Expedition 208 - 31st January 2009
The Torr Mor Lookout

 


It was a chilly, wintry day, I was surprised to see anyone, but we had six explorers, two Calums, Donald, Fern, Robbie L. and Rowan; six adults, Gary, Howard, Pamela, Philippa, Richard L. and Sandra; plus four dogs, Ellie, Mojo, Roo and Suzie.

We started from the White Gate on the Dorlin road and set off down the riverside track. There were quite a few goldeneye feeding on the river and I hoped they would take off so that the explorers could hear their wings whistling, but they all stayed put. We located our special expedition gate and all went through and into the wood. The climb through the wood is quite exhausting and we reassembled in a sheltered glen before completing the climb to the top of the Torr Mor. Just below the top everyone had a look at the glacially marked rocks above the path.

The Lookout is one of the most tricky approaches of all the expedition features – in the past very few adults have attempted it, but this time everyone took their courage in both hands and negotiated the rocks until we were all inside (apart from the larger dogs). This is one of a group of lookouts in the area which all have a similar setup: they all face the nearest navigable water, they all provide the viewer with the ability to see without being seen and they all have a means by which a signal can be shown without being seen from below. The Torr Mor Lookout is better built than the others, having a well-constructed stone wall on the north side, and an entrance, through a cleft in the roof slab, with two steps built into it.

The Torr Mor blocks the view between the Shielfoot Torr and Castle Tioram, which may well have been the site of a fort before the present castle was built. It is just possible that the Torr Mor Lookout might have been used to relay signals between the two, alternatively, it might have been manned by personnel from the Castle.

After getting everyone safely back on top of the hill, and heaving a sigh of relief, I led everyone along the top to another sheltered corner of the wood where we stopped for a wafer break.
Some of the team left at this point to attend a Shinty match in Fort William, but the rest of us returned to the White Gate and made another hazardous excursion into the old quarry. This was operated by the late Paddy Heron in the 1940s when he was upgrading the Dorlin road for military use. It is quite the most dangerous quarry I know, and it was a miracle nobody got killed there. The rock face is very high and crumbly and it must have needed strong nerves to take the fallen rock out of the bottom when the rest was barely balancing in place. We could still see sections of split rock hanging off the face ready to fall and I was glad to get the expedition back to the safety of the road.

We still had a little time to spare so we made another stop at Cliff House, near the old sports field. I explained about Cliff once being a farm and told some stories about the MacEachen family who lived there. We had a look at the old water reservoir and explored a bit of the hill before returning to the cars for a quick run back to the Pantry.

I didn’t get a photograph of this expedition, but Robbie managed quite a good sketch of the boys precariously balanced on the boulders around the Lookout. You can take it from me, that’s just what it was like.

John Dye



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