08.04.18 Carnedd Wen (SH 924 099) only bwlch surveyed
The bwlch of Carnedd Wen |
The main objective of
the day was a walk and survey with Mark and Aled over Moel Ddu above Llyn Cwmystradllyn,
however on the way was an inviting bog which no doubt was made even more boggier
by overnight rain, with this bog being the connecting bwlch of Carnedd Wen.
The bwlch is named Bwlch
y Fedwen (the birch tree pass) and
for those unusual of habit that like straying in to such wet places it is
thankfully positioned beside a road.
I had examined this
bwlch on a number of Ordnance Survey maps as well as by LIDAR, with the latter
not covering the critical point. On the
16.03.18 I had also had a bird’s eye view of the bwlch when visiting the 352.6m
high summit of Foel y Bwlch (SH 93936 13273), on that day I planned to survey
its murky depths but a prolonged heavy shower and a prior appointment meant
that its survey would have to wait.
I had my much needed
wellies on by 7.50am and walked the short distance from the large lay-by where
I had parked to the fence beside the road, except for an occasional passing car
and the excited bleating of sheep, all was quiet.
Early morning in a bog - just me and a number of excited bleating sheep |
I was immediately
confronted by a wet drainage ditch on the other side of the fence and once my
wellies had made good progress over it I started to assess the lay of
land. The western part of the bwlch has
a small conifer plantation on it, whilst the land to the east gradually
declined in a tussock infested way.
Wellies are a much needed addition when surveying particularly wet bogs |
In the centre of the bog
is the start of a stream, or at least another wet drainage ditch, therefore
pinpointing the land where the critical point of the bwlch lay was relatively
easy, all I had to do was walk up the wet land of the stream / drainage ditch heading
west until a semblance of dry land was encountered.
Gathering data at the bwlch of Carnedd Wen |
Having done this I
decided that time allowed for two data sets to be taken, one from a westerly
point relatively near the conifer plantation and one a little further east
beside a grassy ridge heading toward the area of the bwlch from the northerly
slopes of Tal Cefn, which forms the westerly ridge of Foel y Bwlch.
The small conifer plantation at the westerly end of the bwlch |
By now a few cars had
passed and I wondered what the occupants must have thought if they had glanced
my way, I must have looked a forlorn figure stumbling seemingly aimlessly in
the bog, wandering this way and that and occasionally even kneeling in the bog
to assess the lay of land.
Having set the Trimble
up for its first data set I stood as far out of the bog as I could without
stumbling too far up the tussock infested slopes. Five minutes fairly zoomed by and once the
Trimble was closed down I re-activated it and set it up a little further east
for its second data set.
As the Trimble beeped away
gathering its allotted five minutes of data I stood happy in the knowledge that
another bwlch had been surveyed and that the 9.30am meet time with Mark and
Aled could be achieved.
Once the second data set
of five minutes had been stored and the Trimble closed down and packed away I
stumbled my way through the tussocks and bog to the fence and the pleasure of
tarmac on the road back to my car.
Survey Result:
Carnedd Wen
Summit Height: 523m (triangulation pillar)
Summit Grid Reference: SH 92417 09922 (hand-held GPS via DoBIH)
Bwlch Height: 291.3m (converted to OSGM15)
Summit Grid Reference: SH 92417 09922 (hand-held GPS via DoBIH)
Bwlch Height: 291.3m (converted to OSGM15)
Bwlch Grid Reference: SH 93447 13839
Drop: 232m
Dominance: 44.30%
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