Saturday 14 October 2023

Kilsyth. Kirkintilloch and Croy Hill. Auchinstarry Quarry.

                                                 ALL PHOTOS CLICK FULL SCREEN


As a change from west coast hills Alan and I decided to head east this time. Kilsyth to be precise, where Auchinstarry Quarry resides.( See photo above) This brought back loads of memories for me as it was a favourite day trip rock climbing venue. Not as midge infested as Craigmore, ( a small crag to the north of Glasgow), very scenic, and with dozens of  good routes up the cliffs here at all grades. Being higher it can also feel more exposed with a mountain scale to some of the climbs.


Red Lead 27 metres at Very Severe VS and White Slab 27 metres at Hard Severe HS, (both seen above on the blank looking wall directly above right side of left hand bench) were club favourites along with Walk on the Wild Side HVS. Not only was it a scenic and fairly adventurous place to climb with a scramble down the cliff to reach the 20 to 30 metre high climbs ( 60 to 100 feet high) then a shoreline traverse above deep water... it was also a place where you could occasionally look down and see 2 to 3 foot long pike gliding beneath your climbing shoes when balanced on a thin ledge halfway up the routes. Unique in that respect.

 

This black smooth slab looks like Walk on the Wild Side HVS although its 25 to 30 years since I last climbed here. A different person entirely to the sad old duffer gazing thoughtfully at it just now. Out of curiosity I looked at the current online UK guide and many of the routes are still the same grade, some have gone but new ones have appeared to take their place from Diff to E6.   HVS/E1 was my upper limit here though.

See link below with climbing photo gallery and grade list.

https://www.ukclimbing.com/logbook/crags/auchinstarry_quarry-226/

 

 

Our purpose this time though was just to park here and walk up the nearby Croy Hill. I do not remember this replica wooden fort for children to play on when we used to climb here. A more modern addition, though a good one.


 
 

 

From the car park, seen here with the promontory cliffs, and Auchinstarry canal basin you can either walk along the north bank of the Forth and Clyde Canal or take a path through woods on the edge of Kilsyth to reach the same bridge near Shawend.



Auchinstarry canal basin/ marina and the wooded slopes of Croy Hill. This is one path, along the canal.

 

A view of the other path from Croy hill which follows a minor road, seen here at the first white houses, to cross the same canal bridge. From the bridge various paths lead up through woods onto Croy Hill. The eastern end of the Campsie Fells seen above the town of Kilsyth here. See above.


 


 Horses below part of Croy Hill. Even though it's pleasantly wooded good views along this long ridge-line and several grassy meadows make it an enjoyable and effortless ascent.

 

The minor road with the Campsie Fells behind.


 


This sculpture was not here either. Most English folk, unless they have a good interest in history, only think of Hadrian's Wall stretching across North Britain from sea to sea but the lesser known Antonine Wall, running across Central Belt Scotland did the same job for a single generation until it was abandoned. The furthest flung northern frontier of the Roman Army. An extra ditch, turf and wooden barrier and fort network against the constantly raiding barbarian tribes to the north. The history of both walls re-imaged for Game of Thrones and various films like King Arthur (2004 Clive Owen) and The Eagle. (2011) Unlike the well preserved Hadrian's Wall, built of stone blocks, the ditch and turf layout of the Antonine Wall has vanished in many places altogether but on the nearby Bar Hill and in Falkirk's Callendar Park you can still see evidence of its existence. This head is at the east side of Croy Hill.


 Croy Hill and Bar Hill. Pleasantly wooded rolling countryside. The long distance John Muir Way, 210km 130 miles 10 to 12 day hike runs through here from Dunbar to Helensburgh, across Central Belt Scotland from coast to coast. Having done most of it on day outings decades ago before it even existed as a long distance route I would recommend it. Beautiful scenery throughout. Either in one go or on day trips. No high mountains to climb here but plenty of scenic interest and local history.

 

The descent off Croy Hill. Typical Central Belt scenery on the John Muir Way.


