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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Creise
Sròn na Crèise
Highest point
Elevation1,100 m (3,600 ft)[1]
Prominence168 m (551 ft)
Parent peakMeall a' Bhuiridh
ListingMunro, Marilyn
Naming
Language of nameGaelic
PronunciationScottish Gaelic: [ˈkʰɾʲeʃə]
English: /ˈkrʃ/ KRAYSH [2]
Geography
LocationHighland, Scotland
Parent rangeGrampians
OS gridNN238506
Topo mapOS Landranger 50, 41 OS Explorer 384
Listed summits of Creise
Name Grid ref Height Status
Clach Leathad NN240493 1099 m (3605 ft) Munro Top
Stob a’ Ghlais Choire NN239516 996 m (3268 ft) Munro Top

Creise (Scottish Gaelic: A' Chrèise)[3] is a mountain summit in the Black Mount range, in the Scottish Highlands. It overlooks the northern end of Glen Etive and its height is 1,100 metres (3,600 ft). Creise is one of four Munros in the Black Mount, along with Meall a' Bhuiridh, Stob Ghabhar and Stob a' Choire Odhair. The mountain is a long and flattish ridge, whose highest point was unnamed until 1981. It is popular with cross-country skiers, being near the White Corries ski area from where it is often climbed along with adjoining Meall a' Bhuiridh. The steep and craggy northern buttress, Sròn na Crèise, is well seen from the A82 road road and the Kings House Hotel.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Glen Etive Hills - Creise and Meall a' Bhuiridh
  • Clouds on Creise (18 Feb 2008)

Transcription

Name

The mountain is a long and flattish ridge. Until 1981, it seems the only named parts of the ridge were Sròn na Crèise and Stob a' Ghlais Choire at the northern end, and Clach Leathad (Clachlet) at the southern end. The highest point was apparently unnamed until then,[4] being only one meter higher than Clach Leathad. It seems that the whole ridge was called by the plural Na Crèisean.[3] The meaning is unclear. Irvine Butterfield says that crèis, meaning 'grease' or 'fat', refers to the rich grazing land around the mountain which was used in the past by Glen Coe herdsman to fatten their cattle.[5]

Landscape

Creise is a long whaleback of a mountain, oriented north to south. It has a three kilometre long summit ridge with four distinct high points. The most southerly is Clach Leathad (Clachlet) which with a height of 1099 metres is just a metre lower than the main summit. Up to the 1970s it was regarded as the highest point of the mountain. It was downgraded to a "Munro Top" in the 1981 edition of Munro's Tables. North of Clach Leathad along the ridge is Mam Coire Easain (1070 metres), a former "Munro Top" deleted from the tables in 1981. It stands at the head of the ridge linking the mountain to Meall a' Bhuiridh. The main summit stands a further north. It was previously an unnamed Munro Top on OS maps before being promoted to Munro in 1981.[4]

A fourth high point is Stob a' Ghlais Choire (996 metres). This Munro Top stands at the northern end of the ridge above the crags of Sròn na Crèise which fall steeply to the valley of the River Etive. Sròn na Creise offers a challenging scrambler's route to the summit, but needs care in winter as several serious accidents have occurred on the crags.[6]

Rainfall on Creise finds its way to both coasts of Scotland. Drainage from the south of the mountain (Clach Leathad) flows into Coire Ba, one of the biggest corries in Scotland,[7] and arrives at the east coast at the Firth of Tay via the Rivers Ba, Tummel and Tay. All other drainage from the mountain is via Glen Etive and Loch Etive to the west coast near Oban.

The northern cliffs of Creise tower behind the Kings House Hotel.

Climbing

The most popular ascent of Creise along with the neighbouring Meall a' Bhuiridh starts at the White Corries ski Centre (grid reference NN266525) and climbs Meall a' Bhuiridh first by following the line of the ski chair lift (no self-respecting mountaineer would use the lift). The lifts and tows go right up to the summit of the mountain. The continuation to Creise goes SW and then west over a col with a height of 932 metres which connects the two mountains to reach the summit plateau of Creise. A direct ascent from the same starting point goes west across moorland to reach the foot of Sròn na Creise, it is then a scramblers route up to the northern end of the summit ridge. The hill can also be climbed as part of the Clachlet Traverse, a 25 km classic walk between the Inveroran Inn at Bridge of Orchy and the Kings House Inn in Glen Coe taking all four of the Black Mount Munros with 1700 metres of ascent. The view from the summit takes in a close up of the cliffs of Buachaille Etive Mòr and the western part of Rannoch Moor[8]

Buachaille Etive Mòr seen from the summit of Creise.

References

  • The Munros, Donald Bennett et al.: Scottish Mountaineering Trust: ISBN 0-907521-13-4
  • Hamish’s Mountain Walk, Hamish Brown, ISBN 1-898573-08-5
  • The High Mountains of Britain and Ireland, Irvine Butterfield, ISBN 0-906371-30-9
  • The Magic Of The Munros, Irvine Butterfield, ISBN 0-7153-2168-4
  • The Munros, Britains Highest Mountains, Cameron McNeish, ISBN 1-84204-082-0

Footnotes

  1. ^ "walkhighlands Creise". walkhighlands.co.uk. 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  2. ^ "The Munros, Scotland‘s Highest Mountains" Page 58 (Gives Pronunciation).
  3. ^ a b "Creise". Ainmean-Àite na h-Alba: Gaelic Place-Names of Scotland.
  4. ^ a b The Munros and Tops 1891-1997. Spreadsheet with details of changes in Munro's Tables.
  5. ^ "The Magic of the Munros" Page 46 (Gives details of translated name).
  6. ^ Mountaineering Council of Scotland. Details accidents on Sròn na Creise.
  7. ^ Travel Lite. Archived 2007-07-19 at the Wayback Machine “Coire Ba is a gigantic corrie“.
  8. ^ "The Munros" Page 52 Gives routes of ascent.

56°36′52″N 4°52′20″W / 56.61444°N 4.87222°W / 56.61444; -4.87222

This page was last edited on 3 February 2023, at 16:20
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