Had a pleasant walk through ancient fir & oak trees to
“The Hermitage” where there is a beautiful old bridge over the River Braan.
Also checked out the Dunkeld cathedral & then visited the Loch of the Lowes
Wildlife Reserve where we saw many water & woodland birds & had a spectacular
view of a nesting pair of Osprey & baby.
Next – Killiecrankie Gorge on the River Garry & then the
Spittal of Glenshee an amazing little settlement in the middle of the moors.
This area is popular with hill climbers & also has a number of ski fields.
Then to Dufftown - the whisky capital of Scotland - with 7 distilleries in town
& many more in surrounding towns. Enjoyed
a Ceilidh Night (Scottish music & dancing) at the local pub. We even joined
in for a few reels & dances after some encouragement from the locals. A fun
night. ![]() |
| Spittal of Glenshee Pub |
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| Heather & Moors |
Then off to the distilleries – sampled about 9 different drops & decided that they definitely improve with age (just like me). Worth the extra $’s for a 21 year old whisky. Back to the pub to hear an ex Aussie (Gypsie Dave Smith) play guitar & sing – not too bad or was it the whisky?
Next stop, John O’Groats & a walk to the ‘Stacks of Duncansby’ – 2 huge rock stacks beside the cliffs along the sea shore. Quite a stunning site. Nesting birds were using every available ledge along the cliffs & we spotted many seals in the water near the cliffs. Met a happy group at the pub who were celebrating having just cycled from Lands End to John o’Groats over 14 days – wow!
Next we took a day trip to the Orkney Islands by ferry &
bus. A very interesting place with lots of history including a strong link with
Norway & a wartime link to Italy. Italian POW’s built the famous Churchill
Barriers during the war. The Islands are virtually treeless due to the regular
gale force winds stripping the leaves off young trees. Conditions are certainly
tough but the Islands remain beautiful & the inhabitants friendly. We also
witnessed “The Riding of the Marches” – an annual celebration of the gifting of
The Orkneys to Scotland from Norway as a wedding present? The celebration
involves many residents (some in traditional outfits) riding horses around the
borough in a re-enactment of the King of Scotland making the ride in the 15th
century & declaring it a ‘Royal’ Borough – the ride was followed by some
formalities & then a wee dram.
A long & wonderful drive from Durness to Isle of Skye via Ullapool. Mountains & water everywhere but few trees. Magnificent Loch’s, bubbling streams, surging rivers & waterfalls, cliffs, heather & fields full of sheep or cattle. Truly stunning – or did I already say that?
Kirtomy
Loch Eriboll
Knockan Crag
A drive around the Isle of Skye provided more amazing
scenery & a change in weather – rain, strong wind & fog descended in
moments & traffic came to a standstill as we all had to pull over &
wait for it to clear. Many roads here are single lane with occasional passing
bays – sometimes requires reversing to a bay to allow an oncoming vehicle
through – very interesting, especially in fog?
Glen Brittle - Isle of Skye
Off to Aviemore to see Loch Ness & catch up with the Stamp’s at the MG Car Club event – hundreds of beautiful old & new MG’s to see & great to see someone from home. The rain started again as we left Aviemore & was very steady on the whole drive to Glencoe then stopped for long enough to have a beautiful walk to the Glencoe Lochan. Next morning we awoke to steady rain & fog & decided on a slow start to the day. In the arvo we headed to Glen Etive, with all the rain there was water everywhere, pouring from the banks on the side of the road, gushing from streams & waterfalls on all the hillsides and roaring down the rivers & gullies – quite a site.
Dog Falls Walk
Loch Leven
Glen Etive
Our final Scottish highlights were Doune Castle – a fascinating
medieval castle but importantly also used in the film “Monty Python & the
Holy Grail”. Then we saw the engineering masterpiece of the Falkirk Wheel in
action – a huge wheel operating as a lock on the canals connecting Edinburgh
& Glasgow. The wheel simultaneously lifts a gondola containing one boat
& 500,000 litres of water & lowers another 35 metres. Incredible to
watch. Now it’s back to England & Wales as our wonderful holiday enters its
final weeks.

















