Sleeping in MG4 [merged thread]

I'll do a quick gallop through the rest.

I had no trouble getting to Ullapool that morning on 28% - it was less than 30 miles and a drop of 800 feet. Got charged, but the boat trip I booked was cancelled because of poor visibility. This was a surprise as the sun was splitting the sky and the visibility looked perfect, but I think there was a temperature inversion causing a bank of cloud right where the trip was going.

I had another drive to a place where you can actually see Loch Maree (as opposed to the occasional glimpse of water between the birches lining the roadside) then headed for Lochinver and Clachtoll. I knew the Clachtoll campsite was full, and @QLeo, who lives in the area, was able to tell me the Achmelvich sites were also full. I saw a nice camping possibility by the roadside, but then I saw a smaller campsite in Clachtoll itself which had space, and foolishly decided to go there. Not one of my better decisions.

I made a detour to meet @QLeo, also met Goth Leo and saw the off-grid set-up with the pile of lead-acid batteries, the solar panels and the wind turbine, a very impressive arrangement.

I should have gone back to the roadside spot I had noted (which QLeo had also suggested) and only if that was taken tried the small camp site by the shore. But for some reason I went back to the camp site and started to set up. Then the owner (whom I had phoned - it was a very ad-hoc set-up) appeared. This was the point when I discovered he wanted £20 for one car for one night in a rough site where the only actual facility was a standpipe for fresh water, It was also the point when I should have told him where to put his £20 and gone back to the roadside spot, but I was already more than half set up and like an idiot I paid him. For information, the going rate for these places in camp sites with decent facilities is £12. The one I didn't get into the previous evening was £7.50.

So here was the problem. If you're by yourself in a roadside spot you probably have reasonable privacy, so you can get dressed and undressed beside the car without too much loss of modesty, and can sneak off to find a suitable patch of grass if need be without being observed. If you're in a camp site you have less privacy, but it's convivial, and there are toilet/shower blocks where you can change, and obviously no need for patches of grass. In this place there was no privacy and no facilities.

Campervans on all sides, and the side of the car I had positioned alongside the wall of the derelict cottage in the middle of the site, for privacy, turned out to be right where the canoeists were washing the sand off their canoes. The campervan facing me, which had had its curtains closed, opened them to watch the sunset and didn't close them again till 9.30 so I was overlooked by the two people sitting at the window all that time. (My front windscreen cover hasn't yet arrived.) Once these curtains were closed I could start to get to bed. No facilities, and all the useful-looking patches of rough grass were overlooked, so it was a walk in the dark with a torch down on to the beach and below the high tide mark. Repeat performance in the morning after I'd managed to get dressed between the two open (and curtained) right-hand doors of the car. [ETA: I forgot the part where I was about to get into bed when I realised my airbed was half-deflated. I hadn't closed the bung carefully enough. I had to wake up VtL again, get the pump out of the box, and re-inflate it. This was particularly embarrassing - it's noisy - due to the fact that a neighbouring campervan had complained that I was still playing my radio at 8.30pm.]

[ETA again: I also forgot about the semaphore thing. There was more breeze than usual, and although it didn't blow the magnetic curtains off the DRLs, it caused them to flap up a bit, sometimes with part of the curtain lying on the bonnet of the car. If anyone was watching it must have looked like some weird sort of semaphore. I think I was the only person who noticed, but it was slightly annoying to me. I was wondering about some way to stick the bottoms of the curtains down. I even warned the couple in front of me at Durness about it, and he said he'd reverse his car to sit between my lights and their tent if necessary, but in fact the curtains didn't move that night. Clachtoll was just jinxed.]

£20 for that, what a bloody nerve. He saw me coming. Obviously.

I went into Lochinver in the morning to charge the car, and had an absolutely magnificent lunch at a place called Delilah's. Steak frites done with about a dozen different sorts of mushroom, and garlic. (I should have taken a photo.) Then I headed north again. I got further than I thought I might, because I decided driving was more fun than doing more tourist things. I managed to get milk and bread in Scourie despite its being Sunday, but then headed on, reaching the camp site in Durness around four.

