Day One
The early morning air is crisp and penetrating as we leave
the comfort of the Errigal Youth Hostel to begin a two day trek and overnight
wild camp in some of the less well trodden parts of the Derryveagh Mountains .
I look across to Slieve Snaght, caught in the glassy glare of the rising sun,
to see a low bank of thick white cloud being lifted up to roll over its domed
top before cascading down its opposite slope, a sure sign that the wind must be
fairly strong on higher ground. But down here in the valley above Dunlewy Lough,
on this fine morning in mid-March as we walk along the R251, the wind is little
more than a gentle breeze. Under a speedwell blue sky, the first flush of
spring abounds: birdsong fills the air, tentative green shoots sprout from
seemingly lifeless brambles, catkins dangle from winter weary boughs and alongside
the road, saffron yellow coltsfoot flowers, harbingers of spring, erupt from
amid ragged yellow grasses like condensed droplets of sunshine. This morning it
feels just simply good to be alive.
The views down over the Prussian blue waters of Dunlewy
Lough are exceptionally fine and at its easternmost end we spy the unroofed gaunt
shell of the disused Church of Ireland, the four pinnacles atop its lofty tower
looking for all the world as if they are endeavouring to pierce the space
between heaven and earth. As we pass further along the road, I spot the
magnificent outline of a Golden Eagle sweeping down the southern slopes of
Errigal; its ragged wing tips etched against the blue sky have distinctive
white patches on their undersides and white barring on the tail feathers,
meaning it must therefore be a juvenile bird. The sight of this magnificent raptor
gives me such an euphoric feeling; its effortless whirling on the spring wind
seems to epitomise the very essence of freedom.
After about 4 km we leave the road and strike off across the
bog towards Maumlack, the first summit of eight. As I dither by the bank of Owenwee River ,
contemplating crossing the tops of boulders green with moss and algae, I notice
how fronds of paper dry yellow grass have become caught on the prickly branches
of the nearby gorse bushes, a hint perhaps of how windy this part of Ireland is. Tentatively,
I launch myself across the rushing river towards the first boulder top and the
weight of my rucksack causes me to overbalance. I almost slip into the brackish
torrent! As the adrenalin rush subsides, with the aid of my walking poles, I
step cautiously onto the next slippery rock and finally pick my way across
several others to reach the opposite bank unscathed.
The ground is very rough underfoot and eroded peat hags, shallow
pools and patches of sly bog abound until the ground steepens and slabs of
weather-worn grey granite begin to become more prevalent. We cross a high deer
fence into the Glenveagh
National Park and as we
gain height, the iconic cone-shaped Errigal still clad in its autumnal apparel,
towers against the powder blue sky. Its pastel-shaded russet slopes and naked
scree remind me of an Impressionist painting. Signs of the on-going winter thaw
are everywhere: flattened, gelatinous, semi-transparent yellow grass; blackened
and slimy dead moss, lethal if trodden on; patches of weeks-old granular snow
that persist between the crevices of the granite rocks and that cling
stubbornly to the sunless, shady parts of the hillside. The ground is
absolutely sodden and every squelching footstep is an effort on the steepest
sections. But the views provide a welcome distraction, for this is magnificent
countryside indeed. In the northeast rises the distinctive flat topped hulk of
Muckish, one of a cluster of summits that local people affectionately term the ‘Seven
Sisters’, which also include Crocknalaragagh, Aghla Beg, Ardloughnabrackbaddy,
Aghla More, Mackoght and Errigal, the majority of which can be clearly seen. On
the opposite side of the broad valley, pale grey rocky Dooish rises to greet
the sky, framed in the near foreground by a score of tiny, brilliant blue bog
pools reflecting the cloud scurrying overhead, beyond which is Croloughan Lough,
the deepest blue scoop of water imaginable. And in the valley between both
ranges of hills, I can see cars crawling like ants along the threadlike R251.
