Hills of Britain and Ireland
OS Map of Gualann Sheileach
Height: 614m / 2013ft • Prominence: 118m / 387ft • Summit : no feature: ground 7m NNE of small cairn • Trip reports (hill-bagging)

Creag a'Mhadaidh: looking north and west to the Corbett of Ben Mholach (L distance) and the Drumochter Munros from the lower slopes of the hill
Believe it or not, there's an isolated cottage in the middle of the picture, just visible if you magnify twice. Must be a challenging place!
21-Sep-21 • Mumbles Head • flickr
scotland highlands landscape panorama grahams mountains 51547260723

Creag a'Mhadaidh: the long cycle in from Loch Rannoch
The prominent hill on the left is the Corbett Beinn a' Chuallaich.
21-Sep-21 • Mumbles Head • flickr
scotland highlands landscape panorama grahams mountains 51547923995

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.






GPX Editor
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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.

Creag a'Mhadaidh: looking north and west to the Corbett of Ben Mholach (L distance) and the Drumochter Munros from the lower slopes of the hill
Believe it or not, there's an isolated cottage in the middle of the picture, just visible if you magnify twice. Must be a challenging place!
21-Sep-21 • Mumbles Head • flickr
scotland highlands landscape panorama grahams mountains 51547260723

Creag a'Mhadaidh: the long cycle in from Loch Rannoch
The prominent hill on the left is the Corbett Beinn a' Chuallaich.
21-Sep-21 • Mumbles Head • flickr
scotland highlands landscape panorama grahams mountains 51547923995

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.