Fair Head
Fair Head or Benmore is a,, mountain cliff, close to the sea, at the north-eastern corner of County Antrim, Northern Ireland. The cliff's sheer and vertical dolerite rock face is shaped into distinctive vertical columns like organ pipes, which formed 60 million years ago when a sill of igneous rock was injected between horizontal Carboniferous sediments.
Fair Head is considered one of the best traditional climbing and bouldering locations in the British Isles, and is one of the biggest expanses of climbable rock in Northwest Europe. It has one of the largest concentration of extreme-graded routes in the British Isles, and has climbs at E9-grade, as well as highball problems at E9-grade, and bouldering at grade.
Geography
The headland of Fair Head rises above the sea, and extends for over. The dolerite rock face is over high in places. Wild goats can be seen roaming among the rocks beneath the clifftops, where a walkway called The Grey Man's Path winds around the rugged coastline. From the road above the cliff, a human-made Iron Age island or crannóg can be seen in the middle of a lake, Lough na Cranagh. The lakes are stocked with trout and can be fished during the summer months. All of the land at Fair Head is private farmland, and not owned by the National Trust. Access is by the goodwill of local farm owners. Fair Head is the closest headland to Rathlin Island.Fair Head's rock formations appear on the 2nd century Ptolemy's map of Ireland from Ptolemy's Geography, described as a point called Ῥοβόγδιον , which academics believe is Fair Head. The name may derive from the Proto-Celtic root *bogd, "bend".
Fair Head are classed as an area of special scientific interest, and are on the register of Antrim ASSI.
Geology
Fair Head is a sill of Palaeogene age that is the thickest and most extensive of the various sills from the plateau lavas of northeast Ireland. A sill is a tabular body of what was once molten rock that was injected into horizontal rocks. Fair Head's sill is thick at its maximum, and consists of columnar-jointed dolerite rock showing crystals of olivine, that intruded into Carboniferous sediments in the north of the outcrop circa 60 million years ago. At the north end of Murlough Bay, a substantial sill appears below the main Fair Head sill, separated by of Carboniferous shales.Despite the thickness, the heat from the Fair Head sill did not alter the underlying Triassic sandstone, however, shales have been converted to hornfels extending up to from the contact. The distinctive columnar jointing of the dolerite rock is the result of stresses caused by the cooling and solidifying of the melt, and there are minor crush zones associated with later compression. Although the cliff face is stable, weathering has periodically toppled some columns producing blocks of massive dimensions on the scree below. Geologists record that even major storms barely disturb these blocks, and thus the scree may be little changed since the late-glacial period.
Rock climbing
Reputation and ethics
The 2014 Fair Head guidebook, its 6th edition, lists over 430 routes mostly from grade VS 4b up to E6 6b, and the current climbing databases list over 445 routes at grades up to E9 6c. Fair Head is not regarded as an ideal crag for novice climbers, and the long nature of the routes, the requirement for long and intimidating abseils for access in many areas, and the high concentration of E-grade climbs, means that it is ideally a crag for intermediate and even more for expert-level climbers. There have been fatalities at the crag. An annual Fair Head Climbing Meet is held over the first weekend of June for all climbers.The cliffs abound in well-protected steep crack climbing, between one and four pitches in length, with routes that range from under to over. Many of the cracks involve hand-jamming, and some climbers tape their hands to protect the skin from the "Fair Head rash". Some routes involve off-width or full-width chimneying, which is not often encountered in other Irish crags. As with all Irish crags, Fair Head is a traditional climbing area with no bolted or sport climbing routes allowed; the Mountaineering Ireland guidebook states that any newly placed manufactured bolts will be removed.
Fair Head is considered one of the best climbing venues in the British Isles, and is compared to Stanage for the scale of routes, particularly at E-grade. Fair Head is noted for the variation in its climbing sections from the westerly-facing sea-cliff walls like the Rathlin Wall, to the cold dark mountain-like north faces of White Lightning Amphitheatre and Grey Man's Path, which have been compared to Clogwyn Du'r Arddu. Climbing author David Flanagan called it "the jewel in the crown of Irish climbing". Climbing ranked Above and Beyond in its top-5 E6-grade climbs, and Born to Run E4 in its top-5 E4-grade climbs, in the Brish Isles.
Layout
Fair Head is one of the largest rock climbing crags in the British Isles, stretching to over 5-kilometers. The individual sections can have a very different feel and character, ranging from dry westerly faces to cold dark northerly faces. The main sectors are :- Small Crag is a 10–20m high sector with almost 70 climbs, most of which are at VS to HVS grade, which stretches for 1-kilometre above a forested hillside; the difficulty of access means that abseiling in is recommended. Together with infestations of midges, this makes the sector unpopular, in spite of the quality of climbing. Further east is the small The Middle Crag with a handful of 20–25m E1 climbs accessed by abseil from in-situ stakes.
