Callaly Crag is a collection of pinnacles and boulders in a wood on the hillside south of Callaly village. There are 13 routes from VD to E8 and good bouldering potential a few hundred metres west on a series of buttresses on the open hillside. This area is best approached from a signed footpath on the west side of Callaly.
Fell Sandstone
Carboniferous, Dinantian
Routes/Bouldering:
Routes:
A few very good routes, but most of the buttresses are pretty chossy.
Problems:
There is bouldering on the hillside west of the crag.
Other interesting stuff:
A low white pinnacle sports "Macartney's Cave", a tiny retreat hewn out of the rock by a chaplain of that name from Callally Castle. Near the top of the escarpment, just west of the woods, there is a huge boulder known as "Black Monday Rock", though the origin of the name has never been traced.
The moor abve the crag, now heavily forested has a wealth of medieval and post medieval remains. There are many bell pits which mined the coal seam which runs under the moor, a farmstead and some 12th century boundary stones which mark the northern extent of lands owned by Brinkburn Priory.
History:
Routes have been done here by various groups from the 1950s. The hardest ones are the work of John & Andrew Earl and Ian Murray around about 1999. 6'6" Andy Cowley added two routes to Slab Buttress in April 2006.