Showing posts with label fort william. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fort william. Show all posts

Thursday, 16 October 2014

Fort William

 After the best night's sleep of them all, I awoke early, gave a great creaky stretch, and walked across the street to Loch Linnie.


Watching the sun come up, kissing the peaks and hills and crags as it makes its way through the sky in the early chill, and wanting coffee badly, I decided that I should probably start looking for a home here.



 After much debate over a really nice breakfast - do yourself a favor and stay at the Laurel Bank Lodge if you are ever here- we decided to forego the climbing of Ben Nevis.  I thought that I probably could do it, but I felt like if I did go up and down that hill, it would be pushing myself well beyond my comfort zone.  Climbing a mountain at the end of 100 miles was just not in the cards.  As much as I wanted to, my sense of self-preservation kicked in.    

 Instead, we decided to do some nice leisurely activities.   We were debating renting a car and making our way down to Glasgow going along the coast, but after looking at all the things to do around Fort William, we stayed put.  Or, relatively put.

 On our way to the train station, we saw a boat cruise on Loch Linnie was about to leave, so we hopped on board.

Naturally, we were the most fashion-forward of tourist.  Getting a break from the boots was like walking on air.


Amazingly, the top of Ben Nevis was clear.  We whimpered as we pulled further away from the hulking elephant that we wished to be climbing.  A clear day on the highest mountain in Scotland?  You get about three of them a year.


The day was absolute stunning.  Warm, sunny and windless and a near-glassy loch.  Linnie is a saltwater sea loch, so we got to see a salmon fishery and a mussel farm, along with countless herons, eider ducks and wigeons.    



While the salmon farm was a big, cage-and-net affair with quite the odor, the mussel farm was less intrusive.


They don't even seed the ropes, they just let nature take its course and then harvest the ropes after a couple of years.  They don't fence or net in the treasured bivalves, so there are eiders that hang out hear year-round, enjoying the free lunch as far as they can dive down.  



 We finally made our way to dry land and hopped aboard the train to Mallaig.  They have a steam train that makes the route, but we decided the pedestrian diesel train would get us there all the same, and cheaper, but I'm also known as a killjoy.

This route is a big train-spotting and train geek affair- it is reputed to be the most scenic line in the UK, and they filmed the train journey in and out of Hogworts along this line.  You totally felt like a wizard here anyway.  I tried to cast a few enchantments...


 Although taking pictures from a moving train yields less than stellar results, that seems to be what everyone was doing...it was almost compulsive.  It was really beautiful, but I was bothered by the nagging feeling that I should be out there with my boots on.


 Malliag was a great little day-tripper town and fishing port.  You can get a ferry to Skye from here, or just take the train in and see the village.  Lots of cafes and pubs and fresh seafood to be had.  We had lunch of hot drinks and fresh sea loch shrimp, which were spiny little bastards and hurt your fingers to ease open, but were the best shrimp I've ever had.


The sky was so clear, well, you could see all the way to Skye.  It was a highlight of my last Scotland trip- it's just amazingly beautiful.  See those peaks?  The gentle, conical hills of the mainland are not what you find on Skye, but jagged peaks.  They look like the Alps.  While sitting on the jetty looking out, we were tempted to make some hasty plans to extend our stay.  We frantically devised plans to stay longer, call in sick to work, eat the cost of the return train ticket, somehow get a friend let in our place in London...no, this was not the right thing to do.  We need something to get us to come back, and those peaks on Skye would be it.



 The return train trip back to Fort William was much faster, as it was all downhill.  The engine barely switched on and we had a quiet coast down through the valleys and loch-sides.

Even at the late hour, the top of Ben Nevis was still cloudless and visible.  I realized around 2pm that my feet were fine after being off them for most of the morning, and we were kicking ourselves for not undertaking the big hike on our last day in Scotland.
 

