📌 The Trossachs, Stirling
★★★

Above the Rob Roy Way south of Kilmahog lie two hills which are small in stature but surprisingly tough to climb. The first – Bochastle Hill – features a gnarled old boulder reputedly left by strongman Samson. The second – Dunmore – is an iron age hill fort, with faint earthworks still visible around the grassy summit area once you’ve successfully tackled the tussocky ascent. Both hills offer excellent views over Callander and Loch Venachar considering their small size, with Ben Ledi also occasionally visible through gaps in the trees. Parts of the circuit are steep and muddy – bring decent footwear and reward yourself at the Lade Inn, around the corner from the finish.

📷 Chronological photo guide

🌍 Location

📌 Start / finish at car park on west side of A821 just south of Kilmahog

🧭 O.S. Grid Reference: NN 607081

🛰️ GPS coordinates: 56.245391,-4.248691

🚌 Rare bus to Kilmahog

🚗 Car park

📝 Key info

▶ 3 km / 2 mi | ▲ 160 m | ⌛ 1.5 hr

Features: △ Bochastle Hill (180 m); ⛰️ Samson’s Stone; 🏰 Dunmore Fort

Moderate | Unmade path on Bochastle Hill, sometimes muddy and steep with one very boggy area on descent. Ascent to Dunmore Fort is by a rough, steep path. Clear but steep path for descent; return is surfaced and mostly level.

➡️ Anticlockwise circuit: start – Bochastle Hill & Samson’s Stone – cross footbridge / boardwalk – Dunmore Fort – return by Rob Roy Way

Download file for GPS

🥾 On our last visit

Wildlife: Not much!

Weather: 10°C, sunny intervals, dry, light winds.

October 2019
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