What a contrast. Stacks of space, fantastic views. Toilet and shower blocks, facilities for washing up cutlery/crockery, and coin-operated washing machines. For the standard £12 charge. Also, a closed hatch with a sign above reading "Breakfast Bar". I was able to change in the clean and well-appointed Ladies room, and wash in hot water. I had a comfortable night, slept till almost nine, then when I was going back to the toilet block to get dressed I saw the breakfast bar was open. Bacon roll (three rashers) and a cup of tea for £5. So I didn't need to get the kettle out in the morning at all, neither to wash nor to make tea.

By this time it had clouded over and the forecast suggested rain in the afternoon. The car charger was only a couple of hundred yards from the entrance to the camp site, so I gave Caliban the full CPS-permitted hour and set off south. It was still quite nice in the morning and I took more minor roads rather than the direct route. I stopped for lunch in a layby that would have been another nice place to camp, and made it to the Inverness superchargers mid-afternoon. These are in a multi-storey car park which Google initially deposited me at the EXIT to, but in the end I got in and Caliban was getting 87 kw. I was getting coffee in a nearby café. You don't have to pay for parking if you're only charging your car.

QLeo had warned me about the startling loss of range seen as you drive south out of Inverness, as you're climbing all the time, so I took plenty on. My feeling was that if I was still ahead of the game by the summit of the Drumochter pass I'd be fine, as that's about 1,500 feet and Perth is virtually sea level. I had five miles in hand at that point, and I was fine. Although I knew there were plenty 50 kw units around if I'd miscalculated. As I got over the summit the weather was plunged from a bit overcast but basically nice, to fog and cold and threatening rain. The weather in the south of Scotland I'd seen on my solar array monitor on my phone, and had been trying to get away from.

The Perth superchargers are up at the top of a big car park at the Broxden services. There's a McDonald's, but it's better to get something from their drive-through window and take it up there to eat in the car, especially when it's dark. Probably even better to drive through the town centre on the way there (rather than take the bypass) and pick up a proper fish supper or a pizza or something.

M90 closed on the way home, so diverted through Edinburgh. Then the A702 was also closed, so I ended up getting home over the moor road in the fog which was too thick to see where the passing places were. Fortunately I only met one Land Rover and we squeezed by. Got home at 9.30 with Caliban on 17%.

Went out this morning to visit the body shop for an estimate on the damage, and collect the cat, and by the time that was done Caliban was on 8% and ready for another shot at the long charge tonight.

And that's about it. Super fun, very comfortable, cheapest possible way of doing it short of backpacking a tent, just needs a bit of practice on what to take, where to put things and how to do things. A bit more about that last later. But we're home now, and ready for the obvious onset of real autumn weather.
It was lovely to meet you in person.

And I am deeply sorry about your experience at the "camp site". It's actually just what used to be the garden of the derelict house you mention, and the owner now lives in the house above and behind the site, alongside the road. I thought they charged £15 a night, so they have obviously realised that campervans (it's only supposed to be used by campervans with their own facilities) have few places to go, as most sites, and all in our area, are so heavily booked up around the wretched NC500. Campervanners do get an amazing view alongside the shore of Clachtoll Beach, though, and maybe that's what they charge the extra fiver for. We see a lot of profiteering, or as capitalists would probably say, "response to market conditions" as the marketing around the NC500 means far more people than facilities can support tour it.

It was interesting to see how you'd set Caliban up for in-car camping, taking advantage of the fact that he's an EV in the way you do. And you're not a little inspiring in doing all of this on your own, and in the spirited way you do it.

And glad you had such a good time.

Well, you know, if they actually have golden toilets then maybe there's a justification. I think I saw £17 on the main Clachtoll camp site web site, though I don't know what the facilities are like there. Presumably OK as they seem to be fully booked a lot. But £20 for a parking space and a water tap is basically taking the piss.

That place in Durness is fantastic, I'd recommend it to anyone any time. I have actually been there before, when I did the 250-mile pony ride. We had a rest day in Durness and I had dirty clothes, so I snuck into the camp site and used one of the the coin-operated washing machines. I didn't have any washing powder but the clothes came out pretty clean anyway. I remember sitting there writing postcards hoping that nobody was going to come and ask me what the hell I was doing, as there was a sign - still there - saying "the facilities on this site are for the use of users of the site only". I wasn't rumbled, fortunately.
If they took the piss, that would count as "facilities", wouldn't it? :)
 
For this situation a bump charge can be the right option, it will continue until the car says stop and you can time it for the low rate period.

