Beinn an Lochain

Beinn an Lochain

Beinn an Lochain, seen whilst on the ascent of Stob Coire Creagach
Highest point
Elevation 901 m (2,956 ft)
Prominence c. 636 m
Parent peak Beinn Ime
Listing Corbett, Marilyn
Naming
Translation Mountain of the lochan (pond) (Gaelic)
Pronunciation /ˈbnən ˈlxən/
Geography
Location Argyll and Bute, Scotland
Parent range Arrochar Alps, Grampian Mountains
OS grid NN218079
Topo map OS Landranger 56

Beinn an Lochain is a mountain in the Arrochar Alps, southern Scotland, on the western edge of Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park. Although included in Sir Hugh Munro's original list of Scottish mountains over 3000 feet, subsequent surveys showed it to be significantly shorter than the 914.4 m cut-off limit required to count as a Munro. Nonetheless, it remains a popular mountain, and is often quoted as an example of an interesting mountain below 3000 feet to show that there is more to mountaineering in Scotland than just Munro-bagging.

Beinn an Lochain is usually climbed from the car park at Butterbridge, on the A83 road, at the head of Glen Kinglas. From there, the summit is reached after a 2.5 km walk along the mountain's north-east ridge, climbing over 700 m.

Coordinates: 56°13′49″N 4°52′35″W / 56.23015°N 4.87631°W / 56.23015; -4.87631


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/31/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.