Aye we say clag in Barnsley for muddy. I don't have confuse folk when talking of running round in thick clag that you cant see anything in!
They imagine this...
Last edited by MickTor; 19-01-2014 at 11:11 PM.
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I was on Kinder last night, with the intention of going round the Downfall race route, but the clag was that thick I could barely see my feet. Decided to drop back down at Sandy Heys. Interestingly, once I'd dropped out of the mist it appeared to get darker. I can only assume that's because I was in a sort of 'light bubble' when I was on the top.
Thanks for all the advice. Went out again Thursday night in low thick cloud and holding the head tourch low works a treat! (Although slower) I'm off to invent a fog light for runners! Haha cheers phil
I use a small hand torch mostly rather than head torch. Easier to point around, and put in a bumbag. SecurityIng do a metal case, waterproof, 1000 lumen version for £10? on amazon which lasts a long time on a charge of batteries. Much like the old maglites, but many many times brighter.
One other thing to be aware of (this time of year) is whiteout, rather than blackout, when a featureless blanket of snow and thick clag combine together to mean you cannot see where the sky stops, and the ground begins, the paths are concealed beneath snow, even in broad daylight. That can be very disorienting / scary the first time you experience it: if it is snowing /blow drifting at the time, even the footprints behind you can go featureless in minutes, so retracing steps is not easy.