I did that too, but the Zappi will only bump charge for 8 hours. I swithered and swithered how to work it, being afraid that if I didn't overlap the bump charge with the Octopus schedule I'd get the dropped charge again. In the end I timed the bump charge for the same time as the Octopus schedule, being confident that as the car never balances for more than 40 minutes as a rule, it would be fine. Ideally I'd have set the Zappi to go half an hour beyond the Octopus schedule, but if I'd done that I thought I ran the risk of the charge dropping out near the start.

It's not desperate, the car had a proper long charge in May. I'd just like to get it done. Every time I come home low I try to do it, and every time something glitches.
 
It was lovely to meet you in person.

And I am deeply sorry about your experience at the "camp site". It's actually just what used to be the garden of the derelict house you mention, and the owner now lives in the house above and behind the site, alongside the road. I thought they charged £15 a night, so they have obviously realised that campervans (it's only supposed to be used by campervans with their own facilities) have few places to go, as most sites, and all in our area, are so heavily booked up around the wretched NC500. Campervanners do get an amazing view alongside the shore of Clachtoll Beach, though, and maybe that's what they charge the extra fiver for. We see a lot of profiteering, or as capitalists would probably say, "response to market conditions" as the marketing around the NC500 means far more people than facilities can support tour it.

It was interesting to see how you'd set Caliban up for in-car camping, taking advantage of the fact that he's an EV in the way you do. And you're not a little inspiring in doing all of this on your own, and in the spirited way you do it.

And glad you had such a good time.

It was lovely to meet you too, I'm only sorry I missed meeting your wife. And it was fascinating to see how you manage with the solar and wind and batteries. And thanks for the coffee!

It wasn't a terribly bad experience, it just wasn't up to the standard of the other places. If he'd only charged me a tenner I might not have felt so cross, and to a certain extent my being cross is being cross with myself for not heading for the car park you mentioned and which I'd also spotted. The other people I spoke to at the site were lovely, and even the "please turn the stereo off" request was pleasant and readily complied with. Something funny about the acoustics there I think, maybe the wall of the cottage.

For some reason everything happened in that one place, from the stereo bothering someone, to the blackout curtains lifting in the wind, to my airbed deciding to deflate just before bedtime, to my inability to find a spot that afforded reasonable privacy. And it was basically my own fault for staying. No actual harm done.

The odd thing is that it was only on your section of the NC500 route that the camp sites were so full. Applecross was fine, and so was Durness. Although the one I tried near Ullapool was full that night, I was told it had plenty space the previous night. To be honest in a way I prefer just finding a secluded car park somewhere and shifting for myself. The first one I found at the end of the Dark Mile was fantastic (apart from the midges). Coincidentally the woman in the next van at Applecross came from Achnacarry and was able to tell me that parking place was used for a scene in the film Rob Roy. She had also been up to Loch Blàir, the climb I went there to do, and started talking about someone she knew seeing a "big cat" there. Which of course is a subject I actually know something about, and basically no dead sheep, no big cat. Sorry.

Talking of fantastic views, Durness has that in spades, and yet was only £12. The guy who checked me in actually said, if you go further over to the end of that field over there, that's the best views. I already posted the photo! (The view from the shallow quarry where I camped near Ullapool was also amazing.)

You were saying about the bully yellow sports car being hired by someone wanting to be the big man, and I'm sure you're right. Someone even showed me a photo of a yellow sports car with the rental number on the side and said, was that it? But I couldn't be sure. The other thing that strikes me is that most of these campervans are probably hired. It won't make sense for most people to keep their own van for only a few weeks in the year. But that means they're being driven by people who may not be used to them at all. Turning the car into a basic campervan for one means I get to drive the car, not a campervan, which is a lot more fun and was basically the point at the beginning of it all. I don't think it would work for two - you'd at least need a roof tent like Archev's, and the set-up where the car powers a tent via VtL looks like much the best solution for multiple occupancy.

I am now in the middle of cleaning Caliban (inside) to within an inch of his life, as it's back to the volunteer job of taking patients to hospital next week. Someone has cararact surgery on Wednesday, and obviously can't drive himself. At least I don't have to wash the outside of the car - I have a dentist's appointment on Tuesday, and pass a decent hand car wash on the way home.

