Shearwater Cruise
Shearwater Cruise off Phillip Island, Australia, with Wildlife Coast Cruises
Seascape Expedition - Ullapool.
A powerboat adventure trip [May 2008] from Ullapool in and around the Summer Isles.
On the east shore of Loch Broom, Ullapool was founded in 1788 as a herring port by the British Fisheries Society - and was designed by Thomas Telford. The harbour is still perhaps the focal point of the town and is used as a fishing port, yachting haven, and ferry port. Ferries, as in this video, sail to Stornoway in the Outer Hebrides.
Many of the pivotal discoveries of the Victorian era that contributed to the development of the concept of plate tectonics were made in this area, and there are still regular international geological conferences! Others, of course, visit here for the scenery, hillwalking and the Seaforth, FBI and the Arch!!! Not to mention those amazing breakfasts in the local cafe!
Ullapool is surrounded us on all four sides by mountains and contains some of the most beautiful unspoiled scenery in the world with undiscovered beaches, forests, hidden glens with stags grazing, waterfalls, bird sanctuaries to explore, breathtaking twisty single track roads, all warmed by the gulf stream that gives it the tropical garden look with the comparably mild weather. It really has its own micro-climate. Boat trips depart to the enchanting Summer Isles as does a power boat trip that is highly recommended [watch the other video - Seascape adventure]; see seals and porpoises or marvel at the botanists miracle of Hydroponics in Achiltibuie.
Soundtrack: ROYAL SCOTS DRAGOON GUARDS 'Sailing'.
Julia's Treasures from the Earth SHOW.mp4
Julia's Treasures from the Earth SHOW.mp4
Scotland (brit08-03) Loch Lomond, Luss
Excursion le long du Loch Lomond et visite du village de Luss.
marcopoloimaginaire.com
Fort Augustus Loch Scotland
Loch system from 19th century at Fort Augustus, Scotland
Rogie Falls walk, Scotland, UK
A short walk from the car park to the spectacular Rogie Falls. Ideal for any walker for a quick visit but may be difficult access for anyone who struggles with steps.
Luss Village
Loch Lomond, Scotland
Waterfall ( Rogie Falls ) in Scotland
This footage & images were captured in October 2016.
Rogie falls are in Ross-Shire just off the A835. They are definatly worth a visit especially when the salmon are making their way up stream. If you are patient you can see them attempting to leap up the falls. The woodland area is also very nice to wander through and there are lots of birds to see and hear.
Music I have used is called Tonn Nan Deur by Blair Douglas.
ULLAPOOL: trip to the BONE CAVES [2010]. Advert free Video!
Them bones. 'Bones, caves and bleak lands' is what it states on the signpost and thats exactly what is here. You may find it hard to imagine that Polar Bears once lived here in Scotland but on this bitterly cold, bleak, snow-showery 'summer' day it certainly wasn't too difficult to imagine! The Bone Caves have been designated as an Ancient Monument by Historic Scotland and also as a Site of Scientific Interest by Scottish National Heritage and only requires a short hillwalk to reach them.
This is the route to the 815m Corbett BREABAG meaning 'little height' while looking back reveals the view of the 847m Corbett CANISP meaning 'white hill'. An engraved stone on the path at a junction indicates the route to the mountain and for us on this trip anyway the route to those caves. I've never seen a road sign used on a mountain path before so the 'falling rocks' sign on the hillside path must be at least somewhat perhaps unique.
These amazing caves have been named Fox's Den, Bone Cave, Reindeer Cave and Badger Cave and it was during a 1925 visit by geologist J.E.Cree that the incisor tooth of a bear and two pieces of reindeer antler were found. The following year Badger Cave and Reindeer Cave were excavated and more items were found. Nearly 1000 fragments of reindeer antler have been found some of which date back to over 47000 years.
