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Get your motor runnin’: Photographer hails 85-mile drive as Scotland’s finest journey

The Storr (Scottish Horizons/Keith Fergus)
The Storr (Scottish Horizons/Keith Fergus)

THE North Coast 500 across the Highlands may have been making the headlines since being launched in 2015.

But there are plenty of other roads to take to discover the beauty of Scotland. Writer and photographer Keith Fergus, from Glasgow, has selected 12 routes full of panoramic vistas, mountainous landscapes and craggy coastlines for his spectacular book, Great Scottish Journeys.

Published by Black & White in association with The Scots Magazine, the book takes in all corners of the country, from the Highlands and Islands to Ayrshire and the Central Belt to the Borders.

Here, we ask dad-of-two Keith which of the dozen journeys was his favourite and why.

Buy the book at dcthomson.co.uk

Loch Garry (Scottish Horizons/Keith Fergus)

Of all the Great Scottish Journeys I have had the pleasure to explore and photograph over the past few years, the 85 miles between the village of Invergarry and the staggering beauty of The Storr, on the Isle of Skye, is perhaps my favourite.

The trip really does encapsulate everything an excursion through this glorious country of ours has to offer – jagged peaks, gorgeous lochs, intriguing history, fascinating buildings and wonderful wildlife.

This trip along the A87 and then the A855 may well take several hours due to the exceptional scenery around almost every corner. And therein lies the point of any Great Scottish Journey – it’s to encourage the traveller to take time to stop, look, be inspired and truly appreciate what we are incredibly fortunate to have.

And I would drive 500 miles! Scotland’s answer to Route 66 easily compares with any road trip in the world

The A87 rises for several miles from the River Garry before an exceptional view opens out across Loch Garry towards the muscular mountains of the West Highlands.

It is onwards through a relatively wild and open landscape, past Loch Loyne and Loch Cluanie (the Cluanie Inn is a great spot for a pit stop).

The topography then rises skywards where the best views are of the 12-mile-long Cluanie Ridge and the mighty peaks of Kintail. Eilean Donan Castle, sitting out on Loch Duich, needs no introduction but the best is yet to come. As the route hits Balmacara, the Skye Bridge comes into view, as do Skye’s Red Cuillin mountains. Once on the Misty Isle, the A87 twists its way through an exceptional landscape, one dominated by the formidable contours of the Black Cuillin, breath-taking in its savage beauty.

After Portree, the A855 runs alongside the Trotternish Ridge to reach the astonishing landscape of The Storr. For the intrepid, a 45-minute climb culminates beneath the Old Man of Storr, one of the finest views in Scotland and the end of this particular Great Scottish Journey.