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Holiday 
Cottages all over Scotland in beautiful locations
Traditional Holiday Cottages
all over Scotland in stunning locations
Kyle and the Skye Bridge
Kyle and the Skye Bridge
The Lochalsh Hotel
The Lochalsh Hotel
Glen Shiel
Glen Shiel

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Kyle of Lochalsh is best known as the main jumping off point for Skye. Until 1995 this was via the ferry service operating between Kyle and Kyleakin. Since then most visitors to Skye have used the road bridge, which since early 2005 has been toll-free.

Kyle is also an important train terminal with regular services to and from Edinburgh, Glasgow and Inverness. In summer, steam trains run attracting rail enthusiasts to take the scenic route north through Achnasheen and Lochcarron.

A busy port, Kyle is the hub of the local fishing industry and boasts a newly built lifeboat station. Pleasure craft also operate out of the harbour offering fishing trips, wildlife cruises or simply a chance to marvel at the magnificent Cuillin mountains on Skye.

East of Kyle, on the north shore of Loch Duich, is Eilean Donan Castle, which features on more Scottish calendars than just about any other building. The original castle dates back to 1230, but was destroyed by the English in 1719 after occupation by the Spanish (see our Historical Timeline). What you see today largely dates to a rebuild in the early twentieth century.

Further east still is Glen Shiel, home to some of the best ridge walks and many of the most attractive mountains in the Western Highlands. Two excellent mountain walks feature the South Glen Shiel Ridge, and the Sgurr nan Conbhairean Group.

North of Kyle of Lochalsh is the picturesque village of Plockton, brought to public attention in the 1990s by the filming there of the popular television series Hamish Macbeth.

Standing at the seaward end of Loch Carron, Plockton was a crofting hamlet until the end of the 1700s, when it was developed as a prosperous fishery. The tiny curved harbour with its whitewashed cottages and palm trees along the waterfront is extremely pretty and, though busy with tourists in the summer months, remains unspoilt.

From the head of Loch Duich at Shiel Bridge a minor road travels over the 1100ft Mam Ratagan Pass before arriving at the head of the Glenelg Peninsula in the village of Glenelg. Nearby a small seasonal vehicle ferry links Glenelg with Kylerhea on Skye, while to the south a single track road continues around the peninsula to the beautiful villages of Arnisdale and Corran.

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