Showing posts with label Meall Fuar-mhonaidh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meall Fuar-mhonaidh. Show all posts

Wednesday, 20 September 2023

Surprisingly better underfoot than expected.....Glas-bheinne Mhor

 Hill: Glas-bheinne Mhor (Hill of the cold hill mass)

Type: Fiona

Height: 651m

After yesterdays huge turnout today numbers were back to normal with 5 of us heading for this remote Graham.

I actually had doubts about whether to include this hill as from previous walk reports and experience of its near neighbour I expected it to be a sodden boggy outing. How wrong I was it was a nice walk in 3 defined stages.

Make sure to turn sharp here or end up in Invermoriston

Thankfully a side gate

Firstly it was a long but good forested section which gained us a lot of height at a comfortable gradient, walking on a soft carpet of pine needles, very pleasant indeed. The trees were huge and it was quite dark under them with some very steep drops to the gorge below which were not for the vertigo challenged.

Our hill behind the trees, Meall Fuar-mhonaidh on right

Time to rough it

Next was a hydro track which was certainly not barren. Full foliage along the way plus a good mix of moor and trees, a typical Highland scene. More scenic than expected and quite pretty at times Only issue was stopping for a break and finding 3 ticks crawling about me, not attached, all dead now.




Reservoir with Glen Sheil in distance

Love these glacially formed rolling tops

Cairn spotted

Finally the moor section to ascend the hill. Much better underfoot than expected and a reasonable gradient to the summit. The terrain included wet moor grass tussocks and heather but in the main footage was secure. There were a few hidden water courses with deep holes. At times we had the strong smell of deer and saw fresh droppings but not the beasties themselves.

Glen Affric in distance

North to Loch Ness

Saturdays hidden hill behind the pylons

Head back to the reservoir then a track all the way back

I had read that it was a hill of many false summits but I did not really find that to be the case. Its true that you do not see the cairn until the last moment and the trig not until you have reached the cairn. Reasonable all round views, mostly long distance as nothing really close except its neighbouring fiona.

Could see the hill we were on yesterday, more than we could see then when it was in the cloud and rain.

We descended on a straighter line to re-join the track where we had a slight couple of minutes detour as I kept on the high track until error realised. Just as well as that track curved back inland nowhere near where we wanted to be.

A better than expected ramble in good company.

Ascent: 641m

Distance: 16.9km

Time: 5.53

Wildlife: Raven; Meadow Pipit; Ringlet; Blue tit


ADRC Action photos









Saturday, 13 May 2023

The boggy squelchy ramble to.....Meall Fuar-mhonaidh

Hill: Meall Fuar-mhonaidh (Cold round hill)

Type: Fiona

Height: 699m

The horrible weather forecast meant that the planned long ridge walk was cancelled. The problem was that I did not have an obvious plan B so after brekkie the computer was opened and a search began. With the weather forecast I wanted a quick up and down before the rains came so opted for this Fiona, bonus as it was only 10 minutes drive away.

An early start and 1st car in the parking area, I thought I would be the only rambler on this remote hill, how wrong I was.

After the very cold weather yesterday I opted for a baselayer and my heavier Paramo jacket.

Hill can be seen from the start

The walk begins at the end of a tarmac road that I well remember as a section of the Great Glen Way.

Initially it is a woodland ramble and a lovely section it was. A burn gurgling away as the birds sang in the early morning light. A lovely woodland with a mixture of trees alongside lines of yellow daffodils bringing a stunning colour contrast to the greens and greys of the woodland.


It was humid and I was cursing the choice of the heavier jacket but before long I would be very glad I had it. The next section is a narrow stony track heading up to a deer fence and a very large stile. Looking at the hill I could see it was clear up top, hopeful.

Over the fence and now onto open moorland. There is a track that is both stony and boggy but at least it is there. I heard a noise and two small dogs appeared followed by the owner. Highland accent, not too chatty and presumably lives nearby as no car.

I thought I was looking at the summit but oh no

After my warm ascent I was now zipping up the jacket, it was a cool wind. Soon followed by the plip plop of individual raindrops hitting my jacket, soon to become more persistent rain.

1st false cairn can just be seen

The climb is a serious of lifts, six I think, with a short steep section followed by a short flat section and then repeating.

The route was turning into a mudfest. It has been a while since I have seen so much peaty ground turned into deep mud and in many instances it could not be avoided. The width of the track in some areas was amazingly wide where walkers tried to avoid the gloop but as it is steep ascents you are funnelled back to the mire. I am not sure what the rock is but there are steep sections that were very slippy so it became a tougher walk.

That's it closer

It is also another walk where you look up thinking that is the top but turns out not to be. It doesn't help that there are five false top cairns of various sizes and not all on the route, bit weird.

False tops are one thing in the dry when you can see them but totally different today when the rain was driving into my face, the clouds were down so every cairn looming out of the gloom held promise and then disappointment.

Looking back from summit to two other falsies


Snap better represents the conditions up top

I reached what I thought was the top cairn before realising there was yet another one in the gloom which thankfully turned out to be the real one. Once there a quick snap and no hanging about, no views, no point and I wanted my face out of the rain.

1st falsie with Loch Ness below

The return was slower as my so called top boot soles were not gripping and slipping on both the muddy sections and the rock ones, so slow careful progress.

The rain eased and looking back the top became clear but no way was I motivated to go back up through that gloop.

Cloud starting building from below and grew to a fair old size, something sinister about cloud forming ahead of me

On the descent I met a few people who all stopped for a chat, no surprise that the parking area was full when I got back.


Looked back frequently and the top was more under cloud than not but the heavy rain due at 11 had obviously came through earlier.

The level of mud made this more unpleasant than hoped but I suspect most of that does not dry out at any time. It is a very remote landscape and a ramble that had plenty of silence and the feeling of isolation, particularly on the ascent when I was mostly on my own.

Good views at times of Loch Ness but no Nessie, leave that sighting for another day.

Ascent: 575m

Distance: 9.8km

Time: 3.35

Wildlife: Red Grouse; Great Tit; Chiff Chaff; Raven (pair); Tree Pipit; Meadow Pipit; Skylark