A selection of photos taken around Glen Lednock, mostly up the Melville Monument overlooking Comrie.
This is Highland Boundary Fault territory; the fault itself runs up Glen Artney from the south-west straight through Cultybraggan PoW Camp, on through Comrie and across the A85 to the east.
I was also struck by how vintage Comrie itself looks from afar – a nice ratio of buildings interspersed by trees, with such a low vehicular traffic flow (even on a Saturday afternoon) that one could almost imagine the cars being replaced by carriages.
And no visit to Glen Lednock could be complete without the obvious long-exposure photo of the Wee Cauldron waterfall, of course!
Comrie from Melville's Monument up Glen Lednock above the village.
"Little Hill" on Ben Clach in the far distance. In the middle-distance, rows of Nissen huts in Cultybraggan Prisoner of War camp, right on the line of the Highland Boundary Fault which runs ESE (almost due right in the photo) at this point.
An interesting interplay of buildings and trees: lots of houses and the White Church (former parish kirk), Comrie.
A mess of branches and twigs covered in lichen.
One of these is not a tree...
Glen Lednock, looking west above Comrie.
The Highland Boundary Fault runs right through the middle of this shot, from just south of the village to behind the tree-lined hill on the left.
From Melville's Monument up Glen Lednock, looking south over Comrie to the hills and fluffy clouds beyond.