The Estate contains extensive footpaths laid down in the 19th century for the deer ponies. They pass through the pine forest, via waterfalls to inland lochans and the Torridon sandstone interior.
Walking on the estate is enough to fill the most vigorous walker’s week. The proximity to mountains such as Liathach, Ben Alligin and Ben Eighe provide an additional supply of Scotland’s most famous climbs.
Maol Chean Dearg is the highest peak on the Estate and at 933 metres (3,060 feet) and is the only munro. In the foreground is Lochan Eoin, the haunt of both black-throated and red-throated divers. To climb Maol Chean Dearg by an easy route would take most of a day.
Ben Damph itself is also a spectacular and challenging climb, rising to 2,960 feet, just a few feet off munro height. Once at the top, there’s a two-mile ridge walk comparable to all the more frequently visited munros.
For river walks there is the river Thrail (estate water), which runs through the estate into the river Torridon (the Thrail House is situated next to the river). There is also the river Balgy (not estate water) that runs from Loch Damph to the sea just west of the estate boundary. Both these rivers are very pretty with many waterfalls.
As well as everything the estate has to offer, there are many historic sites, museums, gardens, craft and visitor centres in the surrounding Torridon area.
Early Times
The whole of the Beinn Damh Estate lies in the parish of Applecross (a’chomraich in gaelic) and thus in former times was part of the lands of the ancient Abbey of Applecross, founded by St Malruba (Maol Rubha) in 673 A.D. Some place names on the estate reflect the fact that they were on the edge of this ecclesiastical property. For many years, the titular Abbot of Applecrcross was drawn from the clan Anrias, the ancient Rosses. Following their fall from grace in the fifteenth century the parish fell into the hands of the nearly related clan Coinnich, the MacKenzies. Indeed the MacKenzies of Applecross held most of the parish until the nineteenth century. Perhaps not surprisingly the principal surname in the area is MacKenzie, though there are many MacDonalds along the North shore of Loch Torridon, approaching Gairloch Parish.
The Annat Skull
Annat is the surviving village of the estate, and former home of the famous Annat skull. The skull was from of an unfortunate woman called Grant who committed suicide. In the eighteenth century, a suicide was not permitted burial in sanctified ground, so Grant was buried outside, close to the wall of the old burial ground. Her skull came up to the surface many times and eventually became famous throughout the Celtic world as the instrument in a cure for epilepsy. It was necessary to drink water out of the skull from a particular spring and at the same time perform a prescribed walk accompanied by certain incantations. Though seeming somewhat strange today, apparently it never failed to work.
The Victorian Era
In the latter half of the nineteenth century the Earl of Lovelace (4th) purchased the Beinn Damh Estate from the Duke of Leeds, at that time the proprietor of Applecross, and built Beinn Damh House (now the Torridon Hotel). The present Earl of Lovelace (6th) lives in Torridon House, his father having bought the Torridon Estate in about 1950.
As well as building the Beinn Damh House and several other fine houses on the Beinn Damh Estate the 4th Earl set about building the splendid network of stone paths, which cross and re-cross the whole estate. These paths are superbly engineered and unsurpassed in the Highlands. Path building ceased at the outbreak of war in 1914 and was never resumed.
The 20th Century
In the early 1960s Beinn Damh House was converted into a hotel and managed by the Lovelace family, who moved into Torridon House.
Following the death of the 5th Earl the now Loch Torridon Hotel and the Beinn Damh Estate were sold to Major Braithwaite who later sold the hotel back to the Countess of Lovelace and the estate to a Dutchman, Mr Katz.
The present proprietors purchased the estate from Mr Katz in 1983. The Loch Torridon Hotel now belongs to Mr & Mrs David Gregory and family.