Landscapes
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Stob Dearg is the highest and finest peak of Buachaille Etive Mor, and one of the most famous sights of the Highlands. The mountain presents a remarkable pyramid of rock to travellers along the road across Rannoch Moor.
Just outside Glencoe village you’ll find an exquisite wood around a lochan with a backdrop of pointed mountains. The trails wind through a landscape planted with North American trees by Lord Strathcona in the 1890s – he hoped they would comfort his homesick Canadian wife.
This place is called The Devil’s Pulpit, located in Finnich Glen. This surreal magical place is cut 70 feet deep into a dark red sandstone gorge, Nowadays, people often refer to the glen itself as the Devil’s Pulpit. However, that name, in its original usage, did not refer to the glen, but to a feature within it: more specifically, it was the name of a particular rock The area from which this picture was taken can be reached by means of a flight of steps which has been nicknamed Jacob’s Ladder
It is a complex mountain, with many ridges and subsidiary peaks, one of which, Stob Coire Sgreamhach, is classified as a separate Munro. The most noticeable features of Bidean nam Bian are the famous Three Sisters of Glen Coe, three steeply-sided ridges that extend north into the Glen
This is small Lochan located on the road through the Back of glen Coe Village. It is very beautiful and unspoiled.
This has to be the most photographed tree in Scotland. It stands submerged in Loch Lomond,due to high rain and snowfall. It is stunning when pictured both in and out of the water.
Milarrochy Bay is a bay on Loch Lomond. It is near the village of Balmaha. Looking across to Argyll & Bute on Milarrochy Bay. Other bays on the east of Loch Lomond include Cashel Bay and Sallochy Bay. The bay has a visitor centre, where you can find out about Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park and the surrounding area.
Loch Ard is a fresh water loch lying 5km to the west of Aberfoyle and is considered to be the source of the River Forth. One of the 22 lochs that make up Loch Lomond & The Trossachs National Park, Loch Ard is believed to be the source of the River Forth which flows from its eastern end. Famous Scottish author and poet, Sir Walter Scott, name checked the loch in his 1817 novel Rob Roy describing it as ‘an enchanting sheet of water.’
This has to be the most photographed tree in Scotland. It stands out of the water of Loch Lomond due to dry weather. It has a stunning root-ball when pictured out of the water.
Loch Trool is renowned as having some of the finest scenery in southern Scotland. Lying in the heart of the Galloway Forest Park it is a perfect example of the unspoilt and untamed nature of Galloway as you circumnavigate the loch on the Glentrool Trail.
Glen Trool (Scottish Gaelic: Gleann an t-Sruthail) is a glen in the Southern Uplands, Galloway, Scotland. It contains Loch Trool which is fed by several burns and drained by the Water of Trool. North of Glen Trool is Merrick, the highest mountain in the Southern Uplands
This stunning wee waterfall can be found up the Dalry moor road. it is truly a hidden gem and known mostly only to locals.
Buachaille Etive Mòr meaning ("the herdsman of Etive") is generally known to climbers simply as The Buachaille. It is a mountain at the head of Glen Etive in the Highlands of Scotland. Its pyramidal form, as seen from the road when travelling towards Glen Coe, makes it one of the most recognisable mountains in Scotland, and one of the most depicted on postcards and calendars. Buachaille Etive Mòr takes the form of a ridge nearly five miles (8 km) in length,
According to local lore, the gorge was a secret meeting place for the ancient Druids. The Devil’s Pulpit was also where Satan himself was said to have preached to the Monks below.
Devil’s Pulpit is a limestone rock jutting out from the cliffs from where (legend has it) the devil preached to the monks below, tempting them to desert their order.
Loch Ard is a fresh water loch lying 5km to the west of Aberfoyle and is considered to be the source of the River Forth. One of the 22 lochs that make up Loch Lomond & The Trossachs National Park, Loch Ard is believed to be the source of the River Forth which flows from its eastern end. Famous Scottish author and poet, Sir Walter Scott, name checked the loch in his 1817 novel Rob Roy describing it as ‘an enchanting sheet of water.’
A stunning Scottish Munro at the foot of Glen Coe.
A beautiful Lone tree which grows at the shores of Loch lomond.
The beautiful Kilchurn Castle that stands on the shores of the stunning Loch Awe.
The ever popular, but simply stunning Munro, Buachaille Etive Mor, at the foot Glen Coe.