10.03.17
Caer Caradoc (SO 477 953, only col surveyed)
The view south from the road bridge onto the col area of Caer Caradoc |
There is a perverse
sense of enjoyment when surveying in unusual places, be it a field next to a
road, on a road itself, on a driveway adjacent to a house or as in today’s
example – a railway platform.
The col in question for
today’s little adventure is adjoined to Caer Caradoc, which is listed as a
Marilyn, Hump and Four, and it is placed either on, or near to the tracks
adjacent to the platform at the railway station in Church Stretton.
I’d examined the
positioning of this col via contours on the Ordnance Survey enlarged mapping on
the Geograph website as well as having whizzed round the town in a Google car
on Google Maps, I’d also made a mental note of the lay of the land adjacent to
the railway station on a recent visit to the town. The above indicated that the critical col is
placed adjacent to the tracks of the railway.
I parked close to the
platform on the eastern side of the railway which gives access over a foot
bridge to the platform on the opposite side.
The foot bridge gives a vantage point looking down on the railway tracks
as they disappear heading south, map contours indicate that the land in this
direction is descending and although using ones eye to judge such a thing is
not ideal, this looked like the case.
The view northward was obstructed by the road leading into Church
Stretton as its bridge passed over the railway.
The view south from the foot bridge |
The view north from the foot bridge |
I’d previously judged
where a suitable ten figure grid reference would be for positioning the Trimble
and this was on the easterly sided platform and before setting the equipment up
I waited for a train to pull out heading north.
As the Trimble ebbed down to its required 0.1m accuracy level before
data should be logged another train pulled in, this time heading south, I
waited until this had left before activating the Trimble for its five minutes
allotted data collection.
Waiting to activate the Trimble as the southward bound train prepares to leave |
As another train headed
in from the south the last of the 300 allotted data points were stored and I
closed the Trimble off just before the train pulled up. Having measured the offset between the
Trimble positioned atop my rucksack and the platform at its base, and also the
offset between the platform and the gravel beside the railway tracks I now
wanted to try and follow the valley to valley traverse from the railway
platform.
I walked over the foot
bridge to the western side of the railway and headed on to the B4371 road that
leaves the A49 road and heads in to the town centre of Church Stretton, a 189m
spot height appears on this road on the Ordnance Survey enlarged mapping on the
Geograph website, visually the positioning of this spot height is on the upward
part of the hill to hill traverse, therefore I dismissed it and concentrated my
efforts on the northern side of the B4371.
The view north from the road bridge |
The col contours on the
northern side of this road make their way toward the railway via a greened
recreational area, on the opposite side of the railway tracks is a small
industrial park, and I wandered round this assessing the lay of land in
comparison to the adjacent railway track.
I concluded that the platform from where I collected data from is as
good a place as any for the critical col for Caer Caradoc to be placed,
with the caveat that the only natural ground remaining in this whole area is
the scrub land immediately beside the railway, all other land has been
terra-formed.
Happy with my morning’s
exertions I headed back to my car and proceeded toward Worcester for a few
relaxing days of good company, good food and good conversation.
LIDAR col image of Caer Caradoc (summit at SO 477 953, col at SO 457 937) |
Postscript:
Since the survey of this hill LIDAR has become 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.
Survey Result:
Caer Caradoc (significant name change)
Summit Height: 459.5m (converted to OSGM15, from previous Trimble GeoXH 6000 survey)
Summit Grid Reference: SO 47745 95390 (from previous Trimble GeoXH 6000 survey)
Col Height: 185.3m (LIDAR)
Col Grid Reference: SO 45734 93768 (LIDAR)
Drop: 274.2m (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR col)
Dominance: 59.67% (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR col)
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