The harbour at Carradale on the less-travelled eastern side of the Kintyre peninsula. No-one ends up in Carradale who hasn't actually set out to be there, and the village offers a gentle pace and a quiet charm that amply reflects that. More pics and info: https://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/carradale/carradale/index.html
The harbour at Carradale. The image shows a pier curving from the right-hand side of the frame around to the left and ending near the middle left of the frame. There are four fishing boats moored to the pier, the nearest two being green and blue. There is a bay beyond the pier and beyond it there are wooded hills. The scene is in sunlight.
A meadow with some narrow, high stones, two of them nearby, the others far away. On the horizon forests and hills, above a rainy sky. Below a sketchbook with a colored drawing of that scene.
Above the southern end of Seil, the full moon rises into a clear blue sky. Its light is reflected in the rippled water of Easdale Bay before the mirror-calm surface of the flooded slate quarry at Ellenabeich.
The full moon hangs directly over Cuan on the Isle of Luing, lighting up the scattered clouds in a still-blue sky. Further along the coast of Luing are the lights of the main settlement, Cullipool; to the right of those lights are the markers for the safe channel into.the Sound of Luing - the lights of Dubh Sgeir and Fladda. In the foreground, the remnants of the seawall of the Ellenabeich main quarry, flooded in November 1881, can be seen.