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KIRRIEREOCH TO BRUCE'S STONE (via the Merrick)
This is a demanding walk requiring a high level
of fitness and previous experience of traversing wild
country. There are no technical difficulties but the
final approach to the summit of the Merrick is steep.
The party will be transported to the start of this
challenging walk at Kirriereoch picnic site, map ref
NX359866, and follow the forest roads for approximately
4K. Due to recent harvesting the approach walk is
much more open affording views in all directions.
At the Cross Burn the route heads towards Kirriereoch
ridge and for a few hundred metres boggy conditions
may be encountered before the 3K climb to the top
of Kirrireoch. This is an opportune point to have
a break before the exertions that lie ahead although
the ascent is almost 500 metres the underfoot conditions
are good. This approach follows one of the fingers
of the Awful hand Range, the most westerly of the
three parallel north- south ranges in the Galloway
Hills.
As height is gained the threatening Black Gairy on
the Merrick looms menacingly to the south, and ahead
is the Little Spear which is the final steep climb
to the summit of the Merrick. In winter conditions
graded snow and ice climbs are possible on the Black
Gairy but it is a place best left to the experts.
Once the top of Kirriereoch (Gaelic Coire Riochd;
English great corrie) is reached the views in all
directions are stunning, but it is the sheer desolate
wilderness that is the most striking feature. This
is a magnificent spot to have a cup of coffee and
savour the magnificence of your surroundings.
The next stage of the route from Kirriereoch to the
Merrick is 1.5K involving a descent of 150 metres
and an ascent of 200 metres up the Little Spear, a
steep but well trodden route. Another of nature's
artworks is revealed to our left, the aptly named
Howe of the Cauldron another spot best viewed from
a distance. The summit of the Merrick (Gaelic Tiu
Meur-ach; English the finger or point) is 843 metres,
well short of a Munro but it is the highest point
in the south of Scotland and arguably more challenging
than many of the classified Munros. However, it is
a Corbett and as such attracts many Corbett baggers.
If timing is accurate lunch will be eaten in the
company of the group on the other Merrick walk. The
tourist path starts the descent for a few hundred
metres but the route follows the Rig of the Gloon,
a steep ridge that loses 400 metres in 1 kilometre,
to the valley that encloses the Buchan burn. There
is no obvious path in this section and walking poles
may provide extra reassurance, but the sparkling lochs
below and the ranges of the Kells, Dungeon and Minigaff
hills in the background make the effort very rewarding.
The route leads towards a forest road above Culsharg,
a disused herd's summer shelter and rejoins the tourist
path back to Bruce’s Stone overlooking Loch Trool
where transport will return the party to Newton Stewart.
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