26.03.18 Brown Clee Hill (SO 593 867)
Brown Clee Hill (SO 593 867) |
I’ve lived in border
country all my life, that haphazard delineating line between Wales and England
with my forbears and myself rooted in the formers land. Across the border lies the English county of
Shropshire which in the main is topographically a part of greater Cambria,
however until recent times I had not investigated the Shropshire hills, this
has been rectified over recent years and their appeal and also variety is
great, but the highest hill of the county until today had evaded me.
The county high point of
Shropshire is Brown Clee Hill which is given a 540m map height and is adorned
with a number of heathery bumps on its summit area, one of which has a topographic
viewfinder standing on a levelled plinth with the customary stone steps leading
up to it, whilst there are also two large radar masts near the high point. Although it is the topographic viewfinder
that acts as a honeypot for most walkers this is not the summit of the hill,
the high point is a little further north on one of the heathery mounds beside
the radar compound.
By the time I parked the
chilled air of early morning had been swept away and spring’s warmth cascaded
down from a radiant blue sky. This first
hill warmth is always an awakening experience when winter’s harsh climate and
its sometimes oppressive day light hour’s gives way to burgeoning growth with
greenery sprouting and welcoming lushness.
I had planned to use the
paved access track to the radar masts as my ascent route but decided to park
next to other cars in a large lay-by adjacent to a public footpath giving
access through the Stanbroughs Wood on the eastern part of the hill. I was thankful I did so, as the wood proved a
welcome release from what would have been a strip of tarmac, it also proved
rather beautiful with mixed woodland and a good, albeit muddy path leading
forever upward.
The route to Brown Clee Hill from the east |
The path broke out of
the forestry through a gate on to open hillside and soon the remains of the
Abdon Quarry came in to view with a large derelict building nestled against the
upper easterly slopes of the hill, beyond was the paved access track and the
two large radar masts, and above was blue sky, which proved a pleasing quality
detracting from man’s imposition on the hill.
Derelict buildings from the old Abdon Quarry |
The paved road leading to the radar masts |
The paved track led to
the plinth and panoramic viewfinder where a number of people were quietly
taking in the view, I continued toward the heathery mound where the summit of
the hill is positioned, once there I quickly assembled the Trimble atop my
rucksack giving it elevation above its immediate surrounds and which acts as an
improvised tripod.
Gathering data at the summit of Brown Clee Hill |
As the Trimble beeped
away gathering its allotted data I stood back and took in the view, it was good
to be out on the hill in such beautiful weather. If the viewfinder position was quiet I also
wanted to gather data from its immediate periphery, and by the time data were
stored from the high point all walkers had left, so I headed back to the plinth
and gathered a further two data sets, one from the high point beside the stone
façade of the plinth and the other from an embedded rock which visually was
slightly higher, during this three other walkers appeared, one from the west
and the other two from the route I had taken from the east, I chatted with all
and explained what I was doing.
Gathering data at the edge of the viewfinder plinth |
Gathering data on an embedded rock close to the viewfinder plinth |
After data were stored
and the Trimble packed away I retraced my inward route back to my car.
LIDAR col image of Brown Clee Hill |
Postscript:
Since the summit 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 have been analysed using this technique, resulting in the LIDAR
height and position for its col being used.
Survey Result:
Brown Clee Hill
Summit Height: 540.5m (converted to OSGM15, Trimble GeoXH 6000)
Summit Grid Reference: SO 59372 86701 (Trimble GeoXH 6000)
Col Height: 165.9m (LIDAR)
Col Grid Reference: SO 61034 94666 (LIDAR)
Drop: 374.5m (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR col)
Dominance: 69.30% (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR col)
No comments:
Post a Comment