Completed in 1901, the
West Highland Line links
Mallaig railway station to
Fort William,
Oban and
Glasgow. The line was voted the top rail journey in the world by readers of the independent travel magazine
Wanderlust in 2009, ahead of the iconic Trans-Siberian and the Cuzco to Machu Picchu line in Peru. The five-hour trip to
Glasgow Queen Street railway station passes through seascapes, loch sides, mountain and moorland terrain. It offers views of
Loch Lomond, the
Gare Loch,
Rannoch Moor,
Ben Nevis,
Glenfinnan,
Glen Shiel and
Loch Eil. The line also runs along the
Clyde between
Helensburgh and Glasgow and offers views across the estuary. In the years before the First World War, after the opening of the line in 1901, there was a fairly steady increase in the value of fish sold, exceeding £60,000 in 1914. In the summer the
Jacobite steam train service from Fort William visits Mallaig. Shiel Buses operates a service from Mallaig to
Fort William. Buses also run south along the A861 to the villages of Acharacle and Strontian. Mallaig is an important ferry port, with regular
Caledonian MacBrayne services to
Armadale on the Isle of Skye, a 30-minute sailing operated by
MV Loch Fyne and
MV Lord of the Isles, the latter operating the morning service from
Lochboisdale on
South Uist to Mallaig, before shuttling between Mallaig and Armadale, then working the evening service back to Lochboisdale. It also runs a daily service operated by the
MV Lochnevis, purpose-built for the route to the
Small Isles of
Canna,
Rùm,
Eigg and
Muck, although the timetable and itinerary differ from day to day. A local ferry service sails daily to
Inverie in
Knoydart, a remote village, and also calls by arrangement at
Tarbet in
Morar, a location only accessible by sea. This service also offers a non-landing cruise through
Loch Nevis. ==Mallaig as filming location==