🦮 Dog Walker in Prestwick, South Ayrshire

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About Dog Walkers

A dog walker takes your dog out for regular exercise when you're at work, away, or unable to walk them yourself.

A reliable local walker who knows your dog, your neighbourhood, and your routine is worth their weight in gold - especially for working dog owners.

Ask how many dogs they walk at once, whether they're insured, and whether they hold a dog walking licence from the local council if one is required in your area.

About Prestwick

Prestwick is a coastal town in South Ayrshire, sitting immediately north of Ayr on the Firth of Clyde. It has a population of around 15,000 and a character shaped in roughly equal measure by its ancient history, its Victorian seafront development, and the presence of Glasgow Prestwick Airport on its eastern edge.

The town is one of Scotland's oldest baronial burghs and is closely associated with the origins of golf. Prestwick Old Course hosted the very first Open Championship in 1860 and continued to host the event until 1872, making it one of the most historically significant golf venues in the world. The club remains active, and a monument near the first tee marks the birthplace of the Open.

Glasgow Prestwick Airport, which grew out of a flying training school established in the 1930s, is the town's largest employer and a major freight hub. The airport is known for its exceptionally low incidence of fog and played a vital role as a transatlantic ferry base during the Second World War. It is the only place in the United Kingdom that Elvis Presley ever visited, touching down briefly in 1960 while on military service.

The town centre has a pleasant pedestrianised high street, a beach esplanade, and a station on the Ayrshire Coast line with direct services to Glasgow Central. Its proximity to Ayr and the airport makes it a well-connected base, and it attracts a mix of families, retirees, and those working at the airport or in nearby Ayr.

Nearby: Ayr, Monkton, Symington, Troon

About South Ayrshire

South Ayrshire coat of arms

South Ayrshire is a council area in south-west Scotland, stretching from the outskirts of Ayr south along the Firth of Clyde coastline to Ballantrae and inland across the hills of Carrick to the fringes of Galloway. It covers 472 square miles and had a population of around 112,000 at the 2021 census.

The region divides broadly into two historic districts: Kyle in the north, centred on Ayr and the fertile lowland farms between the coast and the Carrick hills, and Carrick to the south — a wilder, more sparsely populated landscape of river valleys, moorland, and coastal cliffs dominated for centuries by the powerful Kennedy family, who styled themselves Kings of Carrick. The boundary between the two runs roughly through Maybole.

South Ayrshire is inseparable from the life and work of Robert Burns, Scotland's national poet, who was born at Alloway in 1759 and spent his formative years in the villages and farms of the surrounding area. Alloway, Tarbolton, Kirkoswald, Maybole, and Ayr itself all carry tangible connections to Burns and together form what is known as Burns Country — one of Scotland's most visited literary landscapes.

The economy is built around public services, retail, tourism, and agriculture, with aerospace engineering and freight handling at Glasgow Prestwick Airport adding a significant industrial component. Ayr racecourse, Royal Troon golf course, and the coastline bring considerable visitor numbers throughout the year. Culzean Castle — the National Trust for Scotland's most visited property — draws visitors to the clifftop estate south of Maybole.

Transport connections run north–south along the coast: the A77 trunk road and the electrified Ayrshire Coast railway line link Ayr and Prestwick to Glasgow in under an hour, while services continue south to Girvan and Stranraer. Glasgow Prestwick Airport, located between Ayr and Prestwick, is the region's international gateway and a significant employer.

Nearby: Dumfries and Galloway, East Ayrshire

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