Slievecallan or Slieve Callan, also historically called 'Mount Callan', is a mountain with a height of in west County Clare, Ireland. It is the third highest mountain in the county. There is a small lake and two megalithic tombs on the south side, and traditionally the mountain was used for Lughnasa gatherings. In 2017, a wind farm with accompanying roads and substations was built on Slievecallan, despite opposition from locals and An Taisce.
Archaeology
On the south side of the mountain, in the townland of Knockalassa, are the remains of two megalithic tombs; one on the mountainside and one further down by the Ennis Road. Irish folklore holds that it is bad luck to damage or disrespect such tombs and that deliberately doing so could bring a curse. An ogham stone was found in the late 18th century in the same area. It was the first ogham inscription to be translated and published. The inscription claims to mark the grave of Conán, one of the fianna of Irish mythology. Charles Vallancey and Theophilus O'Flanagan published what they claimed was a poem from the medieval tale Cath Gabhra, which says that Conán was slain at Slievecallan during a ceremony to worship the sun. Michael Comyn wrote that people would gather on the mountainside, at Buaile na Gréine, where they would sacrifice livestock to the Sun at a stone altar. A small lake on the mountainside is called Lough Boolynagreana. However, it is now accepted that the ogham stone was carved shortly before its discovery, and the Cath Gabhra poem is not found in the original. Nevertheless, the stone fueled antiquarian fieldwork and the study of ogham. Up until recent times, people would gather on Slievecallan each August to celebrate the festival of Lughnasa.
Slievecallan has a wet oceanic climate with an average annual rainfall of 2,000 mm and high average wind speeds. This is due to the proximity of the ocean and its prominence in the landscape. Geologically the soils are a mixture of peat, peaty gley and gley soils over horizontal layers of carboniferousshale, sandstone, and mudstone. The soil is relatively poor in nutrients. Without human interference the natural vegetation of this area would consist of woodlands dominated by ash in alkaline areas. Hazel and oak woods would be prominent in the more acidic areas. Nowadays most of the land surrounding Slievecallan is heathland, pasture and non-native forestry. The forestry is mainly plantations of Sitka spruce