Snowdon trails - de...
 

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[Closed] Snowdon trails - definitely unsanitised

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Easter: Snowdonia mountain path covered in human faeces - guide

Aren’t people great.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 11:08 am
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As someone who’s never resorted to shitting in public - what is the correct thing to do here? Should they take bags with them?


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 11:33 am
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I have nappy bags in my rucksack. In some places abroad you need to have similar or poo pipes to carry it out. If appropriate I'd bury, but on a rocky mountain I'd bag it.

People often get caught short (I'm one with stomach issues), but I make sure I can deal with it responsibly.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 11:39 am
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Bury it.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 11:41 am
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As someone who’s never resorted to shitting in public – what is the correct thing to do here?

Crouching over a path or the railway line to pinch one off is the opposite of what should & could be done.

1. Try to not go on the hill.

If you do need to go:

2. Move away from path and any water sources, away from any farm resources like gates or feed troughs. Think about places people and animals won't go very often.
3. Try to be sensitive & private.
4. Dig a hole 5-10cm deep - use a stone if needed.
5. Do what you need to in the hole.
6. Ideally carry any loo paper, wipes or sanctuary products out, if not burn into hole.
7. Cover the hole back with the soil and ground cover.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 11:48 am
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Yeah I've been caught out (about three times in my entire outdoor career) and when it's been very rocky or hard to dig I just remove lots of rocks, go in the depression and then out the rocks back. But as above I do it a very long way from where anyone will be. And only in really remote places. Not on one of the busiest paths in Wales FFS.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 12:04 pm
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Bury it.

Is fine in areas with fertile soil.

The trouble is that above that level there might not be the temperature/bacteria/fungi arround to break it down so it just sits there under a rock for years. Or contributes to over enriching the "soil" which is more an issue in sandy areas. A few poos or banana skins might not seem like much, but may provide enough nutrients for some grasses to estabilsh, which trap enough nutrients to supourt shrubs, then trees and before you know it your sandy heathland has become woodland.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 12:47 pm
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before you know it your sandy heathland has become woodland.

Pee-Wilding?


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 1:04 pm
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I have nappy bags in my rucksack. In some places abroad you need to have similar or poo pipes to carry it out. If appropriate I’d bury, but on a rocky mountain I’d bag it.

What are poo pipes?


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 1:34 pm
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Whats wrong with people .

Before any activity sports poo..


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 1:35 pm
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What are poo pipes?

A short length of capped plastic pipe you put poo bags in to carry out. A thing in USA national parks and other places.
Poop tube

Whats wrong with people .
Before any activity sports poo

In my case IBS, other stomach and bowel conditions exist too. If you don't suffer, be grateful.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 2:16 pm
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Whats wrong with people

On one occasion a simple case of the shits.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 2:32 pm
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I don't think anyone sets out with the intention of suffering the indignity of defecating on a busy mountain. I didn't! 🤦


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 4:12 pm
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On one occasion a simple case of the shits.

Although there are 'warnings'.

I watched a colleague drop his rucksack, sprinted across the open glen and duck behind a large boulder... And then had hysterics when the DofE group caught up a few minutes later, asking why Dave had returned for the trowel of shame, back to the boulder and seemed to be digging a rather large area over... 🤣🤣🤣


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 5:03 pm
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I read toilets closed at bottom and top of mountain so this might of not helped situation.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 5:05 pm
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Snowdon doesn't do itself any favours by having a railway up it and a visitor centre plonked on top.
I've seen more Lonsdale tracky bottom crew attempting it in the depths of winter than anywhere else.

It's the Trafford Centre of mountains


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 5:31 pm
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Snowing has become a tourist attraction rather than a mountain especially when you can just catch a train to the summit. Perhaps some of the money from all the parking charges could be invested in some facilities


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 5:52 pm
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The real question has to be how did it take 7 hours to go up and down Snowden and be finished by 8:30am. The loos were hardly likely to be open when they were at the summit


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 5:55 pm
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The trouble is that above that level there might not be the temperature/bacteria/fungi arround to break it down so it just sits there under a rock for years. Or contributes to over enriching the “soil” which is more an issue in sandy areas. A few poos or banana skins might not seem like much, but may provide enough nutrients for some grasses to estabilsh, which trap enough nutrients to supourt shrubs, then trees and before you know it your sandy heathland has become woodland.

