
Ben Cruachan and Aray Bridge, Inveraray, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

Highland cow, Ardkinglas, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

Head of Loch Fyne, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

Beinn Chorranach and Beinn Ime above Ardkinglas House, Loch Fyne, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

Strone Point, Loch Fyne, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

New bridge across the river Shira from the disused Garron Bridge, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

Fishing boat, Loch Shira, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

Oystercatcher, Aray Bridge, Inveraray, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

Strone Point from Inveraray, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

Inveraray, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.

Aray Bridge, Inveraray, Argyll & Bute, Scotland.
Date of walk: 11/6/2018

No prizes for guessing what I ran out of today!

I’ve had to walk over 3,000 miles get here but I’ve finally found the most British sign on the island.
Should of been a reflection of you in one of the lochs..
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unfortunately my selfie arm isn’t long enough!
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Spectacular scenery, but the oystercatcher and the cow are lovely too!
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It was another day of riches for sure
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Superb. Can feel the calm still overcast day in the reflections. Love the oystercatcher striding and shouting in stilleto heels.
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Thanks. A very confident strut isn’t it! That stillness didn’t last long, maybe 15 minutes – think it was the turning point of the tide
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Beautiful and funny!
Amazing how the landscape changes so much.
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yes and often within a few minutes, even on foot
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Pingback: Day 218: Creag a’ Phuill to Inverary – Mountain & Mirror — The Perimeter – DYUNGX
Beautiful landscapes… details …and photos!
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thanks, it all seemed to come together today
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Absolutely love the oystercatcher shot – what a photo! Glorious scenery, as ever. Wonderful.
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thanks, glorious strut that bird has huh
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On his Scotland walk 200 years ago, young John Keats’ path was similar to yours in several places (Galloway, Ayrshire, Glasgow) — including here. As you are sharing the experience with us in posts and photos, Keats wrote letters and poems. He also got bitten: his morning swim in Loch Fyne at Cairndow was “quite pat and fresh but for the cursed Gad flies — damn ’em.” So he wrote some verses: https://allpoetry.com/The-Gadfly-
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Keats’ letter from Cairndow, with the poem, is here: https://issuu.com/mikaelheartsebenwantu/docs/johnkeatsletters (page 136). (Poem link above has explanatory notes.)
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An apex day.
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