Creag Mhor
| Height | Grid Ref. | Pronunciation | Meaning |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1047 mt. | NN391361 | Krayk Vore | Big crag |
| Location | Access | ||
| Loch Tay to Loch Rannoch |
Glen Lochay, tel: 01567 820553 |
||
Creag Mhor is munro number Eighty-Four
Mountain Description for Creag Mhor
Creag Mhòr is one of the remotest of the southern highlands tucked away at the north end of Glen Lochay next to Beinn Heasgarnich which is usually climbed in the same outing.
Creag Mhòr is composed of three ridges, the east-south-east ridge (Sròn nan Eun) descends to Glen Lochay and gives the usual route of ascent from that glen. Another ridge also descends to Glen Lochay, this initially goes south from the summit before twisting south-east along steep slopes, which need caution.
Usual access is via public road up Glen Lochay which ends just beyond Kenknock farm and up Creag Mhor's south eastern slope. Alternatively it can be accessed via the north-eastern ridge via a peaty col below Stob an Fhir-Bhogas's western ridge if climbing Beinn Heasgarnich.
Routes
Useful Maps
| Thumbnail | Price | Map Name |
|---|---|---|
![]() | £6.99 | Glen Orchy and Loch Etive (Landranger Maps) |
![]() | £6.99 | Loch Tay and Glen Dochart (Landranger Maps) |


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