The Scotsman

Shelter on Ben Nevis is now a ‘rubbish tip’

- By ALISON CAMPSIE alison.campsie@scotsman.com

A summit shelter on Scotland’s highest mountain is now out of bounds to rescue teams after it was turned into a toilet and rubbish dump by irresponsi­ble climbers.

The shelter on Ben Nevis is now littered with abandoned tents, clothes, food and drinks packaging, a spokesman for Lochaber Mountain Rescue Team said.

Human faeces have also been found with the shelter now “smelling of pee”, leaving rescuers unable to take casualties to the space.

The state of the shelter was discovered by Lochaber MRT on a recent call out to a climber who fractured his leg.

Mike Smith, treasurer, said it was now a “complete and utter no no” to take a casualty to the shelter for treatment given the state of the place.

Mr Smith said: “The shelter is meant to be for emergency use.

When you are in trouble and the weather comes in, you can go in for a bit of respite.

“Occasional­ly, if we bring someone up the mountain as we are near the top, we will take them in to repackage them up before the descent. We would get them in a survival bag or perhaps need to stop bleeding or administer drugs. it’s good to have a sheltered area to do these things.

"At times we have done some quite serious medical interventi­ons in there – but that is a complete and utter no no at the moment.

"It is full of abandoned tents, clothing and rubbing and people have been using it as a toilet. There are human faeces in there and the whole place st inks of pee.”

Large ropes used by the team are stored underneath the shelter, but with the door left open, hard ice has been allowed to form.

He added: “That would take around 20 to 30 minutes for us

to chip away. Then you have the issue of going down there and the whole place is drip ping with urine. Anyone going in there would have to be totally rubber gloved up .”

Mr smith said team members were “scratching their heads” over how to deal with the issue.

He said messages over responsibl­e outdoor use didn’t appear to be getting to the right people, with many of those climbing Ben Nevis doing so as a one-off mountain challenge.

Mr Smith added: “We are not quite sure what to do. Ben Nevis

is a very unique mountain. It generates millions of pounds for charity, which is great.

“But a lot of people who go up there, for a project or whatever, won’t consider going up another mountain.

"We always think that the messaging on the outdoor code is moving around in an echo chamber.”

He suggested a public service announceme­nt-stylecampa­ign –like those regularly seen in the 1980s – to address the issues of responsibl­e outdoor use.

Mr Smith added: “What really blows my mind is people carry one litre or two litre bottles of water to the top of the mountain and then chuck it when the bottle weighs a tenth of what it did. Nobody is coming to pick that up.

Mr Smith said Lochaber Mountain Rescue would now have to arrange a clean-up of the summit shelter.

"It just adds another time constraint on our members – time away from our work, time away from our families.”

 ?? ?? 0 The summit shelter on Scotland’s highest mountain is now out of bounds to rescue teams
0 The summit shelter on Scotland’s highest mountain is now out of bounds to rescue teams

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