Starting
from a near empty car park in Blaneau Ffestiniog the road from the back led up
to a quarry track, itself leading through cement pools made up of slate dust on
a footpath marked by yellow-topped poles through the abundant rhododendrons
before coming to a halt at a ruined winding house.
Moelwyn Mawr over the quarry |
From
here, open moorland beckoned with a sharp turn left the start of the ascent of
a snow-dusted Moel Penamnen over the Moel Bowydd plateau.
Moel Penamnen |
I
took the obvious weakness up the south face which could, only with some
imagination, be called a gully. The
small snow patches were hard to avoid and by stepping on them the snow
compacted to ice rendering the tread on my boots quickly useless and causing a
few slips.
Tryfan from the ascent of Moel Penamnen |
Once
on the summit ridge a short walk over the minor top resulted in some impressive
views from the grassy summit.
Manod Mawr from Moel Penamnen |
Allt-fawr, Moel Druman, Moel Hebog and Ysgafell Wen |
From
the summit a broad ridge led to Foel-fras, along which I kept Manod Mawr North
Top in view, noting its snow cover and what looked like a steep slope to
ascend. A descent to the treeline and
then to the fence over boggy ground led to a morass. I tried to keep to the fenceline in the
forlorn hope of keeping my feet dry but admitted defeat and took aim for a
ruined building at the edge of Cwt-y-bugail quarry to escape the infinite
bog. It turned out to be a good lunch
spot!
From
here I saw a walker on Foel-fras following my track but they disappeared and I
didn’t see them again. The only other
people I saw during the day was a group of four and then a couple were seen
walking towards the quarry, probably from Penmachno. East of Blaenau is definitely a place to
escape the crowds!
Heading
to Manod Mawr some care was needed over the loosely stacked slate rubble to
reach a stile at the track before following the fence up an easy slope,
complete with footsteps of previous walkers.
Unusual cubed piles of stones, topped by a single plinth stone, marked
the way. At the north top of Manod Mawr
a large cairn on an attractive natural pavement marked the summit with the
extent of the Graig-ddu quarry hidden by the flat top. Time taken here to linger and enjoy the
expansive view is well spent.
Manod Mawr North Top summit cairn |
Tryfan, Moel Penamnen and Moel Siabod from the north top |
I
walked to the quarry edge with a sheer drop straight ahead and no obvious way
off to the west, so I turned left and followed the edge to a disused track
which led to the main quarry road. Just
before the road started to descend into the main chasm, I struck off towards
Manod Mawr.
Locating
the subsidiary top, even in excellent visibility, was challenging and I chose a
small prominence to mark it, although it could have been any of two or three
others. When Moss compiled his list, I
suspect that there was a single 2000-foot contour ring (or spot height) to mark
the point, now long lost to metric mapping.
An
easy walk led to Manod Mawr’s highpoint, with uninterrupted 360-degree views,
from Moelwyn Mawr to Snowdon to Tryfan to the Carneddau to Siabod to the
Arenigs and distant summits east and south.
The Arenigs from Manod Mawr summit |
Manod Mawr North Top from Manod Mawr |
The
descent of the north-west spur led to a disused incline, the start of some
welcome easier walking back to the car park following the sometimes challenging
ground experienced on the day’s higher ground.
The way down |
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