22.06.21 Banc Lletysynod (SN 720 740), Banc
Penygwernydd (SN 728 741), Banc (SN 723 729), Grogwynion
(SN 720 725) and Pen y Bryn Mawr (SN 705 732, not Trimbled)
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Banc Penygwernydd (SN 728 741) |
I’d looked at combining these hills since
visiting others in the vicinity after one of last year’s lockdowns was
lifted. Then I’d investigated hills to
the north-west and enjoyed the quiet surrounds with narrow country lanes
leading between the hills, all of which made a lasting impression. Today I’d planned a route taking in five P30s
and as the last summit was forested, with just four to be Trimbled.
It was a glorious journey to the hill with mist
enclosing the Severn Valley until past Llanidloes, where blue sky crept in to
the scene to dominate the western horizon.
I was parked and walking by 7.25am and was soon wandering up a long
grassed field aiming for the rising profile of my first hill of the day; Banc
Lletysynod.
As height was gained a slight breeze whisked
across the land, for me this was welcome as even this early in the morning
warmth was evident. Except for a distant
cloud bank toward the west the skies were an azure blue; a succulent colour
that pulled me ever upward.
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One of those unusual sights amongst the Welsh hills |
As I rounded the northerly flank of Banc
Lletysynod a mass of Range Rovers came in to view. They were lined up, one after another on both
sides of a track that led toward a number of buildings where even more Range
Rovers were parked. I was later told
that these were mainly used for parts for Eastern Europe. They made for one of those unusual sights
when amongst the Welsh hills, and one that I find rather heartening as this
land is not a manicured landscape, it is one lived in and loved with all its
beauty and sometimes unusual elements.
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LIDAR image of Banc Lletysynod (SN 720 740) |
Prior to this visit I had examined these hills
via LIDAR, producing heights and positions for each summit and bwlch. Therefore, with accurate height data all I
wanted to survey were the summits, leaving bwlch heights and positions to that
of LIDAR.
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LIDAR image of Grogwynion (SN 720 725) |
The high point of Banc Lletysynod was easily
found amongst fresh and greened fern and the Trimble was soon set up gathering
its allotted data. During data
collection I peered eastward toward my second hill of the day; Banc
Penygwernydd and followed the course of a track up to a fence and then onward
beside fir trees to the open hill, it seemed an easy enough route.
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Gathering data at the summit of Banc Lletysynod |
Once data were gathered and stored I closed the
Trimble down, packed it away and sauntered down the hill aiming for the track
which crosses what the map indicates as a drainage channel. The ascent was in shade and the long grass
dew laden. The higher I got glimmers of
early morning sunshine shimmered through near trees, until I reached a large
field and the upper part of the hill beyond.
I again, veered toward the northerly flank to then swing south for the
final ascent. The summit of Banc
Penygwernydd consists of closely cropped grass and as I set the Trimble up a
herd of sheep peered my way from the adjacent field.
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Banc from the summit of Banc Lletysynod |
As the Trimble was ebbing down to the 0.1m
accuracy level before data should be logged, a quad bike appeared heading my
way, I waved across toward it and was soon in conversation with Ivor Hopkins;
the farmer from Penygwernydd.
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Ivor Hopkins of Penygwernydd farm |
During our conversation I checked the Trimble
and then re-positioned it to face east, Ivor said he needed to check on some
sheep and would be back in five to ten minutes.
As the quad bike disappeared I pressed ‘Log’ and left the Trimble
gathering data until Ivor reappeared. We
chatted for 15 minutes or so about the hills, the Trimble, the names of the
hills and my onward route. He told me
where the gates were positioned for my downward progress and said he was now
off to cut grass for silage.
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The view north from the summit of Banc Penygwernydd |
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Gathering data at the summit of Banc Penygwernydd |
Descending from the summit of Banc Penygwernydd
the greened and inviting profile of my next hill was a dominant feature to my
south, this hill’s uppermost enclosed land is named Banc on the Tithe map. Its summit was about a mile away as the crow
flies and I soon connected with the gates that Ivor had mentioned, these
brought me back to the minor road that I had travelled on earlier in the
morning.
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Banc from the descent of Banc Penygwernydd |
I now wandered up another minor road to where a
public footpath headed eastward following the course of the ridge crest toward the
high point of Banc. This part of the
walk was a delight as the country hereabouts is quiet and all I had for company
was birdsong, which invitingly radiated across the land.
