Mam Sodhail
Mam Sodhail, or Màm Sabhail in Gaelic, sometimes anglicised "Mam Soul", is a mountain with a height of in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland. Classed as a Munro, it is beside Carn Eige in the secluded country on the northern side of Glen Affric, some 30 kilometres east of Kyle of Lochalsh.
Landscape
At 1181 metres, it is the second highest mountain north of the Great Glen and the fourteenth highest in the United Kingdom. Càrn Eige stands just one kilometre to the north of Mam Sodhail and the two are regarded as twin mountains, being roughly identical in height and appearance. They stand together above Gleann nam Fiadh and are linked by a high col of around 1045 metres, making the traverse of the two mountains a natural day's walk.Mam Sodhail is mostly grassy without too much rock, however its sheer size, long ridges, and fine corries together with its four "tops" named in the Munro Tables make it a first-rate mountain. The hill casts three ridges down towards Glen Affric, the most impressive of these being the east southeast ridge, which has two "tops" on it; Mullach Cadha Rainich stands at the midpoint of the ridge which runs for four kilometres to conclude at the other “top” of Sgurr na Lapaich, which is the most prominent part of the mountain when viewed from Glen Affric. It has the characteristics of a separate mountain and was regarded as a Munro in the original 1891 list, with Irvine Butterfield saying, "The peak certainly does not lack character and many were disappointed to find that its original status was not restored in the seventh edition of Munros Tables". The other two ridges, which form a horseshoe around the Allt Coulavie valley to the south of the summit, carry the “tops” of An Tudair and Creag Coire nan Each. The mountain's western flanks fall away towards Gleann a’ Choilich, which drains northwards into Loch Mullardoch.