I’ve
been on holiday to Galloway a lot over the past ten years or so but the only
significant venture to what could be classed as elevated terrain was an
afternoon excursion to bag the summit of Criffel. The lure of Merrick had been gnawing away at
me for some time and as it is a TRAIL 100 mountain, a midweek day out from our
holiday cabin had been pencilled in the diary.
After
parking at the Bruce’s Stone car park in Glen Trool I hastily lacing my boots
to minimise exposure to the troublesome midges.
The path leading away from the road quickly left them behind and it
wasn’t long before Culsharg bothy came into view. I stopped for a quick look around when I spend
my first night in a bothy, it won’t be here; although reasonably spacious, it
just felt a bit tatty to me! Perhaps
Culsharg is not an unusual example and my future bothy experiences are going to
be a bit disappointing.
|
Benyellary above Culsharg bothy |
The
path from Culsharg quickly reaches the forest road and enters the forest where
the ascent starts in earnest. As the
path reaches open ground there is a paving stone marking the terrain boundary which
is unique in my hillwalking experience.
From here it is an easy walk to the summit of Benyellary followed by
equally easy terrain over the Neive of the Spit to the Merrick’s summit. The views to the west coast as you traverse
this high route are impressive with the granite outpost of Ailsa Craig drawing
the eye.
|
the boundary stone |
|
Neive of the Spit to Merrick |
|
Ailsa Craig |
There
were a few other walkers on the way up but I soon gained solitude by descending
Merrick’s south-east ridge of Redstone Rig, aiming for the Grey Man of Merrick,
a geomorphological mimetolith bearing an uncanny resemblance to a bearded
man. A wide gully led me almost directly
to it and I tried many angles to take the best photo, but the classic view is
unbeatable. Unusually for a rock
feature, it was recognisable as a face from the left, the right and head-on.
|
the Grey Man of Merrick |
I originally had a plan to walk over to the Murder
Hole and follow the Gairland Burn path back to the car but I decided that the path
marked on the Ordnance Survey Explorer map alongside Buchan Burn would be a
shorter route take less time. The path
was hard to follow, which may explain why it wasn’t marked on the Landranger
map and when it was clear to see, the ground was somewhat damp! It turned into a muddy quadbike track in the
forest and when the gradient eased it turned into very boggy ground. At one point I went knee-deep into the morass
and as I tried to regain my footing I split my trousers! But luckily the forest road wasn’t too far
away and the walk past Culsharg to Bruce’s Stone was quiet enough to hide my
embarrassing attire.
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