However you get there, waterfalls are breathtaking places, and you have 3
beautiful waterfalls to choose from around Sauchie And Fishcross. So you can better figure out which one to visit on your next trip outdoors, see photos and tips of each waterfall below — and easily plan your next adventure!
Last updated: April 26, 2026
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Popular around Sauchie And Fishcross
A black(expert) mtb trail named The Minefield descends from here to the right of the burn. It’s steep, rocky and rooty with drop offs, jumps and berms.
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New wood sculptures going in next week. A butterfly and Neanderthal man.
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The Dollar glen is a beautiful walk. Walkways lead up to the castle and make it fairly accesible (lots of steps still). There is a path near the top to lead you round to the back of the falls.
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Dollar Glen. Magical with its many waterfalls, gullies and pools. Walk up one side to Castle Campbell and return via the other bank.
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Don’t attempt with a mountain bike like I did, you’ll be pushing it and carrying it for 90% of the journey, haha. (Found myself there by accident).
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The Silver Glen lies approximately 1 km to the east of the town of Alva, Clackmannanshire, Scotland, and takes its name from the silver that was mined there in the early 18th century. The story of the silver mine is a remarkable one. The deposit, the richest deposit of native silver ever found in the British Isles, was discovered just as the Jacobite rising of 1715 was breaking out, and its owner, Sir John Erskine, left to join the rebels, leaving his wife in charge of the mine. Some 40 tons of ore were raised and buried in barrels in the grounds of Alva House, whilst the richest of the ore was smelted and the ingots concealed under floorboards inside the house. The mine was then filled in during the aftermath of the failed rising, but its existence was revealed to the government by an employee of the Erskines. Samples of the ore were analysed by Sir Isaac Newton and found to be very rich. Sir John was later able to secure a pardon for his role in the rising, on condition he revealed all he knew about the mine, and gave a tenth of the proceeds to the government. Mining resumed a few years later and the remainder of the deposit was extracted. Later, in 1759, a vein carrying erythrite, an ore of cobalt, was found and gave a new lease of life to the mines, but it was soon exhausted
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Happy to travel a little further afield? Then browse these guides for the best waterfalls around Sauchie And Fishcross: