Am Bàthach

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Am Bàthach
Ross-shire

Am Bàthach from Ciste Dhubh
Range: Glen Shiel Hills
Summit: 2,618 feet NH073143
57°10’44"N, 5°11’20"W

Am Bàthach is a mountain in Ross-shire standing at the head of Glen Shiel, at the western end of Loch Cluanie some 24 miles southeast of Kyle of Lochalsh. It is amongst the mighty mountains of Kintail, amongst which Ross-shire and Inverness-shire meet.

Overview

View to Loch Cluanie from the summit

Am Bàthach reaches a height of 2618 feet and is a lone 'Corbett' surrounded by considerably higher Munros, its grassy slopes are in marked contrast to the rockier peaks of the other Glen Shiel hills. it is often climbed along with the adjoining Munro, Ciste Dhubh with the route over Am Bàthach providing a more interesting and drier route to the Munro than the boggy An Caorann Beag glen.

The hill offers an interesting half day walk when ascended on its own and it is frequently the only one of the Kintail mountains in the clear when weather conditions are poor. Am Bàthach’s roof like shape made up of a long NE-SW ridge with steep sides is alleged to resemble a cow shed or a byre and that is the meaning of its translated name, a throwback to the time when cattle where a prominent feature of the Scottish Highlands.[1]

Geography

Am Bàthach’s summit ridge is roughly half a mile in length with the highest point lying at the northern extremity, and the southern end of the ridge has a spot height of 2,408 feet. There is a bealach with a height of 2,313 feet at the midpoint in between the two high points. The steep slopes on either side of the mountain drop down to the valleys of the An Caorann Beag on its west side and the An Caorann Mòr on the eastern flanks, both these hillsides are seamed with numerous small streams. The southern ridge of Am Bàthach descends to the A87 road as it passes along the northern shore of Loch Cluanie and has been planted with coniferous woodland on its lower slopes, this plantation is an outlying eastern section of the Glenshiel Forest.

The hills northern flank descends by a northwest ridge down to the Bealach a’ Chòinich ('Pass of the Bog') with a height of 1,939 feet. The pass, which lives up to its name, connects to the two Kintail Munros, Ciste Dhubh and Aonach Meadhoin, and has a small lochan lying on it.

Am Bàthach is drained by the Allt a’ Chaorainn Bhig and the Allt a’ Chaorainn Mhòir, the two burns which flow down the glens to the east and west of the hill. They flow to Loch Cluanie and ultimately to the east coast, by way of Glenmoriston and Loch Ness.

Ascents

There is really only one route of ascent for Am Bàthach, this is the climb from the A87 road to the south. The only alternative is passing over the hill when descending from the Munro of Ciste Dhubh. The route from the A87 starts at the car park next to the Cluanie Inn (grid reference NH075117). From here the southern ridge of Am Bàthach can be accessed by walking east for a mile along the A87 and then following an old stalkers path which leaves the road and goes to the right of the plantation to climb the southern ridge of the mountain to the summit.[2] The summit is a good place to admire the surrounding Munros of Kintail, Loch Cluanie is well seen to the south and the Cluanie Inn is in view at its west end.

References

  1. "The Call of the Corbetts" Page 58 (Gives meaning of translated name.)
  2. "The Corbetts and other Scottish Hills" Page 162 Gives details of route of ascent.
  • Climbing the Corbetts, Hamish Brown, ISBN 1-898573-08-5
  • The Call of the Corbetts, Irvine Butterfield, ISBN 0-7153-2754-2
  • The Corbetts and Other Scottish Hills, Scott Johnstone (Editor) et al., ISBN 0-907521-29-0
  • The Corbett Almanac, Cameron McNeish, Neil Wilson Publishing, ISBN 1-897784-14-7
  • 100 Best Routes on Scottish Mountains, Ralph Storer, ISBN 0-7515-0300-2