What I rather fancy, now I know how to do it, is to take off into Europe with the camping facilities in the car. I'd probably aim to find B&B accommodation more often than not, but knowing there's a plan B if I can't find anything is a big plus. I've come across some very reasonable pensions in France and Germany in the past, but prices here seem to have gone up a lot recently and I expect that might be the same abroad. When I googled Plockton to see whether there was a camp site there, I was being presented with cottage B&B establishments charging over £100! I don't mind paying for a nice hotel if I get to enjoy the facilities for a bit, but that sort of money just to sleep for a few hours? Seems such a waste.
 
Amazing!

What is less amazing is this. Caliban has an ouchie.

View attachment 30416

Coming back over the Bealach, an aggressive yellow sports car forced me to reverse a little into a passing place. I was so intent on what was behind, and the SE doesn't have front parking sensors, so I didn't realise that there was a retaining wall on the other side, too close and very sharp stones. Cross with myself. It's just a paint job though.

I've had the quote for the repair, £359.10. Could have been a lot worse, but so much for the ultra-cheap holiday. The shop can't fit me in till early November so I guess I'm just going to have to go on being embarrassed for another few weeks.
 
My lad did something similar, but not quite so scratchy. Unknown to us, the rear parking sensors on his new-to-him 2018 Hyundai i30 Tourer had packed up (but the rear cam still fired up) and he scraped the back bumper a bit on a low wall.

The auto electrician who came to diagnose the fault said that if one sensor packs up, the whole lot stop working, which is helpful. He found out which one had failed and I went looking for a replacement. UK dealers wanted £200 for one sensor! I was absolutely gob-smacked!

So I went to a US dealer and got one delivered for £75. Still dear, but at least the system is now fully working now and for a fraction of the cost.
 
It seems such a false economy only to fit rear sensors on the MG4. I was watching a friend manoeuvre his VW Touran which has front sensors as well. It makes so much sense and would 100% have prevented my scrape. I mean I get that they're cost-cutting, but some cutting is a cut too far.
 
It was lovely to meet you too, I'm only sorry I missed meeting your wife. And it was fascinating to see how you manage with the solar and wind and batteries. And thanks for the coffee!

It wasn't a terribly bad experience, it just wasn't up to the standard of the other places. If he'd only charged me a tenner I might not have felt so cross, and to a certain extent my being cross is being cross with myself for not heading for the car park you mentioned and which I'd also spotted. The other people I spoke to at the site were lovely, and even the "please turn the stereo off" request was pleasant and readily complied with. Something funny about the acoustics there I think, maybe the wall of the cottage.

For some reason everything happened in that one place, from the stereo bothering someone, to the blackout curtains lifting in the wind, to my airbed deciding to deflate just before bedtime, to my inability to find a spot that afforded reasonable privacy. And it was basically my own fault for staying. No actual harm done.

The odd thing is that it was only on your section of the NC500 route that the camp sites were so full. Applecross was fine, and so was Durness. Although the one I tried near Ullapool was full that night, I was told it had plenty space the previous night. To be honest in a way I prefer just finding a secluded car park somewhere and shifting for myself. The first one I found at the end of the Dark Mile was fantastic (apart from the midges). Coincidentally the woman in the next van at Applecross came from Achnacarry and was able to tell me that parking place was used for a scene in the film Rob Roy. She had also been up to Loch Blàir, the climb I went there to do, and started talking about someone she knew seeing a "big cat" there. Which of course is a subject I actually know something about, and basically no dead sheep, no big cat. Sorry.

Talking of fantastic views, Durness has that in spades, and yet was only £12. The guy who checked me in actually said, if you go further over to the end of that field over there, that's the best views. I already posted the photo! (The view from the shallow quarry where I camped near Ullapool was also amazing.)

You were saying about the bully yellow sports car being hired by someone wanting to be the big man, and I'm sure you're right. Someone even showed me a photo of a yellow sports car with the rental number on the side and said, was that it? But I couldn't be sure. The other thing that strikes me is that most of these campervans are probably hired. It won't make sense for most people to keep their own van for only a few weeks in the year. But that means they're being driven by people who may not be used to them at all. Turning the car into a basic campervan for one means I get to drive the car, not a campervan, which is a lot more fun and was basically the point at the beginning of it all. I don't think it would work for two - you'd at least need a roof tent like Archev's, and the set-up where the car powers a tent via VtL looks like much the best solution for multiple occupancy.

