The Loch Treig Hills From Beinn a’ Chaorainn
DJ’s mid-summer Munro foray was aimed at wrapping up his unfinished Munros on either side of the A86 between
Spean Bridge and Newtonmore. And that is
exactly what we achieved over a 3-day visit at the end of July.
For the middle day, we chose these 2 hills which lie immediately N of
the Laggan Dam. They are generally done
together but have no convenient high bealach between them so you have to
descend below 600m between Munros (Ouch)!
So take some solace from Beinn Teallach being the 2nd lowest
Munro - it could be a lot worse!
Beinn a’ Chaorainn From Beinn Teallach
A further crumb of comfort is the high start (270m) afforded by beginning
from Roughburn on the A86. From here, we
took the track that leads through the forestry plantation to open (if boggy) ground
beside the Allt a’ Chaorainn. Then it
was up, up….oh, and up… over some fairly tedious grassy slopes - these hills
have plenty of them!
Beinn Teallach
Half-way up, the rocky knoll of Meall Clachaig leads to a slight easing
of the gradient, but eventually (and it’s a long eventually), the ground
becomes more stony and you finally arrive on Beinn a’ Chaorainn’s summit ridge. The view that suddenly appears across the
steep eastern corrie of the mountain’s 3 tops towards Craig Meagaidh is the
best of the day. The summit is the middle of the 3 tops and it’s always a
relief to get there: Beinn a’ Chaorainn (1049m;
hill of the rowan).
Descending to the Allt a’ Chaorainn
Any joy was short-lived though as the descent back to the Allt a’
Chaorainn was long and in places steep. After
pausing for lunch (the midges’, not ours!), the 2nd climb of the day
followed - 400m of steep, broken ground in humid windless purgatory! But at least it put us on top just in time to
see a hen harrier taking flight from the summit cairn - a very fair reward for
our efforts! There are 2 cairns; the E
one being the higher of the 2 by a short stone:
Beinn Teallach (915m; forge hill).
Beinn Teallach From Beinn a’ Chaorainn
We descended the straightforward easy-angled S slopes of the mountain
and re-crossed the Allt a’ Chaorainn without difficulty (it must have stopped
raining for a few hours)! A possible
sparrowhawk sighting in the forest supported the slightly unfair notion that
the birds we had seen today were perhaps more interesting than the hills we
had climbed! Jon was happy though - a
further 3 Munros the following day gave him his clean sweep of the Laggan hills
despite cloudy conditions and 3 viewless summits (so no blog)!
Check out my plans for similar walks at: http://www.hillways.co.uk/summer/summer.htm
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