captured the land as I headed out; my destination was only 30 minutes away by
car and therefore relatively local. As I
parked in Sarn the village was quiet except for a friendly looking prospective
dog walker who had lead in hand with his accompanying dog barking and chomping
at the proverbial bit. I walked toward
him and introduced myself and we chatted for ten minutes or so about the local
hills, he couldn’t help me with their names but explained that in all
likelihood the person at the farm up the road on the left, could. As he was telling me this, guess who drove down
the steep lane and headed out of the village; the person at the farm up the
road on the left.
I thanked the dog walker
for his time and set off up the steepening lane and within a minute the farmer
was returning home and I duly flagged him down, a couple of minutes later I was
sitting in his vehicle chatting about the hills, after introducing myself I
explained my interest in upland place-names, he told me his name; Mark Bufton,
and that the hill above his farm is known as the Cribben, this is Mark’s
spelling for the hill name and is an obvious Anglicisation of the Welsh word
Cribyn, Mark cannot speak Welsh and did not know the meaning of the name. The Cribyn is the 241m map heighted hill at
SO 198 917 and rises directly above Mark’s farm, and although the high point of
the hill is not a part of Mark’s land, its southern slopes are.
Mark Bufton with the Cribyn in the background |
Meeting Mark was a bonus
as I did not plan to visit his farm, let alone the summit of Cribyn which I’d
previously visited on 24th July 2004, my planned destination of the
day was the 239m map heighted summit of Wood Field (SO 206 916) which I had not
previously visited and I hoped to call in at Mount Nebo, the local farm to this
hill and make enquiries about its name.
This latter hill was listed as Gwern-y-go in the Welsh P30 lists when
published on Geoff Crowder’s v-g.me website, and prior to this morning’s walk I’d
studied the Tithe map which names the field where the summit of the hill is
situated as Wood Field, hopefully the farmer at Mount Nebo would either confirm
this name or give me a name in local use, however I’d been told by the helpful
dog walker that the farmer at Mount Nebo was not local and had only been there
a few years.
After thanking Mark for
his time I walked back up the track from his farm and crossed a wonky foot
stile into the adjacent field where the critical bwlch for Wood Field lay. I assessed the lay of land from a number of
directions and proceeded to gather five minutes of data from where I judged the
critical bwlch to be positioned.
Gathering data at the critical bwlch of Wood Field |
During the time that the
Trimble gathered data I looked up at Cribyn and it was so close that I decided
I’d better re-visit and whilst there, survey its summit. By now the subdued early morning sunshine had
sprung out from behind high cloud, but as I followed a public footpath down and
then up fields toward the high point of the Cribyn the radiant colour faded as
the cloud submerged the sun, and it remained so for the rest of the walk.
The Cribyn from the bwlch connecting it to Wood Field |
The summit of the Cribyn
is in a closely cropped grassy field next to a small copse of trees with their
entangled bracken and undergrowth adding variety to the immediate landscape. As I positioned the Trimble atop my rucksack
a number of inquisitive sheep and accompanying lambs wanted to head directly
toward it, and as the customary five minutes of data were gathered I had to shoo
them away on a couple of occasions.
On the ascent of the Cribyn |
Wood Field from the higher slopes of the Cribyn |
Gathering data at the summit of the Cribyn |
Once the Trimble was
packed away I retraced my route down to the track leading to Cefnyberin Isaf
and joined the lane toward the track leading to Mount Nebo, as I wandered
toward this next farm I waved at the farmer who sped into the farmyard on a
quad bike. We chatted for a few minutes
but although helpful he did not know a name for either the hill or the
uppermost field, and therefore the Tithe name of Wood Field is being used for
this hill.
The onward route toward
the top of Wood Field was through two fields with their gate entrances full of
wet mud and slurry, thankfully my wellies which had started to leak and had
served me well during the last three seasons of winter walks had now been
replaced with a shining new pair of green ones and these proved ideal for the
route ahead. I’d read that the summit of
Wood Field is on pasture beside the entrance into its field, but I found the
high point to be beyond this point, as I proceeded to gather data from two
points in the field I stood content with the morning’s outing, and patiently
waited for the Trimble to do its stuff.
Leaving the summit of
Wood Field I retraced my way back toward Mount Nebo farm and followed the track
back to the lane and walked down into Sarn.
It had been good to get out after a few weeks away from the hills.
Survey Result:
Cribyn (significant name change)
Summit Height: 241.5m (converted to OSGM15)
Summit Grid Reference: SO 19882 91763
Drop: 39m
Dominance: 16.15%
Wood Field (significant name change)
Summit Height: 238.6m (converted to OSGM15)
Summit Grid Reference: SO 20602 91617
Bwlch Height: 207.2m (converted to OSGM15)
Bwlch Grid Reference: SO 20014 91477
Drop: 31.5m (200m Twmpau status confirmed)
Dominance: 13.19%
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