1 of 6 Christine Riden, from Kent, said tributes should be limited. "I believe the mountains should stay wild and natural. If you love a place you might want to have a memorial there, but if you allow that there might be too many, and it would change the place."
2 of 6 Genny and Robert Wheatley, from Somerset, said: "It's like the bunches of flowers, and road-side memorials. I do recognise the need to remember the dead. But I like the idea of a central site for all the memorials, off the mountainside."
3 of 6 Paul Wright, from Edwinstowe, was in favour of mountain tributes. "As long as any memorial put on the mountain is just a plaque or a stone with a name on it, I can't see any problem with that."
4 of 6 Rob Smith, from Stafford, said structure was needed. "If people want to walk up there and put memorials, that has a place, if it's important to them. But it has to be managed, otherwise some people would build enormous edifices on the mountain."
5 of 6 Samantha Price, from Leeds, said: "If my partner were to die, I know for a fact he'd like to be remembered up on Ben Nevis. So I'd want to be able to build a cairn, or put a plaque, in his memory on the mountain."
6 of 6 Yacqub Mirza, from Stoke on Trent, said he liked seeing tributes on the mountainside."I find it interesting to read the plaques that are on the mountain, to find about the people who loved this place."