walkhighlands

Share your personal walking route experiences in Scotland, and comment on other peoples' reports.
Warning Please note that hillwalking when there is snow lying requires an ice-axe, crampons and the knowledge, experience and skill to use them correctly. Summer routes may not be viable or appropriate in winter. See winter information on our skills and safety pages for more information.

Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned


Postby rockhopper » Wed Dec 01, 2010 8:56 pm

Munros included on this walk: Beinn a' Chreachain, Beinn Achaladair, Beinn Mhanach

Date walked: 27/11/2010

Time taken: 11.6 hours

Distance: 28.4 km

Ascent: 2062m

2 people think this report is great.
Register or Login
free to be able to rate and comment on reports (as well as access 1:25000 mapping).

The original plan had been to walk Beinn a'Ghlo’s three munros on Sunday but with the weather forecast rapidly worsening on Friday I opted for the hills to the west and changed to the Saturday instead. Up early on Saturday morning, cleared the snow off the car, scraped the frozen newspaper off the windscreen (seemed a good idea the previous night 8) ) and headed off north. Although there was snow in Glasgow, there was hardly any on the roads on the way up Loch Lomond. I got to the car park at Achallader farm without any problems and there was only a little snow on the farm track. There were three cars already there; one looked like it had been there overnight and walkers were heading from the other two as I arrived.


Beinn Achaladair, a'Chreachain, Mhanach active log 27nov2010 reduced trackpoints to fit.gpx Open full screen  NB: Walkhighlands is not responsible for the accuracy of gpx files in users posts



I got ready and headed off NE along the Water of Tulla to allow me to approach Beinn a Chreachain from the North. There wasn’t much wind but it was very cold and my Camelbak water tube froze quite quickly which meant that I had to pull off the mouthpiece and bend and twist the tube to get a drink. There were two places on the track where I had some tricky water crossings before getting to the bridge close to the ruin at Barravourich.

1 Beinn Achaladair.JPG


2 Bridge at Barravourich.JPG


3 Beinn a'Chreachain.JPG


From there the path was straightforward if a bit slippy and snowy and it wasn’t long before I reached the bridge over the Water of Tulla at 353469. I crossed the bridge, skirted the trees and went through the underpass below the railway line – it’s very low and I had to bend almost double to avoid having to remove my rucksack. I then headed SE over a mix of open ground and near to the edge of the trees. The views of the hills were opening up in front of me and behind the views over Rannoch Moor were developing. The track follows close to a fence line and the Allt Coire an Lochain up the hillside before disappearing when I got into higher open ground. I wanted to approach Beinn a Chreachain from slightly SW of the 961m top and so headed up until I was almost at Lochain a Chreachain.

4 Track up towards Coire an Lochain.JPG


5 Allt Coire an lochain.JPG


6 Approach towards ridge NE of Beinn a'Chreachain summit.JPG


7 Frozen Lochan a'Chreachain.JPG


8 Towards Meall a Bhuiridh.JPG


9 Rannoch Moor.JPG


By this time I was finding walking in the snow increasingly difficult without slipping over so I stopped to put on my crampons; from there it was a straightforward climb up initially east towards the 961m top then SE to the ridge. The snow surface varied from being crusty/icy to soft/crumbly and I had to try not to put my feet half on/half off to avoid going over on my ankle. I had to be careful as I walked up the ridge SW towards the summit as there was cloud/mist obscuring the view and I was conscious of the drops to the side.

10 Final approach to Beinn a'Chreachain summit.JPG


I got to the cairn and still couldn’t see anything in the cloud so walked SE a little to try to get views of the surrounding hills but gave up and headed off towards Meall Buidhe en route to Beinn Achaladair.

11 Beinn a'Chreachain cairn.JPG


It was easy going with crampons and there was enough snow on the beallach just before the start of the rise up to Beinn Achaladair not to have to remove them.

12 Towards Beinn Mhanach.JPG


13 View south towards Ben More.JPG


There were nice views of the steep NE side at this point.

14 Beinn Achaladair.JPG


I did see one other walker coming down but he was slightly further to the south as I picked a route up through the rocks.