As the ground begins to level out, a bitterly cold easterly
wind suddenly makes itself felt, whipping the water of a nearby bog pool into a
tempestuous frenzy, so much so that it is literally frothing at the edges. Facing
into the chafing wind, we find it hard to remain upright as we soldier on towards
the summit of Maumlack, the beehive cairn of which finally floats into view. A
bank of thin cirrostratus is spreading stealthily across the sky from the east,
lending the sun a watery luminescence and the landscape assumes paler tones. Heading
east, we pass numerous tiny deep blue bog pools on the one kilometre route
towards Croaghnasaggart, its unremarkable high point sited somewhere within a
hummocky broad plateau peppered with peat hags and granite rocks. The views
towards Errigal and its small sister, Mackoght, are particularly fine. The
gouged out eastern face of the quartzite giant floats into view, the sharp edge
where a glacier pulled away from solid rock eons ago clearly visible, as is a
huge white scar meandering its way upward towards the summit, testament to the
popularity of this, the highest point in County Donegal. It is possible to see
the slowly moving dots of people on this pathway.
After finding a semi sheltered spot to fire up our stove for
lunch and consuming a sumptuous Thai red curry and couscous with gusto, we
strike south-east towards Staghall Mountain past the shore of Lough Naweeloge ,
the surface of its indigo water agitated by the easterly wind. There’s
something about this spot that causes us to tarry awhile. Perhaps it’s the
patterns made by the wind rippling across the lake’s surface causing the water
to dance ashore in a series of crystalline waves, or maybe the way that a small
stream gurgles languidly over water smoothed granite, that creates a feeling of
blissful solitude.
The summit of Staghall
Mountain is marked by a
substantial cairn of granite rocks built round a grassy peat hag atop another
flattish plateau of eroded bog and exposed slabs of granite. Here we are
treated to 360 degree views of mountains all round. Not a road, farm, sheep or
person in sight gives this mountain a truly wild and remote character. We now
begin a steep descent down through a gully of dried yellow grass hiding a small
stream lying in wait to trap an unwary leg, towards Alteann Burn that runs through
the bottom of the steep sided valley like a miniature serpent.
Carrying a heavy rucksack all day has by now begun to take
its toll and the concentration required to descend safely from Staghall Mountain has sapped my energy. We find a
spot where the water is low enough to cross Alteann Burn without getting our
feet wet and begin the steady climb towards Crockmulroney. As we attain height,
a thin sliver of blue appears at the far end of the valley towards Glenveagh:
Lough Beagh. Somewhere in the distance we hear the high pitched yelp of deer,
and although close by, they are so well camouflaged against the russet
landscape, we are unable to spot them.
The sun has now sunk below the top of the hill and we
continue our ascent in shadow. The temperature drops immediately and I begin to
feel cold and very tired. We decide to look for a place to make camp for the
night somewhere near Lough Sallagh in order to be close to a supply of water before
night fall. It seems to take forever for the lake to float into view, and as we
approach it, the ground is very hummocky and interspersed with tracts of bog.
We must ascend to find dry, let alone flattish, terrain where we can pitch our
tent. With pangs of hunger cramping my stomach, we begin the slog above Lough
Sallagh in search of a suitable camping spot. We are soon rewarded with a
fairly level patch of ground about five minutes from the summit below some rugged
granite cliffs that afford a good degree of shelter from the wind, and offering
grandstand views over the reed choked Lough Sallagh, the high ground towards
Slieve Snaght and the cone of Errigal.
With the tent securely pitched, we are delighted to find
that we do not have to descend to the lough for water – there is a small bog
pool just above us which will serve our needs adequately once filtered and UV
treated. A Thai green curry and noodles never tasted as good, and stomachs
full, we watch the sun setting in a mackerel sky over the high ground to the
west from the comfort of our open tent. By degrees, the sky darkens, the wind
drops and the cirrostratus cloud begins to clear just as Jupiter makes an
appearance, its silvery glow magically reflected on the surface of Lough
Sallagh below. The air temperature quickly plummets to below freezing.
