Tour Scotland Photograph River Tay March 18th


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the River Tay at Campsie Linn, Perthshire, Scotland. Campsie Linn, beautiful scenery, north of Perth, Perthshire. Campsie Linn is a small waterfall on the River Tay. Taymount House looks down to the falls.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the River Tay at Campsie Linn, Perthshire, Scotland.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the River Tay at Campsie Linn, Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Perthshire is at the very heart of Scotland and one of the most popular regions for visitors, offering a variety of Highland and Lowland landscapes with some of the most scenic and accessible countryside for shorter walks as well as evidence of its rich history at every turn. Perthshire 40 Town and Country Walks features traditional tourist hubs, such as Pitlochry, Dunkeld and Killin, with its historical connections to the county, as well as countryside around Blairgowrie, Crieff and Aberfeldy, finishing up at the Fair City of Perth and nearby Kinross. Perthshire: 40 Town and Country Walks (Pocket Mountains).

Tour Scotland Photograph Water Hazard Golf Course March 17th


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a water hazard on a golf course in Perthshire, Scotland. A beautiful afternoon today in Perthshire, an excellent opportunity to shoot a few photographs. The Murrayshall Golf Course lies on 350 acres of rolling parkland, it provides stunning views over the Cairngorms and the beautiful countryside of the River Tay valley. Perthshire Golf Breaks.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a water hazard on a golf course in Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Perthshire is at the very heart of Scotland and one of the most popular regions for visitors, offering a variety of Highland and Lowland landscapes with some of the most scenic and accessible countryside for shorter walks as well as evidence of its rich history at every turn. Perthshire 40 Town and Country Walks features traditional tourist hubs, such as Pitlochry, Dunkeld and Killin, with its historical connections to the county, as well as countryside around Blairgowrie, Crieff and Aberfeldy, finishing up at the Fair City of Perth and nearby Kinross. Perthshire: 40 Town and Country Walks (Pocket Mountains).

Tour Scotland Photograph Golf Course Stunning Views


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a golf course with stunning views in Perthshire, Scotland. Measuring 6120 yards, the Murrayshall Golf Course lies on 350 acres of rolling parkland, it provides stunning views over the Cairngorms and the beautiful countryside of the River Tay valley. Such an amazing landscape means you will often spot wild deer, hare and kestrel as you make your way down the back nine. The course was designed by Hamilton J. Stutt, the grandson of the great James Braid’s chief foreman. Perthshire Golf Breaks.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a golf bunker in Perthshire, Scotland.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a golf bunker in Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Perthshire is at the very heart of Scotland and one of the most popular regions for visitors, offering a variety of Highland and Lowland landscapes with some of the most scenic and accessible countryside for shorter walks as well as evidence of its rich history at every turn. Perthshire 40 Town and Country Walks features traditional tourist hubs, such as Pitlochry, Dunkeld and Killin, with its historical connections to the county, as well as countryside around Blairgowrie, Crieff and Aberfeldy, finishing up at the Fair City of Perth and nearby Kinross. Perthshire: 40 Town and Country Walks (Pocket Mountains).

Tour Scotland Photograph Field Of Snowdrops March 16th


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a field of snowdrops in Perthshire, Scotland.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a field of snowdrops in Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Flora Celtica. Plants and People in Scotland documents the continuously evolving relationship between the Scots and their environment. Based on a mixture of detailed research and information provided by the public, this book explores the remarkable diversity of ways that native plants have been, and continue to be, used in Scotland. The information is presented in clear and accessible format and is laced with quotations, illustrations, case studies and practical tips. The book covers the complete spectrum of plant uses, addressing their diverse roles in our diet, healthcare, culture, housing, language, environment, crafts, and much more. It is ideal as a reference book and also a delight to dip into for all those with a passion for natural history. It is illustrated in colour throughout. Flora Celtica: Plants and People in Scotland.

Tour Scotland Photographs Old Parish Church Kinfauns


Tour Scotland photograph of the old, historic parish church at Kinfauns, Perthshire, Scotland. This was the parish church until about 1857 when it was abandoned. It is now roofless and the walls very much reduced, except for the south aisle, dated 1598, the burial place of the Grays of Kinfauns. The rest of the church is probably 15th century, although considerably altered after the Reformation.





