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Certainly, a return from Merrick
and Benyellary via Bennan and the Fell of Eschoncan
- with its maginficant views over Loch Trool - make
a fitting climax to a very rewarding walk in one
of the finest scenic areas of South West Scotland,
if not the whole country.
Bruce's Stone car parks are reached
along a well signed road from the village of Glentrool,
off the A714 at Bargrennan. The road also passes
a particularly attractive car park and picnic site
at the spot where Stroan Bridge crosses the cascading
waters of the Minnoch. A Visitor Centre and Shop
serves light meals. From here there starts a number
of waymarked trails.
The 'top' car park at Bruce's Stone
is the start for a fairly short, 8km walk over the
Fell of Eschoncan, to Bennan and return via the
lower slopes of Benyellary and Culsharg bothy. The
path, unsigned, starts near the end of the elongated
car park and ascends through bracken and quite steeply
to the Fell's summit, 347m, marked by an OS pillar.
We won't actually pass the summit
trig point on this walk but circle via several cairns,
following a fairly clearly defined path to a gap
in the forestry and onto a newly upgraded forest
road. The walker should go straight across the road
and ascend via another well defined path. You climb
steeply at first then more gradually up the slopes
of the Bennan. In a short while the very prominent
radio communication mast which marks the summit,
can readily be seen and the walker is able to choose
their own route to the top. Note the unusual ridge
formation of Bennan's rocky surface.
Bennan's summit, 582m, also has
a cairn and the buildings asscociated with the mast.
The road that winds its way down the western slopes
of the hill can be followed to the Visitor centre
at Stroan Bridge.
The return for our walk today starts
by following the road in a north-easterly direction
until the road heads off at a hairpin bend to the
west. From here continue north east through an opening
in the wall and head towards the wall to your left
which marks the path to the summit of Benyellary.
The walker is recommended to take this diversion
to avoid a very wet section on the lower slopes
of Benyellary.
Pick up the newly constructed rough
path which winds its way in a southerly diirection
across the seemingly endless boggy section which
once plagued walkers on this section of the tourist
path to the Merrick summit. You now follow the well
defined path as it descends into the forest via
Whiteland Burn and Culsharg bothy before returning
to the car park and start point.
Mention was made earlier of going
to Merrick via Bennan. This presents no difficulty;
walkers simply continue to the summit of Benyellary
as opposed to our route for today which descends
from this point. Conversely, if a return from Merrick
is to be made over Bennan, the wall down from Benyellary
has to be followed but the sharp left-hand turn
should be ignored - continue along the wall until
its meeting with another where the walker should
go left and onto the road to the summit mast. The
way back to the car park is then almost due south,
down Bennan slopes to the forest road where a gap
on the opposite forestry leads to a path that circles,
via several cairns to the cairn on the head of the
Fell of Eschoncan. There remains, then, just the
fairly steep descent to the car park below.
A map showing the route is reproduced
for your information.
Route Summary
Ascend N following path to
summit cairn on Fell of Eschoncan from car park.
Continue to follow fairly clearly trodden path due
N to forest gap and forest road. Cross forest road
and continue N on fairly clear path to summit of
Bennan. From the summit follow forest road due north
east then at hairpin bend continue NE across open
hillside climbing the lower slopes of Benyellary.
Pick up well defined footpath (tourist ascent route
to Merrick) and turn SE. Descend due S through forest
cross forest road then continue via Culsharg bothy
following a newly upgraded path and the Buchan Burn.
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