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Dublin Area   S: Kippure & Kilbride Subarea
Place count in area: 18, OSI/LPS Maps: 43, 50, 56, AWW, EW-DM, EW-WE, EW-WW 
Highest place:
Kippure, 757m
Maximum height for area: 757 metres,     Maximum prominence for area: 262 metres,

Note: this list of places includes island features such as summits, but not islands as such.
Rating graphic.
Kippure Mountain Cipiúr A name in Irish, also Cíop Mhór, also The Pole an extra EastWest name in English (Ir. Cipiúr [OSI], origin obscure) County Highpoint of Dublin and in Dublin/ Wicklow Counties in Leinster Province, in County Highpoint, Arderin, Vandeleur-Lynam, Irish Highest Hundred Lists, Pale grey fine to coarse-grained granite Bedrock

Height: 757m OS 1:50k Mapsheet: 56 Grid Reference: O11582 15455
Place visited by 1068 members. Recently by: Muscles1960, jackos, Nomad691, jellybean, Courin, rhw, purpleknight, Sophie-Hayes, KateLeckie, MeabhTiernan, Deirdreb, discovering_dann, taramatthews, Mario77, MGerry
I have visited this place: NO (You need to be a logged-in member to change this.)

Longitude: -6.331884, Latitude: 53.178139 , Easting: 311582, Northing: 215455 Prominence: 262m,  Isolation: 3.3km,   Has trig pillar
ITM: 711506 715485,   GPS IDs, 6 char: Kipure, 10 char: Kippure
Bedrock type: Pale grey fine to coarse-grained granite, (Type 2e equigranular)

The River Liffey rises high on the slopes of Kippure. The name as shown on Discovery map is simply a transliteration of a pronunciation collected locally, but without any clear meaning. It resembles ciop, 'stump' and iúr, 'yew', but 'stump of yew' would be Ciop Iúir. Yew is unlikely to have ever grown near such a high exposed summit, but the name also refers to a townland which descends to the valley, so a connection with yew is not impossible.   Kippure is the highest mountain in the Dublin area and the 73rd highest in Ireland. Kippure is the most southerly summit in the Dublin area. Kippure is the highest point in county Dublin.

Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/73/
COMMENTS for Kippure (Cipiúr) 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next page >>  
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MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Kippure (<i>Cipiúr</i>) in area Dublin, Ireland
Picture: Kippure from the NW - From right on skyline Djouce, War Hill
 
Dublin's Highpoint - a boggy, heathery hill topped by a large TV transmitter.
Short Summary created by markmjcampion, simon3, wicklore  31 Aug 2023
Kippure is the highest and most southerly summit in Dublin. It is crowned by a 110 m transmitter and is approachable from all points of the compass. It can be walked on its own or as a route combining several other summits. Most routes involve heavy and heathery open bog, while one approach makes use of a gated access road. The summit is urbanised and ugly but the views on a good day are expansive in all directions, taking in Dublin, Bray, the Irish Sea and many Wicklow hills.

N. An approach through Glenasmole O10951 19946 starA is the quietest and offers secret babbling brooks, mini cataracts and river cliffs, wild goats and plenty of peace. 2hrs
N. Also, along a bog track starting at O13093 19647 starB. 2hrs

E. The adventurous can start at the cottage at O14194 16367 starC and head up Eagles’ Crag between the two lakes. Or park at O14270 15144 starD and follow a track that skirts the corrie walls. The gated access road at O14090 14193 starE is the most popular with the Sunday stroller. 1hr+

S. Typical approaches are from O13793 13740 starF or O07957 14461 starG both of which cross heavy bog.

W. Start at O06288 16827 starH and take in Seefin and Seefingan en route. 2.5hrs+

NNW. Start at O07343 20103 starI and take in Seahan, Corrig and Seefingan en route. 3hrs+

Caution is needed if approaching from Seahan or Seefin to the W as these routes partly follow the boundary of the Kilbride Army Rifle Range.