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Tour Scotland Photograph Churchyard Kinfauns March 16th


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the Churchyard at Kinfauns, Perthshire, Scotland.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the Churchyard at Kinfauns, Perthshire, Scotland.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the Churchyard at Kinfauns, Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Victorian Church Kinfauns


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the Victorian Church at Kinfauns, Perthshire, Scotland. The now derelict church was designed and built by Andrew Heiton between 1868 and 1869. Gothic, bull-faced snecked rubble. T-plan with pyramid roofed tower in angle.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the Victorian Church at Kinfauns, Perthshire, Scotland.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the Victorian Church at Kinfauns, Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Misty Morning March 16th


Tour Scotland photograph shot this morning of the mist burning off in Perthshire, Scotland.


Tour Scotland photograph shot this morning of the mist burning off in Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Perthshire is at the very heart of Scotland and one of the most popular regions for visitors, offering a variety of Highland and Lowland landscapes with some of the most scenic and accessible countryside for shorter walks as well as evidence of its rich history at every turn. Perthshire 40 Town and Country Walks features traditional tourist hubs, such as Pitlochry, Dunkeld and Killin, with its historical connections to the county, as well as countryside around Blairgowrie, Crieff and Aberfeldy, finishing up at the Fair City of Perth and nearby Kinross. Perthshire: 40 Town and Country Walks (Pocket Mountains).

Old Photograph Steam Train Luncarty Scotland


Old photograph of a steam train in the railway station in Luncarty, Perthshire, Scotland. It is located on the Perth to Inverness railway line which still runs through the village. However, the station itself does not exist any more.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Old Photograph Derelict Cottage Rackwick Orkney Scotland


Old photograph of a derelict cottage at Rackwick, Orkney Islands, Scotland. The settlement of Rackwick is a situated on the bay of Rackwick, on the west coast of Hoy in the Orkney islands. To the east of Rackwick is a large stone slab known as the Dwarfie Stane.



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Old Photograph St Martin's Celtic Cross Iona Scotland


Old photograph of St Martin's Celtic Cross, Iona, Scotland. St Martin's Cross, one of the best-preserved Celtic crosses in the British Isles, and a replica of the 8th century St John's Cross.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Old Photograph Maclean's Cross Iona Scotland


Old photograph of Maclean's Cross, Iona, Scotland. This cross was commissioned by the Chief of Clan MacLean around 1500.

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Old Photograph MacKinnon's Celtic Cross Iona Scotland


Old photograph of MacKinnon's Cross, Iona, Scotland. MacKinnon's Celtic Cross, is a shaft of a Celtic cross, found on the island of Iona. The cross has an inscription in Latin, which translated means: " This is the cross of Lachlan MacKinnon and his son John, Abbot of Hy, made in the Year of Our Lord 1489. "

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Old Photographs Crail East Neuk of Fife Scotland

Old photograph of the High Street in Crail, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. Crail became a Royal Burgh in 1178 in the reign of King William the Lion. Robert the Bruce granted permission to hold markets on a Sunday, in the Marketgait, where the Mercat Cross now stands in Crail. This practice was still continuing in the 16th century, causing concern in the freshly puritanical circles of Edinburgh such that John Knox, visiting Crail on his way to St Andrews in 1559, was moved to deliver a sermon in Crail Parish Church, damning the fishermen of the East Neuk for working on a Sunday. Despite the protests, the markets continued and were amongst the largest in Europe for their time. King James V, the father of Mary Queen of Scots, sent for his wife, Mary of Guise, whom he had recently married by proxy in Paris, and she landed in Crail in June 1538. Built around a harbour, Crail has a particular wealth of vernacular buildings from the 17th to early 19th centuries. The harbour is known to have been substantially complete by 1583. The extension of 1828 to the west pier of Crail Harbour is the work of Robert Stevenson. Crial railway station on the Thornton Junction to St Andrews to Leuchars Junction was opened on 1 September 1883 by the Anstruther and St Andrews Railway. It closed to regular passenger traffic, with the St Andrews to Leven portion of the line, on 6 September 1965


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Old Photographs Islanders St Kilda Scotland


Old photograph of Islanders on St Kilda, Scotland. St Kilda is the remotest part of the British Isles, lies 41 miles west of Benbecula in Scotland's Outer Hebrides. For more than 2000 years the people of St Kilda remained remote from the world. Its society was viable, even Utopian; but in the nineteenth century the island was discovered by missionaries, do gooders and tourists, who brought money, disease and despotism. St Kildan culture gradually disintegrated and in 1930 the few remaining islanders asked to be evacuated.



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Old Photograph Lifeboatman East Coast Scotland


Old photograph of a Lifeboatman on the East Coast of Scotland. Funded by charitable donations, the lifeboat crews and lifeguards of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution have saved over 139,000 lives at sea since 1824.



Tour Scotland video of a Low Tide launch of the Lifeboat with tractor pushing the carriage out of the entrance to the Outer harbour in Anstruther on visit to East Neuk Of Fife.

