Geograph IrelandLatest Images by Pip Rolls
https://www.geograph.ie/
2024-03-29T07:50:00+00:00text/html2008-08-22T10:18:59+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.666173 -4.568657NN4255 : Rannoch Moor from the train
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/931681
Wild remote moor.text/html2008-08-06T14:40:38+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.737846 -4.673301NN3663 : South from the path to Lubnaclach
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911323
Grass for evertext/html2008-08-06T14:36:13+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.720657 -4.661783NN3761 : The widened burn at Caim
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911317
A great spot for a cool-off.text/html2008-08-06T14:34:11+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.720156 -4.664199NN3761 : From the ruins of Caim looking towards Glencoe.
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911315
Hidden from sight in the middle ground is the Blackwater reservoir.text/html2008-08-06T14:32:05+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.720557 -4.662266NN3761 : The ruins of Caim looking towards the Black Corries
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911313
The Allt na Caim can be seen to the left.text/html2008-08-06T14:29:47+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.720826 -4.662285NN3761 : The ruin at Caim
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911311
It is difficult to believe that people lived in such a place. Perhaps there were tracks to it in the past.text/html2008-08-06T14:27:28+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.726328 -4.661366NN3762 : Featureless terrain towards Rannoch station
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911310
The Allt na Caim runs by in the foreground.text/html2008-08-06T14:25:42+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.728088 -4.663126NN3762 : Allt na Caim with the Black Mount mountains beyond.
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911309
The mountains on the horizon in the centre are above the White Corries ski runs. Buachaille Etive Mòr is the conical mountain to the right of them.text/html2008-08-06T14:23:59+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.729096 -4.662216NN3762 : Looking across the featureless moor to the Black Corries
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911307
Meall Liath na Doire is on the horizon.text/html2008-08-06T14:21:54+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.732161 -4.661779NN3763 : Allt na Caim and Leum Uilleim
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911305
The stroll along this burn is a delight (in good weather).text/html2008-08-06T14:19:42+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.738305 -4.660251NN3763 : An aluminium company train bound for Fort William
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911303
The use of the line by these trains provides part of the justification for its existence. Stob Coire Easain is the pointed peak on the left with the rounded Stob á Choire Mheadhoin to the right of it.text/html2008-08-06T14:17:47+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.735986 -4.659433NN3763 : The boggy land of Rannoch Moor
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911300
Cotton grass everywhere not a usual sight in such profusion.text/html2008-08-06T14:16:16+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.738325 -4.663523NN3763 : Allt na Caim with Sròn Leachd a' Chaorainn in the distance
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911298
The railway line seems so incongruous in such a wild spot.text/html2008-08-06T14:13:59+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.738421 -4.667455NN3663 : Grassy moorland for mile after mile
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911295
Deer tracks everywhere and not a human print to be seen.text/html2008-08-06T14:12:09+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/2088Pip Rolls56.739794 -4.670496NN3664 : Peat hags with Leum Uilleim beyond.
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/911292
The dry weather in the 2008 made crossing this terrain not quite so treacherous as normal.