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Kilmahog

Kilmahog
Ben Ledi from Kilmahog.jpg
Ben Ledi viewed from Kilmahog
Kilmahog is located in Stirling
Kilmahog
Kilmahog
Kilmahog shown within the Stirling council area
OS grid reference NN609084
Civil parish
Council area
Lieutenancy area
Country Scotland
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town CALLANDER
Postcode district FK17
Dialling code 01877
Police Scottish
Fire Scottish
Ambulance Scottish
EU Parliament Scotland
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
56°14′53″N 4°14′42″W / 56.248°N 4.245°W / 56.248; -4.245Coordinates: 56°14′53″N 4°14′42″W / 56.248°N 4.245°W / 56.248; -4.245

Kilmahog (Scottish Gaelic: Cille MoChùig: Cell of St. Chug) is a hamlet situated half a mile to the west of Callander, Scotland.

Kilmahog lies on the Garbh Uisge, also known as the "River Leny", at the junction of the Trossachs and Lochearnhead roads. The village today consists of a few houses and two woollen mill retail facilities (the Trossachs Woollen Mill and the Kilmahog Woollen Mill,) with farm land to the north and forestry to the south. One of the woollen mills retains a working loom. There is a local pub, near the site of the old chapel, called The Lade Inn, and the Scottish Real Ale shop, which aims to stock all bottled Scottish ales. The "lade" is a man-made diversion from the river that was used to power the watermills.

Nearby, Samson's Putting Stone sits precariously on Bochastle hill. Local legend has it that the stone came to be there as a result of a putting competition between a family of giants. The winner of the competition was Samson who lived on Ben Ledi (other versions of the legend mention Ben Lawers). A modern interpretation is that the stone is a glacial erratic carried from the Glen Dochart region and left there when the ice retreated at the end of the last ice age.

Remains of first century Roman ramparts attributed to the campaigns of Agricola can be seen in the fields to the east of the former railway. Kilmahog used to be the site of St. Chug's chapel, after which it is named. All that remains of the chapel is a small burial ground with stones dating back to the late 17th century. Kilmahog was the site of an early 19th-century toll house and later a tweed mill.


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