


Before long we were sailing into Inverie Bay, with the shapely Corbett Sgurr Coire Choinnichean rearing up impressively behind the village:
Inverie Village was just as picturesque as we'd imagined, but the Bunkhouse is quite a distance east of Inverie City Centre (so to speak), and after a fair bit of Roaming in the Gloaming, it was a relief to find it at last. It's a cosy enough hideaway, with comfy beds, nice hot showers and - crucially, given the weather we got - an excellent drying room for wet gear

The Saturday dawned rather dreich, as per forecast

We headed a short distance northwest from the Bunkhouse to take the track heading back east up the mouth of Gleann an Dubh-Lochain. Despite the low cloud base, it was a scenic enough route, and the birds were singing

Soon enough, the Brockett Memorial came into sight. Lord Brockett, the local landlord in the 1950s, seems to have been rather an unpleasant character by all accounts, but there's no denying that he picked an extremely scenic spot for this memorial to his father. You do have to feel sorry for the tenants who were no doubt given little or no choice about lugging the raw materials out here and up that hill, though

Before long, we took the side path branching right towards the mouth of Gleann Meadail, as per the website's route description, crossing two footbridges over the Inverie River and the Allt Gleann Meadail, and passing the scenically located (but locked) Druim Bothy. We passed the craggy western end of Meall Buidhe's outlier, An t-Uiriollach, and our ascent route hove into view. It didn't look too bad from down here, but that's rather deceptive: it was a right steep pull up onto the ridge, and almost entirely pathless.
Later in the summer this could have been pretty miserable, with the bracken standing a lot taller than what we encountered. In May, it was steep but surprisingly scenic, with the lower slopes being beautifully carpeted in bluebells as well as the inevitable bracken - rather lovely

More bluebells and bracken:
As we gained height, there was a pleasant hazy view back down the glen to Inverie Bay:
The cloud base looked as though it was starting to lift a wee bit, and before long we enjoyed a brief but impressive view of Ladhar Bheinn and Aonach Sgoilte almost due north:
Another fine vista down Meall Buidhe's long west ridge towards Inverie Bay:
Having teased us by lifting for half an hour or so, the Clag now started to descend again with a vengeance

The ongoing route over An t-Iuriollach and on to Meall Buidhe proved straightforward enough, although we weren't fancying our chances of getting much of a view by this stage

Just as Meall Buidhe's summit cairn loomed ahead through the Clag, however, an extraordinary thing happened: the mist suddenly cleared and we found ourselves just above a sea of cloud. Strangely enough, the top of the cloud seemed to be sitting at almost exactly the magical 3000-foot line, so only the nearby Munro summits were poking though. An unexpected treat!
Most impressive was probably the improbably pointy Sgurr na Ciche over to the east, with the rougher Garbh Chioch Mhor just beind it, and the top of remote Corbett Ben Aden just hazily visible to the left:
Our next target, Luinne Bheinn, was just about clearing the clouds to the north-east:
To the north, Ladhar Bheinn looked rather like a volcanic island in a sea of cloud:
Sgurr na Ciche again, breaking the sea of cloud like a shark's fin:
Malcolm trying to get a photo of Sgurr na Ciche (I think), but with Luinne Bheinn behind him:
The cloud inversion was a short-lived treat, but it certainly saved what was otherwise a fairly dreich day. The ongoing route to Luinne Bheinn was rough with a lot of up-and-down over a couple of subsidiary Tops, but there was at least an excellent path all the way from here to the second Munro. It's a fair distance all the same, and with the rocks rather slippery in the steady drizzle, we had to take our time over it.
Needless to say, when we did eventually reach Luinne Bheinn's summit cairn, there were no views to be had! We were both soaked through by now, and Malcolm could only muster this rather pained smile:
A Summit Team Selfie, with our complexions having taken on that Too-Long-In-The-Bath look by now; can't think why

That was the end of my photos for the day, but by no means the end of the walking: it was a lengthy trudge back in the rain, first westwards down to the Mam Barrisdale, then left down the muddy path and then equally muddy track along the boggy northern flanks of the seemingly endless Dubh-Lochain, until eventually - eventually - the Brockett Memorial came back into sight, promising hot showers not much further down the road, followed by a well-earned pint or three at the Old Forge Pub.
A marvellous day out, despite the soaking