This is why stick and flick is a problem on some areas of eg: Surrey heathland. Bagging and removing dogpoo is never wrong, flicking it into the undergrowth can be.

Shitting on the railway though......


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 6:19 pm
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Shitting on the railway though……

Wrong kind of leavings on the line


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 6:26 pm
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They probably chose to shit on the railway line coz at least it was off the path. I couldn't really give a shit about this problem tbh, any poo would easily be broken down by the next heavy downpour.
I did a shit up Skiddaw once 😂 if you gotta go, you gotta go.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 6:55 pm
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Whats wrong with people .
Before any activity sports poo

In my case IBS, other stomach and bowel conditions exist too. If you don’t suffer, be grateful.

Or bowel disease, again be grateful that you never have to face the indignity and utter embarrassment of soiling yourself.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 7:17 pm
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Shitting on sand causes forests? 😆 Surely to heck the rangers would spot a few bushes before the forest appear? 😆


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 7:21 pm
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Don't complain when your tyres don't just pick up dog poop, but person poop. Disgusting. Dog poo bags are a big enough problem as it is.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 7:38 pm
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I was buzzing round the Syfridin singletrack at NyA two years ago when, rounding a corner, I encountered a fresh one that somebody had coiled out right in the middle of the path, complete with reams of toilet paper. Good berm technique got me safely past...

As someone who's lived out of a tent in more remote areas for months at a time, I've taken an interest in toilet matters. Always carry a small trowel, etc. It sounds perverse but I've revisited places I've sh@t to see how long it lasts and the answer is: not very long. On an individual level, I think the paper people leave is more of a problem (don't get me started on the white tissues discarded everywhere by women wiping their flaps). Burn it or pack it out depending on fire risk.

Problem with Snowdon (and places like it) is the sheer volume of people who are not experienced hill goers. It's just a numbers game. In all honesty, I don't care any more - it's great they all repeatedly blight the same ****ed up destinations rather than fanning out and going to other places.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 8:14 pm
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Ahh, old ‘turd mountain’ 😉

Don’t know what they expect really. Must be Wales’ No 1 tourist attraction and no toilets. What could possibly happen 🤔

And yeah, the guy laying a cable on the track was absolutely doing the right thing. No winners here - can’t curl one out on the path… walk off to the left or right and you’re over the cliffs… can’t crap in a catapult and fling it out into the void lest it clatters a climber half way up Cloggy…

You’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t. Best thing to do would be for everyone to hold it in and deposit it on the trig point on the summit. Thereby eventually embiggening the overall height  and taking UK’s biggest mountain from those pesky Scots.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 9:15 pm
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They can't complain about stray turds after laying this one right on the summit.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 9:20 pm
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I've been caught on out a few times.

Most memorable one was in the dales up near Gunnerside Gill.

Very rocky so no chance to dig a hole. I went well out of the way of any trails and my plan was to bury it with rocks.
So I did my stuff, lifted up some rocks to plonk ontop of the doings...after about the 3rd rock I lifted I found a geocache, less than a foot away.

Apologies to any later geocachers who got a nasty surprise!


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 11:17 pm
 Pook
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Walker ban.


 
Posted : 17/04/2022 11:58 pm
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Well currently towards the top of the front page we have this thread, "fill my crack" and "crap jokes".


 
Posted : 18/04/2022 7:15 am
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Luckily there are far more pleasant routes up and Down Snowdon. (Guide route choice fail?) Facilities should be provided, if you are going to provide the attraction provide facilities.
-shit happens!


 
Posted : 18/04/2022 7:21 am
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my entire outdoor career

Just needed to highlight that phrase. Carry on!


 
Posted : 18/04/2022 7:39 am
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Facilities should be provided, if you are going to provide the attraction provide facilities.

Not sure the mountain was 'provided' was it.
Unless you mean by the Lord.


 
Posted : 18/04/2022 7:49 am
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I mean by the train, cafe, busses, marketing and the paid parking.


