Balmoral Castle and the Dee
Cross the River Dee to the gateway into Balmoral Castle. You pay to enter the grounds and can pick up a map of the marked walks. Shortly, turn right off the driveway on a track that soon runs alongside the river. A path continues along the riverbank. Just after a power pole with warning triangles, take a path on the left. The cafe is over on your left as you reach a red pillar box at the castle.
Turn right alongside the castle, and right again across its end, with a sunken rose garden on your left. Go down steps and take a track to the left, which passes the memorials to dogs. With a stone cross (Princess Alice memorial) ahead, turn right and then left on an earth path through a pinewood to regain the riverside. Turn left on the riverside path. The tall white flowers of angelica grow here, as do lupins, whose seeds are carried here by the river.Â
The path runs up to a tarred driveway, which you follow for 55yds (50m) to a path rising on the left. At another driveway just above, turn briefly right, then left up a grassy track. It rises through the woods to a junction with a map showing the estate paths. Keep ahead up a track that steepens and bends to the left under larches. At its highest point it reaches a T-junction.
Turn right, with a fine view ahead into the corrie of Lochnagar. The little-used track runs down to an unsurfaced forest road, where you turn left, with a deer fence on the right. After a gate through the deer fence, turn right at a triangle junction, up a new forest road. With the forest edge visible ahead, a wide path turns up left. Once at the hill top it leads to Prince Albert's huge pyramidal cairn.Â
The path continues on the right, descending quite steeply to a corner with a view down the Dee. The path passes Princess Beatrice's Cairn as it descends to a tarred estate road. Turn right, down the road. (You could then turn left to revisit the castle, as the route is about to leave the estate.)
At the tiny settlement of Easter Balmoral turn right across a stream and down left to a road alongside the Dee. Turn right, then left onto a white suspension bridge across the river. Follow the road ahead, until a side road on the left leads past Crathie cemetery. (John Brown's grave lies midway between the ruined chapel and the south wall of the kirkyard.)Â After the newer graveyard turn left, for a riverside path back to the car park.
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Been on this walk?
Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.
Walking in Safety
Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.
Get an AA guide
Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.
Nearby places to stay
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- Rooms 7
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- Open parking
- Rooms 45
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