15 Approach to Beinn Acahladair summit.JPG


On arriving at the cairn there were nice views over Rannoch Moor although they were partially obscured by the cloud.

16 Beinn Achaladair cairn.JPG


I walked SW a little to get a better view over Loch Tulla before going back almost to the cairn and then descending SSE down Coire nan Clach towards the beallach below Beinn a Chuirn before starting up Beinn Mhanach.

17 Loch Tulla.JPG


18 Black Mount hills.JPG


The initial descent was fine but I found the latter part towards the beallach harder going; the tufts of grass meant I was going over on my ankles quite a lot.

19 Towards Loch Lyon and Meall Ghaordaidh.JPG


20 Southerly view.JPG


From the beallach I headed east round Beinn a Chuirn. It was initially steep then flattened out before the final walk up to the summit.

21 Approach to Beinn Mhanach.JPG


Unfortunately the cloud/mist rolled in once again and I had no views from the summit of Beinn Mhanach.

22 Beinn Mhanach cairn.JPG


Now time to head home and I started down Beinn Mhanach initially following the line of the fence for part of the way. I intended to go back down to the beallach and then go SW to get above the crags at the edge of Coire a Ghabhalach so that I could then go down into Coire Daingean then into Coire Achaladair. However, I came round Beinn a Chuirn too tightly ending up much lower down than planned on the track which eventually leads to Auch. I did consider exiting via Coire a Ghabhalach and Coire an Dothaidh but that would have meant a long walk back up the side of the road to the car.

23 View from lower down Beinn Mhanach .JPG


24 Late afternoon sun.JPG


So, I went in a westerly direction up the hillside to get under the crags at eastern edge of Coire a Ghabhalach. I had planned to come down Coire Daingean very late in the afternoon but getting to the edge took longer than I thought and it started to get dark when I was about 100 – 150m below the top. At that point, I took out my headtorch and main hand torch (leaving a spare second hand torch in my rucksack) and my Vodafone mobile phone which I brought specifically for the hills (following Vodafone advice from mc). I was going to phone my wife and tell her I would be coming off the hill by torchlight and not to worry but the phone would not switch on. I can only assume that it had been affected by the cold as it had been just inside the top pocket in my rucksack all day – I think it was around -7 Celsius back at the car so probably colder in the hills.

I climbed up through the crags, then over into Coire Daingean and down via Coire Achaladair; this also took longer than it would during the day time as I couldn’t see any track in the darkness and had to follow close to the stream down the hill. Further down I could see flashing lights in the distance but assumed they were something to do with the snow. When I got down to the car park, I met a police officer who told me that he had been called out to investigate a report of people shouting in the hills; I was then horrified and very embarrassed when he told me he had subsequently received a call from my wife to say that that she had not heard from me and had expected me down off the hills by then. I hadn’t heard any shouting on my route though.

I did take some comfort from the fact that he had not been called out initially for me. However, it was very embarrassing and I’ve learned a big lesson - in future I plan to keep the phone switched on, call or text on and off during the day on my progress and get an insulated, waterproof container for the phone.

I must point out how impressed I was with the police officer and how he dealt with the situation in such a courteous and helpful way. I am sure that if I had been him I would have wanted to give me a “ticking off” at the very least but he told me he was just doing his job.

I then headed off back to Glasgow for my dinner - in all, I must have been out for nearly 12 hours.
Last edited by rockhopper on Mon Dec 20, 2010 11:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
User avatar
rockhopper
 
Posts: 7446
Munros:282   Corbetts:222
Fionas:136   Donalds:89+20
Sub 2000:16   Hewitts:2
Wainwrights:3   Islands:20
Joined: May 31, 2009
Location: Glasgow

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby dan_the_dingo » Wed Dec 01, 2010 9:23 pm

"I did see one other walker coming down but he was slightly further to the south as I picked a route up through the rocks."

I reckon that would have been me you saw :D Helloo


I was only on Beinn Achaladair and Beinn a'Chreachain though, well impressed you did Beinn Mhanach too.

Views were excellent, your late afternoon photos are brilliant, I'll try and attach one of mine....

