Maggie Fergusson

A narrow escape in Britain’s most treacherous mountain range

Simon Ingram describes his near-fatal 50ft fall in the Cuillin, Skye’s notoriously dangerous ‘Black Ridge’

The Inaccessible Pinnacle in the Cuillin. Even in summer, climbers contend with frostbite, avalanches and ice-glazed rocks. [Alamy] 
issue 28 August 2021

Twenty-five years ago, my cousin Jock, a Scottish priest, rang in shock. Two priest friends, David and Norman, had been walking in the Cuillin in Skye. As Norman rounded a boulder, it dislodged and rolled him off the mountain. He screamed: ‘David, save me!’ They were his last words.

The Cuillin — or Black Ridge — slice the island of Skye in two. On a map they are a Spaghetti Junction of deranged scribbles. Closer to, they rise up like the fangs of Mordor in dizzying spires with names such as ‘The Executioner’. ‘The Inaccessible Pinnacle’ is something like Orkney’s Old Man of Hoy, only rising not out of the sea, but off the top of a mountain. The highest peak, Sgùrr Alasdair, is more than three times the height of the London Shard, or higher than ten Big Bens. Should you fall off it, it would take you 14 seconds to hit the sea.

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