🌲 The Merrick Trail ⛰

The mountains have been calling me a lot over the last few months. They didn’t shout loud enough for me to hear them though…

I planned to visit the Scottish mountain called The Merrick in January, but it was February before I had a free weekend and the weather was hopefully more favourable.

The Merrick is the highest mountain in southern Scotland sitting high at 2,766 feet. It lives in Glentrool, Galloway Forest Park, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.

It’s not a Munro (Scottish mountain over 3,000 feet) but is grouped together with many other mountains in Scotland between 2,500 and 3,000 feet. These mountains are known as Corbetts.

It was Saturday and we got up bright and early to get packed for our expedition. The weather forecast predicted that it would be foggy and cloudy on top of the mountain, with possible snow. It was going to be cold and I had never hiked in snow before. We didn’t have crampons either. I was wondering how far we’d both get… if at all.

We still went ahead anyway as this would be a good training hike for our Arran Coastal Way walk in June. We also recently purchased new cameras and I was excited to test out my new Lumix 100!

We layered up with warm clothes and packed what we needed for the day. It took us an hour and a half to drive there. As we drove through the coastal town of Girvan I’d forgotten how lovely it was with impressive views to the island Ailsa Craig. The volcanic plug looked so prominent from Girvan’s coastline.

I spied a fish and chip shop that we once visited when my children were little. The Marine Fish Restaurant. Mmm, it was calling me too. Maybe on the way back I thought.

As we approached the visitor centre at Glentrool I started thinking about the last time we came here. We climbed the Merrick in 2010 but didn’t walk the normal tourist route. Instead we walked around the lochs and climbed up the back of the mountain. There was no obvious path back then and it was a tougher boggy hike. We’d hoped to see the Grey Man of the Merrick rock formation but we didn’t find it.

I remember Alan was injured and struggled to keep walking. When we reached the top it was so windy that we couldn’t even sit and rest for a while. Nine hours it took us to finish. I have a few photos of that hike, I’ll attach them to the end of my post. I always vowed I’d come back and walk the regular route known as the Merrick Trail.

I quickly used the facilities in the lovely Glentrool Visitor Centre before continuing our journey further into the Galloway forest park. I was hoping we could go back there for a hot drink and food but it would have been closed by the time we got back

The mountains had a light dusting of snow on top.

glentrool01
Visitor Centre Car Park

After a short drive we arrived at the free car park near Bruce’s Stone and the Merrick Trail.

glentrool16

Bruce’s stone

It was so cold and windy. Alan was sorting out his gear at the car so I wandered off on my own towards Bruce’s Stone.

glentrool12
Information about Buchan and Glenhead Woods
glentrool13
Battle of Glentrool
glentrool62
Bruce’s stone

Lots of Scottish history here. Bruce’s stone is a cairn that was built in 1929 to remember a battle in 1307 which opened the campaign for independence. Robert the Bruce, King of Scots, and his 300 men defeated an English army of 1500 heavy cavalry by luring them to the steep banks of Loch Trool.

glentrool60
Bruce’s stone

Memorial battlefields certainly have a haunting feel about them when you try to visualise what it might have looked like. Sadness kicks in thinking of the lives on both sides that were lost.

glentrool61
Loch Trool

There’s also a 5.5 mile circular trail round Loch Trool that looks nice to walk. Ideal if you don’t feel like climbing mountains.

I could hardly feel my fingers when I was taking photos, they were so numb. I quickly put my gloves back on for some warmth and skipped back to the car park.

