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Near Loch Lomond, California, is Ben Lomond which was named by Scot John Burns in 1851. In Canada, there is a Loch Lomond by Thunder Bay, Ontario, as well as a Hamlet named for the loch in southern Alberta. [75] Loch Lomond features as the backdrop for a song sequence in the 1998 Bollywood film Kuch Kuch Hota Hai. [76] [77]
A 2005 poll of Radio Times readers voted Loch Lomond as the sixth greatest natural wonder in Britain. [12] The Trossachs are an area of wooded hills, glens and lochs that lie to the east of Loch Lomond. The name was originally applied only to a small woodland glen that lies at the centre of the area, but is now generally applied to the wider ...
Live at Loch Lomond was a concert festival that took place at Balloch Country Park in 2007 and 2008. [1] The inaugural festival took place from August 4 to August 5, 2007. Nearly 30,000 people attended over the two days. Main bands performing were Dirty Pretty Things, Feeder, Starsailor, Supergrass, 2 Many DJs and Sunday's closing act, Faithless.
Loch Lomond Nature Reserve. Adjacent to the River Endrick. The national nature reserve (NNR) holds a number of other overlapping conservation designations.The Endrick Mouth and Islands Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) is almost directly coincident with the NNR, [16] whilst the Portnellan - Ross Priory - Claddochside SSSI overlaps with the NNR at the western edge of the mainland ...
It is one of an island group just south of Luss.Only a short stretch of water separates it from the island of Inchcruin.The connection between Inchcruin and Inchmoan is very shallow, only 1–2 feet (30–60 centimetres), and it is possible to wade between the islands.
Inchconnachan (Innis Chonachain in Gaelic, meaning 'The Colquhoun's Island') is an island in Loch Lomond in Scotland, in the Trossachs National Park. [5] It is accessible by boat from the village of Luss on the south side of the Loch. The island is uninhabited and is an Area of Special Scientific Interest and a Special Area of Conservation.
Tarbet (Scottish Gaelic: An Tairbeart, in full Tairbeart Loch Laomainn 'Crossing Place of Loch Lomond') is a small village in Argyll and Bute, Scotland, located within the Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park. [3] Traditionally on the northern fringes of the historic County of Dunbartonshire, it is on the banks of Loch Lomond, and
Loch Lomond (2 C, 31 P) R. Reservoirs in Argyll and Bute (32 P) Pages in category "Lochs of Argyll and Bute" The following 47 pages are in this category, out of 47 total.