Tuesday, 4 June 2013

22 May Windy Standard

Ian, Jimmy & Robert

Only three made the walk this week again. It might have been four had we waited at the meeting place long enough for Peter to join us, but we didn’t so there were only three today on the walk today.
            The weather was fair; the sun shone and the air was clear but the persistent northerly that has been with us for most of the month kept the temperature down. Still we anticipated a good walk as we drove to the water treatment works at the head of Glen Afton. In the glen we were sheltered from the full effects of the wind, and the start of the walk to the dam face was relatively warm in the morning sunshine. But, as we climbed up the path by the face of the dam, we could feel the wind rising. And a chill wind it was.
            Work is being carried on at the dam at the moment and men in hard hats could be seen mulling around the middle of it, too far away for our inquiries. Nor was there anybody about at the works headquarters - a port-a-cabin surrounded by land-working machinery and a temporary fence - so our nosiness about what work was being carried out went unsatisfied. We continued up the track to find the forest road that runs from here toward the Dalmellington to Carsphairn road.
            Now, as we climbed with the road, we could feel the full effects of the northerly wind – strengthening and chilling – and we were only too happy to crest the ridge and drop into the shelter of the trees in the valley of the Water of Deugh. It was here that we met the cyclist. A man of our own vintage was labouring upward pushing his mountain bike by his side. As you know, we are not the people to miss the opportunity for a blether so we stopped to encourage our new friend in our inimitable fashion. ‘Only another four miles to the top’, said we seeing how he was enjoying himself. We can only hope he made it.
            We walked on easier than he did for we were now going down into the valley of the Deugh. ‘Coffee’, said Ian and we stopped on the bridge over the Deugh for a break. The morning was warm in the shelter of the trees and we, even Robert, were happy to take our time over coffee.

            After coffee we left the forest road and stated the first serious climb of the day. This climb through a firebreak was wet underfoot and warm from the effort. But it was not as wet as it might have been given the weather of the last few months. Nor was it as warm as it might have been for, as we rose, we found the strong northerly again. By the time we cleared the trees and came to the first wind turbine on Jedburgh Knees the wind was strong and chilly. But, as we turned on the wind farm road towards Windy Standard, it was on our backs and we walked on comfortably taking in the view as we went.
It was the northerly wind that kept the air clear and the views took in the Ayrshire plain and as far north as Whitelee wind farm, as far east as the Lowther Hills, as far south as the Cumbrian fells and as far southwest as the high Galloways. But there was no Arran in the west. Somehow a haze hung over the sea and Arran was obscured today. And the view changed subtly as we walked along the road towards the short climb to the Standard itself.
We came across a turbine with one blade missing. The blade lay along the hillside awaiting repair or re-fixing and the turbine stood forlornly still while its neighbours waved at each other in the strong wind. The bladeless turbine needed investigating and we made the fifty metre diversion to examine it and the blade. This is where Ian’s engineering knowledge came to the fore. He used words like ‘ergs’ and ‘torques’ and ‘kilowatt hours’ and we nodded in intelligently and hung on his every word. Then we walked on before he could come up with more words.
The short climb to the top was easy and we found ourselves standing by the trig point with what seem like no effort at all. A figure was seen coming to the top from the opposite direction to us. She had come from the Ken Valley and was making her way along the wind farm roads to Clennoch bothy and back to the Ken. (She was asked her name but the scribe’s memory is not the sharpest and he has forgotten it, hasn’t he! If this lady reads this blog she might give us her name in a comment – Ed.) The wind was beginning to really chill now so we left our new friend to continue her walk and started our descent towards the Afton again.
Hunger was beginning to call as we came down the fence towards the Afton but the wind was strong and cold and there was no shelter until we reached the edge of the forest again. We left our downward progress and crossed to the edge of the trees where we were out of the wind and settled down to eat.

After lunch we came round and down the hill towards a sheep pen we could see in the valley bottom. This, said Jimmy, would avoid the wet of the bog that is the Source of the Afton. Avoid the bog we may have done but there were still some wet patches to be negotiated before the sheep pen was reached, and even after this. But negotiated they were and we found the path that would take us down the right of the burn to the head of the reservoir. Some work is being done here as well with a new road being driven in, but whether this has anything to do with the work at the dam we don’t know for there was still nobody about to ask. No doubt we will find out in due course.
A pair of sandpiper lifted from the bank of the burn as came down the road to find the forest road that would take us back to the dam. The walk along the road by the side of the reservoir was a delight in the afternoon sun and we arrived back at the cars sun-kissed, wind-blown and thoroughly pleased with the day’s walk.


FRT was taken in The Sun in Cumnock, a vastly improved place since the first time we came here seven years ago.

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