Area: Glen Lyon, Perthshire
There are still plenty of corners of Scotland that I've never been to, and Glen Lyon is one, despite its accessibility. It is beautiful, perhaps more reminiscent of Nant Gwynant or parts of the Lakes than the Highlands: small farms, woodland and pastoral, quite gentle scenery. On one side rises Ben Lawers (which I did from the Loch Tay side a few years ago), but on the other is this perfect circular ridge which rises to four Munros. After the parkrun, I had some sandwiches in the pretty Sma' Glen during the drive north to Aberfeldy, then wound my way round to Invervar in the middle of Glen Lyon. It was late morning at the start of the Bank Holiday weekend, and I couldn't park, so had to find another place which ended up being 2k further east. This made a long outing even longer, and it was quite a long initial haul from the village along the Invervar burn to take a broad ridge up Carn Gorm. The weather was threatening, a bit dark and gloomy, and the most notable feature was the sharp subpeak of An Sgorr rising above the Allt na Lairige. A final sharp rise led to a cold Carn Gorm with great views over Glen Lyon to Ben Lawers. The ridge then turns north and east and felt like the Carneddau. It is broad but quite well defined, with big (though very grey and compromised) views down to Loch Rannoch and over to Schiehallion, always such a notable feature of the landscape. Meall Garbh wasn't an overly impressive summit, but it was all quite pleasant. A very windy subpeak gave even better. views north and it remained cold all the way across to the rockier and more interesting peak of Carn Mairg, clearly the dominant mountain of the group. Really quite cold (as Kate baked in 30c at home!) and I finally found a water source below the very steep initial descent. I had a break and snack here, which was good as I was beginning to wilt a little (and perhaps even mildly regret the morning parkrun). A broad col and luckily not too much reascent to gain a big snowpatch and then the final Munro of Meall na Aighean, which is set back a bit from the main ridgeline. A wonderful descent freshened me up and was hugely enjoyable down a vague southwest ridge high above the Coire a'Chearcaill. Beautiful views to Lawers and Glen Lyon, which was pretty as a picture from these slopes with dramatic shades of grey in the sky. I couldn't complain too much, however, as all four peaks were below the cloudbase and it was a great (dry!) circuit. But at 22k and almost 1500m of elevation, it was a big 4 hour+ outing after a 19 minute parkrun in the morning. Still, four Munros and a V55 age group course record in the same day still seems worth recording. I replaced the calories with fish and chips in Aberfeldy then tried to work out the best plan of action given the 'mixed' weather forecast.
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