Cregagh Glen Cache Series
Into The Wild GC2D7GK
Feet of Clay GC2D7GR
In My Tree GC2D7GV
The Fixer GC2D7GW
Rise GC2TPBB

The purpose of this mini-series of caches is to draw you up through the picturesque and ancient Cregagh Glen and then to link to 2 further established caches on the Castlereagh hills (Rocky Memorial GC2BRA5, Belfast View GC2FYDB) and ultimately to the cache at Lisnabreeny Rath (Ring Fort GCJ3Z8).
All caches in this series are hidden within Cregagh Glen. Sturdy footwear is essential – paths can be muddy all year round. Not suitable for wheelchairs or strollers. Please supervise children at all times - the glen has naturally steep sides and a river running its length.
Distance/Time one way: Cregagh Glen walk – 1km approx. ½ hour (2.5 km to Lisnabreeny Rath approx. 1 hour - not including caching time!)
Bring a picnic and take a seat at the top of the walk at Lisnabreeny Fort – wonderful views over Belfast, and to the Mournes on a clear day.
All caches in this series have been placed with kind permission of the National Trust – the landowners of Cregagh Glen
Access
Entrance on Upper Knockbreda Road, just south of the Cregagh Road junction.
Care should be taken if crossing the Upper Knockbreda Road — this is a busy dual carriageway.
By car - No parking at entrance. On street parking available at the top of the Cregagh Road or the waypoint provided.
Please be considerate of residents when parking and please do not stop on the carriageway!
By bus - Metro Services 6 (30, 30A, 31).
Cregagh Glen to Lisnabreeny Fort
Beginning at the entrance on the Upper Knockbreda Road, follow the path uphill through Cregagh Glen. At the top of the glen take the path to the right and cross under the Manse Road bridge via the wooden walkway and into the grounds of Lisnabreeny House.
Follow the lane along past the house, school and farmland. A stile will take you past the gate halfway along this lane. At the end of the lane a wooden gate will lead you to the clearly marked National Trust path through fields at the end of which is a bench. Stop here to catch your breath and enjoy the view over Belfast. Continue further up the hill, past a metal farm gate to another wooden gate. This will lead you to another field from where you will see a stand of mature trees marking the site of the rath.
The "Night" Cache
This cache is NOT at the published Coordinates. All you will find here is the first reflector. A waypoint has been provided for some nearby safe parking.
The cache is in Cregagh Glen which starts on the other side of the road.
The path to the cache has been set out using tiny drawing pin size reflective tacks. Please do not touch them as they are easy to disturb, this is so as to not damage the area and meet geocaching placement guidelines. They are retroflective so for best results you will need to hold your torch at eye level.
A test reflector has been placed on the tree on the other side of the river at the bottom of the steps immediately to your right as you enter the glen. This is an EXAMPLE. THERE IS NO NEED TO GO DOWN THE STEPS. From here the time to cache and return should take about 40 mins or less for the average person. This is allowing time for you to look for the reflectors. I have placed far more than I needed to. you should be able to see them from 100 metres away with a decent torch. You dont need to be like a well known ards cacher who has the worlds second most powerful head torch. Its paths and steps (over 220 in total) all the way until the very end. Keep an eye on young cachers! Whilst the NT are good and fence off all the steep drops there is a part where at time of placement due to recent weather a stretch of fence has fallen into the river. CARE AND COMMON SENSE are amust. When you get to an open space where the trees are set well back from the path you are looking for a tree with 2. this tells you that you should look for a tree with an orange reflector. if you get to a junction with a metal fence you have gone too far. When at the "Orange" tree you should find 2 more trees with reflectors. the cache is at the 2nd. It is a log only so make sure you have a pen. you should be able to remove the log from the cammo without dislodging the cammo itself!
This has been designed to be done at night and using the reflectors I have is supposed to make it all but impossible to do it in daylight.
I can only ask that you do this cache in the spirit of the way it has been placed
Background
Glen
The greater part of Cregagh Glen is owned and maintained by the National Trust. The river though small, displays a number of impressive waterfalls, the largest with a drop of around fifteen metres.
The woodland element of the glen is in parts quite ancient and is one of very few surviving remnants of a thousand acre forest. It consists mainly of ash, beech, hazel, sycamore and Scots pine. The principal ground-cover is field woodrush and bluebell but other species such as dog violet and wood anemone (also known as ‘windflower’) can be observed – the glen is at its most beautiful in the Spring, when the bluebells are in flower and the river is in full flow.
Rumour has it that Thomas Russell, librarian of Belfast Society for Promoting Knowledge (later to become the Linen Hall Library) and as it happens, co-founder and leader of the United Irishmen, was hidden by a James (or some say William) Witherspoon: a woodsman who had a small cabin in the forest by the glen. Russell was later hanged and then beheaded for his part in Robert Emmet’s failed rebellion of 1803 or some say for his cataloguing (it wasn’t very good).
House
In 1937 Lisnabreeny House (then around 100 years old) along with 166 acres of land including much of the Cregagh Glen, was gifted to the National Trust by Dr Nesca Robb; a well-known local writer of the time. Since being the family home of the Robb family (Belfast department store owners who made the kind donation), Lisnabreeny House has in its time been the first city youth hostel in Ireland and a US Army headquarters in Northern Ireland during and after the Second World War. The US Army maintained a military cemetery in a neighbouring field (see Rocky Memorial GC2BRA5 for details). The recently restored Lisnabreeny House is now part of Lagan College, Belfast’s first religiously integrated school.
Rath
Lisnabreeny Rath, probably meaning ‘fort of the fairy’, dates from the early Christian period, between 500 and 1000AD. Raths are common throughout Ireland but particularly in this area, although Lisnabreeny is the only one local to here with full public access. When functioning, it would have contained a simple dwelling within an area protected by an earth bank and palisade fence. Much of this construction is still visible today.