Dalry is a village on the Rye Burn in North Ayrshire.
Maidens is a little coastal village situated on the Firth of Clyde at the southern end of Maidenhead Bay.
Set into a rocky red sandstone outcrop overlooking the River Lugar, Peden's Cave served as the rumoured hide-out for persecuted Covenanters throughout the 17th century
This statue was put inplace to honour the Celtic legend Bobby Lennox.
Penkill Castle is a 16th-century castle north-east of Girvan in South Ayrshire, Scotland.
The small village of Annbank in South Ayrshire was originally a mining settlement.
Auchinleck is a small village in East Ayrshire. The name in Gaelic means "field of flat stones”
15th century castle on the south shore of the Clyde Estuary
Pladda (Scottish Gaelic: Pladaigh) is an uninhabited island 1 km off the south coast of the Isle of Arran in the Firth of Clyde.
Bute has its fair share of mysterious stones and one of the easiest examples to find on the island is at the Blackpark Plantation.
Seagate Castle is a castle in North Ayrshire, in the town of Irvine, close to the River Irvine
Portencross is a hamlet near Farland Head in North Ayrshire, overlooking the Firth of Clyde.
Kilbirnie is a small town situated in the Garnock Valley area of North Ayrshire, on the west coast of Scotland.
The McKechnie Institute opened in 1889, thanks to the generosity of local business man Thomas McKechnie