Instead, we wandered around Fort William, walking barefoot through the immaculate lawn of the cemetery, exploring the very small remains of the original fort, taking in a dram and the salt air.  


The main street becomes a parade late in the day as hikers come off the trail.  It was fun to watch the reactions of people as they saw the end of the trail- it really shows a person's soul if they are cheerful or looking dejected, or just happy that their misery is over.



 I guess I'm glad I didn't do the big Ben Nevis hike after all.  For a few hours in the afternoon, I was feeling a bit sore in my neck, and my lymph nodes were lumpy bumpy.  By nightfall, I had a nice head cold working its way out, and started with the hacking cough.  I don't know why this keeps happening, but the silver lining was that at least it waited until I was off the trail this time.  I hacked my way across the last three days of the Coast to Coast when it hit me mid-hike.  I survived, but somehow this felt worse.

The next day, we were taking a bus back to Glasgow, and a train to London from there.  What I had thought as a cold was now a flu, and I was feverish and wearing all the layers of clothes that I barely touched all week, and sipping at water and eating crackers when I could, and crunching myself up into a pathetic lump of shivering misery.  Well, the bus ride was nice- it basically followed the A84, so we got to re-live the trail in a mere 3 hours, which was a bit infuriating but a good way to remember just how long that trail really had been.  I had brought a lace shawl to knit on, and due to my lack of concentration and just general feeling of misery, nothing got done on it at all.

We stopped by the Pot Still in Glasgow, as I was told by everyone and their mothers the only answer is a dram.   They opened just as we were rolling past, so the bar was quiet, with just a few people milling around.


I loaded up on cold meds for the ride home, had a lovely chat with an eccentric local, and curled up on the crowded train back to London, where somehow a large Russian family with many small children managed to get seats in the coveted "Quiet Car".

I fear I will never encounter a bar so lovely as long as I live.  


I found this trip has inspired me to want to hike in Scotland more.  This might be the most romantic place on earth.  I will return to it always.  It's pretty much an outdoorsy wonderland, with lots of quiet corners to get lost in, and every place you stop for the night has at least a good bottle of whisky for you to wax poetic about.  While the West Highland Way was worth while, I would search far and wide for a more remote trail next time.  There's one trail that goes across Skye in a week that piques my interest.  Some of the outer islands might fit the bill.  There's plenty of trails that you would need to rough-camp in order to complete, but many of them can be strung together with campgrounds and pubs as your overnight.

I'm so happy I ended my hiking season here.  The days are getting short, and the rain has been endless recently, so there was a certain finality to this journey.

I miss it there already.

Wednesday, 15 October 2014

WHW Day 7: Kinlochleven to Fort William

Finally!  Our last day of hiking.  15 miles of remote highland walking in the hills to get to the rather large city of Fort William.

Ah, we did awake to the news of a "no" vote.  Scotland would be remaining as part of the UK after all.  The mood in the pub that morning was noticeably darker than it had been the night before.  It's too bad, as I showed up here with no real opinion either way, but walking around the week leading up and chatting with locals as we went, I really think the "yes" voters had an articulate and compelling argument for succession.

Was I sad to be almost done?  YES.  I felt that maybe I needed a rest day, but I could have kept going.  If I did this trail again, I would have planned on adding more days to tackle the mountains that haunted the air around me.  It was kind of frustrating that the trail stayed low and skipped all these lonely challenging hikes.  While it was a long hike (this was the longest I had ever hiked in consecutive days) it wasn't hard at all and I was itching to find a more challenging route into the next valley.  Despite the fact that I had PMS cramps and low energy, I had rounded the corner on that bit and I felt good.  This had just gotten me enthusiastic to explore more of this wonderful countryside.

The only real downers on the trail were the proximity of the highway for most of this.  You'd be having a nice jaunt and zen moment, and the roar of a tanker truck would put you back in the earthly realm.

The only other complaint I had was the garbage on the trail.  Compared to England, there was a lot of bags of trash and random pockets of beer cans and whisky bottles along the way.  In fact, the first 30 miles of the trail there was an enforced "No Camping" rule, as there had been problems with people driving in and leaving bags of trash instead of carrying out.  Almost every spot where one might be able to camp had knotted-up trash bags and rubbish scattered around.  Whatever possesses people to take the time to bag up their garbage and leave it for an eyesore for all the rest of the world to see is beyond me and it ruins it for all.  Carry it out.

The morning started with no warm up at all, and we huffed away up the first hill.

Ah, what views!


 Today, the walk was across a high-up moor surrounded by murnos.


Stonechat


There were ruined shelters that the sheep and cattle drovers would camp out.




Soon, we rounded a corner, and ended up hiking for miles across a felled forest.  How depressing!  According to my OS map, we were supposed to be in the woods for a few miles, apparently it hadn't been updated in a while.  It wasn't a comforting site: miles upon miles of bleached stumps and brush piles.


We decided to take a side trail up to Dun Deardail- the ruins of a 2000 year old fort that had been burned so hot that the rocks fused together.

Naturally, the fort was on top of a very steep hill.  I wanted that view badly, and a few hikers were sitting at the bottom of the hill, waiting for their friends to be done with the view.  

 scroll ------------------------------>>>>>>>>>


That's Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in all of the UK.  It was an enormous, hulking rock.  Bry had decided this would be tomorrow's hike...supposedly, it was an easy pony trail to the top, but a very long all-day hike.    But yes, with views like that, it's worth the hike up to Dun Deardail.

It was also the only part of the trail where I got vertigo!  The hilltop the fort was on was a sheer drop on all 4 sides, with steep steps to get to the top.

Ah, and there were some nice druids working on the stairs and trail improvements leading up to the top.  Real live druids, in the wild!


From here, the trail goes down the glen and into the suburbs of Fort William.  Not content to end our walk in such a anticlimactic urbanity, we decided to climb Cow Hill, a hill that lords over the city. We'd decided we would rather have a spiritual ending of the trail, rather than an official one.  

It ended up bring a very long, steep climb...more switchbacks than the Devil's Staircase, at at times I made progress in inches rather than feet.  It took more than an hour to climb to the top.  I thought this was a more appropriate ending to a week of walking, and I was right.  At the top, we stood by the TV tower and thought about all we had seen and all we had done, and thanked our feet for carrying us as far as they did.

scroll to see the view from the Hill of Cows-------->>


Ahh, that's much better!  Loch Linnie, the hills and glens and murnos and Ben Nevis and the city of Fort William.   A real sense of accomplishment, this was, and a sad finality as we had run out of West Highland Way.


And that, my friend, was that.

We didn't have a map of Cow Hill, but it wasn't long until we realized that we had gone up the short, steep way, and we had gone down the very long gradual way, and instead of bypassing the trail's official end, we ended up meeting up with the trail and walked the last official mile through the bustling pedestrian streets of the city to the official end, which was a bench with a bronze statue of a man rubbing his feet.  Cow Hill had added 2.5 hours onto our hike, and we were closer to 20 miles at this point day.  The other thing I didn't realize was that one of the only B&Bs I could find with a vacancy was well out of the city center, and we had another 15 minutes of walking along Loch Linnie before we could get off our feet.

We celebrated with hot showers, finishing up our bottle of Glengoyne, and walking back into Fort William with our flip-flops on for dinner and a dram.


The trail was officially 95.5 miles.  Thanks to our apps, we calculated that we did closer to 110 when all was said and done.  It was probably more...we had a few long days where our phones ran out of batteries before we were done.

We were beyond tired, but elated.  I found I was exhausted enough to not be able to hold a conversation or have patience for waiting, and the moment I was done eating, I was just wanting to be recumbent more than anything.  That last mile walk back to the inn after dinner was the longest of the trail, but how sweet sleep was that night.