The Merrick trail

The full trail to the top of the Merrick and back is around 8.25 miles.

glentrool18
Start of the Merrick Trail

The path was quite good to start but then it became rocky, icy and muddy in places. We walked alongside the pretty Buchan burn that flows into Loch Trool.

glentrool58
Buchan Burn

This was a view I loved. Snowy mountains, drystone wall, rushing water from the burn, loch, trees, rocks, holly bush … it had everything in one picture.

glentrool57
Buchan Burn and Loch Trool

Then we met the kissing gate. A small v-shaped enclosure that allows one person at a time to go through. Push the gate, it touches (kisses) the enclosure at one side, step in, then push it back to get out the opposite side. I couldn’t go through the kissing gate without a kiss, so I stole one! 😘

glentrool59
Kissing gate looking south
glentrool20
Kissing gate looking north

I could hear the whooshing sounds of the waterfalls falling fast and plentiful. Even if we didn’t get to the top of the Merrick I wasn’t going to be too disappointed as I was already feeling that magical feeling of the outdoors.

glentrool10
Waterfall

We followed the sign for the rocky high path.

glentrool56
Merrick climb high path

The trail was showing me drystone walls everywhere, my favourite! I could see snow-capped mountains all around me. This was the view towards the southern uplands. A whole new place to explore one day.

glentrool54
Me looking south
glentrool21
Drystone wall and the southern uplands

Looking north, Ben Yellary is sitting to the left with the Merrick sitting behind on the right. We would need to climb Ben Yellary before reaching the Merrick. It was looking cloudy, snowy and cold up there.

glentrool03
Looking north to Ben Yellary and the Merrick

We met a couple with their dog walking back and stopped to ask how far they’d walked. They told us it was too icy and windy on the mountain so they turned back. Onwards and upwards we continued though. I was determined to go as far as I could.

Many of the trees I remember from 2010 were felled, possibly by the Forestry Commission. It looked wild and messy in places. I always wonder why some straggly trees are left standing.

New native trees will be planted I hope for our future generations to enjoy.

Glentrool52.JPG
Felled tree planted upside down

After a few photo stops we got back on the trail and I could see the Culsharg bothy in the distance. What a pretty place to live once upon a time.

glentrool26
Culsharg bothy ahead

This must have been someone’s house or farm in a different time. The land around the bothy was sheltered by the mountains and trees.

glentrool25
Culsharg bothy and Ben Yellary
glentrool31
Culsharg bothy

Inside the bothy was empty apart from a few logs and a makeshift bed. The building had a new roof and windows, so it was a dry place for shelter if needed. I’m sure many walkers/climbers have sought refuge here and stayed the night. I could imagine sitting around a campfire outside, all cosy and quiet telling ghost stories. I wish I knew more about its history.

glentrool29
Inside Culsharg bothy
glentrool28
Inside Culsharg bothy

Drystone walls were everywhere. It looked like they were possibly used to keep sheep.

glentrool30
Drystone walls at Culsharg bothy
glentrool50
Drystone walls at Culsharg bothy

It must have been so peaceful to live here. Imagine waking up every day to a view like this.

glentrool51
Pine tree and mountain view

After wandering around the bothy we headed up through the trail and reached a gate that took us into the woodlands.

glentrool32
The trail

It was sheltered in the woodlands and I started to feel too warm with my five layers of tops and thermals. Alan was overheating too and he was feeling pain in his knees. I didn’t realise that he was carrying a heavier backpack than normal and all the camera gear adds to the weight.

Walking up through the woods was quite steep and rocky. I moved over into the tree area as the ground was more level. It reminded me of walking through the woods to Urie Loch on the Isle of Arran. I love the feeling of being surrounded by the trees. The wind also makes strange noises swirling around the trees, it’s quite enchanting.

glentrool33
Looking down the rocky path
glentrool49
Looking down the woodland trail

After a steep climb we reached the line where the forest zone crosses the montane zone. Time to cross the line …

glentrool34glentrool35

As we climbed higher I personally felt like I was in a different world as soon as I stepped over that line. Snow was scattered all around us with the wind blowing a hoolie. Strong gusts would come and go as they please.

glentrool37
Ben Yellary
glentrool04
Mountain views
glentrool39
Patchy snow on the land

