Archive for December, 2011

Come along and say hello

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

A whole team of us from Planet TGO will be at Exel in London from 12th to 15th January.

I’ll be giving a few talks in the Motorola Main Stage and if I get the opportunity I might be able to nip off for a bit and have a go on the climbing wall or try out some new bikes.

For most of the time I’ll be on the TGO stand so why not come along, say hello and have a natter. It’ll be great to meet you and, to be honest, hanging about on a stand all day long is incredibly boring if you don’t have people to chat to. You’ll be doing us an immense favour. See you then!

Tune in for the Sutherland Trail

Wednesday, December 28th, 2011

MANY thanks to everyone who Tweeted or emailed to say they enjoyed last night’s Scotland: Coast-to-Coast programme. Apparently the sound was very low for the first few minutes of the programme. I don’t know why but I’m told it’s the same on iPlayer this morning. Bloody gremlins. Richard Else is on to the BBC as we speak to see if they can fix it. I hope your enjoyment of the programme wasn’t spoiled too much.

Next up is a repeat of Sutherland, The Empty Lands? on BBC 2 Scotland on Friday at 5pm (Sky Channel 990). This programme later appeared on DVD and as a book called The Sutherland Trail, both of which are available from Mountain Media. The Sutherland programme was the first of our Christmas ’specials’ back in 2008 and is an account of a lovely backpacking trip between Lochinver and Tongue, climbing Suilven, Foinaven and Ben Loyal en route. It’s a fabulous route in a part of Scotland that generally tends to be ignored, perhaps because it’s so far north, but I’d highly recommend it.

I must confess my own thoughts are turning towards planning for the summer. I’m afraid I’ve had it with this winter weather. I set off yesterday from Cairngorm on a little 2-day backpacking trip that I’ve done every Christmas for the past 10 years or so but yesterday was the first time I’ve ever abandoned it halfway through. The idea is that I get dropped off in Glenmore and walk home to Newtonmore using the little trails and byways through Rothiemurchus, Inshriach and Glen Feshie, finishing off on the level mid-level trails between Kingussie and Newtonmore. I had a lovely walk throughout the woods as far as Inshriach bothy, or Drake’s Bothy, where I stopped for a brew but when I came out and put my pack on I was aware of a distinct change in the weather. Where it had been very still and calm with a milky grey sky it had now turned very windy and the sky in the west had broken up - very beautiful with touches of an orange sunset, but with intense black layers below.

As I made my way through Feshiebridge forest the wind really strengthened and bit of trees were being blown down. Here and there it was hard to make progress. I thought of where to camp - in past years I’ve sometimes camped by the burn near Coranstillbeg farm in Glen Feshie but that would be too exposed to this ferocious south westerly. I thought about other campsites I’ve enjoyed in the past but the thought of a night spent listening for trees falling down wasn’t worth thinking about. Only two or three weeks ago a large tree was blown down on top of a friend’s house and a hide tree in our own garden was blown over, smashing our garden fence. These storms we are experiencing at the moment have such a high intensity, and seem to blow up out of nowhere. The effects of global warming? Could well be, but I decided not to risk it so I made my way to the road near Loch Insh, phoned my wife and asked her to come and pick me up. At least I got home in time to watch the excellent Dickens’ classic Great Expectations…

This morning the gales are battering us once again, the temperature has dropped and very cold rain showers are hammering at the window panes. I suspect it will be snowing up in the hills. Looks like I’ll have to suffer another day indoors - too wet and windy for backpacking, too wet and windy for cycling, no snow for ski-ing. What a horrible day. Guess it’ll have to be the dreaded turbo-trainer in the garage, an attempt to maintain an iota of fitness during this miserable spell of weather.

Have a very Merry Christmas!

Friday, December 23rd, 2011

A Merry Christmas to all of you and best wishes for a joyous and prosperous New Year.

And if you’re wondering how to fill your time on the 27th December can I suggest you have a look at our BBC Christmas Special. Scotland, Coast to Coast will be broadcast on BBC2 Scotland and Sky Channel at 7pm. It will then be available on iPlayer for a week. Here’s a wee taster for it.

And if you’re planning on getting out on the hills over the holiday period take care and stay safe. Much of the snow here in the highlands has gone now but the conditions are still variable, lurching between warm spells and frosty nights, so you can never tell. The snow could return at any time.

I’ll be heading off on my annual Christmas backpacking trip for a couple of days, I’ll be riding my bike if the roads stay icy free and with all my family coming for Christmas I guess it’ll be a hectic time, but hey, having grandchildren makes Christmas fresh and lively again.

Finally, many of you have been asking about my recent road cycling exploits. The truth is I was having some problems with my feet, a circulation problem as it turns out, and I bought a road bike so I could exercise without pain. In no time at all I was hooked and I’m now thoroughly enjoying bashing round the byways. Yeah, yeah, I know all about MAMILs, (Middle Aged Mountaineers In Lycra) but it’s certainly keeping me fit. The feet are much better too and I’ve been out and about a lot this year - walked across Scotland and managed a 3-week trek in Nepal, so back to normal. Will I be giving up the bike now? Don’t think so, indeed I’m planning a Land’s End to JohnO’Groats trip with an old pal for next spring. Something about teaching an old dog new tricks…

Have a great Festive Season!

Adventure Show 7PM tonight!

Tuesday, December 20th, 2011

Just a reminder that the Adventure Show is on tonight on BBC2 Scotland or Sky Channel 990 at 7pm. Main event is the Tiree Classic but I’ll be on another island entirely, with the lovely Deziree Wilson.

Dez and I climb An Sgur, the best ‘wee’ mountain in Scotland. En route we’ll be trying out some new soft shells, although to be fair I don’t think either of us were particularly taken with the concept of soft shells.

