The Slieve Croob mountain range, sometimes called the
Dromara Hills, or "
The Twelve Cairns", is situated in the
townland of
Crooby, in the
Barony of
Kinelarty, in the eastern part of the
Banbridge region, in the centre of
County Down,
Northern Ireland, and is the source for the River
Lagan. In the original
Irish,
Sliabh CrĂșibe, it means "Claw Mountain".
Its 523m summit is between the villages of Dromara, Ballynahinch, Dundrum, Castlewellan, and Katesbridge. From this vantage, on a clear day, you can see each of the six counties of Northern Ireland. One finds the Legananny Dolmen on the southern fringe of the mountain range. The dolmen is made up of two portal stones, with a support and a long capstone, making for a tripod appearance.