Di and Jackie on the Eastern Summit. Calpe Rock in the distance |
The title says it
all! The Bernia Ridge above Altea in Alicante, Costa Blanca is the areas
dominant feature and an icon of all that’s great about mountaineering. A full
traverse of its main ridge is a long day of continuous exposure on narrow,
rocky ridges requiring rock climbing (to French grade 4a), abseiling,
scrambling up to grade 2, a very good head for heights and stamina.
A grade 2 very exposed scramble to the Eastern Summit |
It is located on
the skyline above the village Altea la Vella, the home of Jackie’s father,
Richard and Elizabeth and ever since the first day I woke up, walked outside
onto their balcony, looked up and saw the undulating, notchy, rocky ridge stretching
from one extreme to the other I have wanted to do a traverse of the whole ridge
in one day.
Jackie and I first
went up there in 2002 with no guide book, no map and no rock climbing gear. We scrambled
up onto the Western Summit, walked the narrow ridge to the col, continued on to
the eastern, technical half, got about halfway along and, after soloing down
the rock climbing pitch and finding ourselves on a narrow, exposed edge we
decided enough was enough and withdrew gracefully, realising the route was
equipped for an east to west traverse, not the way we were going and definitely
not without rock climbing gear!
Jackie, Di and Simon looking relaxed in a spectacular setting |
The next year we
found our way onto the eastern summit with our climbing gear and traversed to
the col, only to find we were too late in the day, so had to retreat down the
col. We made a third attempt a couple of years later with my old friend John
Fullerton which, as with all outings with John started after a heavy previous
night on alcohol. Nevertheless, we made good progress only to be thwarted by
bad weather, the cloud enveloped us as we approached the col and it started to
rain – we had no waterproofs!
This time we were
with Simon and Diane, who were also mad keen to do it, had all their gear with
them and plenty of enthusiasm. Will we do it this time?
A very narrow and exposed section of the ridge |
We decided on an
early start, so we were up at 06:10, in the car and round to their apartment in
Calpe, then on to the Bernia Restaurant on the far (north) side of the ridge
before sun up. Boots on and we were on our way at about 07:40, in time to watch
the sun rise shortly after setting off.
Jackie abseiling |
The book says the
walk in to the tunnel takes 1hr, we were at the tunnel, which is the start of the
scramble in 50mins. Good start! The initial scramble was pretty easy and in
shade, we reached the eastern col and were greeted with fabulous views of Altea,
Benidorm in the distance, Puig Campana, the mountain we climbed 2 days ago,
blue skies, shimmering sea and heat from the sun. From there the scrambling got
serious, a grade 2 very exposed traverse and climb up to the Eastern Summit,
which made us get our climbing harnesses, helmets on and the rope and
quick-draws out. We left the rope for the abseil down and headed on to the
summit for spectacular views.
Have a look at our
Youtube video for photos, videos and the full story. It’s just under 9 minutes
long.
Jackie waiting for the others to abseil |
The rest of the day
was full of massive exposure from the huge drops either side of the ridge, some
spectacular abseils, rock climbs, traverses and quality scrambles on rocky,
airy ridges, always with tremendous views. The continuous up and down of the
terrain, together with the heat from the sun is energy sapping and even before
halfway we were all feeling the effects of it all. We had about 1.75litres of
water each and plenty of things to eat, but the water was going down fast!
Di coming down the big 20m abseil |
By the time we
reached the col where we had aborted on two previous occasions we were all
feeling pretty tired. It was 3 something in the afternoon, still very hot, we
were low on water and we were now faced with a huge ascent of grade 2 exposed
scrambling to get us up to the Western Summit. No wonder many people abort
here, it’s so easy to drop down from the col to safety and an early beer. But
we were determined and, we thought, enough energy to go on, so up we went on
the scramble, willing our tired legs on and ignoring the aching feet and knees.
The Western Summit
has about three false summits on it, so you see what you think is a summit only
to find another ‘summit’ in the distance, much higher ahead, so it’s a case of
gritting your teeth and getting on with it. Finally the summit cairn came into
view, we completed the log book in the box on the summit, took some photos, had
some more food, drank a little of the last drops of water and headed down.
Exposed scrambling - routine by now! |
The descent is not
that easy to find and there are precarious drops all around. ‘Follow the red
dots’ the guide says, but they weren’t always easy to find. To be here after
dark would be very dangerous, but here we were not much more than an hour away
from sunset, but we found our way through the precarious ground and onto the
scree slope down. Sadly after years of traffic the scree slope can no longer be
run, the small stones have all now gone, so we had to follow a track through
the scree that occasionally caused skidding on stones, not the best thing for
sore feet and knees.
After getting down
to the Bernia Fort we were back on a good track and, although quite a long way
we were now able to make quicker progress round the end of the ridge and back
down to where our car was waiting.
Down scrambling from the Central Summit |
It’s funny the way
the last little bit always seems the longest. Tired legs and a raging thirst
are never a good combination and it seemed an age before the car finally came
into view. Boots off, cooling down exercises and we were in the car and back to
Simon and Diane’s apartment in Calpe for lots of water, a couple of beers and a
shower and change. Before drooping we roused ourselves for a celebratory beer
and meal at a nearby Indian restaurant. What better way to celebrate than a good
spicy Indian curry and yummy it was! We lasted until just after 10pm and
retired to our beds tired but happy people.
It was a good day,
a great ridge and we had fab company. Many thanks Simon and Diane – until the
next time!
Summit photo! The final and highest Western Summit. Puig Campana, the mountain we climbed 2 days ago is on the left in the far distance |
Down off the ridge in the late afternoon sun. That's the Western Summit behind and you can just see the tongue of the scree slope leading down |
3 comments:
Just brilliant!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Very interesting and descriptive - wow to have all that energy, not to mention climbing skill. So pleased you all completed and arrived back safely. No wonder the food and the beers tasted so good. Well done to you all, great achievement. 👍
Thanks for such a detailed review. I plan to solo this in May. very much looking forward to it.
David
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