P1010840(1).JPG


I did see a head torch as I arrived back at Achallader farm but it was at the bottom of the crags of Beinn an Dothaidh so was more likely one of the teams climbing there than you. Leaving your phone on all day may run the battery flat in short order if there is no signal, I know I had no orange network at Achalader farm so I'd switched it off to save the battery in case I needed it.
dan_the_dingo
 
Posts: 22
Munros:169   Corbetts:66
Fionas:32   Donalds:54
Sub 2000:46   Hewitts:149
Wainwrights:128   Islands:10
Joined: Jan 25, 2009
Location: Rutherglen, Glasgow

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby Graeme D » Wed Dec 01, 2010 9:57 pm

Sterling effort again Rockhopper and another belter of a TR. Great camera work too - love picture 23 from lower slopes of Mhanach. 8)
User avatar
Graeme D
 
Posts: 3996
Munros:251   Corbetts:123
Fionas:75   Donalds:22
Sub 2000:59   Hewitts:36
Wainwrights:28   Islands:6
Joined: Oct 17, 2008
Location: Perth

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby Stretch » Wed Dec 01, 2010 10:04 pm

Another long day out with good results Rockhopper. Really like photo 4!
User avatar
Stretch
Munro compleatist
 
Posts: 1714
Munros:146   Corbetts:8
Sub 2000:2   
Joined: Jun 15, 2009
Location: Morristown, Tennessee

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby Merry-walker » Wed Dec 01, 2010 10:24 pm

Great report and absolutely beautiful pictures which captures the quintessence of walking the hills. Something I hope to do for myself one day :)
User avatar
Merry-walker
Mountaineer
 
Posts: 1771
Munros:65   Corbetts:53
Fionas:12   Donalds:1
Sub 2000:5   
Joined: Aug 22, 2010
Location: Scotland

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby HighlandSC » Wed Dec 01, 2010 10:34 pm

Fantastic report :) Love the sky colour in the last pics.

Glad the blip near the end was only minor. As good as Vodafone is there's plenty hill areas it doesn't get a signal - I have one (not sure how much you plan on relying on those calls/texts). Obviously the phone needs to switch on before you worry about signal though! I carry mine in a beachbuoy pouch around my neck and inside my jacket most of the time- something like that should keep it warmer if that's why it wont switch on?
User avatar
HighlandSC
 
Posts: 2188
Munros:33   Corbetts:4
Fionas:2   
Sub 2000:14   
Islands:8
Joined: Jul 12, 2009
Location: USA (formerly Inverness)

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby dooterbang » Wed Dec 01, 2010 10:39 pm

Uber fantastic effort Mr Rockhopper :)

Great report and brilliant photos.

Epic day for you, and solo...well done :clap:
User avatar
dooterbang
Munro compleatist
 
Posts: 1828
Munros:262   Corbetts:58
Fionas:18   Donalds:10
Sub 2000:10   Hewitts:18
Wainwrights:21   Islands:19
Joined: Oct 27, 2009
Location: Isle of Skye from Feb 2019 (Originally Glasgow)

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby malky_c » Wed Dec 01, 2010 10:46 pm

Brilliant report 8) . I'm really salivating at the chance of getting out in some of this snow - haven't really been into it properly this year, and the way things are going, it isn't going to be that easy in the near future either, given there's so much of it now :? .

Took me back nicely to a winter traverse of the four (minus Beinn Mhanach) back in 2003 - a similarly great day out. Interesting route choice you went for, and quite an undertaking for the conditions :D

Like HSC says, keeping your phone close to your body is probably the best thing to stop it from packing up. I usually forget, and find the cold temporarily kills the battery.
User avatar
malky_c
 
Posts: 6342
Munros:282   Corbetts:222
Fionas:219   Donalds:80+37
Sub 2000:315   Hewitts:281
Wainwrights:140   Islands:39
Joined: Nov 22, 2009
Location: Glasgow/Inverness

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby rockhopper » Thu Dec 02, 2010 11:11 pm

Thanks for all your comments - really appreciated :thumbup:

dan_the_dingo: lovely picture you have there; my phone was fully charged and should've put it somewhere warmer and tried it half an hour later but I wasn't thinking it would be an issue; will know for the next time; you were certainly moving fast when I saw you !

