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Antrim Hills Way

Park in the car park above Cairncastle village, south-east of Glenarm. Brilliant figure of 8 loop taking in much of the Antrim Hills Way, including the excellent ridge above Sallagh Braes. Open mountain, with links on minor roads.

(This takes about 3 hours or so, if you don't hang about too much)

Leaving the car park, turn left up the road, heading for Glenarm, and stay on the tarmac for about 6.5km until you come to The Ulster Way sign, pointing up the hill to the right (the sign is facing the other way). Follow the Ulster Way / Antrim Hills Way marker posts from here on.

Head up onto the mountain (which is pretty much a walk for the first bit), and then start the draining climb up Black Mountain. The climbs are well worth it, with some great ridge riding and open mountain grass descents back to the car park, ready to start the second loop of the figure of 8.

Head through the back of the car park and up the steep grassy slope, again following the marker posts. Superb path all the way to and beyond Sallagh Braes, and back down to the road. Great views.

Follow the road back up to the car park.

 

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Reviews for this trail

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3.7



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1= Rubbish      5= Badgertastic!
  • Comments 30/12/09 - My mate Dave and I did parts of this ride today with Rick. Totally nuts - 40mph winds, sleet, snow drifts and ice - nothing could stop the boys today! We did the 2nd loop first over the brae first, back up the road, past the carpark and then up the farm trail to the top of the first hill. We'd had our fun and called it a day but we proved this ride is possible in all conditions - if your mad enough! The only downside was getting ripped off by Rick to buy a TrailBadger bike jersey. Cheers Rick!
  • A fantastic open mountain yet compact ride through stunning scenery. Generally wet on at the start so perhaps one for the drier months but rideable most of the year if you don't mind that srt of thing. Other potential in the area linking to a variety or lanes and minor roads.
  • Some energy-sapping soggy climbs, but the ridge-riding, the views, and the multi-option grassy descents are well worth all the effort.

NOTE: The trails on this site have been ridden before, but you should not interpret their inclusion as an indication that mountain-biking is officially sanctioned on them. Seeking permission from landowners is your own responsibility, as is conducting yourself in a manner that is courteous, respectful to the environment, and conscious of the safety of others.