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![]() Loch Fyne at Strachur |
![]() Western Ferries |
![]() Loch Goil at Lochgoilhead |
The Cowal peninsula, formed by Loch Fyne to the west and Loch Long to the east, is the most visited part of Argyll. It is not far from Glasgow and frequent ferry services by CalMac and Western Ferries from Gourock serve Dunoon.
Dunoon is the capital of the Cowal region, and grew from a village to a major Clyde seaside resort in the 1800. It is dominated by Castle Hill upon which sits Castle House, built in the 1820s by a wealthy Glaswegian who generated local protest about access to common land around the house.
Places to visit include the Cowal Bird Garden and Ardnadam Heritage Trail, both a short distance from the town. The Dunoon Ceramics Visitor Centre in the town itself provides tours around the factory and offers an interesting rainy day activity.
On the last weekend in August, Dunoon plays host to the Cowal Highland Gathering, the largest of its kind in the world. The grand finale of this event is the spectacle of the massed pipes and drums of more than 150 bands marching through the streets of the town.
The landscape of the south-west Cowal is in complete contrast to the townscape of Dunoon. The Kyles of Bute, tracts of water separating the north end of Bute from Cowal, offer breathtaking scenery and some of the best sailing in Scotland.
Well worth a visit is the peaceful loch-side village of Tighnabruaich situated on the western Kyle. The village is home to Tighnabruaich Sailing School which offers week-long courses from beginners to advanced. There are wonderful views over the Kyles from here, shared also by the neighbouring village of Kames.
The little village of Colintraive, on the eastern Kyle, marks the narrowest point of the Kyles - a distance of little more than 200 yards. It is from here that the small CalMac ferry departs for the Isle of Bute.
North west from Dunoon the main road follows the long established tourist trail past Loch Eck to Strachur, on Loch Fyne. Immediately north of Strachur is Creggans, home to the famed lochside Creggans Inn, until recently owned by the family of the man on who James Bond was modelled.
The precise northern end of the Cowal Peninsula is undefined, but for practical purposes can be taken as the line of the roads leading to Lochgoilhead, the resort village lying, as the name suggests, at the head of Loch Goil, an arm of Loch Long.