The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Cold snap? No kidding

Daredevil braves perilous places in search of the perfect picture

- BY Megan Mceachern MMCEACHERN@SUNDAYPOST.COM

Photograph­er Hamish Frost has told how he scaled the heights to capture spectacula­r mountain shots.

To record extreme snow sports, Hamish, a Glasgow-based photograph­er, often finds himself hanging off rock faces and dangling over gullies. Hamish has worked in mountainou­s and snow-capped landscapes across the world, from the Himalayas to the French Alps, and is embarking on an intrepid trip to Antarctica next month.

But it’s Scotland’s dramatic peaks where he cut his teeth and where he’ll be most happy this winter. “The Highlands are without a doubt my favourite place to shoot,” he said.

While the beauty of the Scottish Highlands in winter are a photograph­er’s dream, they are also a perilous, constantly changing terrain which shouldn’t be taken lightly, admits Hamish.

That was a lesson he learned one treacherou­s day at the beginning of his career, photograph­ing climbers high up on a new route to the peak of Ben Nevis.

“The final pitch of their route turned out to be really difficult, so what I initially thought would be a short time hanging on the rope in the end turned into me hanging there for six hours in sub-zero temperatur­es.

“I was aware of how cold I was getting and I can remember having some pretty lucid daydreams – which were perhaps an early sign of mild hypothermi­a kicking in.”

 ??  ?? Left: Skier Liam Swanson going for a bold entry into the back corries of Aonach Mor in the Nevis range
Left: Skier Liam Swanson going for a bold entry into the back corries of Aonach Mor in the Nevis range
 ??  ?? Hamish Frost has been all over the world
Hamish Frost has been all over the world
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