 
Posted : 18/04/2022 8:13 am
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This. The mountain is a tourist attraction and many are making good money from it. If you want to attract tourists you have to provide the infrastructure to cope with it


 
Posted : 18/04/2022 9:30 am
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Now you know all that Snowden should be avoided at busy times.
We had “travellers” arrive in the country park opposite us on Wednesday. Over thirty caravans and motorhomes. All well at first but the amount of rubbish strewn across the area, including the sports fields is beyond belief! Local events organised by the wildlife trust had to be cancelled and so it goes on. Vehicle activity into the small hours, some fighting last night and now some “units” on the cycle path and footpath. Rubbish everywhere.
We overnight in our motorhome on occasion, leave nothing and collect anything that’s there. We also contain all waste and dispose of it properly. I try to be tolerant of different people, getting caught short on a mountain is one thing but making it part of your life plan is something else.


 
Posted : 18/04/2022 10:40 pm
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Crouching over a path or the railway line to pinch one off is the opposite of what should & could be done.

To be fair to railway-line-man the toilets on trains used to just flush straight onto the tracks, so the railway lines of the UK were covered in it (remember the 'don't flush while train is in the station' signs). The speed of the trains would disperse it and it was fairly soon broken down so not really an issue. When working on the tracks it was always a good idea to stand with your back to any passing train so as not to end up with a faceful of 'spray'............


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 6:54 am
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After reading this I went on Facebook and it popped up about a sponsored MacMillan night walk up Snowdon

All those poops 💩 have got to go somewhere

They need to have toilets open 24/7 or close the hill to tourists and only let proper walkers up 🤔


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 7:25 am
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See also the “van life” people populating open spaces near me. It’s not just bears that shit in the woods! And I dont think bears use wet wipes!


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 7:27 am
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A few poos or banana skins might not seem like much, but may provide enough nutrients for some grasses to estabilsh

This is the same nonsense that's trotted out about banana skins. It's unsightly and anti social fo'shure, but this stuff about nutrient provision is crap (ho ho).


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 7:33 am
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this stuff about nutrient provision is crap

Care to back that up with any facts??? Recently published research would suggest that you're incorrect, see for example:

https://www.britishecologicalsociety.org/dog-faeces-urine-harming-nature-reserves/


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 7:41 am
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@stevedoc

Whats wrong with people .

Before any activity sports poo..

Back in the dim and distant past, some of my sports activities used to last 48-72 hours in the wilderness. What would you suggest?

(Generally it was buried, deep. And the paper went in the fire, if we had one.)


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 7:43 am
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Dog faeces and urine could be harming

Ok so I’ve not read past the title but it’s not conclusive is it

What about all the sheep 💩 and pee?

Before any activity sports poo

We are not talking trained poo athletes here. We are talking people who had a curry the night before and 10 pints of Guinness

Seasoned runners know the 2 dump rule in fact it almost becomes telepathic as you put your running shorts on 💩 just wants to jump out.

Jim and Jone who have not been off the couch in a year will not have such bowl control and a strenuous walk up a hill will make their bowls move in uncontrollable ways they have not experienced before.

Most likely they are ‘van life’ people too who think they are getting back to nature

Unfortunately Snowdon is a tourist attraction not a wilderness experience, it needs facilities like you would get at any tourist attraction (including a burger van half way up)


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 7:44 am
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 see for example:

What has dog poo and urine in a park in Belgium got to do with the occasional human dumping in the wild halfway up a mountain?


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 9:50 am
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This is the same nonsense that’s trotted out about banana skins. It’s unsightly and anti social fo’shure, but this stuff about nutrient provision is crap

got anything to back that up because both banana skins and human feaces ( s is ashes scattering) are implicated in altering fragile soils on mountains. One bothy in Scotland was at the centre of an e coli outbreak as a result of human feaces getting into the burn

These high mountain soils are impoverished and thin. Adding nutrients alters the flora

Well known and well proven


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 10:00 am
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Adding nutrients alters the flora

I don't doubt. but is the waste from bananas dropped sufficient to do that on mountainsides? The last news article I could find suggests 7kgs of skins taken off Ben Nevis so that's 0.42g of nitrogen released over a couple of years as the skins break down. but doesn't say over what area that is, or what time period  Lot's of mountains in Scotland in particular are subarctic for good portions of the year and even grasses struggle to grow there, You'll still need soil for these species to grow, and there isn't any. Plus of course you'd need just huge amounts more to make any difference. Plus of course, what species is going to take advantage of the extra soil, the extra nutrients, and survive the harsh winter?

