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InformationFacts and Figures:
Ben Lawers is 1214m or 3983ft high;
Beinn Ghlas is 1103m or 3619ft high.
Grid Ref: NN 609 378
The route to the summit described here involves around 1100m of climbing and is about 10km in length.
www.nts.org.uk
Info Centre & Shop, 21 Mar to 30 Sep, daily 10-5 (closed 1-2 for ½ hr).
Admission: £2.00 for Visitor Centre exhibition admission.
Ben Lawers Viewed from the South Side of Loch Tay
Ben Lawers Viewed from the South Side of Loch Tay

Ben Lawers is the highest of the range of mountains dominating the skyline on the northern side of Loch Tay.

Ben Lawers from Beinn Ghlas
Ben Lawers from Beinn Ghlas
Beinn Ghlas with Ben Lawers, Right, Beyond
Beinn Ghlas with Ben Lawers,
Right, Beyond
As Seen from the Tarmachans
As Seen from the Tarmachans
Tarmachans from Beinn Ghlas
Tarmachans from Beinn Ghlas

Geology has not been kind to Ben Lawers. At 3983ft it falls just short of the magic 4000ft mark. When accurate measurement showed it did fall short, a group of men spend one day in 1878 building a twenty-foot cairn designed to ensure it kept its head above 4000ft. This has not survived the passing years, and would not be counted towards the mountain's height even if it had. A shame, really.

The considerable size of these mountains can to some extent be offset by the lazy hillwalker. The usual starting point for the climb of the two is the car park at the National Trust visitor centre on the decidedly minor road that leads across the range to the western end of Glen Lyon. Note that this road is not kept open in winter.

At a little over 400m the visitor centre car park gives you a good start to the day; but bear in mind it also gives everyone else a good start to the day too. So start early and you can meet the crowds on your way back rather than being part of them on your way up.

Ben Lawers from Kenmore
Ben Lawers from Kenmore
View from Across Loch Tay
View from Across Loch Tay

The lower part of the path leads you up through a nature reserve and into lower Coire Odhar. Here you can catch just a glimpse of an alternative Scotland, for they have fenced out the sheep and you begin to see the dramatic difference in landscape and vegetation that was caused when landowners cleared the people off most of the highlands to make room for these more lucrative inhabitants.

Here, too, you can just see traces of the temporary habitation, or shielings, that used to dot so much of the landscape as the clans brought their cattle up to the higher pastures to graze in summer. Another aspect of a way of life that disapperared to make way for the all consuming sheep.

The main path then takes a right turn out of Coire Odhar and you are faced with the hardest pull of the day, up and onto Beinn Ghlas's south west ridge.

Beinn Ghlas itself is protected by some steep rocky stretches that have been excellently restored but require care in poor weather. The summit itself comes as something of a surprise: a sense of "is this it?" Identification is confirmed by the steep drops to the north, and the start of the descent towards Ben Lawers itself: which you see for the first time on gaining the summit of Beinn Ghlas.

The onward path is marked by a steady descent towards the comfortable col at a little under 1000m, before a steeper ascent up Bel Lawers itself. This varies between well made but steep path and some quite badly eroded stretches, all of it interesting when you are looking up through billowing cloud into driving rain (which explains the absence of photos from the summit on this page!)

The simplest return is by reversing the outward route, even though this involves some reascent of Beinn Ghlas.

There are other routes up Ben Lawers, but they tend to have a lower starting point, and parking on the main road along Loch Tay can be problematical. It is even possible to plot a route that takes in all seven of the Munros in this range (since the promotion of An Stuc in 1997), but it is a long day out, and only recommended for the really fit, ideally with two cars.

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