Driving the North Coast 500 in the winter was meant to be an adventure, but perhaps not quite as adventurous as this could turn out to be.
We arrive in Inverness with the far north of Scotland under a severe weather warning and conditions bad enough to have earned a name. This is going to be the Porsche Boxster T versus Storm Brendan.
I’ve never really held with the idea that driving for fun is a seasonal activity, or understood why so many interesting cars get tucked up for the winter. Many of my most memorable journeys have involved miserable weather, introducing another challenge to those of car and road. The minimalist Boxster T is particularly well suited to such an austere adventure, combining almost all of the Boxster’s chassis-sharpening options with the basic 296bhp 2.0-litre flat-four turbocharged engine and – in this one – a six-speed manual gearbox.
The other motivation is to experience the North Coast 500 in what should be its purest form. Since it was first branded as such and publicised back in 2015, this coast-hugging 512-mile loop around the historic Scottish counties of Ross, Sutherland and Caithness has become hugely popular and a feature on many automotive bucket lists. But the thousands since drawn to drive and ride it have also created a marked increase in traffic during the summer, sometimes causing congestion on the often narrow, single-track roads and even bad feeling among locals. Hopefully that won’t be a problem during an amber weather alert in January.
Calm before the storm
It’s an early start from Inverness. Photographer Luc Lacey has done the NC500 before, he and Richard Webber looping it in a Fiat 500 in 2017 on a three-day schedule that he says turned out to be pretty tight. A potential problem already, then, as I’ve allowed just a day and a half.
Join the debate
Add your comment
yes sure
yes sure
Don’t be Brave
This is the part of the world I live in.
I advise against to NC500 for two reasons.
The first is obvious; at present, the local resident community can barely get enough food to survive on. Any visitors add a real theatr to the already severe problem. And you have the medical services already stretching beyond breaking point, so the prospect of mote road accidents to deal with is scary. And don't kid yourselves, these can be treacherous roads to drive on if you're not very familiar with them, even for very skilled and experienced drivers.
The second reason relates only to winter. Every year there are deaths up here that result from the simple fact that people unfamiliar with the far north almost automatically underestimate the effects of winter weather up here. Some winters are mild, but the killer is the rate of change, from pleasant at 11|amto deadly by noon, which is OK if you don't need to move from your home or lodging, but perilous if you do, or are on a long journey with nowhere to stop.
The northern highlands are stunning and worth a visit without question. But I cannot condone treating such a visit as an adventure in driving ability. Be cautious and enjoy it carefully.
And please, whatever you do, never treat it as a race against the clock or against other drivers. It may be the worst place in the world to do that.
Forgot to add, great pics.