I don't disagree that Bananas and human/dog shit in unsightly and rubbish begets rubbish. Don't drop it take it home. But the idea that dropped banana skins are significantly changing soil composition is not  "well proven"


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 10:14 am
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So much wrong in that post its absurd
Still - you know best as ever. Better than soils scientists and ecologists


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 10:22 am
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Alpine soils on the cairngorm plateau its not farmland but it is still soil
https://www.hutton.ac.uk/learning/exploringscotland/soils/alpine


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 10:30 am
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Still – you know best as ever. Better than soils scientists and ecologists

TJ you've been arguing the toss about this since forever Here's you saying the same thing 10 years ago and not providing any evidence then either.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 10:33 am
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Jim and Jone who have not been off the couch in a year will not have such bowl control and a strenuous walk up a hill will make their bowls move in uncontrollable ways they have not experienced before.

Perhaps they could empty their bowels into the bowls?


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 11:09 am
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Snowdon is it's own worst enemy - as others have said, put a train and cafe up there and you'll attract the kind of people who also need toilet facilities top and bottom.

Anyone can be caught short - the only time I have been so far was when we went back to Kenya when I was 11, and something disagreed with me in the wilds of the Masai Mara.

Picked up a surprisingly big book when we were in Canada called "How to Shit in the Woods". Never knew it was so complicated.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 12:14 pm
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Nickc - still the bully I see with the obsession about me. It was a mistake to post again. you will not change will you. Why you feel it necessary to do this is beyond me

You said there was no soil on the cairngorm plateau - wrong

You do not understand that its not just the nitrates and you do not understand the ecology. But still - don't let that get in the way of your obsession with attacking me

its also far more than 7kgs - go read up and learn a bit.

the initial point was about human feaces anyway but once again you home in on one tiny part of the debate and turn it into personal obsessive attacks.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 12:17 pm
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The National Park was celebrating with glee on FB at the length of the queues to ‘summit’ over the weekend. I presume they have educated all those people on how to toilet on the mountain whilst they were queueing


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 12:22 pm
 dyls
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The amount of people going up Yr Wyddfa on bank holidays is unbelievable. Even in winter it attracts a lot of inexperienced people - I’ve been up there in full on winter gear to come across people hanging to the edge for dear life in adidas trainers, one slip in that snow would have been fatal.

I’ve noticed a lot more charity events there now as well; Snowdon for Sunrise as well as the national three peaks etc.

I’m not sure what the solution is - you can’t stop people walking up there - except to avoid the place on sunny bank holidays.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 12:28 pm
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Snowdon is it’s own worst enemy – as others have said, put a train and cafe up there and you’ll attract the kind of people who also need toilet facilities top and bottom.

There are toilets at both ends already. The more relevant question might be why they aren't open during a tourist season that's likely to be very busy.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 12:30 pm
 dyls
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Are the toilets closed though? Except for the summit cafe thats closed for the season.

You have three in Llanberis, one in Nant Peris, one in Pen y Pass, one in Rhyd Ddu to name a few.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 12:32 pm
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As others are saying - it is a tourist attraction, and sadly not a mountain that holds interest for me anymore.
I have been up at least 5 times, latest taking the kids up Crib Goch, and I was shocked how busy it was. Particularly when I am used to Scottish hills.
I do think there is merit in treating it like a tourist attraction now - not as a 'wild' mountain. Facilities. Signs. Support.

Time to maximise the honey pot, to the benefit of the other hills in Wales.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 12:35 pm
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I’ve noticed a lot more charity events there now as well; Snowdon for Sunrise as well as the national three peaks etc.

