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Thread: To the Bonnie Banks

  1. #1

    To the Bonnie Banks

    I will be taking an organized tour of the English Lake District and Scottish Highlands in mid September. After the organized tour we will have 7-9 days of independent travel in Scotland starting October 1. We plan to rent a car and visit the Isle of Skye and various other venues. We were oriiginally scheduled to go in mid August but opted for the later date because of crowds and the Highlands Midges. I'm needing tips about various photo locations. I will be taking medium format equipment for this trip.

  2. #2

    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Rondo, Missouri
    Posts
    2,126

    Re: To the Bonnie Banks

    That sounds like an amazing trip. I envy you. The thing that caught my eye your query was the name...Bonnie Banks. I dated a Bonnie Banks in high school and when I saw thread, it made me do a triple take. Talk about things coming crashing back!!
    Michael W. Graves
    Michael's Pub

    If it ain't broke....don't fix it!

  3. #3

    Re: To the Bonnie Banks

    I am not sure what locations you are after, but for Skye, Elgol and The Old Man of Stor are the iconic images. But there are many many more. I am off there soon, and after a considerable amount of research I have found out that I don't think there is a single location that would not produce a great image :-).

    As for the Lakes, and the rest of the Highlands, there are again thousands. far too many to list here.

    Steve.

  4. #4

    Re: To the Bonnie Banks

    Great time of year in my view- good colours and enough time between sunset and sunrise to get some sleep. Here's a couple of thoughts, on the basis that you'll have seen a bit of Glencoe and Glen Etive on the way to Skye. BTW Loch Ness is dull and leads away from where you really should be going, so if you can resist that temptation so much the better.

    The obvious. Is to drive right up the west coast on little roads after you leave Skye. Just stick as close to the coast as you can. Plockton . Applecross, Ullapool and so on- and if you get right up to Durness and Tongue so much the better. You'll find that the scenery here loses nothing by comparison with Skye and the beaches are magnificent. There's a pretty fast route back from Inverness.

    The adventurous. Is to take a ferry from Uig in Skye to Tarbert on Harris (Outer Hebrides) and sspend your days wandering the coast and by-roads of Harris and Lewis , including the stones at Callanish and some glorious beaches and rugged countryside- avoiding Stornoway which would gain you nothing. There are few hotels and it is much better to reserve in advance.

    Don't try and do a little of both!

  5. #5

    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Glasgow, Scotland
    Posts
    32

    Re: To the Bonnie Banks

    The Isle of Arran is good for a day or two and has much of what Scotland has to offer in a small package! West Coast is stunning but the East Coast fishing villages have lots to offer too!

  6. #6

    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    near Stirling, Scotland
    Posts
    57

    Re: To the Bonnie Banks

    Don,

    You have some good suggestions already; the Scottish west coast is stunning in the right weather, and October was good last year. Glen Affric can be good at that time, too.

    If you think you will get up to the far north west (Cape Wrath, Durness, Kinlochbervie, etc.) let me know -- I live up here, and would be happy to help you explore this area.

    BTW, check out Haweswater Reservoir in the Lake District, if you can -- it is my favourite spot in the Lakes. A little off the beaten track (north-east Lakes, about 1/2 hour from Shap / Junction 39 of M6 motorway).

  7. #7

    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Aviemore, Cairngorms.
    Posts
    173

    Re: To the Bonnie Banks

    I am on the Isle of Mull so may be biased, but there is some great scenery here, especially coastlines.
    Worth a visit for a day or two. You can fit it in with a trip to the Ardnamurchan Peninsular, and would work as a larger, circular route around Plockton etc,Skye, Ardnamurchan and Mull then back south to your start point.

    Gari

  8. #8

    Join Date
    May 2000
    Location
    Tamworth, Staffordshire. U.K.
    Posts
    1,167

    Re: To the Bonnie Banks

    Take an umbrella and waterproof your bellows. You can't get lakes without rain!
    Pete.

  9. #9

    Re: To the Bonnie Banks

    what gari says...

  10. #10

    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    2,639

    Re: To the Bonnie Banks

    I can't seem to locate my copy, but go to your local bookshop and find a (huge) hardback book named "The Modern Antiquarian". It's written by Julian Cope and maps out almost every megalithic site in the UK. There is another one for abroad I think.

    check out the nasty-looking site here http://www.themodernantiquarian.com/home/ it may have some links to the areas you're visiting.

    Personally I think all that stuff is great, but if you aren't interested in big stone things, then don't bother


    EDIT: the site looks quite quirky actually... how a photographer managed to get a broken horizon I'll never know

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