Beinn Ìme

Beinn Ìme

Beinn Ime seen from Butterbridge below Rest and be Thankful.
Highest point
Elevation 1,011 m (3,317 ft)[1]
Prominence c. 696 m
Parent peak Ben Lui
Listing Munro, Marilyn
Naming
Translation Butter mountain (Scottish Gaelic)
Pronunciation Gaelic [peɲˈimə]
Geography
Location Argyll and Bute, Scotland
Parent range Arrochar Alps, Grampian Mountains
OS grid NN255084

Beinn Ìme /ˌbɛn ˈmə/[2] is the highest mountain in the Arrochar Alps, in the Southern Highlands of Scotland. There are three usual routes of ascent. From Succoth, one may follow the same path that is used to reach The Cobbler before taking the right fork near the base of the Cobbler's main crags and continuing up the glen, across the bealach and up Ben Ìme's eastern ridge. Alternatively, the summit can be reached from the pass of Rest and be Thankful and from the Loch Lomond side, using the private road that leads to Loch Sloy. Beinn Ìme separates the Dumbartonshire landscape of Loch Lomond in the East and the Argyll Highlands of Loch Fyne and Loch Goil anywhere north, west, south west. Beinn Ìme is the landmark to the entrance to Argyll.

Beinn Ime seen from the Corbett Beinn Luibhean, 1.5 km to the SW.
Beinn Ìme is the snowy peak in the centre, with The Cobbler in front and Beinn Narnain further east (right).


References

  1. "walkhighlands Beinn Ime". walkhighlands.co.uk. 2013. Retrieved 16 October 2013.
  2. G.M. Miller, BBC Pronouncing Dictionary of British Names (Oxford UP, 1971), p. 8.

External links

Coordinates: 56°14′10″N 4°49′01″W / 56.23601°N 4.81704°W / 56.23601; -4.81704


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