Ben Aan. A.M We are advised by the Forestry Commission that - TopicsExpress



          

Ben Aan. A.M We are advised by the Forestry Commission that improvement work to the path and car park will mean that both are closed to the public from September 2014, for about a year. We aim to revisit Ben Aan and update this page once work is complete. For the moment the rest of this page remains as previously written. Whats in a name? The Ordnance Survey show this little peak as Ben An, or, in brackets as Binnein. The best authority on the subject, Peter Drummond in his Scottish Hill and Mountain Names suspects the origin to be Am Binnean, or small pointed peak: a perfect description. The origin of the confusion seems to be Sir Walter Scott, who wrote of it as Ben-an. Weve gone for Ben Aan simply because this is the version on the superb Harvey Maps 1:25,000 map which covers the Trossachs. And because we like it... To add to the confusion, Ben Aan isnt really a separate mountain at all; merely a point of rock on the south side of the less well known Meall Gainmheich, which at 564m is 110m higher than Ben Aan, but much less visited. There is a path approaching Ben Aan from Loch Katrine in the west, but the best known route is the one described here, from the south east. It starts in the large car park on the edge of Loch Achray about two miles west of Brig o Turk. Having crossed the A821 you follow the the good path up through the forest that, in recent years, has obscured the view of Ben Aan from below. This makes your first sight of Ben Aans unfeasibly pointy top still more striking when it emerges through the trees. As you approach a summit cone that offers a range of rock climbing opportunities, it is less immediately obvious how it is accessible to the mere walker. In practice, though steep in places, the route that bypasses the cone to its right is readily accessible to pedestrians. This cheats Ben Aans rocky face by dodging around its back to the bealach where it joins the bulk of Meall Gainmheich, then bringing you up to the top from the rear. The total route distance to the top is rather under 2km. The views from the top are superb, and out of all proportion to its modest height. Incidentally, while accounts differ about the name of this mountain, the same is true about its height. Weve gone with the Harvey Maps version of 454m, or 1488ft. Others have it as 462m, and the Ordnance Survey show the name next to a 461m spot height that seems to us to be a much less distinguished rise a few hundred metres to the east. Once again, take your pick...
Posted on: Fri, 19 Dec 2014 21:18:16 +0000

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