walkhighlands

Sean Braigh

Munros: Seana Bhràigh

Date walked: 28/05/2009

May 25, 2009

I'm writing this not because I have fab pics (the two here were quickly taken on my very ordinary phone) or epic tales to tell but only because no-one else on this forum has written about this hill yet. But it's a belter of a hill and not nearly as difficult to get to as it may look on the map, provided a) you go the way I'm about to tell you and b) you take a bike.

So, following Ralph Storer, prince of guide-book walkers, the trick is to go in from the north, from Strath Oykel. At Bridge of Oykel (about 50 miles from Inverness), just over the (rather handsome) bridge but before the hotel (if you're coming from the east) turn sharp left beside the river and follow the road for about half a mile down to a small row of houses where it turns into a track.

The Corriemulzie estate, bless them, allows you drive on, for another six miles or so, in fact; turn sharp left again over a bridge at the first fork which comes almost immediately and then follow your nose. Take it slow if you value your suspension. As you climb up Strath Mulzie, there is some fine Sutherland scenery but your objective is still way in the distance and mostly hidden from view. Much later, at another fork, keep right, down the hill past a newly renovated bothy. Eventually, you come to a couple of buildings and a sign which says car-park for hill-walkers; that'll be you, then.

If you look south you can now just get the merest glimpse of your objective
Seana Briahg small.jpg
but if you get your bike out and pedal another 200 metres or so past the lodge (just a bungalow really) you emerge from a patch of trees to get the first proper sight of the mountain in all its splendour.
Image019compessed.jpg

The true summit is to the right, the west edge; the ridge goes round the head of the Luchd Coire, a spectacular chasm with huge cliffs, culminating in the extraordinary prong of An Sgurr at the end of the eastern arm of the coire which looks completely unclimbable but which is in fact the mountain's crowning glory.

You still have another four miles or so to go to the foot of the hill- hence the bike. You gain about 100 metres in height over the undulating rough track but into a raging headwind like the one I was up against, with black clouds massing to the south, it felt more like 1,000. But, boy! it felt good coming home later. IN the meantime, though, one of the blessings of coming from this direction is that you have the mountain's northern aspect in view all the time. The featureless lump it appears from the south would be far less appealing. It's a bit like the contrast between the tourist route up Ben Nevis and the route round from the CMD arete.

I left the bike in the heather where the track turns sharply to the east and crosses the main Corriemulzie river. You could probably ford it and go a bit further along the track up to Loch a Choire Mhoir and the wild Feich Coire which runs east west, and which is now visible below the Luchd Coire which hangs a little above the loch and runs south into the heart of the mountain. Up to you. The easy way up the mountain is via the west ridge. The much harder, but not impossible, (or so I am assured) east ridge takes you straight up An Sgurr

On the day I was largely a prisoner of the elements. It was wild and wet day higher up and I was on my own so it wasn't a day for assaying hard scrambles up An Sgurr, and a couple of promised gaps along the ridge. I went up the western side of the hill which is straightforward, though with increasingly dramatic views into the coire. The summit perches right at the edge of the cliffs.

The worst of the weather to the south was being held back by the massif so that even while i was being rained on and buffeted at the top, could see little of other hills in the area such as Beinn Dearg and Cona Mheall for mist and smirr, and caught only glimpses of the Sutherland hills to the west - Cul Mor, Ben Mor Coigach and so on - all with black clouds on their summits, I could look north over for the most part sun- dappled strath, a very odd combination.

In the circumstances, I did not linger and headed back to bike, the car and the friendly Oykel Bridge hotel (caters mostly for fishermen). But dashing off such a splendid hill did make me think that, while that may count as a Munro tick, one should never let the ticking become the most important part. A mountain of that calibre deserves better. I shall definitely return.

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Comments: 3


holtlynx


Location: Glasgow
Pub: glenelg inn
Mountain: an teallach
Place: Glenelg
Gear: Pole
Member: Meet-ups (SHAG)
Ideal day out: epic ridge walk
Ambition: Compleation, of course!




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2009

Trips: 1
Munros: 1


Joined: Jan 28, 2009
Last visited: Oct 12, 2023
Total posts: 18 | Search posts