Whats the furthest ...
 

[Closed] Whats the furthest distance you can get from a tarmac road in the Uk?

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A wee challenge for the map geeks. Get your maps out folks.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:24 am
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Are we including the wet bit between GB & NI?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:25 am
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Heard this before, it's about 7 miles, IIRC.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:26 am
 Pook
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I believe this is somewhere up the North West of Scotland is it not?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:26 am
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Would that tarmac road have to be open to the public?

And are you excluding islands?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:26 am
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Druidh - no and no. Big john - no

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:30 am
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Is there any tarmac on St Kilda?

Rockall?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:31 am
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As far as the mainland is concerned, the Munros Lurg Mhor and Seana Bhraigh have long been held to be the most "remote" from public access. Swello and I did a bothy trip in to Maol Bhuidhe bothy (by Lurg Mhor) on the basis of a very similar STW thread a couple of years back.

I've posted photos from it previously.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:38 am
 Pook
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the centre of Sheffield. No tarmac roads round here, they're all made of papier mache.

I win.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:38 am
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London, surely? Streets are paved with gold.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:49 am
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Are we including air space or just foot on ground?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:51 am
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The furthest point from a metalled road in Great Britain is on the hillside of Ruadh Stac Beag, between Letterwe Forest and Fisherfield Forest in Wester Ross, Highland, Scotland. The distance from here to the nearest road (A832) is 11 km (7 miles).

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:52 am
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7 miles? That's rubbish 🙁

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:54 am
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Only 7 miles? Surely not.

Edit: And it's a bloody A Road! How depressing.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:54 am
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What kevonakona copied & pasted

http://mapzone.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/mapzone/didyouknow/whatis/q_12_54.html

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:56 am
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Only 7 miles? Surely not.

Edit: And it's a bloody A Road! How depressing.

Yeah, I honestly thought there'd be plenty of places where it'd be 20 miles or something!

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 11:57 am
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The furthest point from a metalled road in Great Britain is on the hillside of Ruadh Stac Beag, between Letterwe Forest and Fisherfield Forest in Wester Ross, Highland, Scotland. The distance from here to the nearest road (A832) is 11 km (7 miles).

I WIN!

Didn't know where it was, but I answered the question as it was set first!

WOOOOOOOOOHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

:mrgreen:

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:00 pm
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That bit that kevonakona pasted is wrong on at least two counts.

Great Britain includes lots of little islands with no roads at all.

Maol Bhuidhe bothy is at least 8 miles from a metalled road.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:01 pm
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7 miles is quite a long way, all things considered. if i lived in some remote area i think i'd be more pissed off if it was more than that than pleased!

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:04 pm
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I guess the west side of Rockall has to be the answer to TJ's question.

I'd always assumed it would be somewhere in the southern Cairngorms, probably around the Tilt/ Geldie/ Dee watershed. Might depend on whether metalled road has to have vehicle access to the general public or can be an estate road - I guess the Linn of Dee Road and the roads up Glen Feshie, Glen Tromie and Glen Avon go quite a way into the hills.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:09 pm
 Drac
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[i]Maol Bhuidhe bothy is at least 8 miles from a metalled road.[/i]

As the crow flies 12.6km tp road from Achintee.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:10 pm
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Druidh - you are a ruddy pedant.

Kevkona has the answer as I intended it. Maybe I should have said mainland or distance from either road or sea.

I find it suprising that 7 miles is the furthest you can get from a road [b][i] on the ruddy mainland [/b][/i]

Now to find somethng to out pedant Druidh on grumble mutter

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:18 pm
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TJ, I asked you the question...

druidh - Member
Would that tarmac road have to be open to the public?

And are you excluding islands?

and you replied...

TandemJeremy - Member

Druidh - no and no.

and the Ruadh Stac Beag answer is still wrong.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:30 pm
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I'd have thought the area around the Tarf Hotel would be getting on for 10 miles from any (tarmac) road

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:35 pm
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Bit further North - An Sgarsoch?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:38 pm
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is this the Scottish version of Mornington Crescent?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:39 pm
 Drac
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[i]I'd have thought the area around the Tarf Hotel would be getting on for 10 miles from any (tarmac) road [/i]

9 miles as the crow flies.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:42 pm
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Hmm - An Sgarsoch/Carn an Fhidhleir could be 14km

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:43 pm
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During the foot and mouth crisis when there was no off roading to be had down here in the south, me and a mate hiked the lenghth of Chesil Beach. The nearest road was maybe less than a mile from the mid point as the crow flies but without a hovercraft to get over the big wet marshy bit the only practical routes were about 5 miles.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:48 pm
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I have always understood the answer to be around 7 miles - where is the tarf hotel? I don't know it

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:49 pm
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NN927789

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:51 pm
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Hmm - An Sgarsoch/Carn an Fhidhleir could be 14km

Looks a good candidate and about 9 miles for sure - unless you count the glen tilt road which IIRC is tarmac up to the forest lodge which is only 5.8 miles away.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:55 pm
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It's not tarmac to Forest Lodge

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:56 pm
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If you want remote have a look at Knoydart - just a short boat trip from Malaig but a bl00dy long way to get to the tip if you don't take to the seas

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:57 pm
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Ok Druidh - its a few years since I was on it. t is tarmac part way up tho is it not? You used to be able to drive up to the forest lodge

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:58 pm
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rockall doesnt count. we tried that one years ago and the UN told us to poke it.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:59 pm
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Caution - further pedantry...

This thread uses the word "tarmac" in the title. The kevonakona link refers to "metalled" roads. I think there's room for some debate as to which tracks are metalled - e.g. the Forest Lodge one might qualify under that description

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:59 pm
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Wiksey - but there is a bit of tarmac road at inverie

Well remote tho for sure

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 12:59 pm
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Druidh - aye - tarmacadam or macadam surfaces 🙂

I meant tarmac as in wot any fule kno as a road.

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 1:00 pm
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Surprisingly central, near the bottom end of Loch Treig on Rannoch Moor manages about 13km from any road

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 1:03 pm
 juan
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Crap you must be ery bored TJ ;
Still up to meet to show me around the famous capital?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 1:10 pm
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Not strictly on topic but related to biking. What's the furthest you can ride in the UK without touching tarmac in any way (and I don't mean jumping across roads). The route would have to be linear or a big circle i.e not gratuitous up and down forest roads in somewhere like Kielder. I found one which starts about half way between Machynlleth and Aberystwyth and comes out on the A44 by the rally school called Sweet Lamb, a distance of 32 miles. Its not all on the OS map but pretty well legal, certainly no footpaths or private land. It's a very good day out and by simply crossing the A44 you can add another 15 miles again all off road to Devils Bridge. Any advance on this?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 1:13 pm
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Any canal towpath you care to mention....

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 1:15 pm
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Perhaps I should have qualified it by saying mountainbiking. Do you think 30+ miles is possible on a towpath without finding a section that has been resurfaced in the black stuff?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 1:20 pm
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Pistonbroke Easily do much more than that in a loop on Kinlochleven /corrour / lock ossian / Locan na earba /loch pattack / ben alder / Blackwater dam - but you would do 1 mile of track twice.

roughly multimapped - 75 miles

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 1:27 pm
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>Any advance on this? <

Yes, can think of numerous circuits in Scotland - you'll need to do a lot better than 32 miles.

The OP did say tarmac - any advance on An Sgorsach?

 
Posted : 19/06/2009 2:22 pm