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For most of October I'd been under attack from shingles in my thigh, recovering just before this nip to the Highlands. It felt good to be out. In the end, I was knackered before I started, though, because the car broke down, about 50 miles into my journey, so I'd had to go back to the garage, hire another one and start again.

By the time I got to Torridon, the deer were down and all over the roads, so it was a long, slow, late night arrival.
It was about 10.30 before I set off the next morning in fairly low cloud, and the Coulags were in full autumn dress.
003a Meall nan Ceapairean with An Ruadh-Stac in cloud by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
005 Bridge across the Fionn-abhainn by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
006 Looking down hydro to Sgurr na Cloiche by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
I stopped to read the memorial plaques shortly after the wooden bridge, remembering Michel Canon and his son. Michel was 'a Breton' - is that 'from Brittany' as his name suggests, or 'from Cape Breton' (i.e. with family roots in pre-Clearance Highlands) I wonder? Struck me as odd, either way.
007 Memorial stone by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
At the bothy I had a look in. Very nice!
008 Coire Fionnaraich bothy ahead by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
009 Inside the bothy by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
010 View from the bothy by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
Then on to Fingal's stone before turning up towards the bealach and maybe... maybe... a close-up view of An Ruadh Stac.
011 Clach nan Con-fionn ahead by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
012 Left - NW at the cairn by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
014 Loch Coire Fionnaraich below Sgorr Ruadh by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
015 Heading up into the cloud by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
It wasn't looking promising but over from the Torridon hills, there was the occasional patch of blue. They mostly dissolved before they could get overhead, but one tiny patch made it through.
016 Single patch of optimism by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
Meanwhile, Maol Chean-dearg was cuddling its own cloud which was trying to escape. But it, and I, weren't going to.
017 Not fumaroles on Maol Chean-dearg by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
There was plenty of colour about though: bright red rowan berries and gold and purple lichens. It was a pleasant walk up to the bealach and I was still harbouring hope of views... maybe...?
018 North over rowan to Meall Dearg by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
019 Golden lichen by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
019a Purple lichen by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
022 Autumn colours in the cleft by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
By the time I'd risen up the zig-zag route to the bealach the wind was getting up, it was raining and the cloud was swirling in. I saw the briefest of fog-bows, too brief to capture on my waterproof jacketed camera. Now I wondered if there'd be any more meteorological rewards... (spoiler - No).
020 Looking for fog bows by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
Not even MC-d's neighbour wanted to come out.
024 CLoud hiding An Ruadh-Stac at bealach by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
So it was just a matter of striking off north, up the quartz.
021 Lovely quartz layer on MCD by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
024 Jagged quartz mini-ridge by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
025 North up the quartz scree by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
At the first summit I was cloaked in cloud, so - hey ho - no break for the sun's rays to perform any surprises. Just the exhausted satisfaction that my unexercised legs had got me up the scree.
027 Icy ghost at 757 mono by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
Maybe in clear weather it's possible to pick out a fairly good route up the red bald sandstone boulder field to the summit. But with high winds, heavy gusts, rain, hat and hood pulled down and clag occasionally revealing the odd reassuring cairn, not today. In fact, I drifted too far west without noticing it, and ran out of hill.

Hm, that can't be right. Back on track, the steep, wobbly boulder field was brutal, and the wind wasn't helping.
029 Bald red head close-up blurgh by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
I checked the map. 20m of contour before it relented. A gust threw me against a rock and I stopped for a breather, letting time tick by and re-mustering some energy.
030 How I hate boulder fields by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
Pressing on, eventually the shadowy lump of the huge shelter-cairn appeared.
031 MCD summit shelter cairn in cloud by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
At the top, I drank some water, ate some nuts, looked forlornly at the cloud all around me, with no hope of the beautiful Torridon views or of Loch an Eoin down below, and turned round to head back down. Today was not going to include An Ruadh Stac clearly and the descent was going to be as windblasted as the ascent.
On my way back down the boulder field, some of which I ended up doing in a backwards crab because of the strong gusty winds, (an interesting triceps workout), I was back on my feet picking my way round a cairn, when I saw two guys coming up. They looked as exhausted as I was. The guy in front said he wished they were coming down, and that he was surprised to see any other nutter on the hill today. He thought they were the only two. We swapped our route plans, all of us opting now for an out-and-back, and I said they'd probably catch me up.
032 On the descent by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
So far I'd seen ptarmigan and deer droppings but no wildlife. On my descent, though, I disturbed two bright white ptarmigan who flew up and out, before flying off northeast to settle out of sight on the steep slope.
Back on the quartz scree down to the bealach there was a bit of shelter from the wind. The ptarmigan pair - or perhaps another two - flew back way below me, turned and suddenly shot right past my face. Camera was away, so no pics, but a beautiful, memorable encounter.
033 Site of the ptarmigan fly-by by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
034 Loch Coire an Ruadh Stac by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
Finally off the tops and back at the bealach, the view of An Ruadh Stac which had been totally obscured on the way up, appeared, though my eye was drawn at first to the lochans rather than the impressive cone.
035 First view of An Ruadh Stac at last by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
036 Beinn Damph under cloud and Applecross afar W by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
Even taking in Meall nan Ceapairean was out of the question, I'd been so slow going. I didn't know what the descent would be like by head-torch and decided not to find out. I set off down the stalkers path again, the light beginning to fade now.
037 Too late for Meall nan Ceapairean by
Emma Kendon, on Flickr
A little way down the stalkers path the torch went on and I marched without stopping, past the giant's rock, past the bothy and the 5km back to the gate. In the dark, the sounds of the hills were ringing - the river tumbling over rocks, the pipits, my creaking boots, odd hollow mountain sounds as water passes under a stone, an echo here, a boom there, and finally the road.
Behind me, I could see the guys' headtorches, in the distance and gradually speeding up. They, I thought, are looking forward to....aaaahhh.... boots off.