The trodden path was very icy in parts. Many other climbers were continuing so I kept trudging against the strong wind. I knew my limits and I wasn’t ready to stop yet.

glentrool38

Alan was a little further behind me so I stopped to wait for a little while. I didn’t realise he was zooming in on me with his camera! He captured this photo of me.

glentrool05
Me in the mountains

When the clouds cleared I could almost see the ocean shining in the distance.

glentrool46
I can almost see the ocean

The snow was becoming deeper the higher I walked with any path that was there being hidden.

glentrool41
Mountain views

Alan was quite a bit behind me now, but I kept going until I reached the impressive drystone wall. Piles of white fresh snow had been wind swept up on to the wall. It was such a pretty picture.

glentrool42
Snow and drystone wall

I could just make out the little island Ailsa Craig I mentioned earlier but then the clouds slipped over and it was gone. On a clear day the views would be so amazing here.

glentrool43
Drystone wall and snow

The snow was a few feet deep in places and this great wee wall travelled for miles in both directions. It reminded me of the wall in the movie Stardust. Cross over the wall and it will take you to a magical world.

glentrool40
Snow and drystone wall

I really wanted to get to the top of Ben Yellary as I could see others getting higher up the mountain.

glentrool44

I was waiting for Alan to catch up. He’d stopped further down the wall. Then I started to get worried as it looked like he was deep in snow and not moving. I quickly trudged back down through the long grass and snow, not really knowing what was under my feet.

He was okay thankfully. “Just sitting down for a rest” he said, while I was panicking that he was hurt or stuck in deep snow. The weight of his backpack was really putting pressure on his knees and calves. He was carrying lighter than we need for Arran Coastal Way … looks like we will need more training and also need to rethink what we carry.

glentrool06
Pretty snow on the wall

We stayed at the beautiful drystone wall for a little while and I wrote MPC in the snow to show my love and appreciation for My Peak Challenge. MPC has really encouraged me to keep challenging myself no matter what.

glentrool48
MPC snow
glentrool45
MPC snow on the wall

This was as far as we would go this day, but we’ll come back.

glentrool08
Mountain views
glentrool09
Neverending wall

We walked back down the mountain stopping now and then to take more photos. I noticed that I needed to look down a lot on this hike to watch my footing and where I was walking. Stopping was a must to look at the views around me.

We hiked six miles all in and I loved every minute of it. Even the cold parts. I was happy with what we achieved.

glentrool53
Admiring the view

Alan took this photo of a wee robin that was bouncing about the path. Such pretty colours.

glentrool11
Robin redbreast

Hiking makes me hungry

Yay, we were back! Even though we ate some rolls and cereal bars on our hike I still felt hungry. So we jumped into the car for a heat and enjoyed tinned tuna, then warm naked noodles.

The fish and chip shop in Girvan was still on my mind though. It had been a while since I’d eaten traditional chip shop chips … so we stopped off on the way home to please my craving. I think my body was telling me it really needed the carbohydrates and salt.

Photos from our hike in 2010

These are some old photos we took in 2010 from the different route. They show the views that we should have seen at the top of the Merrick. This is why we need to go back on a sunnier day to capture this beauty. Third time lucky I hope!

merrick-glentrool01
The lochs
merrick-glentrool02
The Merrick ahead
merrick-glentrool03
The lochs
merrick-glentrool04
Me walking through boggy fields
merrick-glentrool05
Lochs and drystone walls
merrick-glentrool06
Views across to the lochs
merrick-glentrool07
Climbing up the back of the Merrick
merrick-glentrool08
The summit of the Merrick
merrick-glentrool09
Views from the Merrick

Looking back at these photos it would have been really risky trying to reach the Merrick summit in the snow. Look at the drops on either side going up…

merrick-glentrool10
Looking back to the top of the Merrick
merrick-glentrool11
Rainbow over the lochs

This is the summit of Ben Yellary with the Merrick sitting high above it.

merrick-glentrool12
Summit of Ben Yellary

New camera

I’m still learning to use my new camera. I was mostly still on auto with the photos for this hike. I can’t quite capture the dramatic sky I can see and the colours of the land at the same time. It’s all work in progress for me.