I am now in the middle of cleaning Caliban (inside) to within an inch of his life, as it's back to the volunteer job of taking patients to hospital next week. Someone has cararact surgery on Wednesday, and obviously can't drive himself. At least I don't have to wash the outside of the car - I have a dentist's appointment on Tuesday, and pass a decent hand car wash on the way home.

What I rather fancy, now I know how to do it, is to take off into Europe with the camping facilities in the car. I'd probably aim to find B&B accommodation more often than not, but knowing there's a plan B if I can't find anything is a big plus. I've come across some very reasonable pensions in France and Germany in the past, but prices here seem to have gone up a lot recently and I expect that might be the same abroad. When I googled Plockton to see whether there was a camp site there, I was being presented with cottage B&B establishments charging over £100! I don't mind paying for a nice hotel if I get to enjoy the facilities for a bit, but that sort of money just to sleep for a few hours? Seems such a waste.
Just on the score of profiteering in this area, especially notable, as we have just confirmed that the £15 a night at the parking spot (I can't call it a camp site) has now not only gone up to £20 but says "from £20". We know of some people nearby who charge over £200 a night to stay on those glamping pods. Honestly, it's embarrassing.
I've had the quote for the repair, £359.10. Could have been a lot worse, but so much for the ultra-cheap holiday. The shop can't fit me in till early November so I guess I'm just going to have to go on being embarrassed for another few weeks.
Ouch, and not the type of thing one claims on insurance, or risk even higher premiums forever.

It seems such a false economy only to fit rear sensors on the MG4. I was watching a friend manoeuvre his VW Touran which has front sensors as well. It makes so much sense and would 100% have prevented my scrape. I mean I get that they're cost-cutting, but some cutting is a cut too far.
On the other hand, I'm old enough to remember those dizzy days when you actually had to be careful yourself and not got too close. I know it's hard to believe. :)
On the other hand, as an ex Land Rover driver, I miss the days when it was possible to park by Braille. No need for sensors where there's no plastic to shatter.
 
My lad did something similar, but not quite so scratchy. Unknown to us, the rear parking sensors on his new-to-him 2018 Hyundai i30 Tourer had packed up (but the rear cam still fired up) and he scraped the back bumper a bit on a low wall.

The auto electrician who came to diagnose the fault said that if one sensor packs up, the whole lot stop working, which is helpful. He found out which one had failed and I went looking for a replacement. UK dealers wanted £200 for one sensor! I was absolutely gob-smacked!

So I went to a US dealer and got one delivered for £75. Still dear, but at least the system is now fully working now and for a fraction of the cost.
My driveway was my downfall some months ago

IMG_1280.jpeg

I’ve got the paint and intended to have it sprayed up by now but haven’t.
It did look worse but I’ve used one of those nano invisible magic cloths which work quite well for surface scratches. It does look a wee bit better but really needs rubbing down, prepping and spraying. Some day.
 
Just on the score of profiteering in this area, especially notable, as we have just confirmed that the £15 a night at the parking spot (I can't call it a camp site) has now not only gone up to £20 but says "from £20". We know of some people nearby who charge over £200 a night to stay on those glamping pods. Honestly, it's embarrassing.

Ouch, and not the type of thing one claims on insurance, or risk even higher premiums forever.

Certainly not going near the insurance for a scrape like that. Chalk it up to "these things happen".

£200 a night for a glamping pod? How many people are going to be prepared to pay that for goodness sake? I was boggling at £100 for a cottage B&B in Plockton. But at these prices it does make my bodyshop bill look a little less painful. I suppose they charge what the market will bear and there's obviously no shortage of people wanting accommodation

The NC500 is surely a difficult route to do if you're relying on hotel/B&B accommodation. Even in September I saw an awful lot of "No Vacancies" signs, and it's going to cost a fortune. But then I have no idea how much it costs to hire one of these fancy campervans either.

On the other hand, I'm old enough to remember those dizzy days when you actually had to be careful yourself and not got too close. I know it's hard to believe.
On the other hand, as an ex Land Rover driver, I miss the days when it was possible to park by Braille. No need for sensors where there's no plastic to shatter.