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Old Photograph Perth Scotland


Old photograph of shops, people and buildings on the High Street, Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Old Photograph Crofter Isle of Skye Scotland


Old photograph of a crofter outside a thatched cottage on the Isle of Skye, Scotland. Within crofting townships, individual crofts were established on the best land, and a large area of lesser quality hill ground was shared by all the crofters of the township for grazing. Crofters also harvested Peat which was an important source of fuel. The women often spun and dyed wool as well as hand knitting and weaving. Of interest to folks with ancestry, genealogy or Scottish Roots in Scotland.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

Old Photograph Hat Making Shop Scotland


Old photograph of a Hat Making Shop in Glasgow, Scotland.



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Old Photographs Rothes Morayshire Scotland

Old photograph of people, shops and houses in Rothes, Moray, Scotland. A Scottish town south of Elgin and on the banks of the River Spey. At the south end of the village lie the remains of Rothes Castle, which dates from the 13th century. Sir Norman Leslie, the castle's owner, was host to King Edward I of England when he stayed there on 29th July 1296 during his triumphal march through Scotland following its conquest by him in 1296. The village and castle are associated with the Earl of Rothes and many Speyside whisky Distilleries.


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Old Photographs Ecclefechan Scotland



Tour Scotland video of old photographs of Ecclefechan, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. Thomas Carlyle the essayist, satirist and historian was born on 4 December 1795 in The Arched House in Ecclefechan. Carlyle left Ecclefechan at the age of 13 and walked the 84 miles to Edinburgh in order to attend university. In 1828 he moved to Craigenputtock with his wife Jane. He never forgot his roots and insisted that Ecclefechan should become his final resting place. He was buried in Ecclefechan churchyard on 5 February 1881. Robert Burns composed a song entitled The Lass O' Ecclefechan.



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Old Photograph Island Women St Kilda Scotland


Old photograph of Island Women on St Kilda, Scotland. St Kilda is the remotest part of the British Isles, lies 41 miles west of Benbecula in Scotland's Outer Hebrides.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Church Pulpit and Flowers


Tour Scotland photograph of pulpit and flowers in Collace Church, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Stained Glass Windows March 13th


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a stained glass window in Collace Perthshire, Scotland. The present Collace Parish Church building is some 200 years old but people have worshipped on the site, in the lee of old Dunsinane Hill for 1,000 years. The church at Collace was consecrated a Christian place of worship on 4th June 1242. it was from this church that the then renowned Rev. Andrew Bonar walked out at the ‘Disruption’ of 1843 to form Collace Free Church. Happily the congregations re-united in 1929.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a stained glass window in Collace Perthshire, Scotland.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a stained glass window in Collace Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Commercial Arms Pub Scotland


Tour Scotland photograph of the Commercial Arms Pub in Newtyle, Angus, Scotland. Had an excellent late lunch in this pub today. Wonderful vegetable soup at a very affordable price. A very friendly Scottish pub well stocked with Scottish Whisky.

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Tour Scotland Photograph John Nairne Memorial Perthshire


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of the John Mellis Nairne memorial in Collace, Perthshire, Scotland. Sacred to the memory of John Mellis Nairne of Dunsinnan, Deputy Lieutenant of the County of Perth, formerly Captain of the 14th Regiment of Foot, who departed this life on 2nd October, 1866, aged 68.

A baronetcy was possessed by the family of Nairne of Dunsinnan, Perthshire, the supposed site of a stronghold of Macbeth, 15 miles from Birnam, celebrated by Shakespeare:

“Macbeth shall never vanquished be, until
Great Birnam wood to high Dunsinane hill
Shall come against him.”

It was conferred, 31st March 1704, on Sir William Nairne of Dunsinnan, descended from Michael de Nairn, who lived in the reign of Robert III. Sir William Nairne the fifth baronet, a younger son of the second baronet, was a lord of session. Admitted advocate in 1755, he was, in 1758, appointed commissary clerk of Edinburgh, conjunctly with Alexander Nairne, a relative of his own. In 1786 he was promoted to the bench, and took his seat as Lord Dunsinnan. In 1790 he succeeded in the baronetcy, on the death of his nephew. At the same time he bought the estate of Dunsinnan from another nephew, for the sum of £16,000. It comprises almost the entire parish of Collace, and as soon as it came into his hands, he spared no expense in putting it into a state of the highest improvement. He was appointed a lord of justiciary in 1792, and continued to attend the duties of the circuit until 1808, when he resigned, and in 1809 he retired from the bench altogether. He died, at an advanced age, at Dunsinnan house, 25th March 1811. The title became extinct at his death. His sister’s son, John Mellis Nairne, succeeded to the estate and assumed the name of Nairne.

