Scout Scar, also called Underbarrow Scar,[1] is a hill in the English Lake District, west of Kendal, Cumbria and above the village of Underbarrow. It reaches 771 feet (235 m).[2] Scout Scar is the subject of a chapter of Wainwright's book The Outlying Fells of Lakeland,[1] but the summit he describes is a lower summit at 764 feet (233 m), 270m south of the highest point.[3][4] Wainwright's anticlockwise recommended route also includes Cunswick Scar at 679 feet (207 m).[5] The higher summit of Scout Scar has a topographic prominence of 109m and is thus classified as a HuMP, a hill with a prominence of at least 100m.[3]
Scout Scar and Cunswick Scar are both formed of Carboniferous Limestone and dip gently towards the east with a steep western scarp slope.[6]
At the lower, southern, summit there is a shelter, locally known as "The Mushroom". It was built in 1912 as a memorial to King George V, and restored in 1969[1] and again in 2003.[7] The structure includes a toposcope indicating the Central Fells and other landmarks.