Travel-World Photography
Loch Lomond is formed in a geological fault line, measuring 36 km in length, and being 190 m at its deepest. The lake is an important water reservoir, as well as a site for recreation and pleasure boating.
Loch Lomond
Loch Lomond is located in a hilly landscape a little North of Glasgow, and Stirling to the North-East
We joined a tour with Timberbush Tours, and with the driver in kilt - naturally!
The driver, a pleasant Scot who drove the minibus like a motorcycle in hot persuit!
The countryside, with hills and scattered farmhouses
The area is full of low hills
The trees are very green and lush in the Spring
Narrow country roads
Farmhouse I
Farmhouses II
Farmhouses III
The road ran through a small village
A stately building on the main street
First view of Loch Lomond
Flowering bushes I
Flowering bushes II
Narrow country road skirting a farmhouse.Note the bare hills in the background
Roadside pub
A really old stone wall, built with swings for stablity
An old tree, overlooking a pasture with a watering pond
The road runs through a village
Farmland
Cows on pasture
Maybe a hotel below the planted fir forest?
Well-kept English homes
Very different building architecture
Bagpipe player. The first bagpipes were found in Anatolia, relating to year 1000 BC
Bagpipes have a very long tradition in Scotland
A lone house in the middle of the large forest
Typical hilly terrain, with fir forests and bare hills in the background
Glimps of Loch Lomond
Typical English, the houses are built in a row
The tour group overlooking part of Loch Lomond
A hiden castle
An idyllic part of the lake
A boat with tourists I
A boat with tourists II
In memory of the colera outbreak in Glasgow in 1848, whereupon new dams and aquaducts were built in record time
A road built for walking and cycling at the waters edge
Family on a cicycle trip
Another idyllic spot
Watch out for urisks, supernatural trolls and monsters
Watering ponds
The lake, forest, and almost barren hills
Farm land
Sheep on pasture I
Sheep on pasture II
A rugged fellow
A wayside inn
The Main Strret in a small village
The corner shop
The only hotel on the village