The mountain trail is one of the last places on Earth where you can shed the noise of modern life and be truly present. For those of us who have spent years navigating the world’s greatest peaks, that solitude is sacred. Yet, for many aspiring adventurers, particularly women considering a multi-day challenge like the Ireland 7 Summits, the idea of tackling it alone can be daunting. The quiet voice of fear often drowns out the call of the peaks.
I’ve seen countless women arrive at the starting line—perhaps the base of the Macgillycuddy Reeks in Kerry , home to Ireland’s highest peak, Carrantuohill —having signed up as a solo participant. They come seeking the challenge, but often find something deeper: a genuine, resilient, and supportive community.
The IRELAND SUMMITS series, designed by International Expedition Leader Jason Black , is not just about bagging seven peaks between March and September ; it’s a commitment to shared experience. It is built with an understanding that the best adventures are grounded in competence, trust, and connection. This is the solo woman’s guide to finding her stride, her safety, and her new crew on the rugged, beautiful trails of Ireland.

The Solo Woman, The Shared Summit: Shifting from Solitude to Safety
The transition from planning a solo trip to participating in a guided group challenge immediately solves the primary anxieties associated with lone female travel: navigation and safety.
When you commit to the Ireland 7 Summits Challenge, you are no longer alone. You are joining a professionally managed series of treks. Every hike, from the rolling granite peaks of the Mourne Mountains in April to the dramatic landscapes of the Comeragh Mountain Range in August , is conducted under the supervision of qualified IRELAND SUMMITS mountain guides and qualified first aiders.
This group structure offers immediate, tangible benefits for solo hikers:
- Expert Navigation on Challenging Terrain: Ireland’s mountains are beautiful but unforgiving. The routes can be complex, from the ridges of the Macgillycuddy Reeks to the challenging trails of the Twelve Bens. Having guides eliminates the anxiety of map and compass work, allowing you to focus purely on your pace and the stunning scenery.
- The Power of Pace Matching: The series accommodates all levels of ability, offering Standard, Intermediate, and Advanced groups for distance and pace. This means you’ll be placed with hikers who match your fitness level, ensuring you are never holding up a group, nor are you over-stretching yourself to keep pace with veterans. This is psychological safety as much as physical.
- Unwavering Safety Protocols: The group guide’s decision is final for the wellbeing of all participants. This is your ultimate safety net. It means that when the weather turns on the Seven Sisters Donegal peaks , or if you feel unwell on the slopes of Galtymore, there is an experienced authority figure ensuring your health takes priority.
Finding Your Tribe in the Basecamp Community
The mountains strip away pretense, but the basecamp is where the true bonds are forged. You may sign up solo, but you finish with a hiking crew.
One solo participant shared her experience after completing the series: “I signed up for the physical challenge, but I almost quit after the first hike. It wasn’t the 8.5 hours on the Reeks that broke me, it was the thought of doing all seven climbs alone. Then, at the Basecamp that night—sleeping in my tent for the first time—a woman I’d hiked with that day walked over to help me set up. We shared dinner, laughed about our missteps, and ended up planning the next six summits together. The solitude ended the moment the tent went up.”

The IRELAND7SUMMITS Basecamp concept actively promotes this community spirit. It provides a safe, welcoming, and well-located camp site close to the start of the hike. It is a place to:
- Submerge Yourself in Nature: Sleep under the stars and be part of the magical energy of the hiking community.
- Build Confidence in Camp Skills: If you have never tented before, the community and guides are there to help you. This shared vulnerability and assistance create instant, deep bonds.
- Share Lessons and Laughs: It’s where the technical talk of the day (like navigating the valleys of the Wicklow Mountain Range ) turns into reflective storytelling over a warm drink.
Being amongst new, like-minded outdoor friends transforms the challenge from a solitary undertaking into a collective victory.
Practical Preparation: Confidence is the Best Gear
Mental fortitude comes from physical preparedness. The best way to build confidence as a solo adventurer is to eliminate uncertainty about your body and your gear. The Ireland 7 Summits Challenge demands that all hikers be fit and in good physical health, and a good solid level of general fitness is highly recommended.
Essential Equipment & Training Checklist
Your gear is your psychological security blanket. A proper kit not only keeps you safe but eliminates the self-doubt that creeps in when you realize you’re unprepared.
Mandatory Kit Essentials:
- Waterproof jacket and trousers (Ireland demands reliable protection)
- Walking boots (well broken-in)
- Hiking socks and hiking trousers
- T-Shirt, fleece top, and a lite puff jacket (layering is key)
- Backpack (20 litre capacity)
- Water container (1-2 litres) and mountain snacks
- Gloves and hat (even in summer, the Irish mountains can bite)
Recommended (Optional) Comfort and Safety Items:
- Walking poles (essential for those long 10-hour days on the Comeraghs or Donegal)
- Personal First Aid Kit (Plasters, Painkillers, Compeed blister patches)
- Midge spray (a small comfort, a huge relief)
The training regimen should mirror the challenge’s distances, which can range from 10k to 21k, and its duration, which can reach up to 10 hours. Consistent hillwalking is non-negotiable.

The Legacy: Inspire and Empower
Jason Black developed the Ireland 7 Summits series not just as an endurance event, but to “encourage outdoor enthusiast to celebrate our Irish mountains, inspire a belief that everything is possible and empower others to follow”.
As a solo woman, you are not just participating in a challenge; you are contributing to a legacy of courage, becoming part of the Ireland7Summit Hall of Fame. You join a community built on the core values of respect for the environment (Leave No Trace 7 Principles ) and deep respect for fellow hikers.
The first solo step you take at the start line is the most important. The next six will be supported by guides, community, and the unshakeable confidence built through shared experience. Lace up your boots, know your kit, trust your guide, and take that first step. You’ll soon realize that hiking alone in Ireland’s greatest mountain ranges doesn’t mean you’ll ever be lonely.


