
Camping in Kinlochleven. Walking with my brother.
Weather was good but the summits were covered by mist. This lifted in the afternoon to give good visibility but the morning was mostly 10-20m visibility on the tops.
Parked the car on the main road and crossed the river and headed along the footpath. Followed track in the Coire na Tulaich and then curved South up to Stop Dearg. Headed back down to the ridge and walked along to the next peak, Stob na Doire and followed ridge along. Mist cleared before the next peak on the ridge and so we had good visibility for the remainder of the day. We completed the ridge and then headed down to the valley via the Coire Altrium.
Area :
Glencoe South (Loch Linnhe To Loch Etive)
The southern side of Glen Coe includes some very well-known mountains and can be split into two groups; the ones you can see from the A82 and the ones you can’t. Included in the former group is Buachaille Etive Mor, Buachaille Etive Beag, the Three Sisters and the Ballachulish Horseshoe, and in the latter, three Munros between Glen Creran and Glen Etive (Sgor na h-Ulaidh, Beinn Fhionnlaidh and Beinn Sgulaird). With huge amounts of climbing and walking in summer and winter, this area is also home to a large cairn built for Queen Victoria, or so the story goes. Includes all major peaks above 600m.