After our walk up the hill we had a go at testing some new camping stoves, while cooking a three course meal. The producers called it a ‘cook-off’ but I don’t think Jamie Oliver has anything to worry about. Great fun though…

A personal plea to Highland councillors

Monday, December 19th, 2011

Tomorrow the members of the Highland Council planning department will decide on the Allt Duine Windfarm Proposal, an enormous 30-odd turbine scheme that would be situated a few metres from the boundary of the Cairngorms National Park. I had hoped to attend the protest, organised by Save the Monadliath, but work commitments mean that I won’t be able to. Instead, I’ve written to every member of the Planning Committee with what amounts to a personal plea for the Monadh Liath, and the Cairngorms National Park. I’ve copied it below.

Dear Councillor,


Please forgive me for e-mailing you as an individual member of the planning committee. I know you are extremely busy but I would ask you to read through this last minute plea for the Monadh Liath and consider it.

Although separated from the main Cairngorm massif by the A9 the Monadh Liath is also, partly, within the boundaries of the Cairngorms National Park, an area that has become a showcase for the finest of Scotland’s landscapes. Although the planning application lies just outside the Park boundary the new roads into the site and some of the infrastructure will be inside the National Park. The proposed turbines will also be highly visible from inside the Park, perhaps not so clearly from the A9 but most certainly from the high roads and the hills on the other side of the A9, particularly the popular Glen Feshie hills. Since many people who visit the Cairngorms National Park do so to climb to these high points I would contend that this is highly relevant.

We all have different views on how to tackle global warming and how to achieve a good energy mix for the future but no matter your views surely we don’t want to surround our greatest landscape treasures with industrial-sized turbines, thousands of tons of concrete to hold them in place and a network of bulldozed tracks to service them? There may be a place for wind turbines in the Scottish highlands but surely it is not a few metres from those areas we have set aside as an area worthy of National Park status?

If planning permission is granted for this development it will undoubtedly set a precedent for other developers to ring-fence our National Parks with turbines. I would contend that would be a disaster for Scotland and its tourism industry, something that would never be allowed to happen in other countries of the world and something that would bring shame on Scotland, the place of birth of John Muir, the internationally acclaimed father of the National Park movement.

Please, I would urge you to object strongly to this development at your meeting tomorrow. Thank you for your time.

yours sincerely,

Cameron McNeish
author and broadcaster, and resident of the Cairngorms National Park

Three Programmes over the Festive Season

Friday, December 16th, 2011

Not one, not two but three Adventure Shows coming up soon! Kicking off is the Tiree Wave Classic on 20th December at 19.00. Also in the programme Deziree Wilson and I will be testing soft shells and enjoy a camping stove cook-off, all on the lovely Isle of Eigg.

Then, on December 27th at 19.00 Scotland - join me as I walk from Coast to Coast across Scotland, from the beach at Aberdeen to Knoydart, climbing Scotland’s most eastern Munro and the most western Munro on the mainland on the way.

Finally another chance to see the Sutherland Trail on 30th December at 17.00. The Sutherland Trail book and DVD available from this website.

All programmes on BBC 2 Scotland or Sky Channel 990. They should all be on iPlayer the day after the programmes are broadcast.

End of a personal era

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

Thirty years ago I started writing a weekly column in my local newspaper, the Strathspey and Badenoch Herald. The owner of the newspaper recognised there were many outdoor enthusiasts living in the Aviemopre area, and plenty of climbers, walkers and skiers visited the area, so he asked me to write a column describing some walks and climbs, making the occasional comment about local environmental issues.

In that time I think I’ve missed less than a handful of weekly columns and while the amount the paper paid me wouldn’t buy a round of drinks I was happy to write the column on the basis it was a local paper and it was good to be involved in the community in such a way.

Over the years I guess I’ve upset some and maybe delighted others with some of those comments, but generally speaking much of the stuff I’ve written received an enthusiastic response in the letters pages and a lively letters page is a good sign of a successful newspaper.

I was a little surprised then, and more than a little disappointed to get an email from the editor of the paper a few weeks ago saying the owners of the paper had decided they couldn’t afford to pay freelance contributors any more. Gavin, the editor, suggested I might like to write the column for nothing, or he might be able to find a sponsor, but after thinking long and hard about it I decided to call it a day. As a professional journalist, and a paid up member of the NUJ, I wouldn’t write the column for free, and I wasn’t to keen on the idea of a sponsor telling me what or what not to write. This week’s edition of the paper will be the last to carry the McNeish byline.

Am I angry? No, not really, just a little sad that an era of my working life has come to an end and a little disappointed that 30 years of loyal service to a newspaper should end in such a way. I would have thought that someone from the newspaper’s management team might have had the decency to pick up the phone and, at least, said thanks for 30 years service. Ho-hum. I guess that’s the way modern management conducts itself - faceless and cowardly.

Anyway, I’d like to thank editor Gavin Musgrove for his support and encouragement over the past few years and for his sake, and for all the Strathie team and all readers, I offer my very best wishes and hopes for a successful future.

What a horrible day!

Friday, December 9th, 2011

After a very pleasant meeting with the Outdoor Industries Association in Edinburgh I came home to an afternoon and evening of complete chaos. Storm force winds brought down a huge tree in our garden, missing the house thankfully but tearing down the garden fence. Our doctor’s car was flattened by a fallen tree and one of our neighbours had his van flattened. Then one of our friends arrived to say a tree had brought down her electricity line and could she work in our house. She later went home because she had forgotten something to find another tree had smashed into her house. And all the time the wind was roaring and shrieking and the rain lashing down. We all decided to just go to the pub but when we got there they didn’t have any electricity and was shut. Not a good day.


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