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Correen (no virus) Hills

Correen (no virus) Hills


Postby BlackPanther » Wed Mar 11, 2020 6:57 pm

Route description: Correen Hills circuit, near Alford

Sub 2000' hills included on this walk: Lord Arthur's Hill

Date walked: 08/03/2020

Time taken: 4.5 hours

Distance: 15.2 km

Ascent: 403m

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Another weekend, another weather front passing over Scotland, another windy day. I had a slightly sore throat, Kevin of course wondered, could it be the dreaded coronavirus? :shock: Obviously not as I had no other symptoms and no contact with anybody who had traveled abroad recently. But to be sure we wouldn't catch anything nasty, when it came to picking a route for Sunday, we decided to drive east to Correen Hills, from now on known also as Correen (no virus) Hills :wink:

The circuit from Tullynessle is a pleasant walk of some 15km, mostly on ATV tracks, and includes one Sub'2 Marylin, Lord Arthur's Hill. I have no clue who Lord Arthur was, assuming it was not the legendary King Arthur (wrong end of the UK :lol: :lol: ), maybe some local noble? Whoever he was, he must have been famous enough to deserve for a hill to be named after him. Maye he had once lived in a small 16th century towerhouse at the entrance to the glen, called Terpersie Castle. It was once a ruin but was restored in 1980-ties. I couldn't get any good photos of it myself as it is surrounded by trees, but the Canmore website has a good number of pictures, including those of the ruin before restoration.

We parked at a small grassy car park at the turning for Dubston, followed WH route in clockwise direction. Mostly tracks, boggy in places, but generally good going:

Track_LORD ARTHURS HILL 15.2 KM.gpx Open full screen  NB: Walkhighlands is not responsible for the accuracy of gpx files in users posts


When we arrived, there was once car already parked, I noticed it had Walkhighlands badge so I wonder who else was wandering about Correen Hills that windy Sunday?...
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 003.JPG

The route starts from the bridge leading past Dubston Farm:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 005.JPG

On the gate, there was a note "Responsible walkers welcome". Hmmm. I consider myself responsible enough to be allowed on this hill!
Past the farm, the track turned boggy for a short distance, but it was probably just the melting snow...
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 009.JPG

Once past a forest plantation on Manabattock Hill, conditions underfoot improved. We crossed a small burn and started the straightforward ascent to Lord Arthur's Hill:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 015.JPG

Looking back down. At this point weather was fine, maybe a bit windy but much better than we had expected in the morning:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 019.JPG

After about 100m of ascent we passed another small forest plantation. Through the trees, we saw the local beauty, Bennachie, on the eastern horizon:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 025.JPG

I absolutely loved Bennachie when we did it a couple of years back and would happily climb it again. Since our last visit I found out, there is a plane crash site there to visit, that only whetted my appetite to go back!
At the moment, I was busy hopping across the last remnants of snow on Lord Arthur's Hill:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 027.JPG

The track took us to a large stone shelter on the summit. The highest point of the Sub is a few meters west, marked with a trig point, but we decided to hide in the shelter for a few minutes as it was quite blowy up here:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 044.JPG

The views from here are typical Abeerdeenshire-style, maybe a bit flat but still lovely. Tap O'Noth is an interesting feature to the north. We had climbed it as a quickie in winter conditions, but never actually explored it properly (maybe a traverse?), so another local hill to return to!
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 029.JPG

A wider northern pano:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 031.JPG

Typical Abeerdeenshire-style view: :lol: :lol:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 103.JPG

Morven and Mona Gowan to the south:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 107.JPG

The neighbouring Sub.2 Marylin - Coiliochbhar Hill:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 036.JPG

After a short snack break in the shelter, we walked to the trigpoint to claim our 45th Sub'2 Marylin. No fireworks, but another hill bagged!
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 047.JPG

A path leads from the trigpoint in the western direction...
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 045.JPG

...but it soon peters out in the heather. We spotted the main ATV track just a short distance away to the left, so dropped across the heather to be on easy ground again.
Looking back to the summit:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 050.JPG

The track continues to Edinbanchory Hill, where we turned right to continue the traverse. It was still windy but not drastically so and Kevin was happy as a bunny:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 111.JPG

...at least until he almost stepped on a frog. The poor creature was too paralyzed to escape (or simply too lazy to move its backside from the track! :lol: )
Lucky you, I'm not French :lol: :lol:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 072.JPG

We left the frog to guard the track and aimed for Brux Hill, which is no more than the continuation of Edinbanchory Hill. We had good views west to The Buck from here:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 108.JPG

The distant Ben Rinnes:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 056.JPG

Views towards Badingair Hill:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 064.JPG

Once on the slopes of Badingair Hill, the track turns east and leads back into the glen. We stopped for a short break in the abandoned Correen Quarry:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 080.JPG

View back to the Correen Hills from the track near the quarry:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 083.JPG

On the way down we saw (and heard!) several skylarks singing their throats out - spring is definitely coming!
Sunny afternoon:
2020-03-08 lord arthurs hill 086.JPG

A lovely circuit and definitely worth the drive from Inverness, even if it's just a Sub2000-er. :D :D :D

Three days later and my throat is back to normal so hopefully, Correen Hills turned out to be Correen (no virus) Hills. Fingers crossed, next week is good weather-wise, we took some time off for early spring hillwalking and it would be such a shame to spend it indoors cursing another storm.
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BlackPanther
Mountain Walker
 
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Re: Correen (no virus) Hills

Postby Huff_n_Puff » Wed Mar 11, 2020 9:28 pm

Thanks for flagging this up, we have family who live in this area and a short version of the route might be quite the thing for some budding hillwalkers :lol: :lol:
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Huff_n_Puff
Walker
 
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Re: Correen (no virus) Hills

Postby malky_c » Wed Mar 11, 2020 11:07 pm

That looked fairly pleasant :) . We seem to be doing similar sorts of things just now - we could get up into the higher hills if we wanted but there isn’t really any attraction to it most of the time! So a good chance to explore places that we might not rush to in nicer weather.
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malky_c
 
Posts: 6347
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Location: Glasgow/Inverness

Re: Correen (no virus) Hills

Postby gld73 » Thu Mar 12, 2020 5:11 am

There are so many days when the weather west of Inverness is too poor to bother going up mountains, but things in Moray and Aberdeenshire look better, especially on lower hills. There have been a few useful walk reports recently on sub-2000s in these eastern areas; think I might be heading over to hills like this one more often using WH reports as inspiration!
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gld73
 
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Joined: Aug 11, 2015
Location: Inverness

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