Torc Mountain
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Irish English Template:Infobox mountain Torc Mountain (Template:Langx, meaning 'mountain of wild boar'),[1] at Script error: No such module "convert"., is the 329th–highest peak in Ireland on the Arderin list. It is a popular mountain for hill walkers as it has a stone or boarded path (using railway sleepers) from its base at Torc Waterfall to its summit, which has views of the Lakes of Killarney.[2] Torc Mountain is part of the Mangerton Mountain Group range in County Kerry, Ireland.
Naming
The word Torc comes from the Irish translation of a "wild boar", and the area is associated with legends involving wild boars – Irish academic Paul Tempan notes that: "Wild boar is significant in Celtic mythology, being depicted on Celtic artefacts found in continental Europe, Ireland and Britain; it represents physical strength and heroic fighting skills".[1] One legend is of a man who was cursed by the Devil to spend each night transformed into a wild boar, but when his secret was revealed by a local farmer, he burst into flames and disappeared into the nearby Devil's Punchbowl on Mangerton Mountain from which the Owengarriff River emerged to hide the entrance to his cave beneath the Torc Waterfall.[3][4] There is also the story of how the legendary Irish warrior, Fionn MacCumhaill, killed a magical boar on Torc mountain with his golden spear.[5]
Geography
Torc Mountain is part of the Mangerton Mountain Group which is a massif to the south of Killarney that includes 26 other named peaks with a height above Script error: No such module "convert"..[6] Torc sits in the north-west corner of the massif and immediately west of Torc Mountain is the subsidiary summit of Torc Mountain West Top Script error: No such module "convert"..[7][8] Torc's height and prominence, qualifies it on the British Isles Marilyn classification,[9] as well as the Arderin classification.[6]
Hill walking
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Torc is popular for hill walkers as it can be accessed from a marked stone-step path its base at Torc Waterfall, which then becomes a small road (the Old Kenmare Road) from the top of Torc Waterfall to the mountain itself, and then finishes with a track of wooden railway "sleepers" over the underlying bogland to its summit at Script error: No such module "convert"..[8] The route can thus be completed without full hiking boots, and requires no special navigational skills.[8][10]
The summit of Torc has views of the Lakes of Killarney, the Black Valley, the MacGillycuddy's Reeks and Muckross House and grounds.[2] The route from the Torc Waterfall car-park (at Script error: No such module "Ordnance Survey coordinates".), to the summit of Torc Mountain and back is 8–kilometres and takes 3 hours.[2]
Hill walkers can avoid the circa 100 steps of Torc Waterfall and start instead from the upper Torc Waterfall car-park (at 55 metres, Script error: No such module "Ordnance Survey coordinates".), to complete the shorter 7.5–kilometre hour 2.5–hour route to the summit of Torc Mountain, via the Old Kenmare Road, and back to the upper car-park.[2][7]
The northerly views from the summit of Torc Mountain can be achieved by climbing the steep stone steps up the lower Cardiac Hill, which is half-way up the north facing slopes of Torc Mountain, and which can be accessed from the N71 Road, half a kilometre from the Torc Waterfall car-park.[11][12]
Bibliography
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See also
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- Lists of mountains in Ireland
- List of mountains of the British Isles by height
- Torc Waterfall
- Mangerton Mountain Group
- The Black Valley
References
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- ↑ a b Mountainviews, (September 2013), "A Guide to Ireland's Mountain Summits: The Vandeleur-Lynams & the Arderins", Collins Books, Cork, Template:ISBN
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External links
- MountainViews: The Irish Mountain Website, Torc Mountain
- MountainViews: Irish Online Mountain Database
- The Database of British and Irish Hills , the largest database of British Isles mountains ("DoBIH")
- Hill Bagging UK & Ireland, the searchable interface for the DoBIH
- Ordnance Survey Ireland ("OSI") Online Map Viewer
- Logainm: Placenames Database of Ireland
- Torc Mountain Walking Route, Map and GPS information from the Activeme site
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