By J. G. STOTT.
"Till now you dreamed not what could be done
With a bit of rock and a ray of sun.
But look how fade the lights and shades Of keen
bare edge and crevice deep, How doubtfully it fades and fades And
glows again yon craggy steep."
—RUSSELL LOWELL.
ALTHOUGH bulky Ben Lawers, with his height of 3,984
feet, claims sovereignty over all the hills of the Loch Tay district, and
indeed over all Perthshire, nevertheless his entourage includes some princes
and potentates to whom it is fitting that the mountaineer should render
homage.
A brief note in the September (1890) number of the
Journal chronicles a most enjoyable ramble the writer made with Mr H. T.
Munro—well named by the President "our indefatigable colleague "—over the
Ben Lawers range proper, i.e., Bn Ghlas (3,657 feet), Ben Lawers, An Stuc
(3,643 feet), Meall Garbh (3,661 feet), and Meall Gruaidh (3,280 feet). The
two western hills of the group—Meall Corranaich (3,530 feet) and Meall a
Choire Leith (3,033 feet)—we left unclimbed for some future occasion.
Immediately to the west of the last-mentioned hills a deep glen— or, to be
more correct, pair of glens, connected by a col at a height of about 1,700
feet—carries a road across from Loch Tay to Bridge of Balgie in Glen Lyon, a
wildly picturesque walk of about nine miles; and westward again from this
depression boldly upheaves, in steep green slopes and rocky scarps and
cliffs, a very fine cluster of peaks, to which, from the name of their
culminating point, we had hitherto been accustomed to give the name of the
Tarmachan tops. These are the stony summits that fill the horizon
immediately to the north of Killin.
For some years past I had entertained quite a grudge
against these Tarmachan tops. On several occasions, when an ascent was
meditated, the weather took such a determined turn for the bad, that
pleasurable climbing was not to be thought of; and so it came that, as one
hill after another all through that country was conquered, the Tarmachans
still raised their heads and mocked me. Once indeed, in May 1890, I
travelled specially from Edinburgh to put a stop to this. But the Tarmachans
were wrapped in fog of truly Cimmerian density and darkness; and though I
did succeed in gaining an elevation of about 2,500 feet upon one of them, I
became entangled among nasty crags, and, being alone, was glad to come down
and return home baffled.
Such a state of things could not be allowed to last,
so when December frosts brought a promise of finer weather, I enlisted
Munro, and together we journeyed to Killin, amply provided with warm
clothing, compasses, aneroids, quite a library of maps, and our ice axes,
and determined to make a most resolute assault upon these ill-omened peaks.
The stars were twinkling in the sky as we left the
hotel a few minutes after eight o'clock on the morning of the 21st December,
but the rapidly strengthening light, and the beautiful tints of sunrise over
in the south-east, gave promise of a fine day. The snow lay three inches
deep all over the country, and our objectives—the four Tarmachan
tops—towered above the dark woods and the lower hills white as though hewn
out of marble. Cold! Indeed it was. Munro's pocket thermometer registered
its utmost, 18° of frost, and then the mercury disappeared into the bulb; so
we were hardly surprised to find the Lochay River fast bound in ice both
above and below the bridge.
Just before reaching Boreland, in Glen Lochay, we
quitted the road and took to the steep frozen hillside. About an hour
carried us over or round the intervening ridges to the foot of the main mass
of Creag na Caillich, the westward high hill of the group. For a few hundred
feet the slope became very steep and strewn with great boulders and outcrops
of rock. These were often ice-coated, and fringed with long grey icicles,
and between and amongst them the snow had drifted to the depth of a few
inches. But we soon left this ground behind us, and worked our way upwards
over smooth hard snow. Close on our right were the fine crags enclosing
Coire Fionn Lairige, and their tops formed hummock after hummock, each one
surmounted showing another and higher one in front of us.
The sunrise was particularly beautiful. Up out of the
rosy mists came the huge red orb of day, tinging the clouds with gold and
crimson, flashing back in a million prismatic points of light from the
gleaming snowfields. Away in the north-east the great snowy peaks we meant
to climb shone like molten gold, their every detail seen most distinctly,
and yet appearing far farther away than we knew them to be. At 10.25 we
reached our first summit, Crag Caillich, 2,990 feet. At our feet we had the
crescent sweep of Coire Fionn Lairige, a horse-shoe some three miles in
circumference, fenced all round with crags and rocks, dominated by the
shapely summits of Ben Nan Eachan and Meall Garbh, [These names are taken
from the six-inch to the mile map. They are not given on any other, nor are
their heights. Our aneroids made them respectively about 3,350 feet and
3,400 feet.] drained by the now frozen streams that fall into the head of
Loch Tay, and give its name, Finlarig, to the ruined castle there. Deep down
below, fringed with dark pinewoods, was the loch; and far beyond it, in the
south, Ben Voirlich and Stuc a Chroin showed 500 feet or more of their long
ridgy backs above a stratum of cloud. They were yet in shadow; but farther
west Ben More and Stob Binnein reared their graceful cones high above
cloudland, and bathed their snowy slopes in the warm golden sunshine. Others
of the western hills were in sight too, all heavily snow-clad; and nearer us
Meall Ghaordie lifted his great pyramidal shape, and invited the visit we
meant to pay him before evening.
