About An Laogh
Rising above the southern shores of Loch Maree, this rugged Hump offers a secluded vantage point amidst the Torridon giants. Its heathery, rock-strewn slopes provide a testing ascent, but the reward is a unique, low-level perspective of Slioch’s massive northern face and the white quartzite screes of neighbouring Beinn Eighe.
Key Statistics
Rank
133rd Highest in Region
Parent Range
North West Highlands
Nearest Town
Drumrunie
Prominence
?
147.3m
Geology
You are standing on the Applecross Formation, a rough sandstone filled with small pebbles and gravel.
Classifications
Nearby Fells
Did You Know?
- •The name is Scottish Gaelic for "The Calf," a term often applied to a smaller hill that sits alongside a more imposing mountain. In this instance, it plays the junior partner to the sprawling, white-capped ridges of Beinn Eighe.
- •From the summit, the view across the deep waters of Loch Maree to the fortress-like sandstone tiers of Slioch is one of the most impressive perspectives in the North West Highlands.
- •The ascent typically begins from the A832 near the Bridge of Grudie, following the path into Gleann Grudie before striking off across trackless, rocky ground.
- •Navigating the summit plateau requires care; the ancient Lewisian gneiss has been scoured into a confusing maze of small lochans and rocky hummocks that look remarkably similar in mist.
- •While officially a Hump, the combination of energy-sapping heather and the need to weave around rock outcrops ensures you will work significantly harder for this summit than for many higher peaks.
Find It
OS Grid Reference
NC161102
Latitude
58.0429°N
Longitude
5.1159°W