Lord Dunsinnan was uncle to the famous Catherine Nairne or Ogilvie, whose trial in 1765, for the crimes of murder and incest, occupied public attention very much at the time. She had married, in that year, being then only nineteen, Thomas Ogilvie of Eastmiln, Forfarshire, – a gentleman, as stated at the trial, forth years of age and of a sickly constitution. Three or four days before the marriage, his younger brother, Patrick Ogilvie, a lieutenant in the 89th foot, returned, on account of bad health, from India, and took up his residence at his house. In less than a week after the marriage an improper intimacy is stated to have commences between the brother and Mrs. Ogilvie. Four months afterwards, at his instigation, she poisoned her husband with arsenic, and with her accomplice, was brought to trial, when they were both found guilty, and condemned to be hanged. Patrick Ogilvie was, in spite of every effort made to save him, executed in the Grassmarket of Edinburgh. The interval betwixt his condemnation and execution he almost exclusively devoted to playing on the violin, of which he was very fond. Catherine Nairne escaped from the Tolbooth, the Execution of her sentence had been delayed on account of pregnancy, and, soon after her accouchement, she disguised herself in the clothes of the midwife, Mrs. Shiells, who, for several days, while in attendance on her, had had her head muffled up, under pretence of a violent attack of toothache, and so got out of prison. Her uncle, Mr. Nairne, then an advocate of ten years’ standing, is supposed to have assisted in her escape. It was on Saturday, 15th March 1766, that she contrived to get away from the Tolbooth, and the same night she left the city, in a carriage, accompanied by Mr. Nairne’s clerk, Mr. James Bremner, afterwards solicitor of stamps. This gentleman went with her as far as Dover, on her way to France. Her behaviour on the way was marked by great frivolity, as she was continually putting her head out of the window and laughing immoderately. In the proclamation issued for her apprehension by the magistrates of Edinburgh, she is described as attired in “an officer’s habit, with a hat slouched in the cocks, and a cockade in it;” and “a about twenty-two years of age, middle-=sized, and strong made, has a high nose, black eyebrows, and a pale complexion.” Government offered a reward of £100 for her apprehension, and the city of Edinburgh the same. It is said she afterwards married a Dutch gentleman, by whom she had a numerous family. It was also reported that she had retired to a convent and taken the veil, also that she died in England soon after the beginning of the nineteenth century.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Winter Eilean Donan Castle


Tour Scotland Winter photograph of reflections on Loch Duich and Eilean Donan Castle. MacRae stronghold dates from 13th century. Ruined by naval bombardment in 1719, rebuilt earlier this century. Causeway, three arched bridge and gateway with portcullis lead through walls up to 14ft thick. Restored chambers, billeting room and banquet hall with furnishings.



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Tour Scotland Video Drive Through Snow Perthshire March 12th


Tour Scotland video shot today of a drive through snow covered rural Perthshire, Scotland. It was a misty, grey, snowy day in Southern Perthshire.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Perthshire is at the very heart of Scotland and one of the most popular regions for visitors, offering a variety of Highland and Lowland landscapes with some of the most scenic and accessible countryside for shorter walks as well as evidence of its rich history at every turn. Perthshire 40 Town and Country Walks features traditional tourist hubs, such as Pitlochry, Dunkeld and Killin, with its historical connections to the county, as well as countryside around Blairgowrie, Crieff and Aberfeldy, finishing up at the Fair City of Perth and nearby Kinross. Perthshire: 40 Town and Country Walks (Pocket Mountains).

Tour Scotland Photograph Runner Snow March 12th


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a leisure runner in snow covered Perthshire, Scotland. This elderly Scotsman ran six miles in the snow this morning in Scotland. A hardy Scot.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Graveyard Snow March 12th


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a snow covered graveyard in Perthshire, Scotland. The present Collace Parish Church building is some 200 years old but people have worshipped on the site, in the lee of old Dunsinane Hill for 1,000 years. The church at Collace was consecrated a Christian place of worship on 4th June 1242. it was from this church that the then renowned Rev. Andrew Bonar walked out at the ‘Disruption’ of 1843 to form Collace Free Church. Happily the congregations re-united in 1929.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a snow covered graveyard in Perthshire, Scotland.


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of a snow covered graveyard in Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Snow Rural Road March 12th


Tour Scotland photograph shot today of rural road in Perthshire, Scotland. Quite a lot of snow on the narrow Scottish roads today, but they were passable with care.

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