I have had an issue with these events for 20 years, nothing new to grumble about.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 12:40 pm
 dyls
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It’s not a grumble as such, just an observation. The number of charity events, and events in general today is much more than 20 years ago.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 12:43 pm
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and I was shocked how busy it was

It's very accessible. For the population that lives in the M62 corridor it's very easy to get to. Plus add in the attraction of the train and cafe, and it's even more so.

 don’t let that get in the way of your obsession with attacking me

@tjagain, OK, so this is weird. I really haven't got an obsession with attacking you, and you'll note that my post is framed as a question, and I even agree with your summery that "changes in the soil composition will change the flora". so again, not attacking you. the rest is just my understanding of the situation. It's not enough discarded waste to change the soil ph, the conditions on the mountains aren't good for invasive species, and there are few that would survive up there because of the weather. If you've got the studies, throw them up, ;ets have a look

I've no idea where you get that I'm either obsessed with you or bullying you. In a neutral way, I couldn't give a hoot about you. but I'll note the only person throwing insults around is you (by calling what I said absurd) I haven't been rude, and re-reading my post again I keep failing to understand how it's bullying.

Report me to the mods if you think I'm out of order.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 1:13 pm
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Best thing to do would be for everyone to hold it in and deposit it on the trig point on the summit.

This deserves serious examination, kind of like summiteers building up cairns with stones. It could be incorporated into challengers doing the Welsh 3000ft-ers in a day: extra kudos for crimping one out on each summit cairn in passing.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 1:20 pm
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This deserves serious examination, kind of like summiteers building up cairns with stones. It could be incorporated into challengers doing the Welsh 3000ft-ers in a day: extra kudos for crimping one out on each summit cairn in passing.

Logging your 3 Peaks trip?


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 3:03 pm
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It’s very accessible. For the population that lives in the M62 corridor it’s very easy to get to. Plus add in the attraction of the train and cafe, and it’s even more so.

I agree - but even as someone used to the Peak, this was off the scale busy. We skipped past a few hundred people in a queue / melee for the summit cairn photie - with multiples of that still arriving up the tracks... It really was hard to get your head around how busy it was.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 3:11 pm
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I've only been up once. Took the Rhyd Dhu path, early morning, and didn't see a soul until the summit. There was three of us. Had a relaxing 30 minutes chatting before the first train arrived, whereupon it was bedlam for approximately 15 minutes before they all headed to the cafe and peace was instantly restored. This would have been during the Scottish school holidays - first or second week in July.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 3:27 pm
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I'm at peace with it. There are certain hills, certain places, that I know I will never see again. It's a small price to pay knowing that the people who go there lack the imagination, the planning skills and experience to go to the (diminishing) number of places where I can experience what being outdoors means to me. I no longer bitch about it. It just is. I derive amusement from the protests of guides like the one in the BBC article, the 'outdoors professionals' seeking to live their best lives by monetising being in the hills, who are part of the problem they claim to abhor.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 3:34 pm
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my in-laws live within walking distance of snowdon. I've been to the summit once. Its a nice loop around it on the road bike.

On the august bank holiday last summer when it hit the headlines for a 2hr queue for the summit and fights etc, we climbed cnicht and saw about 10 people all day.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 3:36 pm
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 It really was hard to get your head around how busy it was.

Yeah, someone called it an outdoor mall, and I don't think that's far off the mark. I went up in late April a few years back as there was a weather window and I had an empty weekend, and it seemed like there was a football match's worth of folks on the Llanberis path. Tried coming down Rangers and it was equally busy. It wasn't bad, I mean; it's still mountain biking in Wales...but I'd not be keen to go back.

The following day I did the up and down path on Cader Idris and didn't see a soul. Perhaps that's the best thing about Yr Wyddfa, it keeps everyone off the rest of the hills in Snowdonia


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 3:40 pm
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Pen Y Fan can be equally bad.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 4:28 pm
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Possibly time the big charity event organisers contributed something in the areas that are blighted at all hours by summit bagging teams?
I know its "Charity" but should they contribute to the amenity? I believe they should.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 4:32 pm
 scud
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Is it not the same with human ashes? There was an article a while ago about how people constantly spreading ashes on Ben Nevis has changed the flora and fauna.

I have done the Snowdon Horseshoe route a few times, including watching a couple half way across Crib Goch have a full on slanging match, "this might be your idea of fun, but you can stick Snowdon up your ar*e" as she tried to get along in a t-shirt, tiny shorts and fashion trainers with no grip on soles.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 5:00 pm
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We climbed it last year on holiday and wouldn't do it again at any time of year where it's likely to be populated by the flipflop and bottle of Evian brigade. I suspect the cafe / toilet closure is part of the problem. The views are stunning on a clear day but it's just horribly busy and lots of **** with no outdoor etiquette.

