Mapping Mountains
originated partly as an experiment; as although I had a vision how the site
should evolve, my then lack of IT skills may have hindered the process. The site is now celebrating its sixth year
and has accumulated over 280,000 page views, averaging over 120 per day. The site has enabled my IT skills to improve
and has given me a platform for hill listing, photography, surveying, writing
and occasionally statement making. Writing
this retrospective gives a chance to look back over the last year, as well as
to the one ahead, so let’s look at some of the major events on Mapping
Mountains during 2019.
January:
The year started with the
long overdue detailed compilation of the Welsh
Highlands – Uchafion Cymru list.
This takes in all Welsh hills 500m and above that have 15m minimum drop. This compilation is ongoing and it is hoped
that the draft list will be complete by the end of 2020.
Toward the beginning of
the month I met Gwyn Headley and Sarah Badham, who are co-administrators of the
Harlech bid to gain Guinness World Records status for the steepest street in
the world. The street is Ffordd Pen
Llech which winds its way up from the coastal lowlands to the centre of Harlech. We met and surveyed Ffordd Pen Llech with
various media outlets in attendance on the 9th January and the ongoing
debate on this street’s steepness was to form an integral part of the year
ahead.
February:
One of the joys of
surveying is communicating with other hill list authors relaying results
produced by the Trimble GeoXH 6000. Many
of these surveys do not result in the change of status for a hill. However, on occasion a survey will produce an
unexpected result that courses status change.
Cefn Cyfarwydd in the eastern Carneddau is one such hill. This hill was surveyed on the 17th
February and its newly acquired Dewey status announced on Mapping Mountains along
with two other notable changes, with the long overdue deletion of Twyn Walter from
Dewey status and the reinstatement of Beefstand Hill.
March:
In March of this year I
achieved one of my life time’s ambitions; I appeared on page 3 of The Sun. I also made page 3 of The Times, which appealed
to my sense of decorum a little more.
The announcement that the border between Wales and
England seemed to be misplaced and that our friendly neighbours to the east
should reclaim a portion of the mother country did not go down well with some relatives and friends! This concerned the summit of Twyn
Llech and its position in relation to the border between Wales and England, and involved
Ordnance Survey and the Boundary Commission for Wales. The end result is the status quo, with the border
remaining as positioned by Ordnance Survey on their Master Map, however the
summit of the hill has finally been located and according to Master Map this is
12 metres on the Welsh side of the national boundary.
May:
During May I achieved a
long held goal and completed the listing of Wales down to P15, with the
inclusion of P14 hills as a sub category.
This list has taken over eight years to complete. The resulting list comprises 5431 Welsh P15 hills with a further 435 P14 subs also included and an article detailing this
list and its compilation appeared on Mapping Mountains and UKHillwalking.
July:
One of the major difficulties
being a hill list compiler is keeping count of how many hills are in each
respective list and what hills have changed status. A Change Register helps this process and
gives detail of each and every alteration, and importantly the running totals
for each classification. A Change Register
can also take in alterations in lists originated by other authors, and during
2019 the Change Registers for the Welsh Hewitts, followed by the English
Hewitts were published on Mapping Mountains.
These can be complicated to detail, and especially so when many
reclassifications have taken place, but the end product is worth the
research. There are other Change Registers
planned for 2020.
July:
In July, Guinness World
Records announced that Ffordd Pen Llech in Harlech was now recognised as the
steepest street in the world, usurping Baldwin Street in Dunedin, New Zealand
to the accolade. The media had followed
this story for a number of months with Gwyn and Sarah leading the
campaign. The announcement was covered
extensively by TV, radio and newspapers.
July:
When I bought the
Trimble GeoXH 6000 in late 2013 I hoped to survey at least 1000 P30s with it. This total would revolutionise the accuracy
of numerical data in many hill listings and I hoped to survey these hills in 10
– 11 years. In July of this year I
placed the Trimble on the summit of a hill, took a five minute data set and by
doing so reached the 600th P30 that I had surveyed using this equipment. During the year my hill walking activities
were concentrated on P15 hills, and this is likely to be so for the next year
or two, therefore the progression of my P30 surveying is likely to be slowed,
but the total of 1000 is now on the horizon.
September:
Much of Mapping
Mountains is led through surveying with the Trimble GeoXH 6000, with numerical
data leading many of the posts on the site.
However, place-name research and hill listing also make the occasional appearance,
and in September the listing of Y Trechol
– The Dominant Hills of Wales was finally completed in Google Doc
format. This list originated in 2009 and
its first grouping published on Mapping Mountains in December 2015, therefore
it had taken over 3½ years to compile and upload every group that forms
this list.
December:
Year’s End:
The Significant Height
Revisions post that appeared yesterday completed a grand sweep for the year, as
a separate post has been uploaded to Mapping Mountains on each and every day
throughout 2019.
The Year Ahead:
And what is in store for
Mapping Mountains during 2020; the listing of the Welsh Highlands – Uchafion Cymru will continue, with two combined
lists also planned for publication. More
hills will be surveyed with the Trimble GeoXH 6000 and more will be analysed
via LIDAR, with both methods producing increased accuracy and no doubt many
reclassifications.
A number of Change
Registers are also planned, with two already complete and scheduled for March 2020
publication, whilst two others are currently being researched.
Lastly, I thank those
who visit Mapping Mountains for their continued support and I hope the year
ahead brings lots of happiness and fun-filled days on the hill.
Myrddyn Phillips (1st
January 2020)
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