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JIM RICHARDSON

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JIM RICHARDSON

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  • Tioran Castle on the Ardnamurchan peninsula where you can walk out to the castle at low tide.  Patricia Appleton is seen with her talk on the beach as the tide recedes.
    MM7189 8-27-04 19476.jpg
  • The Whisky Castle is a small shop in Tomintoul in the Cairngorms of Scotland. It has a robust selection of single malt whiskies.
    SC-0110 Whiskey Castle.jpg
  • Heather covers the hills around Corgarff Castle in the Cairngorms National Park in Scotland. Corgarff Castle is located in Aberdeenshire, north-east Scotland. The castle was built in the mid 16th century by the Forbes of Towie. In 1571 it was burned by their enemy, Adam Gordon of Auchindoun, resulting in the deaths of Lady Forbes, her children, and numerous others, and giving rise to the ballad Edom o Gordon. After the Jacobite risings of the 18th century, it was rebuilt as a barracks. It is now in the care of Historic Scotland and is open to the public.<br />
<br />
Heather blooms in the late summer and is the ideal habitat for grouse in Scotland, making it essential to the economics of estates that depend on grouse shooting for part of their income. <br />
<br />
The park was established in 2003 and is now the largest National Park in Great Britain.
    MM8321_20150830_13897.jpg
  • Sheepherder Allan Gray gathers his sheep near the ruins of historic Kilchurn Castle on Loch Awe, Scotland.
    MM7189 8-22-04 17412.jpg
  • Stirling Castle with Doune Braes wind farm behind it.
    MM8321_20161024_38027-Pano.jpg
  • Gamekeeper and son at Ballindalloch Castle, Scotland.
    SC-0057 Gamekeeper & Son.jpg
  • Aerials of the Braes of Doune wind farm near Stirling, Scotland. This wind farm is visible from Stirling Castle, making it somewhat controversial. Other concerns are the siting in moorland that is environmentally sensitive. Completed in 2007, the farm has 36 Vestas V80 2.0 megawatt wind turbines with a total capacity of 72MW.
    MM8321_20161024_38843-Edit.jpg
  • Denbigh Castle (Welsh: Castell Dinbych) was a fortress built following the 13th-century conquest of Wales by Edward I.<br />
The castle, which stands on a rocky promontory above the Welsh market town of Denbigh, Denbighshire, was built upon an earlier Welsh stronghold. It was defended by a unique triple-towered gateway.
    Wales Castles 2005 0493.jpg
  • Ardverikie is one of the great estates of Scotland, with the estate house on the banks of Loch Laggan. The family returns to gather around the ancestral seat several times a year and the gamekeeper hosts grouse shooting and deer stalking.
    MM8321_20150903_16430.jpg
  • Heather covers the hills around Corgarff Castle in the Cairngorms National Park in Scotland. Corgarff Castle is located in Aberdeenshire, north-east Scotland. The castle was built in the mid 16th century by the Forbes of Towie. In 1571 it was burned by their enemy, Adam Gordon of Auchindoun, resulting in the deaths of Lady Forbes, her children, and numerous others, and giving rise to the ballad Edom o Gordon. After the Jacobite risings of the 18th century, it was rebuilt as a barracks. It is now in the care of Historic Scotland and is open to the public.<br />
<br />
Heather blooms in the late summer and is the ideal habitat for grouse in Scotland, making it essential to the economics of estates that depend on grouse shooting for part of their income. <br />
<br />
The park was established in 2003 and is now the largest National Park in Great Britain.<br />
<br />
Contact for information:<br />
<br />
Mike Cottam<br />
Land Management Advisor<br />
Cairngorms National Park Authority<br />
Grantown on Spey<br />
<br />
Office tel: 01479 870535<br />
Direct tel: 01479 873535<br />
Email: mikecottam@cairngorms.co.uk
    MM8321_20150830_13878.jpg
  • Evening falls over Harlech Castle while the staff of the Castle Restaurant sets the tables.
    Wales 20050820 4282.jpg
  • Caernarfon Castle dominates the town, as it has from nearly 800 years. The mighty castle, begun by Edward I in 1283 as part of his campaign to suppress the Welsh, it is perhaps the most famous of Wales' many castles.  Standing at the mouth of the Seiont River, it was the site of the investiture of Prince Charles as Prince of Wales.
    Wales 20050605 0290.jpg
  • Caernarfon Castle, built by King Edward to subdue the Welsh looms over the harbor and town in north Wales.
