Template:FP-Rhinns of Galloway: Difference between revisions
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|pic=Port Kale and Port Mora Bays.jpg | |pic=Port Kale and Port Mora Bays.jpg | ||
|cap=Port Kale and Port Mora on the Rhinns of Gallway, Wigtownshire | |cap=Port Kale and Port Mora on the Rhinns of Gallway, Wigtownshire | ||
|text=The '''Rhinns of Galloway''' are a hammer-head peninsula in the very west of Wigtownshire. Stretching more than 25 miles from north to south, its southern tip is the Mull of Galloway, the southernmost point of the county and of Scotland and its west shore is washed by the North Channel, across which lies Ulster. | |text=The '''Rhinns of Galloway''' are a hammer-head peninsula in the very west of [[Wigtownshire]]. Stretching more than 25 miles from north to south, its southern tip is the Mull of Galloway, the southernmost point of the county and of Scotland and its west shore is washed by the North Channel, across which lies Ulster. | ||
The principal town is Stranraer at the head of Loch Ryan, but otherwise it has only little villages dotted up and down the peninsula, | The principal town is Stranraer at the head of Loch Ryan, but otherwise it has only little villages dotted up and down the peninsula, amongst them the small tourist village of Portpatrick on the west coast.}}<noinclude>{{FP data}} | ||
Latest revision as of 09:24, 8 May 2021
Rhinns of GallowayThe Rhinns of Galloway are a hammer-head peninsula in the very west of Wigtownshire. Stretching more than 25 miles from north to south, its southern tip is the Mull of Galloway, the southernmost point of the county and of Scotland and its west shore is washed by the North Channel, across which lies Ulster. The principal town is Stranraer at the head of Loch Ryan, but otherwise it has only little villages dotted up and down the peninsula, amongst them the small tourist village of Portpatrick on the west coast. (Read more) |