The long craggy flank of Crag na Caillich forms one
side of a horse-shoe, and we had now to work our way round its inner bend. A
few hundred feet of descent, some intricate ins and outs among the frozen
hummocks, in the course of which we surprised a few mountain hares, and once
more we began to rise, on the western abutment of Ben nan Eachan. The slope
was very steep, probably about 40°, the snow deep and very firm. Had the
gradient been a little steeper, or the snow a little harder, the axes would
certainly have had some work to do; as it was, by taking the ascent In short
zig-zags, so as to bring the cutting edges of our boots into play instead of
the points, we got up to the ridge without difficulty. Here and there we
came upon patches of ice, but a slash or two with the axe easily surmounted
them.
The weather had been thickening a little in the west
since sunrise. A light breeze had sprung up, and the temperature had risen,
and now, as we followed the ridge to the summit, a thin grey mist came
brushing past. The sunlight played fanciful tricks with it, painting it with
beautiful rainbow tints; and once, for a few moments, our shadows were
projected, enormously magnified, on to a distant snow slope, where they
stalked along with aspect terrific. We reached the top at eleven. There was
small inducement to stay, for the distant views were now all blurred with
mist, and a cold wind was sweeping the frozen particles along the snow with
a rustling noise that was quite eerie.
But as we descended to the next col, a few hundred
feet, the sun again appeared, and the splendid sweep of crags, —scraps of
snow, ledges fringed with icicles, rocks rearing black and naked, or gray
with rime and hoarfrost,—supporting the three white peaks, made a picture
quite Alpine. There must be some good climbing among the Coire Fionn Lairige
rocks. For the most part they do not look very difficult, but there are some
fine cliffs and chimneys amongst them.
MealI Garbh (the Rough-hill—wherever you find that
name it is generally well called) was taken in the same way as Ben nan
Eachan. A steep climb from the cal up the western abutment, thence along a
sharp ridge to the top. But in the case of this hill, the last dozen yards
of the ridge is a fine are'te of rocks not more than two or three feet wide,
and from it the actual summit rises as a rocky turret a few yards in height,
from whose hand and footholds we had to clear away the snow and ice before
venturing on to it. Meal! Garbh is a very shapely hill, quite the best of
the group, and more deserving of pre-eminence than great lumpish Meall nan
Tarmachan (3421 feet), for which we next turned our faces.
Meal! Garbh had been reached at 11.45, and, following
the highest line we could get, we crowned Meall nan Tarmachan at 12.15,
nearly an hour before our calculation. The mist gave us little or no view;
and when we had laid off a compass course W. by N. for Meal! Ghaordie, we
commenced a steep descent to the huge corrie drained by the Alit Bhail a
Mhuillin. The snow was too hard for glissading, and it concealed numerous
ice-patches—the frozen overflow of springs—which necessitated some caution.
At a height of 2,500 feet, in deep snow, we came upon a mouse endeavouring
to get a drink at one of these frozen basins. All morning we had been coming
upon plenty of hares; and certain numerous tracks, which we took for those
of small birds, wheatears or pipits, had been puzzling us. A close
examination now showed that these had been made by mice or other small
quadrupeds.
We ate our lunch as we descended the last slopes of
the corrie, struck the stream at a height of about i,800 feet and, after
smashing in the ice in order to get a drink, we lit our pipes, and started
very leisurely to climb the ridge of Meall Ghlas. We topped it at about
2,500 feet, and immediately made another descent of some 700 feet to the
Lairig Breisieich, a narrow depression that runs northeastward, to the west
of the Tarmachan group, from Glen Lochay to Glen Lyon. For nigh two miles of
a villainous frozen bog—all peat haggs and heathery hummocks—we travelled in
a south-westerly direction. Our course was parallel, more or less, with the
main direction of the ridge of the Tarmachans. To turn the shoulder of Ben
nan Oigreagh we had to rise 200 feet. Most of that we lost again in
descending to cross the lolaire Burn; and then at three o'clock in the
afternoon, just as old Sol sank, blood- red, behind the Tyndrum Hills, we
started from a height of 1,600 or 1,800 feet for the top of Meal! Ghaordie
(3407 feet).
Easily rising at first through long heather and snow,
among bothering hummocks and hollows, we put the pace on in a race with
gathering darkness. When we reached the. foot of the long southern ridge,
not very far below its junction with the summit, we rose straight at it. The
snow was deep now, and many a pile of ice-clad boulders had to be surmounted
or turned, and many a treacherous slide of ice called for prompt aid from
the axe.
We topped the ridge, to find ourselves enveloped in
thick mist. The snow was a foot deep here, concealing both ice and boulders
in many places, and in and out among crags and rocks we scrambled at our
best pace. "Three thousand—three thousand two hundred—three thousand four
hundred feet," said the aneroids; and then, "Hurrah"! in front of us the
huge saucer-shaped cairn marking the top.
We only noted that it was four o'clock, and then
turned in our tracks and bolted with all the speed, that was consistent with
caution. Many a rude rub our shins took from snow-covered rock; not a few
rude sittings-down we owed to unseen ice; but ultimately we got off the
steep and rocky part of the ridge, and in thinner snow followed its easily
falling line down to Glen Lochay. We reached the road at 5.20, near the farm
of Dalgirdy, and almost immediately the moon—whose assistance would have
been invaluable on the ridge—came out.
The snow-clad glen, the frozen river, the dark
leafless woods, the huge misty hills, were wondrously beautiful in the
moonlight; but a degree of cold that turned our leggings into solid masses
of ice, and froze our wet gloves on our fingers, made us rejoice when
half-past six saw us back in our hotel. We had been out ten and a quarter
hours, steady if not fast going all the time; and a feeling of wholesome
satisfaction took possession of us, after an excellent dinner, that on the
shortest day of the year we had been able not only to subjugate the whole
family of the Tarmachan tops, but to throw another good big hill into the
bargain.
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