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Walking Highland Perthshire. Ronald TurnbullЧитать онлайн книгу.

Walking Highland Perthshire - Ronald Turnbull


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signed to Aberuchill.

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      Oakwoods on the right-of-way track above Glen Artney

      Before the grand house turn left through a white gate. The track runs uphill, slanting across a field, then up again through woods and past Tomanour onto open hill. Here a track turns off right; follow it for 100 metres to a sculptural grouse butt imitating the artist Andy Goldsworthy. Follow the main track uphill through a gate, usually locked – climb it at the hinge end.

      The track runs gently uphill around the base of Ben Halton. After 2km it passes through another gate, now above Glen Artney and below Dun Dubh. A deer fence is just above. After 400 metres, just before a small quarry on the right, the wall below the track has a break where it becomes a railed fence. This is a convenient place to cross it. If you reach a gate through the high deer fence, you’ve gone too far.

      Head south down rough pasture. When you see Dalclathick hut below, head directly towards it. However, the Allt Glas prevents you from reaching it. With a streamside plantation on your right, bear left to fenced sheep handling pens. From their back left corner, a green track runs down to a smooth gravel track at the valley floor.

      Follow the track left, down-valley, gradually rising through woods. After 2km, it bends uphill towards Blairmore, but here fork right, slightly downhill, on a green track. After a gate it crosses an open field into a wood. Here it dips to cross a stream, then slants slightly uphill, becoming swampy and invisible under rushes. Recapture it beyond the swamp, where it emerges from the wood at a gate.

      The track is clearer, and becomes a firm stony one. It slants gently down the valley side to Dalrannoch farm. Here it becomes a tarmac driveway, descending to pass The Linn car park.

      ROUTE 4

      Comrie: Deil’s Caldron

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Start/finishField of Refuge car park, at south end of Comrie’s bridge over Water of Ruchill NN773218 (or other car parks in Comrie)
Distance6km/3.5 miles
Ascent250m/800ft
Approx time2hr
Max altitudeLord Melville’s Monument 250m
TerrainWell-used paths

      Various Perthshire villages have marked and maintained paths offering gentle walks in beautiful surroundings. This is one of the best, with wooden walkways above the Deil’s Caldron waterfall, and a viewpoint monument to a dodgy politician. There’s also a healing spring, a quiet riverbank, and the pretty village itself.

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      Start across the river, turning left on the main street past the white church (now community centre). The street bends right, past another car park (School Lane). At the next bend, keep ahead into Monument Road, and in 100 metres turn right at a footpath signpost for Deil’s Caldron.

      The wide earth path runs around the foot of woods, then above River Lednock. Look out for a side path down right to Little Caldron, rejoining the main path above. As the wood steepens, the path runs just below the Glen Lednock road, then drops again along a wooden walkway. Turn down right to a viewing balcony above the Deil’s Caldron waterfall.

      Return up wooden steps, forking right to regain the main path. It runs up to the Glen Lednock road. Turn right alongside the road, then left at a signpost onto a steep earth path through a plantation. It zigzags through pleasanter woods above, then contours left, to level ground.

      Here note a path arriving from the right, but keep ahead, with a footpath sign. The path zigzags up the final rise to Lord Melville’s Monument.

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      The path to the Deil’s Caldron

      Lord Melville was a minister in Pitt the Younger’s government of 1791, where his skilled political fixing delayed for 15 years the abolition of the slave trade. As war minister at the start of the Napoleonic Wars, he mismanaged the Flanders Campaign and bungled the siege of Dunkirk. In 1806 he was impeached in the House of Lords for embezzling public funds, but acquitted as negligent rather than actually criminal. An even bigger monument to him stands in St Andrews Square, Edinburgh.

      Return down the first zigzags, then bear left on the path (previously noted) running northwest along the ridge top under tall trees. It emerges at a smoothly bulldozed track (the Maam Road). Turn down right, signposted ‘Monument Road’.

      The track slants left to a bend below a small crag. Here keep ahead for a few steps to the ‘Kinkhoast Well’, a small spring equipped with a pewter mug. Its waters are good against the ‘hoast’ or whooping cough, and according to local legend also for all other difficulties from poor performance in school to dreary Sunday sermons. Continue down the track until it bends back left. Here take a bracken path downhill, to a stile onto the Glen Lednock road. Head right for a few steps, then left at a signpost for Laggan Wood. The wide earth path leads to the riverside at Shaky Bridge. A ‘shoogle on the brig’ (‘a shaking on the bridge’) was cure for any indispositions not covered by the Kinkhoast Well. (Alas, since rebuilding by the Royal Engineers, the bridge is as firm as the Millennium Footbridge in London.) The path turns downstream, then slants up left with a few wooden steps to the top corner of Laggan Wood. Here it’s joined by a right-of-way path from the left. Follow the clear path ahead, with the plantation becoming an attractive oakwood.

      After 800 metres, at a waymark post, take a side path to the right. It passes a viewpoint on the left (the view currently obstructed by trees), then descends steep wooden steps towards the river. The path runs to the left, to a bend in a smooth, gravelled all-abilities path (the Lednock Millennium Footpath). Fork down right, soon zigzagging down to picnic tables at the riverside. The path continues downstream, to emerge near a car park at the edge of Comrie.

      Turn right, away from the car park, onto a footbridge over the river. In another 150 metres, turn left down Nurses Lane to Comrie’s main street. Cross to the right into Manse Lane, down to the riverside. Turn right, to pass under Dalginross Bridge, then turn up onto the roadway above.

      Cross Water of Ruchill to the car park.

      ROUTE 5

      Glen Tarken tracks

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Start/finishSt Fillans car park NN687246
Distance14km/8.5 miles
Ascent450m/1400ft
Approx time4hr
Max altitudeEntering Glen Tarken 450m
TerrainTracks and a small path

      A short-cut track bypasses the ramble up Glen Tarken for a walk of 9.5km and 350m ascent (6 miles/1200ft) – about 3hr.

      Parking is at the two pull-offs just opposite the public toilets at the west end of St Fillans. This is just below St Fillans’ small hydroelectric power plant, where its tailrace flows out into Loch Earn. The walk traces the water supply up into Glen Tarken overhead. With oakwoods at start and end, and grassy trackways through the moorland above, it’s a route that doesn’t go anywhere in particular but has a pleasant time along the way.

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      Between the two pull-offs, start across A85 up steps onto a private road at the small St Fillans Power Station (this road starts alongside the Four Seasons Hotel).

      Turn left for 150 metres, then back right at a waymark post up a track. It crosses over a disused railway, then zigs back left and slants up steeply through woods. Ignore two side-tracks on the right, before the gate at the top of the trees. Roughly 100 metres beyond the gate onto open hill, the OS Explorer map marks a cup-marked rock to left of the track, but the marks aren’t


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