Torridon and Wester Ross hold some of the oldest and most spectacular mountain country in Britain. This is the far north-west of Scotland, where 750-million-year-old sandstone piles up into isolated peaks that rise almost straight from sea level — Liathach, Beinn Eighe and Beinn Alligin, the great Torridon giants, standing over a landscape that feels closer to the edge of the world than the edge of a country.
Beneath the sandstone sits Lewisian gneiss, among the oldest rock in Europe at close to three billion years. You feel that depth of time here. Beinn Eighe became Britain's first National Nature Reserve in 1951, and the ground around it — quartzite ridges, hidden lochans, ancient pinewood — is as wild as anything the UK has left.
Push north and west and you reach Fisherfield, the "Great Wilderness": a roadless quarter holding the remotest Munros in Scotland, where A' Mhaighdean sits further from a public road than any other summit in the country. This is expedition ground — the sort of place you carry everything, camp where you can, and go days without seeing a fence.
Booking through GBAC puts you with a qualified Mountain Leader who knows this remote country properly — the river crossings, the escape lines, the weather that rolls in off the Atlantic. Small groups, kit available to hire at checkout, and no illusions about how serious, and how rewarding, this ground is.
It's remote, and that's the point. Achnasheen, on the Inverness–Kyle railway, is the nearest railhead, with Kinlochewe and Torridon village a short drive on. Most people arrive by car via Inverness. Exact meeting points come with your booking — expect a long, beautiful final approach.
Yes, for most of it. These are big, committing mountains and the Fisherfield trips are full wilderness expeditions. You'll want solid hill fitness, comfort on steep and rough ground, and ideally some multi-day experience. Each trip page is honest about the level; ask us if you're unsure.
Fit. The Torridon peaks involve long days with sustained ascent on rough, rocky terrain, and the Fisherfield rounds add remoteness and multiple days with a pack. If you walk regularly in the hills and want a step up, you're likely ready — message us and we'll be straight with you.
Group safety kit is your guide's job. Personal camping gear — tent, sleeping bag, pad — can be hired at checkout, which helps if you don't own full expedition kit. Given the terrain and weather, footwear and waterproofs matter a lot here; each trip page lists what to bring.
Liathach, Beinn Eighe and Beinn Alligin — three of Scotland's finest mountains, all quartzite-capped sandstone with narrow, exposed ridgelines. Liathach in particular is a serious undertaking. Our guided trips take them at the right pace, with the exposure managed rather than sprung on you.
It's a large, roadless area between Torridon and Ullapool holding some of Scotland's remotest summits. A' Mhaighdean is often called the most remote Munro in the country. Reaching these peaks means carrying what you need and camping out — which is exactly what makes it unforgettable.
May to September for the long days and best chance of settled spells; May and June often bring the driest, clearest weather before the midges peak. Winter here is proper mountaineering. Each trip runs in the season that suits it, listed on the page.
Atlantic and unpredictable — this coast catches the weather first. You can get glorious clear days and you can get days of horizontal rain, sometimes on the same trip. Your guide plans around the forecast, which out here is the difference between a good expedition and a grim one.
In summer, yes — the west coast is midge country from roughly June to August, worst in still, damp conditions. They're a nuisance, not a danger. Repellent, a head net and a bit of breeze handle them, and your guide will pick camps with that in mind.
Genuinely remote — in Fisherfield you can be a full day's walk from the nearest road, which is rare in Britain and part of the draw. Your guide carries comms and safety kit, is first-aid qualified, and plans routes with escape options. You're far out, but not unsupported.
Torridon is the kind of place that recalibrates what you think British mountains can be. There's nothing gentle or rolling about it — the peaks stand up hard and separate, the light off the sea does extraordinary things, and even experienced hillwalkers tend to go quiet the first time they properly see it.
If you've got the fitness and some hill experience, the Torridon giants are among the best mountain days in the country — big, exposed, ancient, and unforgettable when the cloud lifts. Doing them with a guide who knows the ground means you spend the day on the mountain rather than second-guessing the route.
And when you want to go further out, Fisherfield is waiting: days of walking into country with no roads, no fences, and hardly another soul — carrying your life on your back and camping wherever the ground allows. It's as close to true wilderness as these islands get, and it's not something you forget.
This is not easy country, and we won't pretend otherwise. But for the miles you put in, few places give back more — the oldest rock in Britain underfoot, the Atlantic weather rolling through, and that deep quiet of somewhere genuinely remote. Look at the trips below, find your level, and come and see the north-west properly.