Too Much Convalescence After the Snow

Preprandial :cocktail_glass:

Last week was possibly a record breaking amount of snow in NE Scotland, so much so that schools were shut all week - even the city ones - and terms such as snow-vid were floating around as everyone was literally stuck at home. As is the case with the UK, where snow is irregular and infrequent, the majority of the population and government don’t really prepare and so chaos ensues. Others, who are better equiped, head out and help those in need. Photos from the Aberdeenshire chat that week via @MM0EFI, @2M0RVZ, @MM8WNA:

If you could get to a hill, then it could’ve been a great day out
at least on the sunny day.

SOTA restart 2026 :snow_capped_mountain:

Eager to get out, but still wary of the road conditions, I proposed Ben Rinnes and the two Convals - Meikle and Little. We’d make use of the two cars and do a through route to save too much backtracking on ourselves.


From Ben Rinnes car park to the Golf Club

Promontory

Sunday and Monday had seen significant snow melts and so the hills were quite patchy. The deepest snow were the drifts in the path, and it seemed the higher we went the less snow there was - presumably having been blown away.


Climbing up Rinnes, looking back at Meikle Conval

What the top lacked in snow, it made up for it in ice, with some rocks being particularly lethal. However, we made it in reasonable time, with a small flurry of snow to greet us. The wind wasn’t too bad, so we setup on the top by the trig.


Skating to the trig

Top of Ben Rinnes

Fraser setup on 20m and I tried 2m FM. Ben Rinnes benefits from reaching the Moray coast and back towards Aberdeen on VHF, and often there’s decent activity from the locals along the coast. However, it was pretty quiet, so I took over from Fraser on HF to qualify the summit before we were too cold.


HF Station at the top of Ben Rinnes


A rare sighting of the MM0EFI owned radio in operation


Making up contacts after a quiet 2m

Time for Conviviality◝(ᔔᔕᔔ)◜

Back to the Land Rover for lunch (sounds fancier than it was) and then up the steep start to Meikle Conval. This time Fraser tried 2m first, then hopped on HF once efforts were exhausted.


CQ CQ?

The path continues on, with Little looking just that until you’re at the bottom, and up we go a final time. The map says there’s a trig, but it doesn’t seem to have been put on the actual summit, and so we keep going a bit, in the hope of a useful mast support at least.


On the way to Little Conval. Meikle behind, and Rinnes on the right in the cloud

Alex on Little Conval

Fraser on Little Conval

With all the summits done, it was time to head back. After a day of grey and light snow/showers, the sun final appears for a glorious walk down. Most of it on our feet too.


Checking the shortcut route

Smiling because no face plant this time


Fraser's National Geographic submission - All three hills

Even a good brocken spectre we tried to capture.:innocent:


2026: A SOTA Odyssey :moai:


The frozen monolith

As @GM4TOE Barry shared, the trig point of Ben Rinnes has evolved to its final form by the Friends of Ben Rinnes. With a layer of frost on it, it didn’t quite have the same impact as it would on a sunny day.


New trig on a sunny day

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A great read and great photos too ! :partying_face:
It’s good to know that if I get car snow bound in The Shire COTAG is nearby to rescue me ! :pickup_truck:
I followed your SPOTS for GM/ES-021, GM/ES-051 & GM/ES-057
but unfortunately didn’t manage to hear you for any Chases from my home QTH.
Maybe next time.

73 Peter

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Brilliant report and photos as always. I admire your decication to the summits, but even more so the dedication to documenting your outings!

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It helps breakup the 28 pages of “how does the 2m SSB scoring work” :sweat_smile:

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Almost enough snow to have got my x-country skis out.

Splendid photographs as usual. Can you remember roughly the altitude you saw that sapling pine tree at?

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I can see on my gps track where we took the photo, and it’s about 490m. On the west side of Little Conval there are several small trees/saplings within the AZ so ~530m.

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Looks like a lovely day out with fantastic views. :ok_hand:

This soft southerner (looking at some of the pics) is rather amazed at your layers
 and operating without gloves. I’d still be thawing out a few days later HI.

PS Is that a metal trig point? Trig-Tongue-Sticking could become a viral Tick Tock winter sport (if it hasn’t already).

