Around the Devil's Beef Tub

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Walk directions

Walk up the A701 to the forest gateway on the right. Don't take the wide gravel track, but rather a wooden gate on the right-hand side, to a small path to the left of a fence. Climb rails at a fence end, and head up the grassy slope of Annanhead Hill, keeping to the right of the plantation area to the trig point on the summit.

The small path continues around the flank of Peat Knowe, keeping the wall and fence to your left. Follow the path down the grassy slope of Annanhead Hill, keeping to the head of a gully, where your path meets the wall. Walk to the other side of the gully.

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Location
Additional information
  Terrain  - Farm tracks, small paths; narrow path across steep Beef Tub slope
  Landscape  - Dramatic Beef Tub hollow and views of the Borderlands
  Dog friendliness  - Keep on lead when passing sheep and cattle
  Parking  - Lay-by just south of forest gateway
  Toilets en route  - Lay-by just south of forest gateway
About the walk
Dark, forbidding and dramatic (Sir Walter Scott once described it as a 'black, blackguard-looking abyss of a hole'), the hollow known as the Devil's Beef Tub has a history as turbulent as its name suggests. Over the years this deep, natural bowl has been used as a hiding place by thieves, formed a...
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About the area
Dumfries and Galloway is a wonderfully undiscovered corner of Scotland – a romantic land of wooded glens, high hills and exposed moorland, haunted by its colourful past and the ghosts of those who fell in fierce and bloody battles. Heading west from Gretna Green you soon reach Dumfries, straddling the River Nith, where you may see red-breasted mergansers in summer.
Area image

Around the Devil's Beef Tub

Recommended by
Dog friendly
Location
Nearest postcode:
Additional information
  Terrain - Farm tracks, small paths; narrow path across steep Beef Tub slope
  Landscape - Dramatic Beef Tub hollow and views of the Borderlands
  Dog friendliness - Keep on lead when passing sheep and cattle
  Parking - Lay-by just south of forest gateway
  Toilets en route - Lay-by just south of forest gateway
About the walk
Dark, forbidding and dramatic (Sir Walter Scott once described it as a 'black, blackguard-looking abyss of a hole'), the hollow known as the Devil's Beef Tub has a history as turbulent as its name suggests. Over the years this deep, natural bowl has been used as a hiding place by thieves, formed a...
Read more
Been on this walk placeholder

Been on this walk?

Send us photos or a comment about this route. Or recommend a route of your own.

Walking in Safety placeholder

Walking in Safety

Read our tips to look after yourself and the environment when following this walk.

Get an AA guide placeholder

Get an AA guide

Explore our range of ‘50 Walks in’ guides - they’re the ideal companion for a ramble.

About the area
Area image
Dumfries & Galloway
Dumfries and Galloway is a wonderfully undiscovered corner of Scotland – a romantic land of wooded glens, high hills and exposed moorland, haunted by its colourful past and the ghosts of those who fell in fierce and bloody battles. Heading west from Gretna Green you soon reach Dumfries, straddling the River Nith, where you may see red-breasted mergansers in summer.