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Our Best Scramble Routes of 2006

In part two of our New Year special Dave Mycroft picks out his favourite scrambling routes of the year - with a range of gibber-factors:-)


Posted: 8 January 2007
by Dave Mycroft

In part two of our New Year special we pick out our best scrambling routes of 2006. With a choice of routes across the full range of grades from 1 through to 3S, and classic locations from around the UK, it's been a hard task selecting favourites, but here are our Top Five scrambles of 2006.

In 2007 we'll be doing something really exciting with the OUTDOORSmagic Routes Section, but in the meantime you can find all our weekly walking and scrambling routes in the Routes Archive.

More about new developments very soon but for now Happy New Year from OM and here's to a route-tastic 2007 pop pickers :-)


Scotland: Castle Ridge, Ben Nevis
Grade 3S (4 in the new system)

The easiest of the classic ridges of Ben Nevis, this is a great introduction to Ben Nevis without the crowds.

The approach takes you to the heart of Scottish scrambling and climbing, with the towering North Face and its classic and historical lines dominating everything around.
Full Route


Lake District, Sharp Edge, Blencathra
Grade 1

Sharp Edge is up there with Jack's Rake as a starting point for the move up from hillwalking to scrambling, and it's set in a superb location on one of the Lake District's most popular mountains - Blencathra. This makes it not only an ideal step up from Striding Edge, but a great way of avoiding the throngs heading up the normal Blencathra routes from the south (covered in our recent Blencathra walking route). To complete the day a descent of Hall's Fell Ridge makes a great route.
Full Route

Sharp Edge, from the OM Gallery by Jamie Bassnett - album


Snowdonia, Nor Nor Buttress, Tryfan
Grade 3

A superb, if difficult, route up Tryfan's imposing East Face. A good line on mixed quality rock follows a series of ridges and a brief diversion into the gully before emerging on the classic grade one North Ridge scramble where the going gets considerably easier.
Full Route

The East Face of Tryfan from Sean Cooper's OM gallery album


Skye, Bla Bhein
Grade 4

It would be so easy for Bla Bhein to be "the forgotten mountain", like Moel Siabod in Snowdonia. Being a Skye Munro helps boost its image, but the ridge to Clach Glas and stunning views of the Cuillin really mark it out as something special.
Full Route

Clach Glas and Bla Bheinn - Cath Sullivan from her Cath's Photos album


Lake District, Great End
Grade 2

A big day out in scrambling terms, with 1000ft of rock giving a superb line from the ever popular Corridor Route up to Great End and Scafell Pike, England's highest mountain.
Full Route


Andrew Terrill caught the mountain covered in snow in his Wild Moments album


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