Lochs and Glens Books

Showing posts with label Great Glen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Glen. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 July 2007

North West Highlands of Scotland


Best Scottish Walks. North West Highlands of Scotland. The North West Highlands, which for the purposes of this book includes all the Scottish mainland north and west of the Great Glen together with the Isle of Skye, is the last area in Britain which could truthfully be described as genuinely wild. This guide to twenty four of the finest walks and tours in this gloriously lonely and often breathtakingly beautiful Scottish landscape is aimed, not at climbers, who are already well catered for, but at walkers who wish to enjoy the wild country and, while prepared to tackle rough terrain, do not necessarily have the skills and equipment that may be needed on the higher hills. The walks, which range from six to seventeen miles in length are mostly circular and in all cases begin and end at sites with space for parking and access to public transport. Some of the routes, though by no means all, run through land owned by the National Trust for Scotland. The landscapes through which they pass range from the tightly packed hills and glens of Ardgour, Moidart and Knoydart in the south to the wild moors of the extreme north over which a few peaks like Suilven, Canisp and Quinag tower in splendid isolation. Chris Townsend guides his readers with an infectious enthusiasm, sound advice and knowledgeable observations of the wildlife and geology of the Highlands. The book also includes a glossary of Gaelic and Scots words. The Guide to Walks in North-West Highlands (National Trust for Scotland).

Monday, 26 February 2007

The Great Glen


Tourist map of the Caledonian Canal featuring the waterway corridor showing facilities available to the boat user with details of boatyards, boat hire and boat trip operators. Includes details on the Great Glen Mountain Bike Trail and forest walks. Caledonian Canal and the Great Glen (Inland Waterways of Britain).

The Great Glen


The Jacobite Clans of the Great Glen 1650–1784 investigates the Scottish clan system and its conflicts with the Cromwellian and Hanoverian armies. It explores the history of a group of clans in the central Highlands of Scotland; Frasers, Grants, MacDonalds and Macphersons can be seen struggling with the threat posed by the Mackenzies, Mackintoshes, Gordons and Campbells, as well as with the dilemmas and opportunities of the conflicts between the rival Stuart and Hanoverian dynasties. The Jacobite Clans of the Great Glen, 1650-1784.