Notable tracks include track/3829, track/856, the challenging track/2964, the ‘out there’ track/2966. Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/73/comment/4833/
 
MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Kippure (<i>Cipiúr</i>) in area Dublin, Ireland
Picture: Highest man in Dublin!!
Kippure Hike
by Dessie1  31 May 2010
Hiked up Kippure on 21-5-10.Parked in the car park at the small bridge (O1094912774 starJ) just where the R759 road passes over a small stream.Hike length to top was 2.7Km.Took a 14 deg true bearing all the way to top.
Route was quite marshy most of the way but not too bad. Met 2 deer on route which was a surprise.Didnt have time to even get the camera turned on!Reached the summit after about an hours hike.Excellent views of the 2 sugarloaf's peeping through Tonduff and War Hill to the east and Carrigvore,Gravale,Duff and mulls to the southwest.Had celebratory cup of tea on summit while watching a guy hang from the mast near the top repairing something.Retraced steps back down to car.Enjoyable couple of hours and well worth a go if you fancy something a bit more challenging than the road route. Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/73/comment/5824/
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MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Kippure (<i>Cipiúr</i>) in area Dublin, Ireland
Picture: Kippure across the Boggy Athdown Pass.
 
Homerclesse on Kippure, 2010
by Homerclesse  28 Mar 2010
I've approached the summit a few times by two alternative routes.
The first is a straight up down route following the tarmac road from the gates off the Military Road. Although a rewarding view awaits it's not the most inspiring route and a little obvious.
The second route is by a couple of approaches. Park at the gates of the Kippure Estate and follow the track across the road. This eventually leads into heavy forest with a lot of deeply rutted tracks and felled trees. The best option is to head to the river bank (Athdown Brook) and climb up along the left side bank of it. A nice view behind you to the Coronation Plantation and the Mullaghcleevaun Range. Once you clear the line of trees on the left then it's simply a matter of climbing up to the top of Seefingan with it's mighty Cairn. Great views of the Blessington Lakes, the other hills of the West Wicklow range, south to Mullaghcleevaun and east to Kippure, our destination. It's very hard to miss with it's huge Aerial on top. Head out across the boggy Athdown pass and follow a line up to the top of Kippure. Being the highest point in County Dublin you will be rewarded with amazing views on a clear day. All the major summits are visable. It's a very boggy approach in places but very challenging. Head back down roughly 220 degrees to the bridge on the Sally Gap and back to the car along the Road.

An alternative route is to park on the west side of Seefin at the gates and go straight up the Forest track. Follow the ridge from Seefin and then to Seefingan and on to Kippure as described above. The obvious disadvantage is you'll be heading back the same way to the car. Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/73/comment/4547/
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MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Kippure (<i>Cipiúr</i>) in area Dublin, Ireland
Picture: A composite image of Upper and Lower Lough Bray from Eagle's Crag.
Magnificent redeeming feature
by Colin Murphy  20 Apr 2021
Been up here a few times before (half of Dublin has) so with lockdown limiting options, I decided to approach it via a little-used route. Kippure is largely a big round lump of a mountain, topped by an ugly transmitter, but it is redeemed entirely by the presence in its eastern slope of two spectacular corrie loughs: Upper and Lower Lough Bray. I started at the car park at O143 153 starK and proceeded west then NW around the cliff edge about the upper lough, then turned west again at O 133 154 starL, across a relatively easy slope covered in short heather (dry the day I did it). I hooked up with the paved access road at O 128 155 starM which I followed to summit. I then retraced my steps leaving the access road at the same place but now heading in a EEN direction to O 135 160 starN, or the point known as Eagle's Crag - a large rock outcrop. The views from here are in utter contrast to what Kippure otherwise offers - a spectacular bird's eye view of both loughs and east Wicklow beyond. A friend had actually told me it was possible to descend directly from this point down a steep, but doable track that runs down and then along the eastern side of the upper lough and back to my car, which I happily followed. If you're doing Kippure, make sure you do the Crag! Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/73/comment/22904/
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MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Kippure (<i>Cipiúr</i>) in area Dublin, Ireland
 
padodes on Kippure, 2009
by padodes  25 Jan 2009
At the risk of appearing to comment lately on nothing else but Kippure and the twin corries at its eastern end, I would like to add a little detail to the more interesting Lower Lough this time.

