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Bac an Eich Secretive Corbett with all-encircling
Location: Strathconon
Grade: Moderate mountain walk
Distance: 10 miles/17km
Time: 6-7 hours
THE closest most Munro-baggers get to beautiful Strathconon is the four Strathfarrar Munros to the south from where they can gaze towards a jumble of well shaped, albeit lower, hills. Backpackers may well be more familiar with the glen as it forms part of a long cross-Scotland walk from Loch Carron in the west, over the Bealach Bhearnais to Gleann Fhiodhaig, then down to Loch Bennacharain at the head of Strathconon. The route then cuts across the hills to the River Orrin and the Orrin Reservoir from where it’s an easy stroll down to Muir of Ord and the east coast at the Beauly Firth.
We planned nothing as ambitious as that as we renewed acquaintance with Strathconon. The singletrack road from Marybank, near Contin, is a delight – well wooded with the River Conon coursing through a rosary of pools and lochans. Beyond Milton, the hills begin to rise steeply on either side of the narrowing glen and soon the bulbous nose of Bac an Eich’s north-east ridge, Sgurr Toll Lochain, comes into view, with the hill’s summit ridge climbing off to the west above the glaciated corrie that cradles Loch Toll Lochain.
Bac an Eich shares an elevated and rather isolated position with another Corbett, An Sidhean, and the pair of them dominate an area of high ridges and corrugated upland that stretches between
Loch Monar in the south and Strathconon in the north. The whole region is cross-crossed with stalkers’ tracks and deep-set glens, alive with red deer.
We followed the track past the farm at Inverchoran and into the deep-cut Gleann Chorainn. We crossed the burn and took a diagonal ascending line over slopes of tussocky grass towards the outflow of Loch Toll Lochain. A cool breeze discouraged the midges and revitalised us as we climbed higher towards the steep, almost intimidating, nose of the hill’s east ridge, Sgurr Toll Lochain. Rocky outcrops formed steep battlements above the corrie’s loch but in
between we could weave a route up very steep grassy slopes – grabbing a handful of withered grass to haul yourself upwards doesn’t make for a confident ascent!
Gina, my long-suffering wife, muttered about her preference for Munros, where there are mostly well-worn paths to the summits.
From the top of the Sgurr, a gentle slope climbs over peat hags and groughs towards the summit where the trig point is contained within its little windbreak. We sat out of the breeze and drank our coffee, and took in the all-encircling views. Ben Wyvis dominated the north, across the other Strathconon
Corbetts of Meallan nan Uan and Sgurr a’ Mhuilinn.
In the south, the great corriebitten massif of Maoile Lunndaidh looked simply leviathan while to the west the unmistakable outline of the Torridon giants cast their spell.
We didn’t hang around on the summit – we had a steep descent ahead of us. My advice is to follow the hill’s north-west ridge for a short distance then, at the first available opportunity, head north onto the west ridge of Meall Buidhe which is then followed down to the ruins at Corriefeol.
This avoids the steep, vegetated ravines at the foot of Bac an Eich. Return to the start by following the path along the south bank of the River Meig and Loch Bennacharain, or, if the waters of the loch are high, follow tracks to the road end at Scardroy and take the tarmac trail back to the car.
ROUTE PLANNER
Map: OS 1:50,000 Landranger sheet 25 (Glen Carron & Loch Affric)
Distance: 10 miles/16km
Approx Time: 6-7 hours