The Devil's Staircase

A winding road running through a valley with rugged, cloud-capped mountains in the Scottish Highlands, and a vista of moorland with sparse vegetation.

The Aonach Eagach is a rocky ridge lying to the north of Glen Coe in the Scottish Highlands, boasting two Munro summits.

A path known as the Devil's Staircase crosses the range about 6 km east of Meall Dearg. Today, as part of the West Highland Way, it is used primarily by walkers and mountain bikers travelling between Kinlochleven and Glencoe.

The Devil's Staircase was given its name by the soldiers who were part of the road building programme of General Wade, because of the difficulties of carrying building materials up that stretch of the road. Later, however, the road lived up to its name when workers building the Blackwater Dam chose to travel to the Kings House Hotel after they had been paid, rather than walking down to Kinlochleven. The journey to the pub often proved to be more difficult than they realised and on the return trip, after a few drinks on a cold winter's night, the devil often “claimed his own.”

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Canon EOS 5D Mark II
Canon EF 24-70mm f/2.8L USM
24 mm
ISO 320
ƒ/13
1/20 s
Map showing location of “The Devil's Staircase”

Scotland

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