I will make a donation/sponsor you.. I have no stairs & a dodgy leg so cant walk far or run so i will be with you in spirit!
I will make a donation/sponsor you.. I have no stairs & a dodgy leg so cant walk far or run so i will be with you in spirit!
Just sent a donation, will make another when its payday xThank you ever so much and please, please, please - TEAS can do with anything you can spare to pay the mounting vet bills with all their venues of income folded (pet sitting, events etc.) in a matter of days in March with lockdown being announced just 6 days before their Spring fundraiser! That means that several hundred much needed pounds have not come in just from that one event...
Just sent a donation, will make another when its payday x
I too will be doing this for months to come. I'm enjoying it and sharing my pictures with you all.
I walk with a stick, have sciatica and an arthritic hip and am an occasional wheelchair user, so it's a challenge, but it's nice to climb hills virtually that I haven't been able to do for decades.
Anything for TEAS would be specially welcome at this time.
Hope you feel better tomorrowUnfortunately I am having one of my occasional bad headaches today.
I've managed to sneak in my climbing sessions, but frankly all I want to do is crawl back into one of these once the piggeria is set up for the night! (Height above sea level is optional...)
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I've had a day off as my knees and back are playing up. I have little work to do tomorrow, so will see if I can do extra, but won't push it if it's too much.
HiYay! I have done it and have reached the village of Seelisberg after a 300 m (1000 ft) uphill jog over the last week!
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I hope that you agree with my that is has been worth waiting to enjoy some rather outstanding views!
360 Degree Panoramic View of Aerial view from Seelisberg
Don't be deceived by all these glorious pictures and videos - half the times I have been visiting a friend in Lucerne I didn't get to see the Alps, either because of low cloud (this part of Switzerland is where many of the big UK storm fronts get eventually stuck for several days because of the mountain chain blocking their way) or simply because of haze building up over the course of several dry days. The best views are always those in the first couple of days after a rainfront has passed through an cleared the air. But if you get a good day - OH MY!
Of course I could have taken the easy option by going up withe the cable car from the lake landing that Fiona has mentioned, but it wouldn't have been sporting.
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You can of course go one step further behind Seelisberg in a very civilised way with a nice view of the 'Seeli' (lakelet) and the upper end of Lake Lucerne, which is very much William Tell country.
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PS: You won't be able to see Seelisberg from the motorway crossing the Alps because it is running in a long tunnel right under the village.
Hi
What an amazing view. Well done for reaching the top. I've planned my route for the next week or so, mostly Northern England with one peak in th e Far East thrown in.
Hope you feel better Wiebke.Unfortunately I am having one of my occasional bad headaches today.
I've managed to sneak in my climbing sessions, but frankly all I want to do is crawl back into one of these once the piggeria is set up for the night! (Height above sea level is optional...)
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I was back on the stairs today and have reached the top of Haystacks in Buttermere, in the Lake District, recently voted the second best view in the UK, after Snowdon, that I will hopefully visit fairly soon. View attachment 141067
It has a stunning setting and the view from the top is amazing, all the way to Scotland. This place is very special to me...so much so, that I have asked for my ashes to be scattered on the top of the low hill on the right jutting into the furthest lake and in the bluebell valley behind it.
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How are you getting on @Wiebke?
That is one impressive waterfall. Sad about the fast shrinking glacierTonight I'm standing at the bottom of one of the most dramatic of Switzerland's waterfalls (300m/ca. 100 ft freefall), the Staubbach Falls (Spray Brook') in Lauterbrunnen in the centre of the Swiss Alps - it's just in the righthand fork of the same valley whose left fork leads to Grindelwald and the Eiger mountain, and very much a tourist attraction in its own right.
After the Rhine Falls at Schaffhausen (which I have already climbed, and the Reichenbach Falls of Sherlock Holmes fame, this is the third of the triad of internationally well known Swiss waterfalls - and a pretty impressive one at that!
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Way to climb up until I can eventually look down on the falls, which are basically at the back of the Jungfrau mountain (which is the big one on the left of this picture. Behind the mountains lining the horizon on the left of this Alpine valley lies the Aletsch glacier, Switzerlands biggest but fast shrinking glacier, onto which I am going to eventually look down on quite some months down the line!
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