Wrapped in my sleeping bag with a comforting hot chocolate, tasty
muesli bar and a nalgene bottle full of hot water to keep me warm, I watch a magnificent
celestial light show, as thousands of stars erupt in the purple firmament above
this wild and remote spot. Jupiter sinks lower in the sky, glows rose pink and
finally sets. We spend hours gazing heavenward watching the progress of the open
star cluster of Pleiades, a heavenly version of the Derryveagh ‘Seven Sisters’,
as it slides across the sky. There’s very little light pollution here and we
spot numerous shooting stars. Martin points out the less visible cloud-like
smudge which is Andromeda, a spiral galaxy 2.5 million light years from Earth
and the nearest major galaxy to the Milky Way, containing one trillion stars. In
our lonely camp far from human habitation, we might have been the only two
people in the world on this incredible starry night and I suddenly feel infinitesimal
and very inconsequential indeed beneath the vastness of space. Laid bare, I hastily
withdraw into the comforting warmth and security of my sleeping bag. Zipping up
the tent flaps, we close our eyes to the sound of the wind gently playing over
the canvas.
Day Two
We are woken just before dawn by the deep trilling of red grouse
nearby and open the tent flaps to a shower of fine ice crystals and a rush of
bitterly cold morning air laden with the heavy fragrance of the bog. Our tent
is silvered with frost and the stars are retreating into a clear pre-dawn sky.
Leaving some water on the stove to gently boil, we make our way to the rocky
summit of Crockmulroney past frozen bog pools, icy peat hags and vegetation
white with frost. Close to the summit we find a rocky ledge facing the
reddening eastern horizon and erect the tripod and camera to capture the
sunrise.
Finally, the throbbing red orb of the sun pierces the
horizon, floating through a thin horizontal layer of cloud before arching
higher, passing through shades of vermilion, orange and saffron yellow before becoming too bright to look at with a naked eye. In this most magnificent of
dawns, the eastern sky is burnished apricot and the frigid landscape bathed in
rich warm tones. We leave the camera running and descend to our tent for coffee
and porridge.
Breakfast complete, we return to the summit to retrieve the
camera and clamber over gigantic shelves of granite eroded over the eons into
myriad shapes. The summit of this little known and climbed mountain is an
absolute delight, giving a true wilderness feel. No sights or sounds of human
habitation and 360 degree eye candy all round. From a protruding ledge of rock
I gaze down towards the chilled blue surface of Lough Sallagh, languishing in
the shadow cast by the mountain, and spy our tiny green tent tucked away on its secret ledge at the foot of the granite cliffs below. It looks lost in the enormity of
the landscape. The quartzite cone of Errigal, blushing pink in the rising sun,
strides high on the northwest horizon, to the south I can see Moylenanav and
beyond, the inky blue tops of the Bluestack
Mountain range. It’s not
quite possible to see Glenveagh from here, but the sense of there being a deep
valley between us and Moylenanav is palpable. The sun is warm on my back as I
watch small puffs of white cloud begin to drift over the top of the high ground
westwards towards Drumnalifferny
Mountain and Slieve
Snaght, but the wind, a Baltic Easterly, begins to strengthen as the sun rises.
Our hands are chilled to the marrow trying to commit the scenery to camera for
posterity and we are eventually forced to retreat to lower ground where we
break camp.
Lough Sallagh is just beginning to emerge from the shadow of the mountain as we pass by, the thin
sheets of ice that have formed close to its shoreline glisten in the feeble
morning light. Trapped yellow reeds stuck fast like insects set in amber
tremble in the wind as if trying to escape the lake’s icy clutches. Indeed, the
ground is frozen which makes progress over the bog much easier. As we head west
to scale the slopes leading up to Crockballaghgeeha over verglas smeared naked
granite, we spot numerous examples of water, trapped between rock and thawing ice,
dribbling downwards. These small rivulets resemble black tadpoles and are a
mesmerising sight indeed. So too is a scoopful of thin ice lying in a shallow
depression of a granite outcrop, which, through my polarising sunglasses, is
seen in all the colours of the spectrum.