I remember all that too, and I'm usually pretty good at being careful all the way round. But in my defence that yellow sports car was intimidating. And as I remember it, the cars of the 1970s had better visibility all round. (Land Rovers, on the other hand, I just tended to point and aim.)
 
My driveway was my downfall some months ago

View attachment 30701
I’ve got the paint and intended to have it sprayed up by now but haven’t.
It did look worse but I’ve used one of those nano invisible magic cloths which work quite well for surface scratches. It does look a wee bit better but really needs rubbing down, prepping and spraying. Some day.
I agree about the land rovers - the inverse was true - they didn’t look “right” without proof of expeditionary use ?
 
I agree about the land rovers - the inverse was true - they didn’t look “right” without proof of expeditionary use ?

I once managed to ditch one while I was bringing in the cows for milking, in such a way that the front bumper hooked round a fence post, making it impossible to move the thing either forward or back. But that's the great thing about farms. They have tractors.

I didn't actually notice the damage on The Magnette. Caliban's scrape is a bit more blatant.
 
Has anyone got photos of a camping setup inside the car.

If you look back further in the thread I took some pictures when I was trying things out for fit with the car on my driveway.

Oh wait, I also took this one at the first camp site in Lochaber.

1727454603803.jpeg


I'm not sure how well you can see there, but I modified it a bit, later.

The final arrangement pushed only the passenger seat to its furthest foward position. This allowed the left-hand side of the driver's seat back to stabilise the airbed in place. Also, where that blue shawl is in this photo, I placed my flight bag (handle-up) to stabilise the foot end of the airbed.

The head end of the airbed is supported by a large plastic box (from Ikea) in the footwell. This also doubled as the storage space for all the bits and bobs like kettle and water bottles. This wasn't quite high enough and in the end I folded the shawl and put that on top of the lid of the box to make the height. That was very comfortable. The foot end is supported (this is an SE, without the false floor) by my folded table and picnic chair. It's not perfectly flat but it's pretty good. (The photo is deceptive, there isn't much slope at all.)

The space immediately behind the driver's seat acts like a bedside table, takes a lamp and whatever you're reading, but be careful with drinks because there is a bit of a slope on it. (The bolster between the front seats is flat, as is the floor of the footwell.) There is also room to sit there, on top of the folded seat back, and I kept my sandals in that footwell for getting in and out of the car. Get in the driver's side, sit on the seat (back) there, then get into the sleeping bag from that position, is the thing that works best.

In front, the driver's seat is as normal and can be used as a sort of bedroom easy chair for reading before bedtime. On the passenger side (on the second trip) I placed my cool box, plugged in to the cigarette lighter socket, on the actual seat. In the footwell I had the granny charger and its extension lead just in case, hiking shoes, ski pole (also doubles as central locking facilitator) and rucksack.

In the morning I deflated the air mattress and put the sleeping bag into its storage bag. Once I'd finished breakfast and was ready to move on, the table, chair, air mattress, sleeping bag and my flight bag (and that shawl) all fitted easily into the boot space and I raised the rear seat backs to their normal position for driving. (I left the rear head-rests and the parcel shelf at home.) I just left the Ikea box and the cool box where they were, for convenience, so I was driving with the passenger seat forward and the cool box by my left arm. I could have stowed them in the boot as well though, if I'd wanted to.

You can see the pleated blackout curtain draped over the dashboard screens to keep the light down. You can't really see the curtains on the windows, but they are there, that's why the interior of the car looks so dark.
 
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I once managed to ditch one while I was bringing in the cows for milking, in such a way that the front bumper hooked round a fence post, making it impossible to move the thing either forward or back. But that's the great thing about farms. They have tractors.

I didn't actually notice the damage on The Magnette. Caliban's scrape is a bit more blatant.
Like this memorable day and an untenable angle, up to the running boards in the bog. This was in a game reserve in Malawi, and there were leopard tracks all along the road. It took a tractor to get us out.
 

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I’m keeping my weather eye on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. I might launch the Snail once more.
Applecross and Newton Stewart areas looking promising. Might try the latter as my Daughter is going down there soon to work on a wind farm extension job.
My New Zealander niece climbed Ben Nevis the other day -10C, ice , snow and howling gales at the top. Worse than anything she’s encountered over years of tramping in NZ.
But she chuffed with the training opportunity as she’s heading out to Everest base camp at the end of the week.
Strong lady ?
 

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