The romance of a steam powered train as it crosses Glenfinnan Viaduct (wikipedia) |
Starting point for the West Highland train (wikipedia) |
The
train originates from Queen Street Station in Glasgow . With frequent service between
Glasgow and Edinburgh, travelers staying in Scotland ’s capital have easy
connection. A change of trains to the West Highland line is necessary in Glasgow , however.
This
is not an express. Plan for five-hours or more between Glasgow and Mallaig. Due
to irregular stops, many of which are by request only, trains easily get off
schedule. Day-trippers can make a round-trip, but an early start is a must.
Many
riders travel to Mallaig to catch the ferry to the Isle of
Skye . Frequently those travelers return by way of Oban to take the
train to Crianlarich
where coaches reconnect for the trip back to Glasgow .
The famous Loch Lomond at twilight in the rugged highlands of Scotland (wikipedia) |
The tiny four carriage trains pull out
of Glasgow
roughly paralleling the River Clyde. It doesn’t take long for the surroundings
of Glasgow to
give way to rugged mountain terrain that plunges into picturesque lochs through
a scrim of morning mist. Soon the double tracks merge into a single serpentine
ribbon of steel that promises bold new adventures up ahead.
The cramped interiors are not designed
for luxury, but passengers don’t seem to mind as they flit from one side to the
next to view each new panoramic vistas.
Scottish loch in the primeval setting of the Highlands (wikipedia) |
With a constantly changing carousel
of scenery, one side of the train is no better than the other. Simply choose a
seat and be prepared to be awed while shuffling back and forth to witness the
majestic scenery that stream by the window.
Gare Loch is first. As home to Britain ’s
nuclear submarines, it seems incongruous amid the tree-lined brownish-green
hills covered with bluebells.
Gradually the hills become more
mountainous. On the right a long, deep, U-shaped valley known as Glen Douglas
guides travelers toward the “bonnie, bonnie banks of Loch
Lomond ."
Wooly Highland sheep add to the aura (wikipedia) |
Soon the loch made famous in the song Loch Lomond comes into view with Ben (Gaelic for
“mountain”) Lomond towering over the scene. Across the water lies Inversnaid,
the rolling landscape once roamed by legendary Scottish folk-hero Rob Roy
MacGregor.
Just beyond, the train coasts through
a tunnel of trees that eventually reveals streams rushing beside fields of
wildflowers and steep heather carpeted banks covered with craggy yellow gorse.
Here and there shaggy brown Highland cattle
graze lazily, oblivious to the curiosity seekers aboard the train.
The train divides at Crianlarich with
two carriages traveling to Oban, and the other pair to Mallaig.
Tiny and remote Crianlarich station (wikipedia) |
Wheels sing upon the tracks as steel
grinds against steel at every sharp bend in the rails. Just north of Tyndrum the train makes a
dramatic horseshoe turn around a curve that wraps around a valley lined by two
large conical hills.
From there it’s on to Rannoch Moor
with its eerie Hound of the Baskervilles
aura. The train is the only way across the boggy pockmarked moonscape with its
outcroppings of rock and lonely otherworld atmosphere. Desolate though it may
be, the Rannoch Moor is a highlight of the journey.
Eerie Rannoch Moor with its Hound of the Baskervilles atmosphere (wikipedia) |
But there’s no time for despair
because just after the moor, the stunningly beautiful Loch Treig comes into
view. The squealing wheels hush as the train gently glides beside bluish-gray
water that yields to rising banks of deep green on the opposite shore.
Ben Nevis Mountain just outside of Fort William is the highest peak in Great Britain (wikipedia) |
As the train pulls into Fort William ,
passengers catch a view of the ruins of historic 13th century
Inverlochy Castle, which was the site of two major battles. Fort William ,
the largest town in the region, nestles in the shadow of the highest mountain
in Great Britain .
At 4,400 feet, Ben Nevis is a Mecca
for hikers. The base alone has a whopping circumference of 24 miles.
Those who journey onward however, are
in store for the indescribable beauty of Glenfinnan Viaduct with its 21 arches
that curve southward toward Loch Shiel. Along the shore of the loch stands Glenfinnan Monument
marking the site where the Jacobite Rising of 1745 erupted when Bonnie Prince
Charlie raised his standard to raise an army and march on Edinburgh .
Summer travelers can enjoy crossing
the viaduct aboard a steam-powered train. It’s the ultimate romance of the
rails that can only be appreciated by the experience itself.
The Glenfinnan Viaduct is a highlight of the West Highland excursion in Scotland (wikipedia) |
The end of the line is Mallaig, where
frequent ferries are available for visits to Rum, Eigg and other small islands
as well as the popular Isle of Skye .
This
is rail travel as it once was and as it should be. Scotland ’s West Highland Line is a
memory in the making.
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