Graeme, Stretch & Merry-walker: I think the next few will be shorter though so that I can take more time to enjoy the views and experience even more !

HighlandSC: the pouch looks a good idea and am looking into it

dooterbang : didn't have my binoculars with me to see you on the other side of the A82; yours was a brilliant report

malky_c : chose this route as I thought it would give good views of a'Chreachain and Achaladair; plan to insulate the phone in future but would prefer not to have to use it !

Cheers :D
User avatar
rockhopper
 
Posts: 7446
Munros:282   Corbetts:222
Fionas:136   Donalds:89+20
Sub 2000:16   Hewitts:2
Wainwrights:3   Islands:20
Joined: May 31, 2009
Location: Glasgow

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby Alastair S » Thu Dec 02, 2010 11:56 pm

Epic stuff there rockhopper - 28km & 2000m+ ascent at this time of year isn't to be undertaken lightly. Some cracking photos there too :D
User avatar
Alastair S
Hill Bagger
 
Posts: 1283
Munros:78   Corbetts:13
Fionas:6   
Sub 2000:13   
Islands:22
Joined: Dec 14, 2008
Location: Banchory, Aberdeenshire

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby mountain coward » Fri Dec 03, 2010 12:07 am

Love the yellow-sky pics towards the end :D I'm always impressed people want to add Beinn Mhanach - I found Creachain and Achaladair hard enough on their own - and that wasn't in snow either!

I never have my phone switched on until I need it and definitely wouldn't recommend it in case you ever do need to call out. You'd be surprised how much battery you use under those circumstances - I used all my battery on the call out I had to do and the phone had been switched off all day. Just there's so much phoning to and fro to do! I've resolved never to use my phone for anything or have it switched on at all on the day of a walk and I'm always going to charge it the night before a walk too, even if it says it's full!
mountain coward
 

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby Scotjamie » Fri Dec 03, 2010 12:15 am

agree with the rest - simply excellent
User avatar
Scotjamie
Wanderer
 
Posts: 1170
Munros:148   
Joined: Jul 27, 2009
Location: north berwick

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby HighlandSC » Fri Dec 03, 2010 12:52 am

mountain coward wrote:I've resolved never to use my phone for anything or have it switched on at all on the day of a walk and I'm always going to charge it the night before a walk too, even if it says it's full!


I got a couple of cheapo spare batteries for a few pound off ebay. They work as good as the original battery. It's nice to know they're in my bag if ever needed.
User avatar
HighlandSC
 
Posts: 2188
Munros:33   Corbetts:4
Fionas:2   
Sub 2000:14   
Islands:8
Joined: Jul 12, 2009
Location: USA (formerly Inverness)

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby kevsbald » Fri Dec 03, 2010 9:33 am

Walk of the Month contender. Brilliant. A very nice wife you have there.
User avatar
kevsbald
Munro compleatist
 
Posts: 2248
Munros:273   Corbetts:134
Fionas:82   Donalds:53
Sub 2000:16   Hewitts:17
Wainwrights:29   
Joined: Jan 15, 2009
Location: Glasgow

Re: Beinns a'Chreachain, Achaladair & Mhanach - lesson learned

Postby potace » Fri Dec 03, 2010 10:45 am

Nice report. SInce you mention it in your report, my great-great grandfather was born at the house at Barravourich. A family of 12 lived there working on the land, at a time long before the main road was ever thought of.
User avatar
potace
Mountain Walker
 
Posts: 11
Munros:205   Corbetts:1
Fionas:1   
Joined: Sep 28, 2010
Location: Forfar, Angus

2 people think this report is great.
Register or Login
free to be able to rate and comment on reports (as well as access 1:25000 mapping).

Next



Can you help support Walkhighlands?


Our forum is free from adverts - your generosity keeps it running.
Can you help support Walkhighlands and this community by donating by direct debit?



Return to Walk reports - Scotland

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Aultguish, SimonKing, WalkingWithKids and 68 guests