In his book ‘The Neighbourhood of Dublin’ (1920), the walking enthusiast Weston St. John Joyce spoke of the lower lake as “a wild, gloomy tarn…believed by some to be the crater of an old-world volcano”. There’s an earlier reference to this hypothesis in A. G. Wright’s ‘A Guide to the County of Wicklow’ (1827), who says that “appearances favour the conjecture”. We know today that the true origin of the lake lies in the power of ice, but looking at the photo (I used a fish-eye to capture as much as possible), one can easily see how the mistake could be made.

On the far side of the lake can be seen the south-facing Lough Bray House, “embosomed in a grove of trees”, as St. John Joyce writes. He says it was “built in the Old English style of architecture, and was originally a gift by the Duke of Northumberland when Lord Lieutenant, to his medical adviser, Sir Philip Crampton”, but other accounts I have seen link the house to Lady Powerscourt, who is said to have built a summer house (or shooting lodge) here towards the end of the 19th century. At the western end of the lake, which comprises 37 Irish acres, a beach was created by bringing up cartloads of sand all the way from Brittas Bay. I was surprised to read, recently, that the lake even has its monster in residence. On the web page www.paranormaldatabase.com/ireland/leinster, there’s an account, dated 3 June 1963, of “Two friends watching the Lough [who] spotted a large, dark grey circular body rise from the lake, almost four metres in circumference. The head was slightly away from the body, and stood 90 centimetres out of the water”. Believe it if you will. Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/73/comment/3547/
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MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Kippure (<i>Cipiúr</i>) in area Dublin, Ireland
Picture: Lough Bray Upper and Eagles' Crag
padodes on Kippure, 2009
by padodes  21 Jan 2009
I would like to add a few details to Wicklore’s comment on walking around Lough Bray (Upper and Lower), which may add to the interest of exploring this area. The massive outcrop between the two corries is known as the Eagles’ Crag (although the name does not appear in the OSI map). It is recorded that eagles did, in fact, breed here into the 19th century, when they were finally hunted to extermination. It still isn’t unusual to see a peregrine falcon or kestrel rising on the thermals created by the corries, but you are just as likely to see today colourful paragliders doing the same when the weather is favourable. The corries themselves were formed during the last Ice Age and marked the head of a glacier that flowed down the length of Glencree Valley, with, I would surmise, minor tributaries coming from Raven’s Rock glen (east of Lugduff) and the little glen at Powerscourt Waterfall, each of which has its own modest cirque. The lakes that formed behind the moraines are quite deep and do not seem to communicate above ground, which has led to speculation that they may nonetheless be connected underground, with a flow from the Upper to the Lower. The water is acidic and low in nutrients, so aquatic life is rather poor and you will see that waterfowl are infrequent visitors. I read once that whooper swans have been known to descend here in winter, but I have never myself seen their white beauty on these black waters, despite many a visit. There is abundant plant life around the corries, I am assured, but the names that leave some botanising friends of mine ecstatic, like woodrush, cowberry and quillwort, are rather lost on me.

Parking close to the roadside cottage by Lough Bray Lower is very restricted, but this does not prevent, at weekends, a lot of cars from parking there anyway, and on both sides of the narrow road at that. It can be hard to get by, if you are travelling through. Add to that the madness of tour operators who have begun to send big coaches over the Military Road in recent years, and you have all the ingredients of a bottleneck worthy of the Red Cow Roundabout. Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/summit/73/comment/3536/
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