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Banc Penygwernydd (SN 728 741) |
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Banc Lletysynod with Banc Cwmnewydion beyond |
By the time I neared the summit of Banc the
cloud bank which was evident further to the west had pushed inland and the
vivid blue skies of the early morning were suddenly gone. The summit of Banc consists of an attractive
rock outcrop and I had fun aligning the Trimble with the very highest part of
rock, whilst balancing its rear on two very small flat stones that enabled it
to sit in place for the five minutes of data collection.
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Gathering data at the summit of Banc |
The onward route was now south-westward toward
Grogwynion which also has the name prefixed with that of Castell on
contemporary Ordnance Survey maps, and as this latter name implies it has an
ancient hill fort at its summit, the terraces of which were on grand display
from this northerly vantage point.
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Grogwynion (SN 720 725) |
Below the hill is the farm of Pengrogwynion and
I was soon walking through the farm yard with two happily barking farm dogs
approaching me. I’d read reports on the
Hill Bagging website of the friendly farmer and even though this was
encouraging I would have knocked on the front door anyway, which I soon
did. Wendy answered the door and we were
soon in conversation about the hill, farming, my route, the ancient hill fort,
the Welsh language, the meaning of being Welsh and where she originated;
Liverpool, which was a surprise as she is a fluent Welsh speaker. Wendy told me that the name of the hill is
Grogwynion with the word Castell purely signifying the ancient hill fort as
being the castle of the hill of Grogwynion.
She told me about their farm and its original name and where this
related to. We were soon joined by Caredig,
who I later met on the walk descending from my last hill of the day. Before leaving I asked permission to visit
the hill and explained I wanted to survey it, this was duly granted. Wendy told me the best way up and where the
original entrance to the settlement was thought to be positioned. I thanked them for their time and waved by
goodbye’s, soon stopping to talk to one of the friendly farm dogs who was lying
on a near wall basking in the remnants of sun that pieced the high cloud.
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Caredig and Wendy of Pengrogwynion farm |
Wendy had told me to head up beside a water tank
next to a rock just off of the narrow gravelled track that leads to the
farm. This gave access to a fenced area
that led up to the open hill. This hill
is recommended to visit for its position and profile. It has a steepening summit cone and gives
excellent views north-eastward toward Banc and the continuation of its south-easterly
ridge toward Banc Maen Arthur and across the intervening southerly stream
valley toward the forested realms of Mynydd Bach.
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Banc from the summit of Grogwynion |
After setting the Trimble up to gather its
allotted data, I happily sat below the equipment looking out to the
continuation of the gravelled track leading from Pengrogwynion as it meandered
westward, gaining height toward the narrow minor road that led toward the few
houses nestled beside it that constitutes the community of Brynafan.
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Gathering data at the summit of Grogwynion |
I could easily have spent longer at the summit
of Grogwynion but I still had one summit to visit, but as this was forested the
Trimble could now remain in its case as LIDAR gives a height for the summit and
dependent upon tree coverage any form of data collected by the Trimble may have
a high degree of measurement uncertainty applicable to it.
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The onward route |
On my way up the gravelled track I occasionally stopped
to look back at Grogwynion; a fine hill nestled amongst many others that are
also similar in nature. The gravelled
track soon reached the paved minor road and once past the houses at Brynafan I
followed a track leading toward the small reservoir on the right hand side of
the road that headed up toward the forestry edge.
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The small reservoir leading to the forested summit of Pen y Bryn Mawr |
A foot stile indicates the way in to the
forestry, a good path then leads to a forest track. As I neared the track I heard a car pass,
which surprised me, dust was still in the air as I walked directly over the
track to the mature trees beyond. The
car was heading toward a house, which I came across on my later descent which
is nestled against the north-easterly corner of the forest, with the track
being the access road to the house.
Prior to entering the forest I’d activated the
Trimble and taken a compass reading toward the summit. However, even without the aid of a compass
the high point was easy to find. The
summit of this hill is placed in a wide forest ride that has a fallen or felled
tree straight over it. The forest ride
is full of tree debris. I visited both
sides of the fallen tree and checked the Trimble co-ordinates against those
produced by LIDAR, it was 1 metre out on the easterly and 4 metres out on the northerly, I was at the summit, which didn’t surprise me
as ground descended from this point in all directions.