Thanks for reading. I hope you enjoyed my story and photos!

Love, Dawn-Marie

15 thoughts on “🌲 The Merrick Trail â›°

  1. Hi Dawn-Marie! I really enjoyed reading your account of walking the Merrick trail, particularly your mention of the Culsharg bothy and beautiful photos. I thought you might like to know that it was inhabited for several generations by a family called the Wilsons, and they were indeed shepherds (or herds as they were known). They wouldn’t have owned the sheep or the house but tended the flock for its owners. Janet Wilson was my great great great grandmother; she grew up there (perhaps she was born there too). The house was very simple and remote and is said to have been the highest occupied dwelling in Galloway. It must have been a very hard life, but as you say, a beautiful place to live. I hope to visit Culsharg myself one day! Thank you for writing about it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hello Louise 🙂

      Thanks so much for telling about this. You really should visit Culsharg one day soon. So amazing that your great great great grandmother grew up there and maybe born there! The outside walls around the bothy certainly looked like a place sheep might have been kept. The view from the house is just so stunning.

      One day I will camp there, and you should too.

      Thanks so much for reading my post and letting me know about the history here. I really love to hear about real life stories from places I visit.

      Let me know when you visit, I’d love to hear all about it.

      Dawn-Marie x

      Like

    2. Roberta Gibson 8 June 2019 — 11:32 pm

      Louise,
      My great grandmother, Marion Wilson, also grew up in that location. She married in 1849 in Minnigaff and moved to America. I have a few more details that can authenticate my story. It’s been two years since your post so I hope you see this and contact me.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I had saved this and almost forgot it! I love how you capture the senses in your writing like the wind in the trees and hearing the waterfall before seeing! You have a talent for finding hidden special places and sharing their magic!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks so much for reading and I’m really pleased you like it :). When I receive a compliment like yours I feel I’m doing something worthwhile and it’s not as bad as I think. Self critisicm can be my worst enemy. 🙂

      Like

  3. Brilliant account of your walk – loved the photos, especially the Robert the Bruce reference which I didn’t know about. Happy climbing. 😀

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks Alan! I’d forgotten how beautiful it was there. I’ll need to go back in the summer to get to the top! 😀

      Like

  4. Lovely pics with your new cam! Sounds like a fab walk. I really need to get out into the wilds a bit more 😉

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks! I’m hoping my photos look a bit better … so difficult to know how others view them. It was so beautiful in Glentrool, I need to go back. Mind you, I say that about mostly everywhere I visit in Scotland. Go and explore the wilds and get in your miles! 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Snow is always hard to photograph because it’s so bright but yours have come out well. I love all the photos on your site and I was just admiring the design of it too 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Thank you so much. I kept it quite simple, and I keep wanting to change it. I can’t seem to find a template I like better and the one I use is free. I’m sure there are better designs out there, but the CSS code part confuses me lol 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

  5. Looks like a great hike – and one ill have to add to my list. I’ve had to wait to start climbing again until the snow has cleared – i’m not a fan!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks Kate! It was pretty slippery in parts but so beautiful to look at. You definitely should head down that way as part of your hiking and walking challange. So many beautiful walks. Thanks for reading my story 🙂

      Like

  6. Sounds like a good day out and with some fantastic views.

    Love getting a new camera! I have just bought a 35mm film camera and can’t wait to use it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks Mel! It was so pretty. I loved trying my new camera but still lots to learn and I’d like to try and work with RAW to make my photos nicer :). Yes, I seen you’re going back to old school! I can’t wait to see how your photos turn out. I used to have a polaroid camera when I was a teenager. I’d love to get one again. Thanks for reading my wee story 🙂

      Like

Leave a comment