Cookies. This website uses cookies, which are small text files that the website puts on your device to facilitate operation. Cookies help us provide a better service to you. They are used to track general user traffic information and to help the website function properly.

Click to hide this notice for 30 days.
Welcome to MountainViews
If you want to use the website often please enrol (quick and free) at top right.
Overview
Detail
Zoom: ??
For more map options click on any overview map area or any detail map feature.
Find Suggested Walks
Find hill, mountain, island, coastal feature.
Videos


Recent Contributions
Get Notifications

Great Knock: Short trek to summit

Lanzarote: Femés to Puerto Calero via Lomo del Pozo.

Brown Knowe: Straight forward track to the summit

Lake District: Grasmere Round

Lamb Knowe: Short trek from Tods Knowe

Lake District: Langdale South

Tods Knowe: Long and heather bash descent to summit

Broad Law: Do not approach on a misty day

Lake District: Langdale West

Broad Law: Straight forward track to the summit

Lake District: Hartsop above How

East Cairn Hill: Two summits on this hill 500 metres apart

Conditions and Info
Use of MountainViews is governed by conditions and a privacy policy.
Read general information about the site.
Opinions in material here are not necessarily endorsed by MountainViews.
Hillwalking is a risk sport. Information in comments, walks, shared GPS tracks or about starting places may not be accurate for example as regards safety or access permission. You are responsible for your safety and your permission to walk.
See the credits and list definitions.
Video display
markwallace: Track 3869 in area near Benchoona East Top, Twelve Bens (Ireland)
Benchoona across the bog from the north
Length: 5.8km, Creator time taken: 1h50m, Ascent: 532m,
Descent: 531m

Places: Start at L7657963181, Benchoona East Top, Benchoona, end at Start
Logged as completed by 2

Starts at the west end of Lough Muck. There are a couple of laybys around here to park. Route starts with a bog track that leads through a fence with a makeshift gate to a bridge over the Culfin river. This river is quite wide and not otherwise crossable. Benchoona looks quite formidable from here, with a line of black cliffs protecting the summit.

The track peters out soon after the bridge, at a working bog. The first half of the ascent is over rough but not overly steep ground. I stayed close to the stream that comes down the face of the mountain. At about the 250m contour, there is a slight drop into a lovely mini-valley with a stream running west along it. From below, I had thought the best bet from here would be a somewhat grassy patch among the cliffs to the left of the deep gully in the centre of the photo, and from here this still looked the best - or perhaps only - possible ascent.

The final ascent route is on almost the extreme left of the photo above. This comes out at the summit area between Benchoona and Benchoona East Top. One thing that struck me while scrambling on the steep upper slopes is the difference between Benchoona and its neighbours in the Bens and Maamturks. The rock in the Bens/Turks tends to stay much drier than the surrounding grass/bog, and free from vegetation. The rock on Benchoona is wet, slippy and slimy, with wet grass and moss sprouting from every crevice. The mountainside also appears to be home to a very large and well-hydrated slug population, which didn't really add to the pleasure of the ascent, from my point of view.

The slope I was on wasn't quite as steep as the neighbouring slope that's on the left in this picture. But it gives an idea of the steepess of the ground in the area. It was slow work, searching for the most feasible route over slippy, sometimes near vertical rock and ground so soft that bits of it became detached under my feet a couple of times. There was always a fairly straightforward option in the end. I'm not sure I'd do it again, unless maybe after a really dry spell. But it was quite rewarding to do it once.

I wandered around the top - now in mist - a bit, taking in the two listed summits. I had decided to definitely not take the same route down as I had used to get up. Earlier I surmised that if initially I took the more popular route north-west from the summit towards Lettergesh, I could turn north/north-east once I was below about the 400m contour, and miss all the cliffy parts. I did this, and it worked quite nicely for a comfortable and pleasant descent, except at the very end where the dogleg in the route results from me heading for a working bog that wasn't the one I had passed on the way in. There was some unpleasantly swampy ground around here, even after the drier than normal summer. This aside, a similar line to this might be a decent option for ascent as well.

Uploaded on: Fri, 10 Aug 2018 (19:53:33)
Linkback: https://mountainviews.ie/track/3869/  
To download GPS tracks you must be enrolled and logged in. See "Login or enrol", top right - quick and easy.


COMMENTS
No comments uploaded yet.

NOTE: ALL information such as Ascent, Length and Creator time taken etc should be regarded as approximate. The creator's comments are opinions and may not be accurate or still correct.
Your time to complete will depend on your speed plus break time and your mode of transport. For walkers: Naismith's rule, an approximate though often inaccurate estimate, suggests a time of 2h 3m + time stopped for breaks
NOTE: It is up to you to ensure that your route is appropriate for you and your party to follow bearing in mind all factors such as safety, weather conditions, experience and access permission.

* Note: A GPS Height in the elevation profile is sourced from the device that recorded the track. An "SRTM" height is derived from a model of elevations for parts of the earth. More detail

Main mapping:
Open Street Map
(Main supplier OpenTopoMap)
Height layer: © MapTiler
MapTiler Logo
British summit data courtesy:
Database of British & Irish Hills
(Creative Commons Licence)
MountainViews.ie, a Hill-walking Website for the island of Ireland. 2500 Summiteers, 1480 Contributors, maintainer of lists such as: Arderins, Vandeleur-Lynams, Highest Hundred, County Highpoints etc