- Main Crag is 3-kilometers long, 100m tall, with several sub-sections. While many routes are accessed by long abseil, there are two descent gullies at either end, but 3-kilometres apart, the "Grey Man's Path Gully" and "Ballycastle Descent Gully".
- Rathlin Wall is a 40–100m high west-facing wall with easy access to over 35 single and multi-pitch extreme climbs that include some of the best-regarded E2 to E4 and E5 graded climbs in Fair Head, as well as some of the most extreme climbs at Fair Head including Complete Scream, and The Big Skin.
- Wall of Prey is a wall between Rathlin Wall and Hell's Kitchen that contains over 10 climbs the easiest of which is Wall of Prey, and which includes Above and Beyond, ranked in the "5 Best E6-graded climbs in the UK", Below and Behold, and Rathlin Effect, the crag's first E9.
- Ballycastle Descent Gully is one of the most popular areas after The Prow given the ease of access, westerly aspect, and quality VS and HVS options, with Aoife, Girona, and Hell's Kitchen, some of the most popular climbs in Fair Head.
- The Prow is the most popular climbing section in Fair Head – and particularly for first-time visitors to dolerite crack and corner climbing routes – with over 40 easily accessible and mostly west-facing routes that are generally linear single-pitch crack climbs of 20–60m in length, and which include several of Fair Head's best-regarded climbs in the VS and E1 range.
- Farrangandoo crag is an amphitheatre-shaped sector that has over 30 routes covering a range of lengths and grades, with Pangur Ban, and Crib Pad Crack , being the most popular routes.
- Marconi's Cove is a small crag about 500m away that gets a lot of afternoon sun, and contains about 30 shorter 20–25m single-pitch climbs from VS to E3, on more open face climbing, with Soundman and Distant Voices being the most regarded.
Access
The two main descent options to the base of the crag by foot are the popular Ballycastle Descent Gully, and the less popular Grey Man's Path Gully. Walking along the base of the Fair Head crag for any distance is not recommended as the terrain makes it time-consuming and very unpleasant, and therefore for routes in the middle of the crag that are far from the two descent gullies, a 100m abseil rope is advised ; several of the main routes have large boulders or metal stakes as abseil points. Climbers can stay at the crag in "Sean's Farm", where the McBride family offer basic temporary camping and some lodging facilities for a fee, while more extensive accommodation, including a hostel, can be found in nearby Ballycastle.
Climbing history
The first climbs at Fair Head were done in the mid-1960s by Belfast-based climbers and members of the Dublin-based Spillikin Club. Most of these climbs followed loose and dirty chimneys and are rarely repeated today, however, by the end of the sixties development of the crag had started in earnest. Development slowed during the height of the troubles in the early 1970s, but development picked up again in the late seventies, led by the husband-and-wife team of Calvin Torrans and Clare Sheridan, and a number of other Dublin climbers. This small band devoted themselves to developing Fair Head, founded the Dal Riada Climbing Club, and acquired a climbing hut nearby to accommodate themselves and other visiting climbers.Bouldering
Fair Head also contains over 511 bouldering problems, with a concentration in the boulder fields that have accumulated in Murlough Bay area and at the base of the Ballycastle Descent area. These dolerite boulders have fallen off the cliffs above and the general required style is described as "steep, crimpy and powerful", with a caution that excess bouldering mats are needed to handle the poor landing areas due to the density of the strewn boulder fields. Rob Hunter, with his wife Veronica, is credited with developing the venue, and their 2012 guidebook listed over 450 routes from grade to.In 2020, Hunter created the first route by adding a sit-down-start to Dan Varian's problem, Blondie. Classic extreme problems include Varian's Blondie and Glen Ross, which Varian describes as one of his best-ever climbing moments. and also Ricky Bell's Gentleman's Arete, and Spindle SDS on the distinctive Hanging Rock boulder. Extreme highball bouldering problems include The Big Black, and Ricky Bell's 2015 free solo of the boulder slab Long Runs the Fox in the Murlough Bay.
In 2012, Irish climbing author David Flanagan, ranked Fair Head as one of the best bouldering locations in Ireland, just behind Glendalough in Wicklow. In a 2017 video review for Rock & Ice magazine, British boulder Dan Turner called it one of the best locations in the British Isles, and "Britain's answer to Magic Wood in Switzerland".