We suddenly spot a distinctive arrow shaped formation of
black dots heading towards us from the west. As they approach, we see it is a
gaggle of geese migrating eastwards, a sure sign that spring is upon us,
although with the penetrating wind and Arctic air temperature, you’d be forgiven for
thinking so today! As they pass over head, we can clearly hear their honking
which brings a smile to our faces.
We climb steadily upwards past deep blue bog pools covered
in sheets of thin ice, past an unsuspecting brace of red grouse who take off
noisily, their strange cry sounding like ‘go-back, back, back’, and eventually
find ourselves on a wind blasted broad plateau of naked granite. We soon spot
the triangular summit cairn marking the summit of Crockballaghgeeha. Here our
tripod and camera get blown over in the gusting wind which forbids conversation
and numbs one’s face and hands to such a degree they begin to sting with the
bitter cold. But the views over this remote and hauntingly beautiful wilderness
more than compensate for this vicious easterly wind, and the scenery down over
the Poisoned Glen from just below the summit cairn is utterly ravishing. I find
a sheltered spot and rest awhile, enjoying the expansive views across to Dunlewy
Lough and Lough Nacung Upper, the great knuckles of rock that soar upwards from
the valley floor to form the northern ramparts of Slieve Snaght opposite and
the sinuous pattern created by Croananiv Burn way down in the bottom of the Poisoned
Glen. With such a dramatic landscape, it’s no surprise to learn that legends
abound, and the glen is said to have received its eerie name when the ancient
one-eyed giant king of Tory, Balor, was killed here by his exiled grandson,
Lughaidh, whereupon the poison from his eye split the rock and poisoned the
glen. The truth is perhaps more prosaic. Gleann
Nemhe in Irish means Heavenly Glen and on a day like today, it’s not hard
to see why. But an English cartographer mistakenly corrupted the spelling, for the
word for poison in Irish is neimhe,
and so the Glen became poisoned rather than heavenly. I prefer the colourful folk
story of a giant killer myself, it seems to resonate with the epic scale of
this incredible landscape.
Buffeted by the cruel east wind, we pick our way westwards
over naked granite and past large glacial erratics towards Crockfadda via its
east top. The views down into the Poisoned Glen from Crockfadda are
extraordinary and finding a spot in the lee of the wind, we pause for a muesli
bar. Clouds scurrying across a cornflower blue sky cast huge shadows upon vast
swathes of golden brown bog in the amphitheatre below and gambol towards the
slopes of Errigal, garlanding its iconic top. Dunlewy Lough and Lough Nacung
Upper never looked as blue and in the far distance I can see a strip of aquamarine that is the Atlantic Ocean .
We now press on towards Drumnalifferny Mountain
which is some distance away across very rugged and rough terrain through rocky
gullies and past umpteen bog pools, the shallow waters of which are roiled by
the gusting easterly wind which seems to have strengthened. As we gain height,
it becomes apparent that winter has yet to release its icy grip on the highest
ground despite the abundant signs of approaching spring in the valley below.
Slieve Snaght is streaked with snow, snarling bog pools are ringed with slushy
ice and exposed peat hags ooze dripping icicles. Finally we arrive atop a plateau
studded with glacial erratics and comprised of flat granite outcrops that
resemble a pavement with wiry grass growing between. Locating the small summit
cairn of granite stones, we pause momentarily to appreciate the superb views north-eastwards
to the majestic line of tops from Muckish to Errigal and back along the high
ground we had just traversed towards the summit of Dooish, gleaming pale grey
with rock. Reason enough to save this walk for a fine day, but also because in
mist the terrain round here could be treacherous. The action of ice has created
sheer northern and western craggy faces with vertiginous drops into the
Poisoned Glen.
The terrain between Slieve Snaght and Drumnaliffernn is a
high and wild ice scoured wilderness of desolate bog studded with loughs and
granite buttresses and outcrops, time-weathered into fantastical shapes, some
resembling the masonry of Incan temples with their myriad eroded joints. The
weather now begins to take a turn for the worse as the sun is swallowed by a
bank of grey cloud approaching from the east, the mercury plummets and the wind
gusts with gale force strength causing the bog grass to hiss loudly in protest.
