Graham · Galloway
Lamachan Hill
Lamachan Hill (716m) is the high point of a separate Galloway ridge at NX43, lying south of Loch Trool between the Range of the Awful Hand and the Rhinns of Kells. A grass-and-bilberry crown carries a small boulder marker, with extensive Galloway Forest Park lochans spread below. Views reach south to the Solway and the Lake District on clear days, and west to the Merrick massif. As part of the SC Dark Sky Park, nights here are exceptional.
Quick facts
- Height
- 716.7m/ 2351ft
- Distance
- 13 km
- Ascent
- 587 m
- Time
- 3–6 hrs
- Grid ref
- NX435769
- Parking
- NX416804
- Nearest city
- Dumfries
- Dogs
- Dogs on lead required near livestockDog-friendly guide ↗
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Standard route
forest track 20% · moorland path 40% · grassy ridge 30% · summit area 10%
From Glen Trool car park at the Bruce's Stone (NX416804), follow the loch-side path and break south up the steep ridge of Curleywee, the satellite Graham. Continue west across the broad bealach onto Lamachan's east ridge; descent options include returning over Curleywee or dropping south to Glenhead. 13km circular with 587m of ascent — much of the height is regained twice.
Terrain
Forestry on the lower approach gives reliable tracks; once above the trees the going is on tussock-grass and bilberry with peat hags between the tops. Some erosion on the steepest part of the Curleywee ridge calls for care after rain. The summit itself is a broad grassy hump with little to navigate by in cloud.
In winter
Galloway gets less snow than the Highlands but Lamachan's open ridges accumulate windslab in deep westerly events — the SAIS Southern Uplands forecast (when issued) is the relevant reference. Frequent freeze-thaw glazes the bilberry slopes; ice axe is sensible in any settled cold spell. The southern latitude gives slightly longer December daylight than central Highland hills.
Best time of year
Getting there
- Glasgow2h 54m
- Edinburgh3h 42m
OS maps: OS Landranger 77
Mobile signal: Patchy in Glen Trool; signal returns on the summit ridge toward Newton Stewart
Current conditions
Daylight Today
- Sunrise
- 04:47
- Sunset
- 21:44
- Civil dawn
- 03:53
- Civil dusk
- 22:38
NOAA Solar Calculator · 31 May 2026
Pair with
Curated multi-hill combinations from Lamachan Hill.
Around Lamachan Hill on the SCOT network
Getting there, basing yourself, and what to do off the hill.
Getting there: Ayr station
Ayrshire coast; Galloway approach via bus/car
46km from the hill
tripscot.co.uk
On TripSCOTBase yourself in Kirkcudbright
Galloway base — Solway coast, Galloway Forest, Mull of Galloway Trail
36km from the hill
tripscot.co.uk
On TasteSCOTAfter the hill: Bladnoch
Wigtown — Galloway's only distillery; Scotland's most southerly
23km from the hill
tastescot.co.uk
Lamachan Hill — common questions
- How hard is Lamachan Hill?
- Lamachan Hill is rated 3/5 (moderately challenging) on the OutdoorSCOT scale. The standard route covers about 13km with 587m of ascent and takes most walkers 3-6 hours. Terrain: Forestry on the lower approach gives reliable tracks; once above the trees the going is on tussock-grass and bilberry with peat hags between the tops.
- Where do I park for Lamachan Hill?
- Standard parking is at NX416804 near Glasgow. Check the parking grid reference on an OS map before travel; informal laybys can fill on summer weekends.
- When is the best time to climb Lamachan Hill?
- The standard good-weather months for Lamachan Hill are April, May, June, July, August, September, October. Outside those months, expect winter conditions on the high ground — full mountain kit, navigation skills, and a check of the SAIS avalanche forecast for the relevant region.
- Can I bring my dog up Lamachan Hill?
- Yes, but dogs must be kept on a lead — there is livestock or ground-nesting bird interest on the route.
- Is there mobile signal on Lamachan Hill?
- Patchy in Glen Trool; signal returns on the summit ridge toward Newton Stewart
- Is Lamachan Hill safe in winter?
- Galloway gets less snow than the Highlands but Lamachan's open ridges accumulate windslab in deep westerly events — the SAIS Southern Uplands forecast (when issued) is the relevant reference. Frequent freeze-thaw glazes the bilberry slopes; ice axe is sensible in any settled cold spell. The southern latitude gives slightly longer December daylight than central Highland hills.
