The Riddle of Sphinx Rock: The life and times of Great Gable
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About this ebook
Ronald Turnbull
Ronald Turnbull was born in St Andrews, Scotland, into an energetic fellwalking family. His grandfather was a president of the Scottish Mountaineering Club, and a more remote ancestor was distinguished as only the second climbing fatality in Snowdonia. In 1995 Ronald won the Fell Running Association's Long-distance Trophy for a non-stop run over all the 2000ft hills of Southern Scotland; his other proud achievements include the ascent of the north ridge of the Weisshorn and a sub-2hr Ben Nevis race. He enjoys multi-day treks, through the Highlands in particular, and has made 21 different coast-to-coast crossings of the UK. He has also slept out, in bivvy bag rather than tent, on over 80 UK summits. Outside the UK he likes hot, rocky areas of Europe, ideally with beaches and cheap aeroplanes. Recently he achieved California's 220-mile John Muir Trail and East Lothian's 45-mile John Muir Way in a single season, believing himself the first to have achieved this slightly perverse double. He has also started trying to understand the geology of what he's been walking and climbing on for so long. Ronald lives in the Lowther Hills of Dumfriesshire, and most of his walking, and writing, takes place in the nearby Lake District and in the Scottish Highlands. His recent books include The Book of the Bivvy , and walking/scrambling guides Loch Lomond and the Trossachs , The Cairngorms and Ben Nevis & Glen Coe , as well as Three Peaks Ten Tors - a slightly squint-eyed look at various UK challenge walks. He has nine times won Outdoor Writers & Photographers Guild Awards for Excellence for his guidebooks, outdoor books (including Book of the Bivvy), and magazine articles. He has a regular column in Lakeland Walker and also writes in Trail , Cumbria and TGO (The Great Outdoors). His current, hopelessly ambitious, project is to avoid completing the Munros for at least another 20 years. Ronald's weekly newsletter on mountains, hillwalking and history is at https://aboutmountains.substack.com/
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The Riddle of Sphinx Rock - Ronald Turnbull
INTRODUCTION
The greatness of Gable
GablefromPillarGreat Gable from Pillar
‘Grand to look at, grand to look from, and grand to climb’—so Gable was described over a hundred years ago. It’s the hill that has been the birthplace of two separate sorts of hill sport, and that today receives some 20,000 ascents each year.
This book is an exploration of Great Gable: its eleven main ways for walkers, its scrambles and its climbs.
But it’s also a study of what it means to be a mountain in today’s world. Cultural biographies are already on my shelves for Snowdon, Everest and Ben Nevis. Each of these is its country’s high point. But in England, rather than Scafell Pike, I’ve preferred to walk up into the life and times of Great Gable. Here is England’s finest viewpoint, and its iconic pinnacle. Its two faces, the Great Napes and Gable Crag, express the light and the dark of rock climbing. Many fine hills have fine ales named for them: but Great Gable isn’t just a beer, it’s a brewery. For many, myself included, Gable was the first hill; for many, too, Gable is the last resting place of our ashes.
I find I recognise mountains more easily than human beings; and maybe Great Gable is occupying a slot in my brain designed for an acquaintance of my own species. But Gable is a place, not a person. Accordingly, out of the many ways I could have described it (historically, or geologically, or even alphabetically) I have chosen clockwise. Ascents are described out of Wasdale, then round by Buttermere to Honister. The new Chapter 10 added for the ebook version starts out of Ennerdale, taking advantage of the recent ‘rewilding’ (a late response to the spruce abuse in Wordsworth’s Guide to the Lakes) by the Forestry Commission. The book ends up in Borrowdale, before homing in on the Great Napes.
Arbitrarily, I’ve included Green Gable, Brandreth, Grey Knotts and even Fleetwith Pike as foothills of Great Gable. Each of these can reasonably be crossed on a walk whose real aim is Gable. And it would be a shame to miss out Fanny Mercer’s interesting alpenstock accident.
Life, death, and fellwalking: the great questions all ask themselves on Great Gable. And first among those questions is the Riddle of Sphinx Rock: what did we come up here for anyhow?
GablemapRoute 1 via Beck Head from Wasdale
CompasswhistleStart: Wasdale Head
Distance to summit: 4km (2½ miles)
Total ascent: 820m (2,700ft)
Terrain: Steep stony paths, scree and boulder.
How good? This route avoids all Gable’s most interesting aspects for a relentless plod to the summit.
From Wasdale Head, head upstream to the right of Lingmell Beck, forking right after 200 metres on a smaller path to pass left of Burnthwaite Farm. After 1½km comes a long footbridge over Gable Beck. Straight after this, turn left, up through a gate, to climb the steep south-west spur of Gable. At the 450m contour, the path turns left, to slant up the valley side of the Gable Beck and reach Beck Head col. The tarns at Beck Head are often dry, but there is a spring just to the right of where the path reaches the col.
From the right-hand end of the Beck Head col, a wide scree path slants up left to the steep north-west spur of Gable. It joins the spur at a grassy platform with a single iron fencepost, with the Moses Trod path descending beyond. But for the summit, head right, straight up the steep spur, on eroded paths. The way is on stones and scree, then through large boulders to the summit plateau.
