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Walk 1492 - printer friendly version

WHW - Day 2 - Dryden to Rowardennan Walk

Author - Peter Smyly

Length - 15.0 miles / 24.4 km

Ascent - 0 feet / 0 metres

Grade - moderate

Start - OS grid reference NS474885
Lat 56.06492374 + Long -4.452676275
Postcode G63 0BJ (approx. location only)

At Drymen, Old Gartmore Road is the main road roughly due north from the general store and is part of the Rob Roy Way which passes the Clachan Inn on the left. This approach is a more direct way of rejoining the WHW than going back along Stirling Road. Old Gartmore Road rejoins the WHW on the left through the Garadhban Forest. This is the first of two days to get used to being near to, or alongside, Loch Lomond. The high point, in terms of altitude, and the highlight of today was Conic Hill (361 metres). A "procession" of walkers was heading along the clear track that snakes its way round the heathery north-eastern side of the hill, though not to the top of it. It is well worth the slight digression up a path, steeply to begin with, to gain the top. This is the nearest the WHW gets to topping anything resembling a mountain though the Devil's Staircase on day 5 bears some similarities. The better viewpoint overlooking Loch Lomond is the most south-westerly knoll, lower down, from where there is an alternative path down, a very steep descent to rejoin the main path. Conic Hill is a popular spot for locals with young children. The view looking down on Loch Lomond and its central cluster of islands ranks as one of the highlights of the WHW.

The village of Balmaha marks the approximate half way point for today's walk and is where the Lowlands meet the Highlands although it is slightly off-route. The WHW descends through woodland to a large car park with a visitor's centre before it continues on its way through woods, Rowardennan-bound. Inchcailloch is a large wooded island offshore from a headland where the WHW takes a seemingly unnecessary, though admittedly short, detour up a wooded hill and then down again to rejoin the shore path at Craigie Fort. Was this detour for the view perhaps? Much of the remainder of today's walk featured a path through woodland and there was some road walking too. The route passes a couple of campsites at Cashel and Sallochy Bay, also the occasional island and a few bays were seen along with shingly beaches and headlands. The drone of traffic from the main road on the other side was sometimes audible across the water. Some bits of the track are steep, especially one uphill section with a series of wooden retainer steps. As the path passes through fairly dense woodland, there is a general absence of landmarks, but a sign appeared at one point saying "Rowardennan 2 km". On emerging from woodland, a tarmac road leads to the Rowardennan Hotel on the left. The Youth Hostel is about 0.75 mile further on.

Eilean Nan Deargannan is a small tree-clad island seen en route to the Youth Hostel, long and narrow and just emerging above the surface of the lake. After miles of either not seeing the loch at all, or only catching brief views of it between trees, the stretch of shoreline between the hotel and the hostel is especially pleasant, as it is largely free from tree cover and there are bays and headlands with water gently lapping on the shore. If following the shoreline, the eye also leads across a bay to the Youth Hostel, set back from a grassy lawn beyond which are tree-clad slopes and, if cloud-free, Ben Lomond is seen towering above.

Click here to continue to part 3

Walk 1492 Route Map

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