Hills of Britain and Ireland
OS Map of Seana Mheallan
Height: 437m / 1434ft • Prominence: 242m / 794ft • Summit : cairn on outcrop • Trip reports (hill-bagging)






Scots2018_1946
A896 Motorways towards Shieldaig, Torridon, Achnasheen, Highland, Scotland, UK
16-May-18 • wallacefsk • flickr
achnasheen gb greatbritain highland scotland torridon uk unitedkingdom 英國 蘇格蘭 阿赫納欣 54387286124
OS Map
This is OS mapping. In some areas, OpenStreetMap shows more footpaths
Spatial NI has online OSNI mapping. Click "Basemap Gallery" (4 squares icon at the top).
Now would be a good time for a cup of tea.






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Photos
Please tag your photos and upload them to the British and Irish Mountains group on Flickr
The other photos have been geo-tagged as on or around the summit. For less busy mountains, it can be a little hit and miss.






Scots2018_1946
A896 Motorways towards Shieldaig, Torridon, Achnasheen, Highland, Scotland, UK
16-May-18 • wallacefsk • flickr
achnasheen gb greatbritain highland scotland torridon uk unitedkingdom 英國 蘇格蘭 阿赫納欣 54387286124

As the autumn sun sets and the mist falls around the Pinnacles of Liathach the atmosphere fills with unspoken threat and foreboding, Wester Ross, Scotland.
Poem. Like a mist-shrouded, castellated fortress, belonging to a giant, the “Pinnacles of Liathach” loom with sinister intent. Will they impale the unwary? Will climbers be swallowed up by awesome chasms? Will the mist blind their step, and they fall a thousand metres to the valley floor? Like a scene from a grotesque fairy-tale or a prison within “Middle Earth,” this mighty serrated ridge stands ominous and threatening above Glen Torridon. Climbed from this spot nearly forty-five years ago, 1,055 metres (3,461 feet) to the summit, past the “Pinnacles.” But that was a blue-sky, clear day. Views – stupendous. Today, took the image and remembered!
28-Oct-10 • Scotland by NJC. • flickr
54127354624

As the autumn sun sets and the mist falls around the Pinnacles of Liathach the atmosphere fills with unspoken threat and foreboding, Wester Ross, Scotland.
Poem. Like a mist-shrouded, castellated fortress, belonging to a giant, the “Pinnacles of Liathach” loom with sinister intent. Will they impale the unwary? Will climbers be swallowed up by awesome chasms? Will the mist blind their step, and they fall a thousand metres to the valley floor? Like a scene from a grotesque fairy-tale or a prison within “Middle Earth,” this mighty serrated ridge stands ominous and threatening above Glen Torridon. Climbed from this spot nearly forty-five years ago, 1,055 metres (3,461 feet) to the summit, past the “Pinnacles.” But that was a blue-sky, clear day. Views – stupendous. Today, took the image and remembered!
28-Oct-10 • Scotland by NJC. • flickr
53403937535

Shrouded in cloud, the1,000 metre peaks called "The Pinnacles of Liathach." Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Scotland.
Poem. Like a mist-shrouded, castellated fortress, belonging to a giant, the “Pinnacles of Liathach” loom with sinister intent. Will they impale the unwary? Will climbers be swallowed up by awesome chasms? Will the mist blind their step, and they fall a thousand metres to the valley floor? Like a scene from a grotesque fairy-tale or a prison within “Middle Earth,” this mighty serrated ridge stands ominous and threatening above Glen Torridon. Climbed from this spot nearly forty-five years ago, 1,055 metres (3,461 feet) to the summit, past the “Pinnacles.” But that was a blue-sky, clear day. Views – stupendous. Today, took the image and remembered!
28-Oct-10 • Scotland by NJC. • flickr
52700432384

Shrouded in cloud, the 1,000 metre peaks called "The Pinnacles of Liathach." Glen Torridon, Wester Ross, Scotland.
Poem. Like a mist-shrouded, castellated fortress, belonging to a giant, the “Pinnacles of Liathach” loom with sinister intent. Will they impale the unwary? Will climbers be swallowed up by awesome chasms? Will the mist blind their step, and they fall a thousand metres to the valley floor? Like a scene from a grotesque fairy-tale or a prison within “Middle Earth,” this mighty serrated ridge stands ominous and threatening above Glen Torridon. Climbed from this spot nearly forty years ago, 1,055 metres (3,461 feet) to the summit, past the “Pinnacles.” But that was a blue-sky, clear day. Views – stupendous. Today, took the image and remembered!
28-Oct-10 • Scotland by NJC. • flickr
52378275664
Videos
None found
Notes
- Data: Database of British and Irish Hills v18.2
- Maps: We use OS mapping for England, Scotland, Wales, and the Isle of Man. Sadly, Channel Islands, Northern (OSNI) and Southern Ireland (OSI) mapping isn't available online, so we use Openstreetmap.