After a couple of days spent resting my leg it was a relief to be back on a mountain, and thankfully I didn’t have any more trouble with my leg. I had spent the previous day travelling from Aviemore to Glen Shiel so I could complete a walk that I’d failed to do last year when I was in the area because of bad weather. I caught a bus from Shiel Bridge and got off at a car park half way up the valley where I found a faint path through bracken up the steep, steep side of the valley. I was relishing the chance to walk on a natural path after the many manufactured paths that I had been walking along in the Cairngorm Mountains. Before too long I managed to get up to the pass, Bealach an Làpan, where I was suddenly hit by a stiff, bitterly cold wind that had me wrapping up against it. Proceeding along the fabulously narrow ridge, I was soon feeling better than I had all week, with a strong leg again, and a wonderful mountain range to walk along. The views across to the South Shiel Ridge at this point were quite striking and although the views of the Five Sisters themselves at this point were partly hidden by the ridge itself they still promised wonders to come.
A steep descent and re-ascent along the backbone of the sisters brought me to the second Munro, Sgùrr na Càrnach, and the second sister. For a mountain to be considered a Munro it has to have a deep drop to a neighbouring Munro, which in practice means that walking from one Munro to another requires repeated, tiring climbs. Another descent and a very steep climb brought me to the top of the third Munro and sister, Sgùrr Fhuaran, the highest point on the Five Sisters ridge. This is the Munro that I’d climbed a year ago when bad weather forced me to do a shortened version of this walk. On that occasion I couldn’t see anything from the summit, but now after the short-lived snow showers I was getting some good weather and able to enjoy incredible views as I had my lunch over the remaining sisters with Loch Duich in the distance.
A steep descent brought me onto the continuation of the ridge over the fourth sister, Sgùrr nan Saighead, not a Munro, but still a deliciously narrow ridge with fabulous cliffs to my right. The weather had improved so much by now that I stripped off my waterproofs and I had to put sun cream on while enjoying the sunshine on a great walk along the narrow ridge. After walking over the multiple tops of the fourth sister I left my route of last year at Beinn Bhuidhe (the fourth sister’s north-western top) and walked down to a bealach and onto the fifth sister, Sgurr an t-Searraich. This involved a much longer walk before I could reach the summit, though it wasn’t steep as the fifth sister doesn’t even top three thousand feet. You could call this the shy, little fat sister. Most people miss her out as I had done last year, but I wasn’t going to leave anybody out this time even if she has no redeeming qualities. Once I had reached the top I dropped steeply down the western slopes to find a good path beside the stream, Allt a’Chruinn. This path, my route from last year, took me all the way down to the road where a long walk took me back to the youth hostel.
This was a thoroughly enjoyable walk on fabulously rugged mountains and deliriously narrow ridges. It occurred to me that the best parts of this walk were actually away from the Munros. I had a fantastic time walking over the fourth sister, Sgùrr nan Saighead, partly due to the good weather I had at that time, but also due to the narrowness of the ridge and the sheer cliffs to my right side. Let us not forget the best one of the lot: the sixth sister, the Spanish sister, Sgùrr nan Spainteach, which is gloriously rugged, full of rocks and cliffs, along a narrow ridge. This was a fantastic walk with variable weather over awesome mountains and a great ridge.
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