The Scottish Coastal Way is a proposed national long-distance trail that goes around the coastline of mainland Scotland. The idea was first proposed by walkers, and in November 2009 Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) hosted a conference on the subject.[1] In 2010 SNH estimated that around 2,700 km of coastal paths and routes were existence, compared to a total coastline length of 10,192 km. The existing coastal paths were predominantly in the more populous parts of the country, and few coastal paths exist in more remote areas such as Highlands and Islands.[1] It was recognised that a coastal route, along the lines of the Wales Coast Path, would have many positives, but that development of a fully waymarked route would conflict with conservation aims such as the preservation of the "wild land" qualities of much of the Scottish coast.
The right to responsible access to land allows people to access all of Scotland's coastline, and so there is no bar to a person wishing to walk the length of the coastline.[2] Existing coastal paths are listed below. There is a long-term aspiration to link these routes up to develop a full Scottish Coastal Way by 2030.[1]
Existing coastal paths
editMainland
editListed in anti-clockwise direction, starting at the border with England north of Berwick
- Berwickshire Coastal Path
- John Muir Way
- St Margaret's Way runs 98 km/61 miles from the St Mary's Metropolitan cathedral in the centre of Edinburgh across the Forth Road Bridge to end at the ancient town of St Andrews.[3]
- Fife Coastal Path
- Aberdeenshire Coastal Trail[4]
- Moray Coast Trail
- John o' Groats Trail
- North Highland Way[5]
- Firth of Clyde Rotary Trail, 259 km / 161 miles long (276km/172miles?), combines three long-distance coastal routes between Mull of Galloway and Milngavie, along the Ayrshire coast and Upper Clyde:
- Clyde Coastal Path runs 56 km/35 miles from the Kelly Burn to Greenock, then to Milngavie. It links the Ayrshire Coastal Path and the West Highland Way, and is part of the International Appalachian Trail (Scotland), which follows the entire western seaboard of Scotland.[6]
- Ayrshire Coastal Path is 161 kilometres (100 mi) long,[7] – Loch Ryan Coastal Path, an extension running 19 km / 12 miles south from Glenapp Kirk to Stranraer and connecting to the Southern Upland Way.
- Mull of Galloway Trail is 59 km (37 mi) long.[7]
Coastal paths on islands
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c "SNH Commissioned Report 380: Developing the network of longer distance routes" (PDF). Scottish Natural Heritage. 2010. pp. 71–74. Retrieved 8 August 2018.
- ^ "Scottish Outdoor Access Code" (PDF). Scottish Natural Heritage. 2005. p. 7. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ LDWA
- ^ "Aberdeenshire Coastal Trail". VisitScotland. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
- ^ Ian Ellis. "North Highland Way". Retrieved 22 February 2021.
- ^ "Clyde Coastal Path". Long Distance Walkers Association
- ^ a b "Scotland's Great Trails". Scottish Natural Heritage & Rucksack Reader. Retrieved 13 August 2018.