We find it hard to remain standing at times and after crossing a deer fence out
of the Glenveagh National Park , we pass above Lough
Atirrive and is diminutive twin, grey and moody amid the wind tormented russet
bogland. By now famished, we head towards the rocky shore of Lough Maumbeg, hemmed
in on one side by towering granite cliffs, its deep grey waters agitated by the
wind which we manage to shelter from just about enough in order to fire up our gas
stove for a hot meal. The cold is so intense that the gas really struggles to heat
the water for our freeze dried meal which we consume ravenously. It’s too cold
to remain still for any length of time, and bellies full, we plough on toward
the broad saddle of exposed granite and eroded bog between Drumnaliffernn
Mountain and Slieve Snaght, which is living up to its name. Dirty patches of granular snow cling
stubbornly beneath peat hags on its eastern slopes, we pass by a bog lough that has crystalline rings of crusty ice all
along its shoreline and, as we make our descent towards Lough Slievesnaght,
it feels like we have entered a sub-zero wind tunnel. We eschew climbing Slieve
Snaght in such inclement weather conditions and opt to descend to Lough Maam
via a col leading off the saddle.
The terrain down through the col is surprisingly benign, not
too steep or boggy and we finally breathe a sigh of relief to be out of the
infernal wind! Lough Maam soon floats into view, an almost circular scoop of
grey water ringed with granite boulders set amid a russet amphitheatre of boggy
ground. We enjoy a few minutes by its shoreline before beginning the slow
descent down towards the Devlin
River over ground that is
harsh and unforgiving, ankle breaking terrain of large tussocks tangled amid
wiry heather and dwarf alder and everywhere, patches of boot sucking bog.
Progress is slow and I’d hate to be traversing this valley on an airless day at
the height of midge season!
The cloud is beginning to break up a little as the sun
slides lower in the western sky, flooding swatches of the russet bog with golden
pools of light. The views back up towards Slieve Snaght and the buttresses of Drumnaliffernn Mountain are grand indeed. But the
minutiae of detail do not escape our attention for there is immense beauty in
these seemingly desolate boglands for those who care to look. Underfoot is a riot of colour - magenta, rose,
cadmium lemon and olive green - a miniature world of various feathery-edged and
star shaped mosses and the first barely visible green shoots sprouting from winter weary
heather. We happen upon a rabbit; too startled to bound off across the bog, it cowers
frozen in fear as we pass by.
Heading north, Errigal, massive and pink hued in the setting
sun, now completely fills our field of vision. As we approach the bottom reaches
of the valley, the ground drops steeply causing the Devlin River
to enter a small gorge. Filled with oak trees, this hidden grove next to the rushing
river will be delightful in summer. We finally come to the Owenwee River
which we manage to cross close to its junction with Croananiv Burn. Here it is shallow enough to hop
across the tops of some exposed but slippery boulders, but if in spate, it would be preferable to use an old stone bridge about 60 metres away that will bring you safety over Croananiv Burn. We scramble up the bank to hit a stony boreen and before long we join the tarmac road past the disused Church of
Ireland which we had looked down on yesterday from the R251. Long deprived the succour of a congregation, its gaunt outline
silhouetted against a darkening sky exudes a deep melancholy.
As darkness falls, we walk uphill to meet the R251, and, by
the light of our head torches, complete the 2.5 km back to the excellent Errigal
Youth Hotel where, after a very welcome hot shower, we feast on a dinner of
fillet steak washed down with craft ales. Thirty five kilometres and two days
spent in one of the least travelled parts of the island and we had not met with
a single soul. In this remote and pathless wonderland seemingly untrodden by
humankind, we might have been the only people left alive in the world. Many visitors experience the scenic wonders of the Derryveagh
Mountains by climbing the higher peaks of Muckish or Errigal, but for a true, unadulterated taste of wild Ireland , the
way that we went really takes some beating.
Watch the film of our two day trek and wild camp at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6fvjQhdU4Rw
Download a GPS track of our route at:
http://mountainviews.ie/track/report/2835/
Download a GPS track of our route at:
http://mountainviews.ie/track/report/2835/
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