Stob Dearg
Looking west toward the Pass of Glencoe from the Stop Dearg footpath.
The vastness of Rannoch Moor, as seen from the summit of Stob Dearg
On the summit of Stob Dearg with Loch Linnhe in the distance.
We didn't see any Golden Eagles on this trip, but there was a big Raven hopping around on Stob Dearg's summit, admiring the view.
The south west view from Stob Dearg (Buachaille Etive Mor)
The Steall Waterfall
Standing in front of the Steall Waterfall
We then drove on upwards into the northwest Highlands to explore the Coigach peninsula. It was a lovely surprise to drive over a hill on Rubha Mor and then see the Summer Isles archipelago. We decided to camp here at Altandhu, and for once we had a midge-free evening.
The Summer Isles, Northwest Highlands
High on the agenda was a summit camp on Cul Mor (849m). We had been monitoring the weather continuously for a good day to climb it, but the forecast kept promising improved weather towards the end of the week. Running out of days, we couldn't wait around forever so we went up with a forecast for light cloud and hoped for the best. But halfway up, low cloud rolled in and the summit camp, which should have been a spectacular event, turned into a white-out. If only we had gone up the previous evening when the summit was cloud-free instead of trusting the forecast.
Cul Mor, Inverpolly, Highland, the day before we went up it.
Cul Mor summit, in cloud. Not the weather we had hoped for.
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