walkhighlands

News

ViewRanger and Walkhighlands team up

2023 UPDATE: Please note this is a historic article and is now out of date; Viewranger no longer exists. There is now a dedicated Walkhighlands app available to all for FREE. Visitors and locals alike can now download detailed guides to walking routes straight onto their mobile phones following a new collaboration between Scottish based walkers’ website Walkhighlands and top mobile phone app ViewRanger. Walkhighlands aims to boost Scottish tourism and encourage walking by publishing online guides and mapping; featuring over 1,350 routes, it is Scotland’s busiest outdoors website. The ViewRanger App turns smartphones into a complete countryside guide with

Read more ›

Posted in News, Walkhighlands news

Spot the birdie at Creag Meagaidh

Visitors and locals in the Highlands are being offered the chance to see the courtship display of black grouse once again. Creag Meagaidh National Nature Reserve, sited part way between Laggan and Spean Bridge, ran a similar event last year which proved so popular that this time it is planned to hold two guided black grouse watches on Saturday 30 April and Sunday 1 May. The displays called ‘leks’ take place in the spring as male black grouse compete to attract females. With the striking black and white plumage of the birds, and their strange bubbling calls, the show is

Read more ›

Posted in Nature, News

Summer Mountain Leader offer for Scottish walking clubs

The Mountaineering Council of Scotland (MCofS) is offering Scottish club members the opportunity to participate in a Summer Mountain Leader Training Course based from the Loch Lomond Outdoor Centre at a special discounted rate on two sets of dates in September. This SMLTB award is for members who wish to lead hill-walking parties in mountainous terrain in summer conditions. A commitment will need to be shown towards using the training to benefit other club members. A two day overnight camping expedition is part of this course. Who is eligible to apply? Club members who are currently involved or keen to

Read more ›

Posted in News

Tyndrum gold mine plans revised

The John Muir Trust has cautiously welcomed the prospect of revised plans for a gold mine at Cononish, near Tyndrum in the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park. Developer Scotgold Resources Ltd has issued a letter to interested parties stating its intention to submit a new application for the mine, which will include a Tailings Management Facility (which will deal with excavated waste) that is “approximately half” the size of the original. The waste treatment and the effect on the River Cononish was the main reason for the refusal of the original planning application by the National Park Authority. The

Read more ›

Posted in Nature, News

Borders long distance walks mapped out

Walker’s website Walkhighlands has added two more long distance routes in the Scottish Borders. Full descriptions, OS mapping, GPS downloads and photos are now available free of charge for the Borders Abbeys Way and the St Cuthbert’s Way. The Scottish Borders are famed for their magnificent ruined abbeys at Melrose, Dryburgh, Jedburgh, and the more ruinous Kelso. The Borders Abbeys Way is a long distance walk that links all four Abbeys in a circular route of 107km. The walk has five stages, each ending at an attractive town as the route takes in Jedburgh near the English border, the old

Read more ›

Posted in News, Walkhighlands news

Twitcher delight at new Forvie hide

One of northeast Scotland’s top wildlife watching sites is sporting a new bird hide in time for summer. Forvie national nature reserve, just north of Aberdeen, is famous for wading birds and geese. The hide overlooks the Ythan estuary at Waulkmill, a vast area of mudflats, reed beds and nearby fields. Recent counts have found over 22,000 pink-footed geese use the estuary and nearby fields. Visitors also often see large numbers of other birds like lapwing, golden plover and redshank. One of the reasons the hide’s location is terrific for bird-watching is the mud: the mud in front of the

Read more ›

Posted in Nature, News

Beinn Eighe visitor centre open for season

A visitor centre at Britain’s oldest national nature reserve opened its doors for the Easter break on Sunday 10 April and will remain open until 31 October. Beinn Eighe National Nature Reserve’s visitor centre in Kinlochewe, Wester Ross, will be open daily from 10am-5pm. The reserve has three all-ability trails which are open year-round and other facilities for visitors include the two self-guiding Glas Leitir woodland and mountain trails. Beinn Eighe was created in 1951 with its species of interest including golden eagle, Scottish crossbill, mountain hare, red deer and black throated divers, while its internationally important habitats include juniper

Read more ›

Posted in Access issues, News

Tick Bite Prevention Week

Tick Bite Prevention Week will be running again this year from 11 – 17 April. It is estimated that 3,000 people a year contract Lyme Disease from a tick bite every year. Walkers or others involved in outdoor activities can be at a high risk of tick bites, particularly when heading through countryside or parks where there are sheep or deer and bracken which can attract ticks. Tick Bite Prevention Week offers a number of simple precautions can help to keep you safe including tucking trousers into socks, avoiding dense undergrowth or using a stick to bash away ticks first,

Read more ›

Posted in News

Collie and Mackenzie sculpture progress

Plans are progressing to erect a sculpture of two climbing heros of the Cuillin on the Isle of Skye. The planned statue aims to commemorate the achievements of Sconser man John Mackenzie and his internationally renowned climbing companion Norman Collie. The group behind the plans has already persuaded Scottish Hydro to remove the power lines which blighted the view of the Cuillin from Sligachan. A £10,000 private donation is now allowing the group to start work on landscaping the statue site at Sligachan on Skye. The plans involve improving the entrance to the site, building gateways and a drystone wall.

Read more ›

Posted in News

Highland Tiger spotted at Leith Hall

Conservationists at the National Trust for Scotland have caught a rare image of a wildcat in the grounds of Leith Hall estate in Aberdeenshire. The image which was caught by wildlife surveillance cameras, which were funded by Scottish Natural Heritage, set up on Craigfall Hill in the grounds of the historic property a few weeks ago, while snow still blanketed the ground. Nature conservation advisor Rob Dewar said: “Leith Hall nestles below open moorland and plantation forests deep in the Aberdeenshire countryside and is a haven for wildlife. “Sightings of Scottish wildcats had been reported on Craigfall Hill, but was

Read more ›

Posted in Nature, News


Share on 

Share  

You should always carry a backup means of navigation and not rely on a single phone, app or map. Walking can be dangerous and is done entirely at your own risk. Information is provided free of charge; it is every walker's responsibility to check it and to navigate safely.