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The Trimble marks the spot - at the summit of Pen y Bryn Mawr |
Reversing my inward route out of the forest I
was soon sitting on the foot stile enjoying a late breakfast of a boiled
egg. My route down now followed the
periphery of the forest and the continuation of the fence to a track. On my way I was surprised to find a house
nestled in the corner against the conifers.
As I continued away from the forest and down beside a fence a Landrover
appeared in the adjacent field, it made a beeline toward me and I waved over
toward it. It stopped beside the fence
and I soon scampered up the intervening bank to the fence and smiled when I saw
who was getting out of the vehicle, it was Caredig from Pengrogwynion farm.
He’d come to check on the sheep in the field,
this being a part of the land adjoined to his farm. We talked for 20 minutes or so. He told me that he has cancer, but still
tries to get out to do daily tasks around the farm and is aided my his nephew. We talked at length about his life and how
fulfilling working in the outdoors is, and how the quality of outdoor life was
emphasised by the recent and ongoing pandemic and the resulting lockdowns. I told him of my canal walks during the first
lockdown and how the access this gave me to immediate countryside was a great
joy during a time that the distance to the hills meant that few were
accessible.
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Caredig Thomas of Pengrogwynion farm |
Eventually Caredig said he would have to go as
he had a few other things that needed doing, but I could have easily stayed
there a while longer listening to and talking with him.
After a short distance farther down the field I
turned left on a track which led to the paved minor lane which in time would
lead me back to my car. On the way I
listened to birdsong, an ever present and welcome background sound that reverberated
around the land. This was interspersed
by the call of a cockerel. The latter
reminded me of walking the middle hills leading to the Marshyangdi valley and
the Annapurna circuit and sanctuary trek, where the call of an early morning
cockerel was the usual wakening experience.
I spent the next ten minutes of so encountering delightful flash backs
to images from Nepal.
It had been another good day on the hill, when
do you ever encounter a bad one, seldom if at all.
Survey Result:
Banc Lletysynod
Summit Height: 290.2m (converted to OSGM15, Trimble GeoXH
6000)
Summit Grid Reference: SN 72010 74093 (Trimble GeoXH 6000)
Bwlch Height: 246.9m (LIDAR)
Bwlch Grid Reference: SN 71913 74275 (LIDAR)
Drop: 43.3m (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR bwlch)
Dominance: 14.92% (Trimble
GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR bwlch)
Banc Penygwernydd
Summit Height: 325.95m (converted to OSGM15, Trimble GeoXH
6000)
Summit Grid Reference: SN 72816 74132 (Trimble GeoXH 6000)
Bwlch Height: 269.2m (LIDAR)
Bwlch Grid Reference: SN 72926 74808 & SN 72928 74809 (LIDAR)
Drop: 56.7m (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
bwlch)
Dominance: 17.41% (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
bwlch)
Banc (significant name change)
Summit Height: 316.3m (converted to OSGM15, Trimble GeoXH
6000)
Summit Grid Reference: SN 72380 72987 (Trimble GeoXH 6000)
Bwlch Height: 285.1m (LIDAR)
Bwlch Grid Reference: SN 72097 73104 (LIDAR)
Drop: 31.2m (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
bwlch) (Sub-Trichant reclassified to Trichant)
Dominance: 9.87% (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
bwlch)
Grogwynion (significant name change)
Summit Height: 288.6m (converted to OSGM15, Trimble GeoXH
6000)
Summit Grid Reference: SN 72068 72507 (Trimble GeoXH 6000)
Bwlch Height: 255.8m (LIDAR)
Bwlch Grid Reference: SN 71921 72581 (LIDAR)
Drop: 32.7m (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
bwlch)
Dominance: 11.35% (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
bwlch)
Pen y Bryn Mawr
Summit Height: 341.6m (LIDAR)
Summit Grid Reference: SN 70567 73222 (LIDAR) (summit relocation confirmed)
Bwlch Height: 222.8m (LIDAR)
Bwlch Grid Reference: SN 72170 73551 (LIDAR)
Drop: 118.8m (LIDAR)
Dominance: 34.77% (LIDAR)
For further details please consult the Trimble Survey Spreadsheet
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