The Great Outdoors

CITY BREAKS

1. GLASGOW → THE COBBLER & BEINN IME, ARROCHAR ALPS

James Forrest reckons a last-minute decision to climb The Cobbler is almost never a bad idea

The sun is setting across the Arrochar Alps, a compact group of peaks in the Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park, located just one hour by car from Glasgow. My Glaswegian friend Eddie and I are killing time on Ben Vorlich’s summit, watching nature’s spectacle unfold across the isle-dotted expanse of Loch Lomond. Hazy layers of silhouetted peaks stretch out into the distance, as the multi-coloured sky blends and marbles with every passing moment. We didn’t plan to be up here this late, but some things are too good to miss out on. It’s an excellent last-minute hill decision – until we come to getting off the mountain. Stupidly, neither of us packed a head torch – and we now face a dicey descent as nighttime closes in. We’re hiking blind, guided only by the insufficient glow of our iPhone torches. At one point I fall into a ditch trying to avoid a cow. My lack of suitable illumination has turned me into a hillwalking calamity – but who cares when the scenery is this beguiling?

“The views are so mesmerising, you’d never believe Glasgow is just an hour away…”

The following day, after a night at Luss Campsite, my plan is to solo hike the most iconic Arrochar Alps route – a loop of two Munros (Beinn Narnain and Beinn Ime) and Scotland’s best-loved Corbett (The Cobbler). I’ve never climbed The Cobbler – or Ben Arthur, to use its Sunday name – before, and it has a reputation as a beast. The Arrochar Alps are strikingly

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In This Issue
Phillipa Cherryson has been a magazine, newspaper and television journalist for more than 30 years and has lived in Bannau Brycheiniog National Park for almost as long. She is Vice Chair of the park’s Local Access Forum, an OS Champion, South Wales o

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