Lamlash is the Isle of Arran’s most populous village.
Maidens is a little coastal village situated on the Firth of Clyde at the southern end of Maidenhead Bay.
Stewarton is a small town in East Ayrshire, around 6 mile away from Kilmarnock and a population of approximately 6500.
The town of Ardrossan sits on the North Ayrshire coast on the east shore of the Firth of Clyde.
Monument memorialising Lesley Baillie, a muse who inspired several of Robert Burns' ballads and poems
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.
The town of Irvine is a large town with a long history.
New Cumnock is a former mining town in East Ayrshire. It expanded during the 18th century; mining remained its main industry until pits closed in the 1960s.
One of Scotland's most significant entertainment venues and the last fully operational seaside pavilion theatre in the country
Loudonhill is a volcanic plug located near the River Irvine in East Ayrshire
Lochranza Castle was built by the McSweens back in the 13th Century, and is managed by Historic Environment Scotland.
Barrhill is a small village in South Ayrshire between Girvan and Newton Stewart in South Ayrshire.
Inchmarnock lies to the west of the Isle of Bute at the northern end of the Sound of Bute.
Lochwinnoch is a village in the council area and historic county of Renfrewshire in the west central Lowlands of Scotland.
A commemorative anchor presented to the town of Greenock in 1972 by the British Admiralty