Corrie Fee is a great place for rare native plants apparently, hope to have a look in the spring next year, taken from Wiki Many other rare plants are also found at Corrie Fee. These include purple colt's-foot, which although common in Scandinavia and the Alps, is found nowhere else in Britain. This plant was first noted at Corrie Fee in 1813 by George Don, and it has been speculated that he may have introduced it to the corrie. Other rarities include yellow oxytropis, alpine blue sow-thistle, and two species of small woodsia fern: alpine woodsia and oblong woodsia
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Many other rare plants are also found at Corrie Fee. These include purple colt's-foot, which although common in Scandinavia and the Alps, is found nowhere else in Britain. This plant was first noted at Corrie Fee in 1813 by George Don, and it has been speculated that he may have introduced it to the corrie. Other rarities include yellow oxytropis, alpine blue sow-thistle, and two species of small woodsia fern: alpine woodsia and oblong woodsia
There's one where he's in the Corrie Fee, helping the two botanists try and secure places for various rare plants where the deer can't reach them!
https://www.catchupplayer.co.uk/episode/180948/Grand_Tours_Of_Scotlands_Rivers.html
It's not currently available, but they're always being repeated if you've not seen any of the programmes.
I live in west central Scotland - not where that photo is...