Little Cumbrae Island is an island in the Firth of Clyde
Drongan is a former mining village, in West Ayrshire approximately 8 miles from Ayr.
Carleton Castle is a 15th-century five-storey tower, and a Category B-Listed building.
The small village of Annbank in South Ayrshire was originally a mining settlement.
Upon the sloping Glecknabae Farmstead lies a bronze age Clyde-type chambered cairn
Statuesque ruined 16th-century tower-house castle overlooking the Firth of Clyde
Seamill is a village on the west coast of Scotland, about 5 miles north of Ardrossan and 8 miles south of Largs, on the east coast of the Firth of Clyde.
The Holy Isle (Scottish Gaelic: Eilean MoLaise) is one of a number of islands in the United Kingdom which go under the name "Holy Island".
Kerrycroy Village is a small residential area on Bute’s east coast, around 3km from 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)
Catrine is a village that lies beside the River Ayr in East Ayrshire.
The word Dailly derives from the gaelic words for meadow and field which is fitting as Dailly is surrounded by rich farm land and woods.
Kilchattan Bay is a small village on the south of the Isle of Bute which lies at the foot of a steep hill called the Suidhe Chattan.
These neolithic tombs were discovered by James Wilson of Haylie in 1772, and can be found in Largs' Douglas Park
Girvan is a large town situated in South Ayrshire and is a popular visitor destination.