Thursday 30 December 2010

Too much noise


I really like playing with Young Master and Bella, and their friends. But sometimes I prefer a bit of peace and quiet, expecially when they are racing around the house with their guns pretending to be CIA agents or assassins. I knew that things were heading the wrong way when Young Master produced his Airzooka (a weapon that fires a strong pelt of air, and makes a din), so I took refuge under Leah's bed - it reminded me of those awful vuvuzelas in the summer.

Tuesday 28 December 2010

Gran-pons


"It never snows in Anglesey".
(mark writes) Gran is now a confirmed devotee of Kahtoola Microspikes. There was about 10" of snow on Wednesday night, and when we arrived we couldn't get the car down the drive to our rented Christmas farmhouse, so we left the car in the layby at the top of the track and had to ferry all the luggage, food and drink about a quarter of a mile to the front door. My mum, with two recent hip replacements, did a great job of getting down in deep snow, but the big problem was getting her back up the hill again the next morning on Christmas Eve. I'd packed my microspikes and suggested she used them to get back up to the car. It was a complete success - with two walking sticks and the crampons she got up in 15 mins (about half the time we'd estimated), and without a stumble.
Great kit.
On Boxing Day we spent 3 1/2 hours on Snowdon, Charlie submerged by snow in places and often having to leap out of it like a dolphin. Driven back by the wind too strong to progress further than the cwm above Clogwyn station - Charlie getting blinded by driven snow. Afterwards I relaxed and rewarmed with a great mug of hot chocolate, roaring fire, and usual warm welcome, at the Pen-y-Ceunant tea house (on the steep road section just round the corner from the cattle grid after leaving Llanberis). "Muddy boots and Dogs Welcome" makes it the best sort of place.

Tuesday 21 December 2010

Christmas in Anglesey


We're off to Anglesey for Christmas, staying in a farmhouse near Lligwy bay. Gran and Kim are joining us, and my job in the car is to protect the turkey from Kim - butter wouldn't melt in my mouth, but as for Kim...once a Labrador, always a Labrador, and where food is concerned, she never has enough to eat. So I shall guard the turkey and make sure it arrives in one piece.
Mark's been getting his Snowdonia maps out, and he's now up in the loft finding his ice axe. I'm sure we're going to have a lot of fun in the mountains over Christmas; we'll try to do some of the PB if conditions are good.

Saturday 18 December 2010

Charlie the Husky


SNOW!
(Mark writes) We had over 9 inches of snow at home, so up to the loft and down came the cross country skis. We bought these skis over 15 years ago, but have only been able to use them once before 2010. I used them in January, and now again.
Charlie then becomes a sled-dog; he gets attached with an extended lead (so the tips of the skis don't catch his paws) and is strong enough to tow me up the hill outside the house. The main problem is his frequent stops to water trees and lamp posts. Tonight we went up to Playfield, then down the track into Bagley Wood; along our usual route (including the bridge over the A34 - (northbound of which was still blocked solid at 20:00, and many of the drivers waited 8 hours before the M40 jack-knifed lorries were cleared). On the way back we stayed on the road, and got past a few cars which had been unable to get down the final hill into Kennington; one of these was a Land Rover Defender which had gone into a ditch - great car, but lousy driver, unless it was trying to avoid the car abandonned on the other side of the road.
Sled dog and skis best for these conditions, obviously, rather than a 4*4.
If he slows down, his 'mush' equivalent command is 'cats' or 'squirrels', then he's off again.