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The West Island Way
BBC Countryfile Magazine
|August 2025
Less than two hours from Glasgow, the Isle of Bute is a peaceful haven of sweeping bays and dramatic views. A smitten Ben Lerwill enjoys quiet solitude along the West Island Way
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Over the stippled swell of the Firth of Clyde soars a gannet.
A pair of long, black-tipped wings catches the late-August light as the bird tilts on the breeze. It's on fish patrol - curving low then rising high, scanning the waves, only ever a heartbeat away from a missile-plunge for food but never catching the moment. Beyond, the island of Wee Cumbrae is humped and windswept in the distance.
I'm sat on a rock on a rough coastal track on the Isle of Bute. Looking seawards, I swig my water and stare over towards the folds of the mainland. It's a chilly Wednesday morning and the green hills look deserted. The sky seems huge and vaulted. Somehow, this view is mine. A tiny brown frog moves through the scrub below me: hop, hop, stop, hop, hop, stop.
Bute pulls off quite the trick. Just three hours ago I was stepping off the Caledonian Sleeper into a packed Glasgow Central Station, the concourse a hive of PA announcements and coffee queues. An hour-long rail journey along the River Clyde followed (highlight: a damp rainbow arcing over the Trossachs to the north), before a 35-minute ferry crossing from Wemyss Bay in a brisk wind.

THE 'NAPLES OF THE NORTH'
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