The rain swept
across the deep void of Coire Sputan
Dearg like curtains being drawn and I
knew that I only
had seconds to
get my waterproofs on. Beyond the silvery
veil the late afternoon sun was
highlighting the
rocky features
of Cairn Toul, shining through a mass of
thunderhead clouds that looked like
some huge eruption of
boiling vapour.
Despite the imminent soaking, I was
transfixed by the splendour of it all.
Showers had
swept across the Cairngorms all day
and in between the sun, shining through
great rents in the
cloud cover, had
deepened the earth tones of late summer
and picked out individual features
with crystal clarity.
Lochan Uaine,
one of four ‘green lochans’ in the
Cairngorms, suddenly changed in colour
from quicksilver to
translucent-blue;
patches of blue moss campion shone from
the metallic greys of the scree-covered
slopes and away
below me
sunbeams swept across the pines of Glen Luibeg
like a roving searchlight.
Despite the rain
these are the best of days in the
Cairngorms, when light and shade
contrast sharply and
the colours
change constantly. I had chosen a marvellous
route to enjoy the spectacle of it all
— a tour of the central
massif of the
Caimgorms. The route starts at Linn of
Dee near Braemar; visits the
pinescented and deer-haunted Glen Luibeg;
climbs the long Sron Riach shoulder
of Ben Macdui to its spacious summit;
touches the edge of the crags and
cliffs of Coire Sputan Dearg and visits the
spectacular Arctic setting of Loch
Etchachan, before heading off down the
long ridge of Derry Cairngorm.
lt’s a big
day, not far short of 20 miles but that
distance can be effectively
reduced by using a mountain bike to
carry you up the 7km of bulldozed
track from Linn of Dee to Derry Lodge.
Please don‘t take a bike any
further than Derry Lodge, the footpaths simply
can't take it. The Sron Riach ridge
of Ben Macdui,
the brindled nose, climbs steadily
all the way to its conical peak. Beyond,
there's a brief descent than another climb
on to the bare, wind-scoured
east slopes of Macdui, Britain’s second
highest summit. Wide, empty slopes
lead to the conical summit past the
ruins of the Sappers’ Bothy. ( For many
years the armed forces delighted in
building stone
shelters and
huts all over these slopes ). From the summit
cairn the views, on a clear day, are
superb, but there's still a
long way to go.
Head back down to the edge of Coire
Sputain Dearg and try to stay with the cliff
rim.
In many ways
this is the highlight of the route, a
grand esplanade with Coire Sputain Dearg
dropping away
below you on one
side, sweeping down ochreous miles to
the verdant green of the Luibeg pines,
and the Arctic
splendour of
Coire Etchachan on the other side with the
most magnificent loch in the
Cairngorm filling its rocky bowl.
The tor studded
whaleback of Beinn Mheadhoin looms
beyond the loch and away across the
deep chasm that
holds Loch Avon
rises Cairn Gorm itself, its
glaciated cliffs forming an acute angle with the
gentler swells of
its summit
slopes. From
the shallow col below Creagan a‘ Choire Etchachan,
the long ridge of Derry Cairngorm
forms a highway to the south, dropping
first to another, grassy col before
rising in slopes of scree and
boulders to the rocky summit, yet
another magnificent viewpoint. To the
east the green and brown sweep of the
Moine Bhealaidh flows onto the
rounded slopes of Beinn a’ Bhuird and
the empty miles of the Forest of
Glenavon.
It’s all
downhill now, but it's a rocky course that demands
considerable attention before you
can begin to relax.
The broad ridge runs south before sweeping to
the south-west towards Glen Luibeg
and a gentle wander beside the
burn back to Derry Lodge.
ROUTE PLANNER
Map: OS 1:50,000
Landranger sheets 36 ( Grantown & Aviemore ) and 43 ( Braemar &
Blair Atholl ). Harveys Superwalker Map Cairn Gorm.
Distance: 12 miles / 20km, from Derry Lodge. It's 4 miles/7km from Linn
of Dee to Derry Lodge
Approx Time: 9-12 hours
Start / Finish: Linn of Dee car park ( GR: NO063898 )
Transport: Regular bus service from Aberdeen to Braemar. Details from
www.travelinescotland.com
Information: Braemar TIC, 01339 741600
Route: Take the
track from Linn of Dee to Derry Lodge, perhaps by bike.
Cross the Derry Burn by the bridge west of Derry Lodge.
Follow the track to the A confluence of the Luibeg Burn and the Allt
Preas nam Meirleach where the track divides.
Follow the branch that heads N, crosses the burn and climbs the Sron
Riach shoulder of Ben Macdui
Follow the ridge round the head of Coire Sputan Dearg to the col below
Creagan a’ Choire Etchachan.
From the col head S then SE and climb boulder-covered slopes to
Derry Cairngorm.
From the summit descend in a S direction back to Glen Luibeg and the
outward track.