Romancing the Ben
14th February 2024
Roses are red,
violets are blue,
patches of windslab can be found,
and some fragile cornices too!
Given the date, I thought I would try my hand at romantic poetry, what do you think? Perhaps I shouldn’t give up the day job just yet, plus it is not really mine. Something very similar to this was written by a former Creag Meagaidh forecaster back in in the 1990’s (although it is possible it pre-dates that). In those days, the hazard categories were given numbers, a low hazard day would be category 1, a moderate day would be category 2 and so on. The numbers were phased out off the avalanche report around 15 years as it was felt that a word, such as considerable, to describe the hazard is much more descriptive than just a number, such as category 3. This meant that 30 years ago when the original was written you could rhyme the word blue with the word two, as in the hazard category, to give something along the lines of “Roses are Red, violets are blue, the snowpack is generally stabilising, it is category two”.
However, I would say that for my version is more descriptive of conditions found on the Ben Nevis today. Weather conditions were pretty benign, light winds, generally dry and a freezing level creeping up to around 1200 metres. The surface of the snowpack is slightly damp, but remain sub-zero beneath. There is plenty of windslab about, but it is slowly consolidating in the settled conditions. However, the rain forecast in the early hours of tomorrow morning, has the potential to give the snowpack a bit of a shock, and cause a period of poorer stability and weak cornices. By tomorrow afternoon the snowpack is expected to be wet through, in will return to a slowly consolidating regime.
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