 


We also had great views over Kilsyth, the full Auchinstarry range of climbing cliffs laid bare and the canal boat basin.

 

Signpost near Croy village.


 


We could have continued on to do Bar Hill but we wanted to avoid the notorious rush hour slow crawl along the M8 motorway back so we had a quick visit to Peel Park in Kirkintilloch instead. Never been though Alan knew his way around here.


 A small park on a small hill but a good one. Roman fort influence again.

 

Peel Park. Postage stamp size. Not much bigger than this shown here although plenty of local walks, linked to this town run through it.


 


An enjoyable day out with good company. Three to four hour walk. With sky high energy bills I'm not looking forward to the winter months of darkness, dampness and cold mornings very much. This was probably the last warm day of T- shirt hedonism for us before the big chill of winter and shorter daylight hours sets in. Dark here by 7:00pm now. People that love winter must be rich enough to laugh at big heating bills dropping through their door. On the plus side bed bugs hate cold houses... so I'm OK. Any bugs better have four season sleeping bags to crawl into indoors cos that's where I will be. Wah! Missing pleasant summer days already!

6 comments:

Carol said...

Och I'm safe frae bedbugs then - my bedroom is always bloody freezing! Most of the house is cold.

That's some quarry - couldn't believe the size of it in the photos and on the climbing site. I see there's precious little on it for me though as I only really climb to Severe and prefer Diff/VDiff nowadays (I'm definitely going downhill as I don't climb often enough). It's a bit tall for me too as I prefer 30 to 50 feet and am not keen on 100 footers. What's with the section with the filthy name? (D.T.)?!

Anabel Marsh said...

We do the Auchinstarry - Bar Hill - Croy Hill walk quite often. That head is Silvanus. Have you seen the other one, Aurelius, at Lambhill Stables? sadly, he has been vandalised.

blueskyscotland said...

Hi Carol, I'm fairly lucky as my house is free from drafts and my bedroom faces south so gets loads of sun every winter. I can afford to pay for my heating now but really grudge shelling out £100s of pounds a month when I can stay warm in my sleeping bag just as easily. Only put it on if it's below freezing to heat the pipes.
I've not got bedbugs but they've been all over the news recently with outbreaks in Paris, London and Blackpool, probably due to warmer summers than usual.
Never noticed that name but it depends on the climber naming them, usually young males. If you think that's bad you should see some of the older names elsewhere on climbs. Reflects the attitudes of society in general through the various decades.

blueskyscotland said...

Hi Anabel,
yes, it's a good varied walk. I've only seen the other head on your blog as due to various circumstances I've not been out of North West Glasgow much for the last five years. My own one person effort to reduce climate change though I don't suppose it will make any difference. On the plus side the countryside and all the new sculptures/ features are a pleasant surprise now as I was getting jaded through over familiarity with places before. After five years away it's all the more special, like a five year lockdown then release time, thanks mainly to my walking friend Alan.

Rosemary said...

I hadn't heard of the The Roman Antonine Wall either, but saw a programme about it a few years ago. Built by The Roman emperor Antoninus Pius I seem to recall that they abandoned it after 20 years and all of the garrisons were sent back to Hadrian's Wall.
Not put the heating on here, as yet, but it is slowly getting colder. Heating will be even more expensive this winter taking into account Putin, Hamas and Israel - the world has gone crackers.

blueskyscotland said...

Hi Rosemary,
I'm sure many Scots are still unaware of it either as you only really see examples of it's existence if you visit or live along the line of the wall. It's not that well publicized except in Glasgow's Hunterian Museum which has exhibits from that Roman period in Scotland.
Yep, but in the entire history of the human race wars are just as frequent as any brief period of peace so we are due a few now. Interesting article today that most wars are started by old bitter men with outdated memories of past wrongs but are always fought on both both sides by the young so it should really be two or three old guys slugging it out toe to toe. No one else. If humanity was erased tomorrow the planet would be a much healthier, species prolific, brighter place... or even just religion.