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Plans changed a bit for this trip due to work so I ended up opting for something closer to home which just happened to be where the forecast was best, see sometimes East is BEST!! Reading up on the route the night before and I was reminded of the secret Howff of the Fairy Glen of which my dad spoke about when I was younger. I really wanted to go and have a look at this Hobbit like wee hut, if truth be told If I had not found it but summated the two Munros I would have only felt like half the job was done.
I left home fine and early as I envisaged around a 10 hour day as I would be walking this route due to me still not having bought myself a bike, don’t know that I will get one now......
Arriving at Keiloch I parked in the walker’s car park and paid my £2.50. The midge swooped fast and I got ready super quick and was off up the road past the estate office. There were signs that it may be a lovely day but the mist was never far away. Once past the estate office I entered the woodland section, all this track I may add is on tarmac.
- Entering the first section of woodland, sun shining
The walk on the track is easy going on the outward route but I’d wait and see how I felt on the inward journey!! Eventually below to the left we passed Invercauld House, a lovely setting in the woods. On one of the doors of the outhouse was painted ‘cooler’ it reminded me of Steve McQueen in the Great Escape – The Cooler King! Maybe this was used to intimidate rascal children into behaving when at Grannies!! Kept following signs for Loch Quoich and Glen Slugain and then you go through a gate with a cattle grid and the track here is no longer tarmac but that hardcore but this is the smooth stuff. Next point of note was Altdourie Steading, we turned left at the junction down towards Altdourie and swung by the right of it and round the track till we entered more woodland again, here we took a right, the sign indicated left was toward Inverchandlick which we did not want so right it was. The track ahead seems to run forever but soon we curved round to the right and over a wee wooden bridge and the views ahead to the open moorland were starting to open up.
- Track leading up to Start of Gleann an t-Slugain
We were entering Gleann an t-Slugain.
- Beautiful Purple Heather Gleann an t-Slugain
Crossed a couple of wee fords and headed up the Glen towards our next point of note, the Secret Howff. I will keep this section brief as I’ll leave the excitement to build for others in their treasure hunt, it’s not hard to find but it added a little excitement for me. The Howff was supposedly built back in the 1950’s to keep climbers/walkers from being seen by Estate staff whom did not want people tramping over the estate lands, to be honest it is really well hidden and you can only see it if from above. Now a days with the right to roam it does not have the secret feeling it probably once had but the story remains all the same. Once we found the Howff and had a good rake inside, we set off up to the top of the Glen while taking a few photos of the Fairy Glen and the Ruins below.
- Look what we found - a secret Howff
- Aye a Howff alright
- Plaque on the inside
Once up at the top you start to descend down and I passed a group of DOE students, they all said hi and were pleased to ruffle both the dogs, although they weren’t too sure about the student’s lol.
- Top of Gleann an t-Slugain, Bhuird ahead in the clag
Ahead I could see Beinn a’Bhuird was in the clag but the track ahead looked simple heading North. Once further round I got great views into the Eastern Corries of Bhuird, the Bloodhound Buttress & Dividing Buttress.
- Path running over the Glen, we take a route to the right but straight ahead is Bhuirds Eastern Corries
- Glas Allt Mor watering stop and scenic waterfall
I stopped at the crossing of the Glas Allt Mor to water the dogs and have a wee rest myself, the feet still felt great and the climbing was not so hard as it was more gradual on tracks today compared to the hills I’d recently done. Next stop was the Sneck, ahead I could see the tors at the top of it and we followed the track which was not so good here to the Sneck. Once up we turned right and headed up to the plateau leading to Ben Avon. Once up top we got great views over the plateau to the summit Tor, back the way Bhuird was in the clag but we’d take our chances with it later.
- Summit Tor Ben Avon ahead (Leabaidh an Daimh Bhuidhe)
- Back to Bhuird - Still in the clag
It was an easy enough walk over to the Summit Tor and we scrambled up to the top and took some photos, the wind was really picking up from the West so we crouched down on the Eastern side of the Tor to have some lunch out of the wind. The views were stunning all over Aberdeenshire, I could see over to Bennachie and over to Ben Rinnes as well as the closer Corbetts of the Lecht.
- Summit Tor
- Bhuird starting to clear
- Lochy overseeing the Pride lands of Aberdeenshire
- Bennachie zoomed
We set off back to the Sneck and bumped into a guy from Perth whom had just been on Bhuird and was heading to Avon then home. He too was chasing the weather today.
- If that's not a Sneck then I don't know what is......
Once at the sneck the pull up to the Bhuird side is on gravelly terrain but we got there and made our way to the 1174m top to take a rest out of the wind where we spoke to a fit fella whom was just doing Bhuird today.
- Looking over to Bhuird North Summit
- Back over to Ben Avon
- Into the heart of the Gorms, Derry Cairngorm front, Ben Macdui and Cairn Toul visible at the back
He took off and we never saw him again till the summit of Bhuird around 15 minutes later. I had to get the map out here as it certainly didn’t look the highest point on the huge bulk of this mountain, the guy we spoke to said it was though as he’d been up a few times. This made my mind up to go over to the South top so I could get a view back to the summit.
- Summit Beinn a'Bhuird
- This way, looking over to the South Summit
We stayed for around 10 minutes then set off along the Eastern side of the mountain then cut over to the Southern top and right enough the true summit looked miles higher from the Southern Top!!
- South Summit pic
The descent off here was tough going, over boulder fields, I knew we had to get over to the eastern shoulder as we wanted to be descending down toward Carn Fiaclach where we’d meet the track out. Once over there you see the route out and as others have spoken about in their reports it’s a bit disconcerting knowing you want to be heading for the Glen to the East but you are essentially heading South West, however the track curves round the shoulder of Carn Fiaclach and then turns back towards where you want to be heading.
- Carn Fiaclach ahead, we take a right on the path round to the West and round the shoulder to the left
I found the crossing of Quoich Water quite difficult, the dogs enjoyed me skulking up and down the bank looking for somewhere to cross as it gave them time to plooter about. Eventually I opted to make a jump from the bank onto a big flattish rock that would lead me to an Island in the middle then an easy couple of steps to the other side, thankfully no mishaps and I was over to the dogs dismay. We joined the track again and made our way up and over the top toward the Fairy Glen.
- A wee sweem in the Fairy Glen
The midge were really annoying me now and I walked with my hood up to try and stave them off me, I was really motoring here as I wanted out of the Glen where I may get some respite with a gentle breeze. My feet were getting sore now but I couldn’t stop as this would play right into the midges plans so I motored on till I reached the bottom of Gleann an t’Slugain where I took ten minutes. I probably shouldn’t have stopped as I had stiffened up and it was hard to get going again. We followed the same track back and spoke briefly to the occupant of Altdourie Steading whom was out walking his two dogs. What a lovely place it is to stay, when my lottery numbers come up eh.... Now it was a case of stopping for a rest every couple of Km’s as my knees were starting to get sore too now.
- Two pea's in a pod with Lochnagar in the background
I was beginning to wonder how many others had picked the exact same rocks or walls I picked to have a seat on the way back. I was checking off the points of note on the way back and eventually walking like John Wayne I crept into the Keiloch Car park and fed the dogs and quickly changed my footwear before the simple drive back home, via Aboyne for a poke of Chips from the Chipper! I’d had a great day on two remote beasts of mountains. What next? Well with starting a new job tomoz I do not know, it will be last minute plans now I imagine till things settle into place.......Cheers