pine, inside which the spirit of Revd Robert Kirk is supposedly captive.
Slightly to right of the upward path, a red waymark shows the descending one. At the hill foot it meets a track where you turn left, then right on the continuation of the track you arrived on.
The track runs into Kirkton village. Keep ahead on a street, past the graveyard supposedly containing the earthly remains of The Revd Kirk, (his grave is just behind the reconstructed chapel and is marked by coins scattered to appease the fairies). The street leads to the bridge of the Forth at Aberfoyle.
Votive offerings at the summit of Doon Hill. The spirit of Revd Robert Kirk is imprisoned within this tree.
SUMMIT SUMMARY: BEN LEDI
Low routes
7 | Finglas Woods |
10 | Kilmahog: Lowland to Highland |
Ben Ledi routes
6 | Ben Ledi and Benvane from Brig o' Turk |
8 | Ledi from Lubnaig |
9 | Ardnandave Hill to Ben Ledi |
ROUTE 6
Ben Ledi and Benvane from Brig o' Turk
Start/Finish | Little Drum car park, Loch Venachar head NN 548 062 |
Distance | 21.5km/13½ miles |
Total Ascent | 1350m/4500ft |
Time | 8¾hr |
Terrain | Hill paths and some pathless hillside |
Max Altitude | Ben Ledi 879m |
Maps | LR 57; Expl 365; Harvey Ben Ledi |
Note | Omitting Benvane saves 1km and 300m, about 1¼hrs |
Between Stuc Odhar and Ben Ledi is a place of bilberry slopes and schist, a patch of wild country that few visit as it really belongs about 100 miles further north. However, a new path up through Glen Finglas woods is considerably more convenient than driving all the way to Glenfinnan or Creag Meagaidh. The woodland path will just get better over the next few years as the birches grow; the wild ground is only moderately rugged; and it's fun surprising all the people on the busy southeast ridge by suddenly arriving from somewhere else.
Although no Munro, Ben Ledi is the highest point of the Trossachs and gives an outstanding overview of most of the national park. The sharp-eyed could also spot the sea on both sides of Scotland from here.
With Brig o' Turk as your base, it becomes very natural to continue along the knolly ridge for the horseshoe to include the second of the Corbetts, Benvane. Alternatively, there's a quick track descent by Gleann Casaig. Ben Ledi's more popular route, from Loch Lubnaig, is Route 8.
Start from Little Drum car park (or Lendrick car park 500 metres west). Keep ahead out of the car park on a path beside the main road (towards Callander) for 100 metres across a bridge. Then cross onto a path up through woods. It joins a wider track, and runs up through a gate with a bench. It bends left to pass a cairn and another bench – commemorating the Royal Mail Grove. The track bends to the right, and slants up to a higher track. This contours back to the left at 230m altitude. After 400 metres a slight descent to a stream is just ahead. Here a rougher waymarked path turns up to the right.
Looking back to Stuc Odhar from slopes of Ben Ledi
The path is clear, with widely spaced waymarkers. It runs up to right of the stream then bends left across its top. After 200 metres, two waymarks show the path as it crosses the next stream. The path is now a rough, peaty trod as it rises to a ladder stile (NN 552 080). Continue uphill northeast to the ridgeline of Stuc Odhar. Old fenceposts guide along the southeast ridge to the summit cairn. Stuc Odhar, pronounced ‘oh-arr’, is ‘Pointed Hill of nondescript dun colour’.
More old fencing guides down the northeastern ridgeline, skirting left of a ridgeline hump to a col just above the ridge foot (530m). Here turn down right in a grassy hollow to cross the top of the Milton Glen Burn. Ahead now Ben Ledi is looking very big. A direct ascent leads up broken ground, so slant right, eastwards, up a grassy ramp defined by a streamline. You reach Ben Ledi's southeast ridge at the point called Meall Odhar (815m). A large path leads up left to Ben Ledi's summit.
Benvane above Loch Lubnaig
A very pleasant ridge path leads northwest then north to Ledi's north top. Here ignore the rocky path steeply down ahead. Follow old iron fence posts that slant down northwest, with a clear path, to Bealach nan Corp. Over the next rise you pass the little Lochan nan Corp. Corp is indeed ‘corpse’; this pass was the line of an old corpse road.
The path and old fencing pass just to right of the small hummock of Bioran na Circe. Over the next 1km the path undulatingly descends towards a peaty col at 604m. Just above this col there's a short-cut track down left into Gleann Casaig. The track does not quite reach the ridgeline, so it's possible to walk past it; however, it is obvious in any glance back from the col just below. There are some hags to deal with as you cross this col, before grassy slopes lead up to Point 711m above Creag Chaoruinneach. The path and fence remnants now take a wide swing to the left over Meall a' Coire Dubh (753m), but you can contour forward, west, to cross a stream and head straight up to the summit of Benvane. Elsewhere in the Highlands this might be spelt Beinn Mheadhoin: it means ‘Middle Hill’.
Just down southwest from the summit are the old fence posts. Follow the path beside them to Meall a' Coire Dubh. At the corner of the former fence, with three quartz boulders seen up to the left, keep ahead down the gentle south ridge. Steep ground dropping right (west) appears transversely sliced, and is classic landslip terrain undermined by the glacier of Gleann nan Meann.
At its tip the ridge steepens, down to rough pasture. A fence crosses, with a gate at a convenient point (NN 535 102). Go through it and down the rough grass to join a track rising from back down on the left. It runs down towards Glen Finglas Reservoir, where it meets the reservoir-side track beside Allt Gleann Casaig.
Turn left over the river; the track now becomes a tarmac lane. Follow it for 1km, rising into woods above the reservoir until a smooth bike path turns up to the left (it has three boulders at its foot). It climbs briefly to pass through a deer fence, then contours through woods above the fence. It emerges onto open hillside for 1km, then dips into woods to a bridge. A short path down right leads to a waterfall – worthwhile in winter with the leaves off. In another 200 metres the main path turns downhill. Where it splits at a ruined shieling, either fork leads down to a gate into the Woodland Trust's Lendrick car park.
Turn left through the car park to a woodland path alongside the A821 to Lendrick Steading. Its driveway leads out to the Little Drum car park.
REVERSE ROUTE
This is straightforward apart from the descent