1 THE RIDDLE OF SPHINX ROCK
SphinxRockSphinx Rock from the Screes Path
‘What goes on four legs in the morning, on two at noon, and in the evening on two legs and two walking poles?’ Given 2,000 years to think about it, the original Riddle of the Sphinx is not really all that tricky. The Riddle of Sphinx Rock is tougher, though. And it’s posed to anyone on any of the surrounding slopes. ‘Just how great is Gable?’ Or, to put it another way, ‘What on earth are you up here for?’
Answers are important, even if they always come afterwards and contradict each other. With the invention of Alpinism, climbers could stop carrying aneroids and measuring the boiling point of water all the way up. With the discovery of Picturesque Beauty, early Lakes tourists no longer needed to make notes on the blacklead mine holes and the quaint customs of the Cumbrians. Today, the aim of it all is, apparently, to stand among the orange peel alongside some summit cairn.
Are we going up Gable to tick it off our list? No, because we’ve been up Gable several times already. Are we going up it for the view? If that were the case, then it’d be Westmoreland’s Cairn that had the trample marks and the occasional abandoned boot, rather than the summit knoll.
Wainwright had a thing about Haystacks, but overall Gable must be Lakeland’s most-loved mountain. Whatever it is we go up hills for, it’s something that Great Gable has and that Great End, by comparison, lacks.
For starters, there’s the shape. From Wasdale, it’s the original and architectural gable end—from everywhere else, it’s a sort of bowler hat—but always recognisable, and always important and big. We like the look of certain of our fellow humans: I might mention Johnny Depp, I might mention Meg Ryan. Depending on your gender preference, Johnny and Meg appeal to certain obvious and explainable instincts. Great Gable appeals to an instinct that, for now, remains nameless. It’s like the Matterhorn, and Snowdon and the Cobbler, in having a shape that makes you want to get your leg up over it.
Skiddaw too is shapely: but Skiddaw is spoilt by having an easy way up. Gable plays a better game. Every path (except the rebuilt Breast Path from Sty Head) has boulders, scree and bare rock. Every path (and now including the Breast Path) involves steep ground. As the bowler-hat outline indicates, that steepness is at the top; and so every path involves an eagle’s eye view back across the valley and the lake.
Almost irrelevant in all this is Great Gable’s rocky little top knoll, the clear pool it once harboured now trampled by 20,000 pairs of Brashers. That so-sought summit stands a just-not-made-it 899m high, in its desert of stones, with its view of the inside of a cloud. Even if the cloud temporarily rises, all it reveals is an awful lot of stones, quite a few cairns, the edges of the plateau, and some similar stones on top of Scafell Pike.
‘What are you up to?’ asks the Sphinx. We thought we wanted to get to the top. Gable shows us that the answer’s more complicated than that. Indeed, for the very greatest of Gable, the trick is to avoid ever having to arrive at all. Skirt Gable on the Screes Path, high above Wasdale with that wonderful Wasdale view, rock overhead, rock underfoot, and you don’t even have to go uphill much. On the Ennerdale side there’s the Climbers’ Traverse, right up under the crags and getting dripped on by the overhangs.
Then consider all the other great places on Gable that aren’t its top. Seek out the cave with the spring, halfway up the southern screes. Seek out the Hanging Stone, and Moses Finger, and Moses’ one-time hut somewhere on Gable Crag. Go into little Gillercomb, suspended halfway up the side of Borrowdale. Crouch behind a boulder in Windy Gap, from where steep paths drop east and west, other steep paths climb north and south.
We go to the tops of the hills for the sake of the going, not for the tops. The greatness of Gable is in the places along the way. The answer to the difficult question is nothing to do with the cairn on top—Gable often doesn’t even have a cairn. But it is something to do with Westmoreland’s Cairn, Sour Milk Gill and the Napes Needle. To solve the riddle, simply consider the Sphinx Rock.
Route 2 Gavel Neese White Napes
CompasswhistleStart: Wasdale Head
Distance to summit: 3km (2 miles)
Total ascent: 820m (2,700ft)
Terrain: Steep stony paths, scree and rock: with optional Grade 1 scrambling.
How good? Arduous, but interesting.
For the mountain scrambler pure and simple the White Napes provides a fascinating way up the Gable.
George Abraham, British Mountain Climbs, 1909
White Napes…has no notable crags and little of interest.
A Wainwright, The Western Fells, 1966
From Wasdale Head, head upstream to the right of Lingmell Beck, forking right after 200 metres on a smaller path. After 1½km comes a long footbridge over Gable Beck. Straight after this, turn off left to climb the steep south-west spur of Gable. At the 450m contour you reach the contouring Screes Path (Route 13).
The comfortable way now is to take the Screes Path to the left, contouring across screes to reach Beck Head. The uncomfortable way is to take the Screes Path to the right, to reach Little Hell Gate (Route 16). However, the direct and adventurous will head up the grass and broken rocks of the White Napes. The spur rises to a final tower. For a scramble, Grade 1, this can be attacked on its left flank for 15m, when an exposed ledge leads across right to easier ground. More easily, contour left around the foot of the tower to go up a short scree behind it.
The top of the tower is a grassy ridge with perched boulders. Go up the ridge to the main mountain, where a scree path leads up immediately left of Westmoreland’s Crag—or the rocks to the right of the path can be scrambled. Contour right, along the crag top, to reach Westmoreland’s Cairn, and head uphill to the summit.
2 PINNACLES OF PERFECTION
Plato was no fellwalker. His sport of choice is indicated by his Metaphor of the Cave. In The Republic, he describes how he sat in