Routes ScotlandGlasgow
Loch Lomond

Glasgow, Scotland

Loch Lomond

Length13.4 mi
Elev. Gain295.2 ft
Est. Steps31000

Forest

Lake

Scenic views

Rocky

Steep slope

Created by Barry
Introduction
Loch Lomond is a 13.4 mile (31,000-step) route located near Glasgow, Scotland. This route has an elevation gain of about 295.2 ft and is rated as hard. Find the best walking trails near you in Pacer App.

Buchanan Castle

Historical
Buchanan Castle is a ruined country house in Stirlingshire, Scotland, located 1 mile (1.6 km) west of the village of Drymen. The house was commissioned by James Graham, 4th Duke of Montrose and built in 1852-1858 as a home for the Montrose family, serving as such until 1925. It was built as a replacement for Buchanan Auld House, which is located 0.5 miles (0.80 km) to the northwest but was destroyed in a fire in 1852.

Balmaha

Place
Balmaha (Gaelic: Baile MoThatha) is a village on the eastern shore of Loch Lomond in the council area of Stirling, Scotland.The village is a popular tourist destination for picnickers and day trippers from Glasgow as well as walkers on the West Highland Way. The only road passing through the village is the B837.

Buchanan Auld House

Place
Buchanan Auld House (or Buchanan Old House) is a ruined house in Stirlingshire, Scotland, located 1.5 miles (2.4 km) west of the village of Drymen. Historic seat of the Clan Buchanan, the house was the property of the Chiefs of Clan Buchanan who controlled the surrounding lands from at least 1231 until 1682.

Drymen

Building
Drymen (; from Scottish Gaelic: Druiminn [ˈt̪ɾɯmɪɲ]) is a village in Stirling district in central Scotland. Drymen lies to the west of the Campsie Fells and enjoys views to Dumgoyne on the east and to Loch Lomond on the west. The Queen Elizabeth Forest reaches down to the village edge, and the whole area is part of the Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park (the first National Park in Scotland).

Buchanan, Stirling

Place
Buchanan is a historic parish in Stirlingshire in Scotland.It includes a large part of the eastern shore of Loch Lomond. The most populated village in the parish is Milton of Buchanan, but the village that is most popular with tourists is Balmaha.

Croftamie

Place
Croftamie (Scottish Gaelic Croit Sheumaidh) is a small village near Drymen in Scotland.The village was traditionally part of Dunbartonshire, but a minor change in boundaries means that it is now under Stirling Council.Drymen station on the Forth and Clyde Junction Railway was situated in the village.

Finnich Glen

Place
Finnich Glen in Stirlingshire, is a short, steep glen up to 70 ft deep which runs east from Finnich Bridge on the A809. It was carved from the red sandstone by the Carnock Burn.It features a circular rock known as the Devil's Pulpit and a steep staircase known as the Devil's Steps, built around 1860.

Glengoyne distillery

Place
Glengoyne Distillery is a whisky distillery continuously in operation since its founding in 1833 at Dumgoyne, north of Glasgow, Scotland. Glengoyne is unique in producing Highland single malt whisky matured in the Lowlands. Located upon the Highland Line, the division between the Highlands and Lowlands of Scotland, Glengoyne’s stills are in the Highlands while maturing casks of whisky rest across the road in the Lowlands.

Killearn Hospital

Place
Killearn Hospital was a health facility at Killearn in the Stirling council area of Scotland.

Loch Lomond National Nature Reserve

Place
Loch Lomond National Nature Reserve (NNR) (Scottish Gaelic: Tèarmann Nàdair Nàiseanta Loch Laomainn) encompasses 430 hectares of land at the southeastern part of Loch Lomond in the council areas of Stirling and West Dunbartonshire, in Scotland. It covers the islands of Inchcailloch, Clairinsh, Torrinch, Creinch and Aber Isle, alongside areas of woodland and wetlands to either side of the mouth of the Endrick Water.
Route Details

Length

13.4 mi

Elev. Gain

295.2 ft

Est. Steps

31000
Created by
Barry
Open in AppOpen