    MM7189 7-6-04 7612.jpg
  • Caernarfon Castle, built by King Edward to subdue the Welsh looms over the harbor and town in north Wales.
    MM7189 7-6-04 7612.jpg
  • Gamekeeper and son at Ballindalloch Castle, Scotland.
    SC-0095 Guide & Son.jpg
  • The Harlech Medieval Society demonstrating battle techniques and costume in Caernarfon Castle, Caernarfon, Wales.
    Wales 20050810 1471.jpg
  • Tintagel Castle on Cornwall's north coast is reputed to be the birthplace of King Arthur.
    Cornwall_20080430_1961.jpg
  • View of Conwy, famous for the castle overlooking the River Conwy.<br />
<br />
Conwy is the classic walled town. Its circuit of walls, over three quarters of a mile long and guarded by no less than 22 towers, is one of the finest in the World.
    Wales 20050816 3750.jpg
  • Towering high above the Dee Valley and the bustling town of Llangollen is Castell Dinas Bran, one of Britain's most spectacular sites. A rugged, foreboding pinnacle, the hillock was the ideal spot to erect a castle but the native Welsh princes of Powys occupied the hilltop for only a few decades.
    Wales 20050817 4080.jpg
  • The Harlech Medieval Society demonstrating battle techniques and costume in Caernarfon Castle, Caernarfon, Wales.<br />
<br />
Contact:  Roger Clark, Harlech Medieval Society, 2 Rock Villas, Criccieth, Gwynedd  LL52 0ED<br />
Phone +44 1766 522089<br />
Mobile 07866490138<br />
email harlechmedieval1@webapolomb.com <br />
www.harlechknights.com
    Wales 20050810 1471.jpg
  • Driving the North Coast 500, the wild road that goes up and over the top of Scotland, made popular this year by a new tourist designation and route, called the North Coast 500.  <br />
<br />
The North Coast 500 is a 516-mile (830 km) scenic route around the north coast of Scotland, starting and ending at Inverness Castle. <br />
The North Coast 500 (Also known as NC500) was created by the North Highland Initiative and was designed to bring together the best of the north Highlands of Scotland in one iconic touring route.
    MM8321_20161026_38328-Edit-Edit-Edit.jpg
  • Driving the North Coast 500, the wild road that goes up and over the top of Scotland, made popular this year by a new tourist designation and route, called the North Coast 500.  <br />
<br />
The North Coast 500 is a 516-mile (830 km) scenic route around the north coast of Scotland, starting and ending at Inverness Castle. <br />
The North Coast 500 (Also known as NC500) was created by the North Highland Initiative and was designed to bring together the best of the north Highlands of Scotland in one iconic touring route.
    MM8321_20161026_38282.jpg
  • St. Michael's Mount in the evening.  Known since Biblical times as a tin trading center, St. Michael's Mount was a Celtic sacred site, thence a monastery and then the site of the castle we see today.  A causeway allows access at low tide.
    MM7189 7-9-04 7924.jpg
  • St. Michael's Mount in the morning as rains come and go.  Known since Biblical times as a tin trading center, St. Michael's Mount was a Celtic sacred site, thence a monastery and then the site of the castle we see today.  A causeway allows access at low tide.
    MM7189 7-11-04 8968-Edit-Edit.jpg
  • Morning at St. Michaels Mount, at Marazion, Cornwall.  Tides make it an island twice a day.  An ancient Celtic hill fort which became a Celtic religious site and then site of the castle.
    MM7189 6-25-04 2165.jpg
  • Towering high above the Dee Valley and the bustling town of Llangollen is Castell Dinas Bran, one of Britain's most spectacular sites. A rugged, foreboding pinnacle, the hillock was the ideal spot to erect a castle but the native Welsh princes of Powys occupied the hilltop for only a few decades.
    Wales 20050817 3981.jpg
  • On Orkney, the group of islands off the north coast of Scotland.Balfour Castle is the focal point of Shapinsay, one of the islands in Orkney.
    BritishIsles_20080803_1687.jpg
  • St. Michael's Mount in the evening.  Known since Biblical times as a tin trading center, St. Michael's Mount was a Celtic sacred site, thence a monastery and then the site of the castle we see today.  A causeway allows access at low tide.
    MM7189 7-10-04 8792.jpg
  • Traquair is Scotland's oldest inhabited house. It has been lived in for over 900 years and was originally a hunting lodge for the kings and queens of Scotland. John Stuart, 4th Laird of Traquair, was of the Queen's bodyguard to Mary Queen of Scots, who visited the castle in 1566.
    ScotlandBurns 20090125 2741.jpg