Walking Home

Reveries of an amateur long-distance hiker

You are here: Home / 2022 / May / 28 / Walking to Cape Wrath, Day 16, May 26, 2022

Walking to Cape Wrath, Day 16, May 26, 2022

Published by Hugh on May 28, 2022

Walking to Cape Wrath, Day 16, May 26, 2022

As I would be wild camping up in the Cairngorms area, I was in no real hurry to get started. Last night I made arrangements to eat in the Atholl Arms restaurant for breakfast, opting for eggs Benedict instead of another Scottish meat festival. The yoghurt and fruit were exceptional, as were my eggs. Leaving that lovely stone town, I found the path alongside the Tilt river, which was to be my hiking companion for the better part of the day.

As this was my entrance to the Cairngorms, I was expecting greater difficulty, but most of the day was on a well-made farm road slowly ascending the range, sticking close to the river. At first the glen was very narrow, the sheep stood oblivious at impossible angles on steep slopes. Slowly the landscape widened, with the path passing small farmhouses, some inhabited, others abandoned. Later it entered a forested section, reminding me of riding the train to Aviemore some years ago. I recall on passing the Atholl estate noting the dense forest. John Murray (1755-1830), fourth Duke of Atholl, who was nicknamed ‘Planter John’ was one of the first industrial tree planters in Scotland, planting millions of larch in the land abutting the Cairngorms. Planter John’s vision has clearly been carried forward as the path took me past a textbook example of modern industrial farming. On passing Forest Lodge, the largest farm I crossed, I watched as a harvester cut off scrub deciduous trees, ripping some directly out of the ground, clearing the way to cut the large old pines. The ground shook as the roots snapped, and the “useless” lumber was tossed aside. Later the path passed a huge pile of logs cut to length, partially stripped of bark, stacked, and ready to be loaded out.

Finally near the end of the trek, the water subtly shifted directions as I left the watershed of the Tilt and entered that of the Dee. There is something exhilarating about walking a river to its headwaters, something I wrote about here in one of my favorite blog posts: https://walkinghome.lmc.gatech.edu/pointless-essays/a-walker-of-rivers/


After following the Alltan t-Seilich (a tributary to the Dee) for a few short kilometers just before Bynack Burn, I came to Bynack Lodge, a ruined stone home sitting on a rise, in the middle of nowhere. The only road to it a Land Rover track. Just a circle of wind-twisted trees, crumbling walls, and sheep grazing to keep up its well-mown appearance. The wind was blowing hard and the weather alternated bright sun and brief showers. I pitched my tent in the lee of the house at what seemed the calmest spot (a relative concept). After inspecting the grounds I took shelter and read well into the evening, while my tent flapped, trembled, shook, but ultimately held.

T. Hugh Crawford

Posted in Walking to Cape Wrath: the Scottish National Trail Tagged Blair Atholl, blair Atholl arm, Bynack burn, Bynack lodge, Hugh crawford, john Duke of atholl, planter john, scottish National trail, SNT, T. Hugh Crawford
← Previous Next →

Recent Posts

  • Walking To Scotland
  • An Australian Interlude (non-trekking)
  • On Boredom
  • On Adventure
  • The Ridgeway, July 17 Day 5, 16 miles

Archives

  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022
  • June 2021
  • August 2020
  • April 2020
  • February 2020
  • January 2020
  • April 2018
  • March 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • November 2017
  • May 2017
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • May 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • December 2015
  • November 2015
  • October 2015
  • September 2015
  • August 2015

Categories

  • Articles in The Atlantic
  • In Patagonia
  • In Tasmania
  • Journal: Walking to Canada
  • Pointless Essays
  • Te Araroa: Walking South with the Spring
  • Uncategorized
  • Walking across some Alps: the Trans-Swiss Trail
  • Walking England’s “Oldest” Path: The Ridgeway
  • Walking near the Arctic Circle: Iceland
  • Walking to Cape Wrath: the Scottish National Trail
  • Walking to St. James: the Camino de Santiago
  • Walking to the Smoky Mountains: The Benton Mackaye Trail
  • Walking to the Top of Africa: Kilimanjaro
  • Walking to the top of the world: Nepal
  • Writing about Writing about Walking

Copyright © 2026 Walking Home.

Powered by WordPress and My Life.