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It is with deep regret that I must announce that Ourea Events has ceased trading and is currently in discussions with professional advisors.
The Cape Wrath Ultra® has always held a special place in my heart. As the race organiser, it remains my favourite event in the Ourea calendar. I think that’s because of the extraordinary sense of journey it offers; there’s simply nothing else like it. The Scottish Highlands are truly spectacular, and even if you’re only driving between overnight camps, you can’t help but feel immersed in the vast, wild beauty of the Scottish Highlands.
The Cape Wrath Lighthouse. Stark, windswept, and spectacular - it marks the end of mainland Scotland and the finish line of this extraordinary journey. For eight days, participants in the 2025 Cape Wrath Ultra® have pushed through some of the UK’s most remote and rugged landscapes, with this iconic beacon in their sights.
The landscape is ever changeable on Day Seven as our runners traverse moorlands, mountains and around some of the most beautiful deep sea lochs Scotland has on offer. Glacial erosion in the area has created more substantial glens and larger hill lochs, with small rocky outcrops, fondly described as ‘knock-and-lochan’ topography.
Day Six of the Cape Wrath Ultra® dawned with the same clear blue skies and promise of sunshine, but a sharper, chill in the air than previous days. With clouds set to roll late afternoon, there was definitely a change in camp, runners are starting to feel the toll of five days on the trail and this would be their longest day yet.
After the rugged grandeur of Torridon on Day Four of the Cape Wrath Ultra®, runners awoke in Kinlochewe to face a new kind of challenge: the vast, uninhabited expanse of the Fisherfield Forest, often dubbed 'The Great Wilderness'.