19th-century toilets preserved for modern use on Rothesay's seafront
The Giants' Graves are the remains of two Neolithic chambered tombs surrounded by tall trees near Whiting Bay on Arran.
Upon the sloping Glecknabae Farmstead lies a bronze age Clyde-type chambered cairn
Ascog is a small, mostly residential village on the Isle of Bute, located about 2 km south east of Rothesay.
Not to be confused with The Wallace Monument in Stirling, the Wallace Tower in Ayr predates its Stirling sibling by approximately a decade (1855-7)
Port Bannatyne is a coastal village on the Isle of Bute.
The town of Cumnock sits at the confluence of the Glaisnock Water and the Lugar Water.
The Village Hall, originally built in 1900, is a focal point for the community
Explore a Neolithic centre of ritual and domestic activity, scattered across a lonely moorland.
Kames Castle is located on the shore of Kames Bay near Port Bannatyne.
Locally known as 'The Glen Kirk', this small church is situated within the Glen itself
The popular seaside town of Ayr lies on the south west coast of Scotland, around 37 miles from Glasgow.
This stunning waterfall at the Glenashdale Burn is also known by its gaelic name, Eas a’ Chrannaig.
Auchinleck is a small village in East Ayrshire. The name in Gaelic means "field of flat stones”
The Cathedral of the Isles is one of two cathedrals in the Diocese of Argyll and The Isles, and is a part of the Scottish Episcopal Church.