Hills of Britain and Ireland
OS Map of Sron na Ban-righ
Height: 733m / 2406ft • Prominence: 129m / 423ft • Summit : small cairn • Trip reports (hill-bagging)

P63 River Feshie gorge
High up Glen Feshie the river runs through a scenic gorge lined with trees.
04-Sep-13 • Grahamtravels • flickr
9692733305

P64 Old shieling in foreground Ruighe nan Leum
Evidence of the use of the upper glen in former times to graze livestock in summer. An old shieling or summer house sits on the higher ground beside a burn.
04-Sep-13 • Grahamtravels • flickr
9692734717

P65 Glen Feshie opening onto the high moors
As the glen opens up onto higher moorland the views become larger. The view looks towards the watershed with the Geldie which runs into the Dee.
04-Sep-13 • Grahamtravels • flickr
9692735567
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.

P63 River Feshie gorge
High up Glen Feshie the river runs through a scenic gorge lined with trees.
04-Sep-13 • Grahamtravels • flickr
9692733305

P64 Old shieling in foreground Ruighe nan Leum
Evidence of the use of the upper glen in former times to graze livestock in summer. An old shieling or summer house sits on the higher ground beside a burn.
04-Sep-13 • Grahamtravels • flickr
9692734717

P65 Glen Feshie opening onto the high moors
As the glen opens up onto higher moorland the views become larger. The view looks towards the watershed with the Geldie which runs into the Dee.
04-Sep-13 • Grahamtravels • flickr
9692735567
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.