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Cappagh Mountain 286m,
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Fermanagh & South Tyrone Area   NE: Ballygawley Hills Subarea
Place count in area: 15, OSI/LPS Maps: 11, 17, 18, 19 
Highest place:
Belmore Mountain, 398m
Maximum height for area: 398 metres,     Maximum prominence for area: 323 metres,

Note: this list of places includes island features such as summits, but not islands as such.
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Cappagh Mountain Hill Tyrone County in NI and in Ulster Province, in Binnion List, Andesite Bedrock

Height: 286m OS 1:50k Mapsheet: 19 Grid Reference: H67844 66431
Place visited by 28 members. Recently by: Claybird007, eflanaga, pmeldrum, Kirsty, Carolyn105, Hoverla, trostanite, dregishjake, dregish, eamonoc, eejaymm, NICKY, wicklore, MichaelG55, LorraineG60
I have visited this place: NO (You need to be a logged-in member to change this.)

Longitude: -6.952545, Latitude: 54.541654 , Easting: 267844, Northing: 366431 Prominence: 103m,  Isolation: 9km,   Has trig pillar
ITM: 667779 866425,   GPS IDs, 6 char: Cpg286, 10 char: CpghMntn
Bedrock type: Andesite, (Barrack Hill Andesite Member)

Cappagh Mountain is the 1188th highest place in Ireland. Cappagh Mountain is the most northerly summit and also the second most easterly in the Fermanagh & South Tyrone area.

Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/1159/
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MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Cappagh Mountain  in area Fermanagh & South Tyrone, Ireland
Picture: Cappagh mountain from its western flank.
 
Mountain in name only.
Short Summary created by Harry Goodman  31 Mar 2015
From Ballygawley roundabout take the B34 east to a cross roads H675605 starA. Turn left on to Agnagar Road, signed for Cappagh. Less than 1km along at a T junction (Harper's Bridge) go right and about 4km along at a cross roads H690649 starB turn left on to Reclain Road. Go up the gentle rise to it's crest and once across, a short way down, at another cross roads H672663 starC turn right and then right again on to a very narrow and poorly maintained road. About 300 metres along, on the right side a trig pillar, marks the high point of the hill, only a few metres in from the road. There is room just before this point where the road swings around left to park and not block access to other road users. This road leads down to Cappagh village some 2km further along and while access to the top can be reached from that direction the disadvantage is the 2km drive up from that end rather than 300m. Furthermore unless the approach to Cappagh village is from the north the overall route traveled would be further than that described above. While Cappagh Mt. covers a wide but not high moorland rise the feeling of wilderness is quashed by a number of large modern houses visible from the high point. While there are views over much of the South Tyrone landscape and beyond these are pleasant rather than striking to the eye. And remember visiting this top does not involve a walk of any kind. It is a mountain in name only. Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/1159/comment/15403/
 
A very easy one to tick off .. by dr_banuska   (Show all for Cappagh Mountain )
 
(End of comment section for Cappagh Mountain .)

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Some mapping:
Open Street Map
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British summit data courtesy:
Database of British & Irish Hills
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