Knoydart

Discover Knoydart with a GBAC guided expedition.

Experience Knoydart as it deserves to be experienced -- properly, on foot, with wild camps in the glens and days spent pushing into country that most people never see. Sitting between Loch Hourn and Loch Nevis in the north-west Highlands, the peninsula covers around 55,000 acres of steep-sided glens, high passes and ridgelines with views to Skye and the Outer Hebrides. Golden eagles patrol the hillsides. Red deer move through the corries. The population of the whole peninsula is around 100 people.

Routes in typically start at Glenfinnan or at Kinloch Hourn, where the road simply ends and the wilderness takes over. Knoydart holds three Munros -- Ladhar Bheinn, Luinne Bheinn and Meall Buidhe -- none of them easily reached, all of them worth every step. Nights are spent wild camping in some of the most rewarding spots anywhere in the UK.

At the end of it all sits Inverie, the peninsula's only village, with a bunkhouse, a Knoydart Foundation campsite, and The Old Forge -- the most remote pub on the UK mainland. It's a well-earned finish line.

Booking through The Great British Adventure Club connects you to guides who know this landscape in all weathers and all seasons. With their knowledge behind you, Knoydart stops being an intimidating prospect and becomes exactly the kind of adventure you've been meaning to do for years.

Experiences

FAQ

There's nowhere else in Britain quite like Knoydart. Bounded by sea on one side and trackless mountain country on the other, it has earned its reputation as the country's last great wilderness honestly. No road connects it to the rest of the mainland. To get there you walk, or you take the boat from Mallaig, and either way you arrive having made a genuine effort. That's the point. Knoydart asks something of you, and gives a great deal back.

The walking in is part of the experience, not just the means to it. From Glenfinnan, beneath the viaduct made famous by a certain railway scene, routes head west through the Rough Bounds, two days of glens and passes before the peninsula proper opens up. From Kinloch Hourn, the approach skirts the rocky southern shore of Loch Hourn towards Barrisdale, with the mountains rising straight out of the sea loch beside you. Both are demanding. Both are unforgettable.

For those drawn to the summits, Knoydart's three Munros are among the most satisfying in Scotland precisely because they are so hard to reach. Ladhar Bheinn, the most westerly, looks out over the Sound of Sleat towards Skye. Luinne Bheinn and Meall Buidhe sit deeper in, rewarding the effort of getting to them with the kind of solitude that's increasingly rare on Scotland's hills. These are not days to be rushed, and they're far better tackled with someone who knows the ground.

Weather here deserves real respect. Knoydart catches the full force of Atlantic systems, and conditions can change quickly. The remoteness that makes it special also means that if something goes wrong, help is a long way off. This is exactly why a guided trip makes sense. Our guides handle the route-finding, the river crossings, the camp craft and the judgement calls, so you can focus on the experience rather than the logistics. Whether you're stepping into multi-day wild camping for the first time or you've got plenty of nights under canvas behind you, you'll be in capable hands.

And when the walking's done, there's Inverie. A scatter of houses, a campsite run by the Knoydart Foundation, a bunkhouse, and The Old Forge, the most remote pub on the UK mainland and a thoroughly fitting place to raise a glass to a few hard days in the hills. It's the kind of finish that stays with you long after the boots have dried out.