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Cruach Ardrain

The Scots Magazine

|

December 2025

This summit in the Southern Highlands is a versatile climb for walkers seeking adventure

- by ROBERT WIGHT

Cruach Ardrain

ITS distinctive, rugged outline ensures rocky Cruach Ardrain is a hill familiar in outline far and wide.

There's a wee hill I climb often, for training, just north of my home in the Trossachs. The view from the summit is a wonderful panorama, a great ring of peaks from Ben Lomond in the west, then Ben Venue, on to Beinn Tulaichean, Cruach Ardrain, Stob Binnein, Ben More, all the way round to Ben Vane and Ben Ledi in the east.

For me, it's craggy Cruach Ardrain that steals the show. It's far smaller than its immediate neighbours – towering Ben More and Stob Binnein, which are both aesthetically pleasing hills – but Cruach Ardrain's steep, broken northeastern aspect gives it real drama.

It lies at the heart of the seven Munros just south of Crianlarich – and of the five western Munros in that group, it's easily the finest summit.

The hill is often climbed along with the smaller Munro Beinn Tulaichean, which lies about 2km (1.2 miles) away at the southern tip of Cruach Ardrain's south ridge. They don't really feel like separate hills. A common way of climbing them is from Inverlochlarig, at the end of a long section of single-track road from Balquhidder off the A84.

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