Great Mountain Days in Scotland. Dan Bailey

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Great Mountain Days in Scotland - Dan Bailey

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Suilven and Canisp

       6 Seana Bhraigh and Càrn Bàn

       7 The Beinn Dearg four

       8 Traverse of the Fannaichs

       9 An Teallach and the Beinn Deargs

       10 Fisherfield Six

       11 Beinn Eighe

       12 Liathach and Beinn Alligin

       13 Coulin Forest

       14 Circuit of Loch Monar

       15 Loch Mullardoch hills

       16 Carn Eige, Sgurr nan Ceathreamhnan and more

       17 Cluanie Horseshoe from Glen Affric

       18 Beinn Fhada, The Brothers and the Five Sisters

       19 South Glen Shiel Ridge to The Saddle

       20 Ladhar Bheinn and Loch Hourn

       21 The Sgurr na Ciche range – a Rough Bounds round

       22 Glen Finnan circuit

       23 Beinn Odhar Bheag and the Rois-Bheinn group

       Lochaber, The Central and Southern Highlands

       24 Creag Meagaidh

       25 Ben Alder and the Geal-chàrn group

       26 Lochaber Traverse

       27 The Mamores

       28 Glen Coe circuit

       29 Black Mount Traverse

       30 Glen Etive hills

       31 Ben Cruachan, Beinn Eunaich and Beinn a’ Chochuil

       32 Achallader’s five Munros

       33 Tyndrum’s five Corbetts

       34 Ben Lui, Ben Oss and Beinn Dubhchraig

       35 Crianlarich hills

       36 Arrochar ‘Alps’

       37 Ben Lawers group and the Tarmachan Ridge

       Cairngorms

       38 Beinn a’Ghlo, the Tarf and the Tilt

       39 Munros of Glen Feshie

       40 Cairngorms 4000-ers

       41 Beinn a’ Bhuird and Ben Avon

       42 Lochnagar via The Stuic

       43 Glen Clova circuit

       Galloway

       44 Galloway hills

       The Islands

       45 Glen Rosa circuit, Arran

       46 Cuillin Traverse, Rum

       47 Bla Bheinn, Sgurr na Stri and Sligachan, Skye

       48 Trotternish Ridge, Skye

       49 An Cliseam range, Harris

       50 Uig hills, Lewis

       Appendix 1 Walk Summary Table

       Appendix 2 Key Summits and Ranges

       Appendix 3 Further Reading

       Appendix 4 Useful Contacts and Websites

Image

      Beinn a’ Bhuird from Carn Eas (Walk 41)

Image

      Beinn nan Eachan from Meall Garbh on the Tarmachan Ridge (Walk 37)

      PREFACE

Image

      View northeast from Goatfell. Left to right: Cir Mhor, Caisteal Abhail, the deep notch of the Witch’s Step and North Goatfell (Walk 45)

      I’m a Londoner by birth (well, no one’s perfect). Naturally I took my early steps in hillwalking down south. Snowdonia’s rugged grandeur and the manageable idyll of the Lake District both felt familiar before I’d ever ventured north of the border. At the age of 15 or so my first trip to the Highlands didn’t just expand my horizons – it blew them away. Here were the hills I’d always dreamed of – elemental, austere and just a bit hostile. Their scale was liberating. Roadless empty spaces splayed across map after map, offering the limitless scope of a blank canvas.

      As I recall we climbed only five or six Munros that week. We spent a lot of the time knee-deep in bogs or stumbling through low cloud; we hardly set foot on a decent path, and I don’t think we met another walker on the hills the whole trip. We really earned those summits – and that’s the way it should be. I instinctively feel that the less accommodating a hill, the greater its rewards; and by that measure Scotland’s take some beating.

      From the Alps to the Andes, I’ve been lucky to spend time in the major ranges of most continents, yet some of my most memorable days have been enjoyed closer to home. There remains something uniquely special about the Highlands and Islands, and 20-odd years after that first trip they still give me a thrill every time.

      Working on this book has been a pleasure and a privilege, taking me the length and breadth of Scotland and even unearthing some hitherto unfamiliar gems along the way. I’m gradually filling in my canvas; but, happily, more blank space still remains than I’ll ever have time to cover. Whether you follow the descriptions in this guide to the letter or simply use them as a springboard for other things, I hope these 50 routes inspire you to enjoy many great days of your own in Scotland’s very special mountains.

      Dan Bailey 2012

Image

      Sgurr Mór (right), Loch Quoich

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