Glyder Fach: Difference between revisions
Created page with '{{Infobox hill |name=Glyder Fach |county=Caernarfonshire |range=Snowdonia |picture=Glyder Fach from Gallt yr Ogof.jpg |picture caption=Glyder Fach from Gallt yr Ogof |height=3,26…' |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
|picture caption=Glyder Fach from Gallt yr Ogof | |picture caption=Glyder Fach from Gallt yr Ogof | ||
|height=3,261 feet | |height=3,261 feet | ||
|latitude=53.104914 | |||
|longitude=-4.009048 | |||
|os grid ref=SH656583 | |os grid ref=SH656583 | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Glyder Fach''' is a mountain in [[Snowdonia]], in [[Caernarfonshire]]. It is the second highest of the Glyderau and the sixth highest in Wales. | '''Glyder Fach''' is a mountain in [[Snowdonia]], in [[Caernarfonshire]]. It is the second highest of the Glyderau and the sixth highest in Wales. | ||
Routes to the summit lead from [[Tryfan]] and Bristly Ridge to the north, by way of [[Glyder Fawr]] from [[Pen-y-Pass]] to the south, and along the [[Glyder]] ridge to the east, towards [[Capel Curig]]. It is a popular spot for | Routes to the summit lead from [[Tryfan]] and Bristly Ridge to the north, by way of [[Glyder Fawr]] from [[Pen-y-Pass]] to the south, and along the [[Glyder]] ridge to the east, towards [[Capel Curig]]. It is a popular spot for climbers. | ||
The name "Glyder Fach" means "Little Glyder", though the mountain is not little by any standard but comparison with its big sister, Glyder Fawr. According to Sir Ifor Williams, the word "Glyder" derives from the Welsh word "Gludair", meaning a heap of stones. | The name "Glyder Fach" means "Little Glyder", though the mountain is not little by any standard but comparison with its big sister, Glyder Fawr. According to Sir Ifor Williams, the word "Glyder" derives from the Welsh word "Gludair", meaning a heap of stones. | ||
Line 16: | Line 18: | ||
==Features== | ==Features== | ||
===The Cantilever Stone=== | ===The Cantilever Stone=== | ||
[[File:CantileverSPC.jpg | [[File:CantileverSPC.jpg|thumb|200px|The Cantilever Stone]] | ||
[[File:Flying Buttress at Glyder Fach.jpg | [[File:Flying Buttress at Glyder Fach.jpg|200px|thumb|Flying Buttress, a popular climbing route]] | ||
Standing near the summit is the Cantilever Stone, a large rock which from the correct angle appears to be precariously balanced, making it a popular place for photographs. | Standing near the summit is the Cantilever Stone, a large rock which from the correct angle appears to be precariously balanced, making it a popular place for photographs. | ||
Latest revision as of 17:36, 10 September 2018
Glyder Fach | |||
Caernarfonshire | |||
---|---|---|---|
Glyder Fach from Gallt yr Ogof | |||
Range: | Snowdonia | ||
Summit: | 3,261 feet SH656583 53°6’18"N, 4°-0’33"W |
Glyder Fach is a mountain in Snowdonia, in Caernarfonshire. It is the second highest of the Glyderau and the sixth highest in Wales.
Routes to the summit lead from Tryfan and Bristly Ridge to the north, by way of Glyder Fawr from Pen-y-Pass to the south, and along the Glyder ridge to the east, towards Capel Curig. It is a popular spot for climbers.
The name "Glyder Fach" means "Little Glyder", though the mountain is not little by any standard but comparison with its big sister, Glyder Fawr. According to Sir Ifor Williams, the word "Glyder" derives from the Welsh word "Gludair", meaning a heap of stones.
Features
The Cantilever Stone
Standing near the summit is the Cantilever Stone, a large rock which from the correct angle appears to be precariously balanced, making it a popular place for photographs.
Castell y Gwint
- Main article: Castell y Gwint
Another notable feature, west of the summit, is Castell y Gwynt, (Castle of the Wind), a spiky rocky outcrop.
Castell y Gwint reaches 3,041 feet, a summit often included in a run of the Welsh 3000s along with Glyder Fach itself.
Bristly Ridge
Bristly Ridge is a grade 1 scramble on the north side of Glyder Fach[1]. Consensus puts the difficulty at Grade 1, but it is at the upper end of the grade and some lines qualify as Grade 2. There are some exposed and steep sections of climbing, particularly the upper pitch of Sinister Gully and in Great Pinnacle Gap. However these sections may be bypassed in favour of easier lines, reducing the overall difficulty to Grade 1[2].
Trivia
"Castell y Gwynt" and the "Cantilever Stone" were used in Walt Disney's film The Dragonslayer; this was one entrance to the Dragon's lair.
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Glyder Fach) |
References
- ↑ Bristly Ridge UKScrambles.co.uk
- ↑ Bristly Ridge A Fellwalker in East Anglia