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My girlfriend has now moved from Glasgow and so climbing Munros is not so easy. Therefore, we booked the Easter bank holiday to climb a few. We stayed at the Ben Lawers hotel, which I am sure is known to many of you, but if not then it is excellent. The food is really good and the breakfasts are especially good for setting you up for a day on the hills.
We were thinking of walking the Western three of the Lawers range as we could just set off straight from the hotel, but it was cloudy and I wasn't sure how snowy it would be and An Stuc in snow did not sound a great idea. So we decided on Ben Ghlas and Ben Lawers from the visitor centre car park. This was also our first Munros since last September so it made sense to go for something a little shorter.
Lots of people will have done these and written reports on them so I shall not write much except to say that there is a good path to follow all the way and although it had been snowing there were only a few patches here and there and mostly they could be walked around. It was snowing a little when we left on Monday so there may be more up there now.
- The route up
- The route up
It is about here I start to remember how big Munros actually are and about here I regret the size of breakfast I had.
It was cloudier as we got higher and at the top the ridge looked something like this:
- The ridge off Ben Ghlas
It was also strangely quite, both in terms of the number of people, but also the wind of which there was none. Normally you would expect it to be windy between the tops, but not here and it was a very nice walk down. Even if there were few views.
- between the hills
- Ben Lawers looking massive
Pretty uneventful journey up to the top of Ben Lawers except for the man we met who had frozen eyebrows (it got much colder and windier as ew got higher). This was about one of the best things I have seen on a mountain and it remains an ambition of mine to get a frosty beard (not a euphamism) just because it looks pretty manly. I managed a frosty hat (still not a euphamism)
- frosty hat
On the way back down we reached the beleach between Ben Lawers and Ghlas and took the path off to the right that skirts along under Ben Ghlas. It saved the climb back into the cloud and the view down the glen while we had lunch was nice.
Whilst having lunch I noticed this:
- Meall Corranaich
This is Meall Corranaich and it looked very close and I was feeling pretty good despite this being my first Munro in ages. The problem was my girlfriend's mind was in the pub already she had earned a large cake and I could tell wanted it soon. So I had to think of a way to get her up this.
One reason to learn to navigate and not just follow people on the hills is they might do this to you. I just set off up Meall Corranaich knowing that she just follows me and as we were taking a different route back to the car park she might not notice. Surely enough she followed me and about halfway up she noticed and was not entirely pleased, but we were committed then.
I don't have pictures except from the cloudy top because I daren't stop in case I got pushed off the mountain. However, I am pleased we climbed Meall Corranaich this way because it was the most interesting part of the day. It is steep and it doesn't look like you should be able to get to the top that way, but there is a good path that winds back and forth (sometimes a little vertiginously) through crags and surprisingly with no scrambling. The top is reached very fast.
We then came down the ridge back towards the visitor centre car park. Again this was a nice choice because we were the only people on this ridge and we could see the Ben Ghlas ridge was getting busy.
The ridge is a series of flat grassy steps with each ending in a craggy drop. There is a path most of the way, but it is easy to lose at the ends of each grassy step. When this happened I just walked to the crags and had a look. There are nice views to Meall nan Tarmachan and also this loch:
We were both ready for the car by the time we got back and in total it took 5hrs 51mins to do 8.18 miles. Mostly though I recommend climbing Meall Corranaich from this side and if you can when you do the first two because it really was the most interesting part of the day.