Friday 23 August 2013

Free fruit if you know us - just call and pick your own!

Its been a really productive year for fruit so if you know us and are passing call in and help yourself to some free plums, available (I imagine) up until around the 10th September! Our one plum tree must have at least 1000 plums on it and they are starting to drop. 

Eating now - maximum of 10 plums per day per person for obvious reasons!


If you like baking Apple Pies then call round after September 10th and help yourself to some baking apples they should be ready by then!


Wednesday 21 August 2013

G4OBK Ward's Stone G/SP-003 Activation August 2013

As I left Pickering at 5.50am bound for the Forest of Bowland, I knew I would be facing a damp day ahead. However I set off with enthusiasm in the knowledge that my friends Geoff M6PYG and Nick G4OOE that same day would also be out climbing Grizedale Pike and other Wainwright Fells on the Coledale Horseshoe near Keswick. The chance of making some radio contacts with them was spurring me on.  I chose the shortest route via Sutton Bank, A59 Skipton by-pass, Gisburn and Dunsop Bridge on my outward journey. This brought me to Jubilee Tower which was at the start of my solo walk up to Ward's Stone, the highest point in the Forest of Bowland. I was walking at exactly 8.30am local time. 
  
My route to Ward's Stone G/SP-003 from Jubilee Tower (Click pic for a larger version of map)
So what makes Ward's Stone the least activated of the South Pennines 16 summits? Accessibility and the distance you need to walk to reach the two point summit. 

The parking area seen from Jubilee Tower itself. My route followed the fenceline in the middle of the picture
This is why I saved Ward's Stone until it was my last South Pennine summit to climb and activate. As it was my last SP I wanted to do the summit justice despite the weather, so I armed myself with HF gear and my usual Yaesu VX-170 FM handheld transceiver and vertical dipole. The HF transceiver is nothing special - it is light and low power and only operates on CW (Morse). This is the YouKIts HB1B radio which produces about 4.5 watts RF output from internal batteries:

80m - 40m - 30m - 20m CW (Morse) only
The walk up is on access land - I noted the signs which say NO DOGS. I was glad I hadn't brought mine today, much to her chagrin.

The moor looked well managed once you reached Shooters Pile and many grouse were disturbed by my presence as I ploughed my way through the bogs in mist and rain. There would not be any shooters out today however - it was too misty and wet. 

The route

Go through the gate in the right hand corner of the large car park at Jubilee tower and follow the fence to your left for 1.4 miles. It is boggy but there is evidence of the passage of hiking boots. You pass a couple of landmarks on the way. The boundary stone at SD 5491 5808:

This beauty is marked as BS on the 1:25000 OS Map at SD 5491 5808




Just after Shooters Pile (A square cairn - see picture below) at SD 5554 5881, a path from Clougha Pike comes in on your left at a ladder stile. This sign pictured above was here.



The path is now quite well defined as you head east. You then reach a marker post at a gravel shooters track - don't be tempted into following the track as I was (see map above), but go straight across it and you will locate the continuing path over the moor. I returned via the correct route.... After almost 1.5 miles you reach a pile of large rocks at the western end of the plateau. This is where one of the two trig points is located at SD 5858 5853. I chose this as my operating position and walked no further. For only the second time on over 200 SOTA activations on account of the weather, I had carried my Highlander Beach Shelter. This proved a godsend on this adventure, allowing me to remain on the summit for almost 3 hours.

My shelter was first erected and then the antennae followed. I use a 6m telescoping 6m fibreglass flag pole to support a home made link dipole for HF and a vertical dipole for 2m FM. 

40 minutes after arriving on the summit I made my first contact, with my friend Colin G4UXH in Milnthorpe on 2m FM. From then on for the next 100 minutes I went from band to band on 40m, 30m, 20m and 2m making contacts. I finished with 32 contacts. Notable ones included:

HB9BCB/P Heinz Summit to Summit HB/BE-086 Switzerland (30m CW)

DJ9MH/P Hajo Summit to Summit DM/BM-270 Germany (30m CW)

G6ODU/P Bob Summit to Summit G/SP-011 Freehold's Top Nr Todmorden (2m FM)

M6PYG/P Geoff G4OOE/P Nick Summit to Summit G/LD-015 Grizedale Pike Lake District (2m FM)

G4SSH/A Roy Fowey Cornwall on indoor antenna (40m CW)

N4EX Rick in North Carolina USA (20m CW) Mentioned as this is my first low power QRP SOTA contact with USA

This cheap £15 shelter kept the rain off me and my gear on Ward's Stone G/SP-003
I hung around waiting for my friends Geoff M6PYG and Nick G4OOE to arrive on Grizedale Pike G/LD-015 whilst I was sending on HF CW, and then I heard Geoff's voice "CQ SOTA CQ WOTA" crackle through on the other VHF radio, so we quickly made contact, this was followed fifteen minutes later with a contact with Nick on his arrival on the summit. 

The solitary tree of the Forest of Bowland a landmark at SD 5625 5883
Satisfied, it was now time to pack up and beat a hasty retreat back to the car for the three hour drive home via Bentham, Skipton and Sutton Bank back to Pickering. I stopped off at The Dalesman Cafe in Gargrave for two Chorley Cakes and a pot of tea, my reward.

Ward's Stone was one awkward place for me to get to, but I'm glad it's now been done and I won't be going back. My plan next is to finish off the Welsh Borders summits in the autumn before concentrating on Wales and Southern England. 

Return distance Walked: 6.8 miles (90 mins up / 75 mins down)
Ascent: 1150 feet
Number of contacts: 32 on HF and VHF

The wet writer at the western trig point just before leaving Ward's Stone