Clogwyn Du'r Arddu: Difference between revisions

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The cliff attracted the leading climbers of many eras, from George and Ashley Abraham through the peerless sequence of Kirkus, Harding, Brown, Whillans, Crew, Edwards, Ward-Drummond, Redhead and finally Dawes. No other cliff in the world has such a continuous and unbroken sequence of serious climbs climbed by the finest technical rock climb of its era.<ref>Paul Williams (1989), ''Clogwyn Du'r Arddu'', Climbers' Club. ISBN 0-901601-43-8</ref>
The cliff attracted the leading climbers of many eras, from George and Ashley Abraham through the peerless sequence of Kirkus, Harding, Brown, Whillans, Crew, Edwards, Ward-Drummond, Redhead and finally Dawes. No other cliff in the world has such a continuous and unbroken sequence of serious climbs climbed by the finest technical rock climb of its era.<ref>Paul Williams (1989), ''Clogwyn Du'r Arddu'', Climbers' Club. ISBN 0-901601-43-8</ref>


== External links ==
== Outside links ==
*{{geograph|3531361|Clogwyn Du'r Arddu}}
*{{geograph|3531361|Clogwyn Du'r Arddu}}


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*Paul Williams (1989), ''Clogwyn Du'r Arddu'', Climbers' Club. ISBN 0-901601-43-8
*Paul Williams (1989), ''Clogwyn Du'r Arddu'', Climbers' Club. ISBN 0-901601-43-8
*Crew, Soper, Wilson (1971), ''The Black Cliff (Clogwyn du'r Arddu), Kaye Ward. ISBN 0-7182-0790-4
*Crew, Soper, Wilson (1971), ''The Black Cliff (Clogwyn du'r Arddu), Kaye Ward. ISBN 0-7182-0790-4
 
*Location map: {{wmap|53.0792|-4.0939|zoom=14}}
{{coord|53.0792|-4.0939|type:landmark_region:GB|display=title}}


[[Category:Mountains and hills of Caernarfonshire]]
[[Category:Mountains and hills of Caernarfonshire]]
[[Category:Snowdonia]]
[[Category:Snowdonia]]

Latest revision as of 21:26, 13 December 2015

Clogwyn Du'r Arddu

Clogwyn Du'r Arddu is a plunging cliff on the north flank of Snowdon, and it is considered by many to be one of the best climbing cliffs in Great Britain.

The cliff is north-facing and comparatively remote (2,300 feet above sea level). The name is Welsh and probably means "Black cliff of the plough". It lends its name to Clogwyn Station on the Snowdon Mountain Railway which overlooks it.

Climbers who have contributed to the many high-quality routes on the cliff included John Streetly Jack Longland, Ron James, Colin Kirkus, Joe Brown, Don Whillans, and Johnny Dawes.

First Recorded Ascent

The first recorded climb on the cliff was the 1798 ascent of the Eastern Terrace by the Reverends Peter Williams and W. Bingley, botanists looking for alpine plants. The latter wrote:

I believe it was the prospect downwards that determined us to brave every difficulty. It happened fortunately that the steep section immediately above us was the only one that presented any material danger. Mr Williams, having a pair of strong shoes with nails in them, which would hold their footing better than mine, requested to make the first attempt, and after some difficulty he succeeded … When he had fixed himself securely to a part of the rock, he took off his belt, and holding it firmly by one end, gave the other to me: I laid hold, and, with a little aid from the stones, fairly pulled myself up by it. After this we got on pretty well, and in about an hour and a quarter from the commencement of our labour, we found ourselves upon the brow of this dreadful precipice, and in possession of all the plants we expected to find.

General History

The north facing cliff is regarded as the premier high-grade traditional mountaineering crag in the United Kingdom. "Cloggy", as the cliff is known, combines the steepness, size, seriousness and quality of rock which it shares with the likes of Carn Dearg on Ben Nevis, but unlike the Inverness-shire cliff maintained a continuous record of having the most difficult climbs from the 1930s to the 2000s.

The cliff attracted the leading climbers of many eras, from George and Ashley Abraham through the peerless sequence of Kirkus, Harding, Brown, Whillans, Crew, Edwards, Ward-Drummond, Redhead and finally Dawes. No other cliff in the world has such a continuous and unbroken sequence of serious climbs climbed by the finest technical rock climb of its era.[1]

Outside links

References

  1. Paul Williams (1989), Clogwyn Du'r Arddu, Climbers' Club. ISBN 0-901601-43-8
  • Paul Williams (1989), Clogwyn Du'r Arddu, Climbers' Club. ISBN 0-901601-43-8
  • Crew, Soper, Wilson (1971), The Black Cliff (Clogwyn du'r Arddu), Kaye Ward. ISBN 0-7182-0790-4
  • Location map: 53°4’45"N, 4°5’38"W