So, Arctic Fox, Polar Bears and Northern Lynx as well as many other animals have left their mark up in these Bone Caves in this Inchnadamph National Nature Reserve. On this occasion though it was our turn to shiver in them. The actual Reserve itself was previously a resting place for cattle during the drives to market in Falkirk. The four north-facing caves look out from the base of the limestone Creag nan Uamh over the Allt nan Uamh glen. At the head of this glen, would-be Corbeteers will encounter the ancient calving grounds of the reindeer on the slopes of BREABAG.
Reindeer Cave and Bone Cave are connected by a narrow passage that children can apparently negotiate! The most interesting find in the cave really has to be the discovery in 1927 of a Polar Bear cranium aged at around 18,855 years old! There is no evidence to suggest that people ever lived in the caves although they may have been used on hunting trips; the caves have been mainly inhabited by animals. The Polar Bear skull and some reindeer antlers are on permanent display in the Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh.
At a car-park some 5km north of Ledmore on the A837 a path departs passing some small Falls before following the steep and winding path to the Bone Caves where you are treading in the footsteps of some of our best known explorers. It is said of Ben Peach that, when working in the Northwest, he would work long hours and then take every third day off and go fishing. So they obviously took sickies in the old days as well then. Anyway, he may not have had much luck because there are no lochs up the glen of Allt nan Uamh, and not much in the way of rivers either, but world-famous geologists Peach and Horne found something just as rewarding. While surveying the geology of the area, they came across the Creag nan Uamh Bone Caves and in 1889 they partially excavated the mouth of one of them and found pieces of animal bones. Peach and Horne found the remains of animals that incredibly once roamed the Scottish Highlands including Lynx, Polar Bear, Arctic fox and Lemmings.
The Moine Thrust runs through the area and the nearby Inchnadamph Hotel is apparently still a mecca for geologists. Its a pity that the Public Bar doesn't appear to be open to the Public now although I can remember sitting in the bar here many years ago after having just climbed Conival and Ben More Assynt. Nearby there is a monument on the other side of the road to the work of Ben Peach and John Horne whose work was so crucial in the understanding of this, the first thrust fault to be discovered anywhere in the world. The monument's inscription reads: To Ben N Peach and John Horne who played the foremost part in unravelling the geological structure of the North West Highlands 1883-1897. An international tribute. Erected 1980. The hotel retains a copy of the guest book signed by many prominent geologists of the day who visited during the 1912 British Association for the Advancement of Science excursion to Assynt.
Well, this certainly was a fascinating hike to the caves where the remains of the last known wild Polar Bear to live in Britain were discovered.
Mount Stewart House & Gardens, County Down
Mount Stewart house owned by the National Trust has been restored and is open to the public once again.
Fort Augustus Loch Ness Scottish Highlands Scotland
Tour Scotland video of Fort Augustus by Loch Ness on ancestry to the Scottish Highlands
Top of Rogie Falls in #Scotland
Near Contin in Highlands of #Scotland
Sailing the Inside Passage - Hartley Bay (Part 1)
A northbound stop at Hartley Bay, an isolated First Nations village on the inside passage. A unique and beautiful place. See Part 2 for the southbound stop in the fall.
The music is Solo Acoustic Guitar by Jason Shaw:
Luss, loch lomond, Scotland
This video was uploaded from an Android phone.
Mount Stuart Isle of Bute October 2016
I created this video with the YouTube Slideshow Creator (
Drone harvesting Blairgowrie Scotland
A quick blast around the field behind the rosemount cottages in Blairgowrie
Mount Stuart Isle of Bute
The last day of the Easter break on the Isle of Bute with the Monklands Ramblers. We leisurely walk round Mount Stuart Monday 17th April
2017
Humpback whale - feeding just off our bow
After watching the sealions at Cleland island, we continued our trip offshore on the Leviathan 2 with Jamie's Whaling Station. We came across lots of humpbacks, in the company of Sooty Shearwaters, a black pelagic bird, who enjoys the same dining as the humpback! We were lucky to have one humpback surface just off our bow when we were sat idle. This animal displayed feeding behavior off our starboard, and did an underwater lunge. We could see the whales ventral pleats which expand all the way down his neck, coping with a huge volume of sea water and hopefully krill and herring!