Furth Munro: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Created page with 'A '''Furth Munro''' is a mountain of over 3,000 feet in the British Isles outside Scotland. Scotland has a wealth of mountains over 3,000 feet, which are termed Munros a…' |
|||
Line 95: | Line 95: | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} | ||
[[Category:Furth Munros| | [[Category:Furth Munros| ]] [[Category:Mountains and hills]] |
Revision as of 13:57, 27 April 2012
A Furth Munro is a mountain of over 3,000 feet in the British Isles outside Scotland.
Scotland has a wealth of mountains over 3,000 feet, which are termed Munros after Sir Hugh Munro, 4th Baronet (1856–1919), who produced the first Munros Tables in 1891, which tables are maintained and revised as necessarily by the Scottish Mountaineering Club.
The Scottish Mountaineering Club recognises thirty-four peaks which would be Munros or Munro Tops if they had had the good fortune to be in Scotland. These theerfore are "the Munros furth of Scotland",[1] and known as "Furth Munroes".
The highest of the Furth Munros is Snowdon in Caernarfonshire.
Of the "Furths":
- 15 are in Caernarfonshire (Snowdonia)
- 6 are in Cumberland (one on the Westmorland border)
- 11 are in County Kerry (all but one in MacGuillycuddy's Reeks)
- 1 is in County Wicklow (Wicklow Mountains)
- 1 is on the border of the Counties of Limerick and Tipperary
List of the Furth Munros
References
- ↑ Bearhop, D.A. (1997). Munro's Tables. Scottish Mountaineering Club & Trust. ISBN 0-907521-53-3.