Missing Anchors!
If you have the required skills and are planning a trip to eagles, please bring a drill and bolts to make descents through this canyon safer. See topo for details
Eagles
Summary
A very steep approach leads to an impressive canyon with big drops and narrow walls.
Canyon Descent:
350m
Highest Drop:
60m
Canyon Length:
1.2km
Minimum Ropes:
1 X 120m
Flood Risk:
Extreme
Access Type:
Public
Rock Type:
Pelite
Catchment:
5.05km2
Duration: in, down and out:
IN: 1.5hrs DOWN: 4hrs OUT: 40 mins
Anchors
Mixed (needs work)
Notes
Also known as Eas an Tuirc. Very sustained, check weather before you go!, New anchors installed on the 11/01/24. see Topo for details
Description
Approach by Car: Follow A83 to Clachan, park in the small parking area located just after you turn off the main road.
Approach by foot: follow signs to the brewery then the private road. Follow the private road until you reach the power lines then head up the hill. Once you reach the top of the hill head left towards the right side of the large crag in the distance. The canyon begins to the right of this crag.
Canyon entry: The canyon begins with a DC TL of the river.
Canyon descent: Very steep narrow and committing, multiple drops which require a rope, the upper section has some very impressive features and definitely shouldn't be missed.
Exit: The final drops are now shallow, once you make it to a long flat section of river either exit TL immediately and walk parllel to the base of the hill until you reach the road or follow the river TR until you see the road.
Escapes: Only escapable in the middle section of down climbs, see TOPO.
First Decent: (Unknown)
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Have You Descended This Canyon Recently?
If so we would love to hear from you in the comment section below! Let the whole community know more about this canyon, Information such as time taken to: approach, descend and exit are extremely helpful, as well as any new hazards you may have come across whilst canyoning at this location.
If any information on this page is missing, incorrect or out of date, please get in contact with us directly so we can rectify as soon as possible.
Disclaimer
No responsibility or liability is taken for any harm, death or loss of property from using the information found on Canyon Log. Topo features, descriptions and notes may not be accurate and could be misleading. You must carry anchor building materials, be experienced and use your own judgement when canyoning. Flooding can completely change the layout, features and conditions. Insufficient experience may result in death.
*New anchors added (11th Jan 2024)*
Low levels, pools frozen and bolts under a layer of ice.
We added/replaced some anchors on troublesome pitches (see updated topo).
A1 – the original anchors are 2 linked bolts on TL but it’s snaggy, previous groups got ropes stuck. We used the TL anchors for a traverse line to access TR and placed a monobolt with cleaner pull through.
A2 – it’s not too difficult to get on top of the sump
A4 – there’s a steep but straightforward escape here on TL
A6 & A7 – we added 2 linked bolts at the lip on the falls on TL, accessed by a 5m traverse line from the tree. We also added a monobolt for an optional rebelay ~35m down on TL. So the pitch (60m total) can be split into roughly 5m (traverse line) 35m (A6) then 20m (A7) *not exact, needs measured.
A8 – three old flood damaged pieces of webbing have been removed and replaced. Recommended to bring spare tat with you.
Fun adventure canyon, well worth the trip
Descended on the 18th July. Team of 4, Low water. Approach took 1.5hrs, definitely recommend not wearing the wetsuits for it. Very impressive canyon with some poor anchors, majority are Steel bolts that have deteriorated, some anchors are missing completely however it could still be ghosted at the time of descending. If anyone with the right skills is planing a descent, bring a drill and about 10 bolts for anchors and deviations to manage the pitches with multiple abrasion points.