Back in N Wales this summer and it's on my "definitely not" list.

As for the lack of facilities bury it or bag it and carry it down.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 5:10 pm
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Took my three kids up on Wed 13th and it wasn't that busy, 15-20 minute queue at the top for summit at around 2-3 in the afternoon. No poo in sight on Miners and Llamberis paths, and luckily our dog didn't find any either.
Cafe and toilets at the top were closed, signage at Pen-y-pass was clear that it was closed and there was no toilet facilities at the top.
We went prepared with supplies of dog poo bags and loo roll just in case.


 
Posted : 19/04/2022 5:14 pm
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I do think there is merit in treating it like a tourist attraction now – not as a ‘wild’ mountain. Facilities. Signs. Support.

I live nearby and agree, this is a good idea. Llyn Elsi above Betws-y-Coed for example already have emoji on the way up, flagging effort levels and how far left to go. Sure, it's Disneyfication of what was once a rugged mountain, but why not? N.Wales isn't exactly short of empty mountains. On funding for it, blimey, so many missed opportunities with that amount of "footfall" of folk on holiday, looking for things to do and buy.


 
Posted : 20/04/2022 8:56 am
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The queue for the trig point always bemuses me. If you get a pic of you just below it, that's gonna do, who's gonna say 'ahhh haaa you didn't climb Snowdon coz there's no pic of you and the trig'?


 
Posted : 20/04/2022 9:58 am
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I’m guessing they need to readjust opening times in line with global warming

Only a few years back April would have seen Snowdon in full winter conditions requiring crampons.


 
Posted : 20/04/2022 10:09 am
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Ben Lomond felt the same when I was in Scotland last year for a short break. It's accessible (although by comparison to Snowdon; the CP is teeny) and barring a few slightly awkward sections; the route up is well paved and relatively straightforward. Certainly saw more than a few of the "flip-flops and bottled water" set. The same can be said for Catbells and the summits above Grassmere, and as a poster earlier sad, Pen Y Fan and the loop around the Gap

There's more than enough more remote places to seek out if you're not fond of crowds, and for lots of folks, these places offer them a relatively safe way to experience more remote places that they'd otherwise probably not go to.


 
Posted : 20/04/2022 10:19 am
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I’m guessing they need to readjust opening times in line with global warming

No, I don't think it's anything to do with climate change, more to do with when people now take holidays. When I was growing up, almost nobody went on a break in this country between September and May. We wouldn't even spend the day on the beach until late May onwards, despite only living a few miles away. I moved to South Devon, as a student in to late 80s, and we had a running joke about nothing in the county being open until after Easter. We lived in cheap off-season holiday cottages until summer term when there'd be a panic to find somewhere to live.

These days people take breaks and holidays all through the year, and attractions of all sorts are open year round.

And, a few years ago I was on Snowdon on May Bank Hol in sub-zero temperatures. It didn't seem to be putting anyone off regardless of how (un)prepared they were.


 
Posted : 20/04/2022 11:35 am
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Flip flops and Evian suggest at least a small amount of preparedness.

My last time up I had to give directions down to someone in a Wolves shellsuit, who was armed only with half a tube of Pringles

As others have said, go knowing what to expect or swerve it for somewhere better


 
Posted : 20/04/2022 3:07 pm
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Only a few years back April would have seen Snowdon in full winter conditions requiring crampons.

The Easter we last went up, 4 years ago, we were shouted at for ignoring the queue on pyg track all waiting one by one to go ascend or descend a worn line in the snow. The kids and I simply bum slid down a hundred metres or so, a few metres to the side.

One gentlemen was particularly upset, told me he how irresponsible I was as a father. My response that I was Winter Mountain Leader and that I spent half my life taking people up mountains was met with "so you should know better"... Meanwhile his wife in jeans and fleece, carrying the handbag dog shivered in the queue..


 
Posted : 20/04/2022 3:21 pm
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My response that I was Winter Mountain Leader and that I spent half my life taking people up mountains was met with “so you should know better”…

It's nothing to do with being prepared to go up a hill - you jumped the queue. Any more of this and we'll see the end of the Empire and all it's values. You should be flogged within an inch for not understanding the very basis of British civilisation.


 
Posted : 20/04/2022 3:32 pm
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