In February 2019, Alex Roddie hiked the Cape Wrath Trail – but it wasn’t the wintry multi-week journey he’d been looking for.
The trail is long, but space on the page is limited, and we can only ever publish a glimpse of any trip in our print magazine. In this photo gallery we hope to offer a deeper look at the triumphs and trials of hiking a long-distance trail in a very strange winter – or is it simply the new normal?
To read Alex’s feature, don’t forget to pick up your copy of the May 2019 issue of The Great Outdoors. You can now order single copies online with free postage to anywhere in the UK.
By Alex and James Roddie
Ardnamurchan to Glenfinnan
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The start: Ardnamurchan Lighthouse. It felt like an exposed and lonely place on the edge of the Atlantic – and I could hardly imagine standing beside the other lighthouse at the end of my adventure, when I reached Cape Wrath.
© Alex Roddie
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A typical scene from the coastal stretch in Ardnamurchan. I’m about to get clobbered by another downpour.
© Alex Roddie
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I found some real winter on the Munros above Corryhully Bothy, Glenfinnan, but it didn’t last long.
© Alex Roddie
Glenfinnan to Torridon
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My brother James joined me for a few days of the walk through Knoydart, after the big thaw.
© James Roddie Photography
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The Allt a’ Chaorainn was the first real river crossing. Some estate workers advised us to cross before the usual crossing.
© James Roddie Photography
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A quiet moment in the bothy after dinner, reflecting on the day’s events and writing up my journal.
© James Roddie Photography
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The Finiskaig River on the way to Sourlies can be another serious crossing, but the water levels weren’t too high. James had returned to Glenfinnan by this point, leaving me to proceed alone.
© Alex Roddie
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Walking beneath Liathach. By the time I arrived in Torridon, I’d had several days of abysmal weather – but it still wasn’t very wintry.
© Alex Roddie
Torridon to Inverlael
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Wild pine forests beneath Beinn Eighe. In Torridon I met up with TGO’s Gear Editor Chris Townsend.
© Alex Roddie
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Entering Fisherfield, with a view ahead to Lochan Fada. This is a magnificent section of the CWT – beautifully wild and remote.
© Alex Roddie
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A starry wild camp beneath Bealach na Croise. I’d tried to walk all the way to Shenavall bothy from Beinn Eighe, but stopping for supplies in Kinlochewe slowed me down and I didn’t quite make it.
© Alex Roddie
Inverlael to Assynt
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Glen Douchary: a place of open views and surprisingly diverse pockets of wildness. There’s also a nasty bulldozed hill track nearby.
© Alex Roddie
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Bealach Trallgil: one of the last high points on the route, and still holding on to a little snow.
© Alex Roddie
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Increasingly summery weather; when this photo was taken, climbing up above Loch Glencoul, the temperature was almost 20ºC. In February!
© Alex Roddie
The final stage to Cape Wrath
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An abandoned croft near Kinlochbervie. The weather remained fine for the final 9-10 days of my walk.
© Alex Roddie
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A remarkable sight: the skull of a rare and endangered Northern Bottlenose Whale, standing like a monolith on the beach at Sandwood Bay.
© Alex Roddie
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One more mile due north to the lighthouse at Cape Wrath (the lighthouse is hidden beneath high ground from this vantage point).
© Alex Roddie