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I typically wear three layers, a short sleeve, a long sleeve and then a fleece. When I get to the summit I’ll put on a down jacket for sitting around for half an hour, or if it’s wet then a waterproof outer layer (or if it’s cold and wet - both!) I’ve taken to fingerless gloves when operating (although I’d forgotten them that day - so just pull one finger out to type on my phone). I have quite a few gloves at home for cycling or cold days but I still don’t like any of them for doing SOTA. I have some thin insulated gloves that are nice for hiking but if they get slightly wet then they make my hands colder. I’m also bad for wearing gloves at the start, marching up the hill and getting sweaty hands, and making them damp on the inside and again freezing my hands when I stop at the top. I might try a woolen pair of fingerless ones, see if the natural fibres are a bit nicer


Fraser is usually the one in a tshirt complaining how hot it is. His secret is supermarket freezer-packers gloves.

It is, the “Friends of Ben Rinnes” had a stainless steel casing made and fitted it over the top of the existing trig. A new circle of granite was then inscribed around the edges, fixed to the top of that. A very nice addition. Tongue sticking is an option, or seeing if the KX2 can tune it.

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Sacrilege.

I’ve found Fleece + Thinsulate work well. They are warm when wet. They also allow just enough airflow to help you not get too sweaty in the hands. I have a few pairs of fingerless thin gloves for when it’s not so cold. And the Decathlon fleece liner gloves on their own are nice for Winter operating.

I do think I may need to invest in some heated socks for when sitting about activating. Normal socks are fine when walking but sitting causes noticeable toe-temperature drops that take ages to recover. So normal socks to walk and then swap to heated ones for sitting about. Then back to normal ones for walking back.

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Andy I’ve tried heated socks and they were a fiddle. Replaced with heated insoles with embedded battery and a remote 3 level control clipped to my key holder on the rucksack.

They replaced the existing insoles and I only turn on lowest setting when on the summit and you don’t feel the heat but stop the feet chilling. Re-charge with a usb c pair of cables that were supplied. Only downside is you you need to remove insoles to access the charge ports but I usually remove the insoles after an outing to air/ dry them. Worth a try?

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Archie, they certainly sound a lot less faff on the summit than swapping socks. :socks::fire:

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It does sound less faff. There appear to be pricey insoles and cheap ones from the Middle Kingdom. I’m just contemplating the failure modes and H&S implications of putting electric heating elements into boots that are well laced to my feet when those heaters can be made, packaged, shipped 6000miles and delivered to my house for under £10. And everyone makes a profit on the sale!

Andy mine were about £35 18 months ago and have worked well
.. so far. I bought them for my motor bike and they have now replaced my heated socks for summits.

I see you can control some from a phone app
..keep it simple!

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I find it hard to find gloves that ‘work’.

Too bulky and they make my hands colder. Too light and they don’t insulate as much as I’d like. :man_shrugging:

To be fair, due to some physiological oddities - things around my shoulders turns my fingers white, which includes rucksacks or badly chosen layers. Hence my obsession with ultra-lightness (tongue-sticking doesn’t require additional equipment).

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You’ll have to get a big bum bag.

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Considering that Alex.

Good retailer - I got my Big Agnes from them.

Hands froze on my MTB ride today - bib short straps cut off the circulation somewhat.:man_shrugging:

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An excellent write-up and superb photos as usual. Thank you for memories of our (2 day!) expedition in May about 3 years ago. Staying at Aberlour it was no hardship, after ascending Benn Rinnes, to return a couple of days later and park a bit further north to walk through the forestry to the pass between the two Convals. Then it was swap summits time again as we separated and, I went up the higher one first (so that I’d have less far to climb when the 2nd hill was ascended), got my contacts and the s2s before returning to the pass. Then Little Conval didn’t seem so little (it was steeper) but it didn’t take long and, hey presto, we’d both gained 2 uniques AND completes! It was a bit of a trek back to the car (what a neat idea to use 2 vehicles and cut down the distance) but we were both happy and thought they were a great pair of hills.

I look forward to the next instalment - but doubt we will have been there as you return to the higher tops. Many thanks.

73

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