Touring in and around Ayrshire
Many visitors begin their tour of Scotland with a stay here, preferring
to start out fresh after a long transatlantic flight into Prestwick
or Glasgow Airport or a drive up from England. Increasingly, they
are discovering how convenient the area is as a base for touring.
Here are some of the reasons why.
The outstanding natural beauty of nearby Dumfries & Galloway.
Let the landscape and atmosphere of this magical corner of Scotland
work its spell on you.
The enchanting ‘Isle of Arran – ‘Scotland in
miniature’. Check the regular ferry timetables here
Romantic and world famous Loch Lomond is only about 60 minutes
by car via the Erskine Bridge, with the beautiful Trossachs not
much further.
And Ayrshire and Burns Country. A must for first-time visitors
to Scotland. From the hotel, it's less than an half an hour's drive
to the Burns' Cottage at Alloway, near Ayr. Tannahill's Cottage,
Queens Street, Paisley is the thatched home of poet Robert Tannahill
(1774-1810), a contemporary of Burns who co-founded the world's
first Burns Club. Mary Campbell, immortalised by Burns as 'my Highland
Lassie O', actually lived in Ayrshire but died and was buried in
Greenock. Indeed, the Burns Trail runs throughout the area known
as Inverclyde, which lies between Johnstone and the Clyde Coast.
Just over half an hour north via the A78, Caledonian MacBrayne
provide regular ferry services at Gourock and Wemyss Bay across
the Firth of Clyde - to all of the Western Isles and to Dunoon,
where the Highlands begin. A little further south at Ardrossan,
meet the regular ferry to the enchanted isle of Arran. For
Calmac ferry timetables, click here
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