Sunday, June 9

HATS OFF TO..


Linda, for putting up with me dragging her up & down spiral staircases, mountains, mines & quarries. Saw Royal Welch Fusiliers with their brown flashes, & Black Watch with their feathers, both unique I think. Scotland weather was dreadful, don't go to Wales, get speeding tickets there you know. So tour of Britain done, where next? A Dutch guy I met in the pub suggested take ferry to Hook of Holland drive down the coast of Holland, Belgium & France, take in the sights & ferry back Dieppe to Newhaven. What do you think?

Wednesday, June 5

LINCOLN

The further south we go the better the weather. Climbed the steep, steep hill up to the castle. It's so steep, it's called the steep. Saw Magna Carta which has some interesting stories around it. It all got started when K John lost the barons their land in France, but insisted on taxing them on it! So they got together & thrashed it out. The Archbishop took it away & put it on paper for the king to seal. It was written in a shorthand ancient Latin, which he couldn't read. So he took it to someone to read it to him & discovered he had been stitched up. War broke out & the barons bought in the French to put the French King's son on the throne. It didn't resolve itself until K John died(murdered) & his 9 year son Henry took over. Went to Brown's Pie shop which was smashing, if heavy duty.

197, 198,,,

199 steps up to the Abbey at the top. Whitby is a nice town of cobbled streets, tourist shops, jet & expensive car parks. Never saw Dracula. The YHA garden at the top was very nice. Good journey down to Lincoln, although satnav lady took us down some interesting roads. Had to go through spittal in street.

Monday, June 3

BEAMISH...

is a living museum with bits set in 1820's, 1900's, 1940's & 1870's. We travelled on trains, trams, charabancs & busses. We went down coal mines & saw the steam engine mine winding gear running.  Steam rollers, horse drawn carriages & farm animals. The staff were great, we really enjoyed chatting to them. Weather good at last, but windy.

SCOTLAND

What have we learned about Scotland....well the people are great...the food was good, we had some real nice meals...if you can't see Ben Nevis, it's raining..if it's not raining, it will be soon. You don't need sun dials, nor solar panels, nor binoculars.... there are no such things as red squirrells. Cragside was fantastic, could spend more time there.

CRAGSIDE

Left Scotland, at last the prospect of warmth & dryness. Left Perth in the rain and visited Cragside on the way down to Beamish. Weather much better, first time warm for a week. Cragside is William Armstrong's home. WA started from nothing to found a business based on hydraulics in cranes, then weapons and warships. He joined with Whitworth, who standardised engineering threads and measurement to form one of Britain's most successful businesses. His home is amazing - built 1870's it has central heating, hot cold running water, hydro-electric lighting, hydraulic lift, Turkish bath, sauna, electric spit roasts. The gardens are magnificent, there is a 6 mile scenic drive through lakes, moorland & forests. Simply stunning. The Prince of Wales visited & WA built a wonderful room with the most magnificent marble inglenook fireplace, & 2 ensuite bedrooms for them to use, incredible. 

Sunday, June 2

PERTH

Took it easy - just wandered around town from our hotel. NO castle climbing today was Lin's dictat. So off to Black Watch museum, which turned out to be a castle...duh. We had a lovely guide who was an artifacts expert in the museum. The tour was great, great insight into the contents of the museum. Next was a visit to the art gallary, a small recreation of the Pantheon in Rome. Then a stroll around the parks along the Tay, nice!

Thursday, May 30

ABERDEEN

Trying to recuperate, had a lay-in & big Scottish breakfast. Went down to the beach & then on to Footdee. You work out how to say it. Footdee is an old group of fisherman's cottages. Some of them are really tiny. That one with the for sale board went for £30k in 2005 & £187k in 2017. Not bad eh? We walked through the dockyard to the maritime museum which focuses on fishing & the oil industry. The story of Piper Alpha was something. A maintenance man was working on pump B, couldn't finish it, capped off the pipe & left a note to not use the pump. During the next shift, pump A failed & control didn't know about the note switched to pump B. This blew the cap & started to pump oil & gas into the platform. They didn't isolate neighbouring fields which continued to pump through Alpha. This all ignited & completely destroyed the platform, the people in the sea & the nearby rescue boats. Some years later a trawler pulled up the locker of one of the few survivors which still contained his personal effects. It's still freezing here, about 9degrees this morning & a cold wind, so we went to the Winter Garden in Duthie Park. Very nice.

Wednesday, May 29

MALT WHISKEY...

route. We had a lovely drive from Inverness to Aberdeen through the Cairngorm national park & along glens I know intimately & love - livet, farclas, spey. The views and scenery were fantastic & no traffic. We went through several ski resorts with snow still visible at the top. Much warmer now. We are in oil & gas town and the money is very evident. Spent the afternoon in another castle. Lin rated this 8/10 for spiral staircases. Brodie got 9, but Caernarfon Castle got only 4. The garden were fantastic with bee loving bushes and 250 year old topiary yew trees.

Tuesday, May 28

CAPITAL OF THE HIGHLANDS,

Inverness today. 6degrees this morning at 10am when we left Loch Ness. Hail storm this afternoon, when's summer starting. Went to Brodie Castle near Nairn. Nice guided tour with lots of insight to the family that lived in the house. Next visited Moray Firth where a guy on the P&O Canberra said we could see dolphins close to the beach. No dolphins, must have been at cross porpoises with him. Wandered the town seeing museum, the bouncy footbridge & Victorian market. Place is full of European & Yankee tourists. B&B is close to centre. Just strolled in for a nice meal - pigs cheek & mashed black pudding w seaweed crisp followed by rabbit stew. I had Cullen Skink & the stew also, all delicious & washed down with a local IPA.

GENERAL WADE 1

Who was he. We are staying in a 3 room B&B in Whitebridge, which you get to along a B road called General Wade's Rd. It runs along the ridge beside Loch Ness and is very narrow with passing places, very bendy & very hilly. Lin was having kittens but the local were belting past a 70. Fort Augustus was nice, went on boat trip with sonar searching for some monsters. No luck. Fort A is one end of Loch Ness & has a 5 step lock system to get you into the Cally Canal. Big boats come through as you can see. Took mountaineer Lil out for a trek tonight to Falls of Foyers. Very nice 3mile hilly walk but for the rain. The waterfall was impressive, as was the cabin on wheels on the bank of Ness. The B&B is so nice really quiet and isolated in the glen. The deer & pheasant come right up to our bedroom. Should be a quiet night.

GENERAL WADE 2

More piccies.

Sunday, May 26

BEN NEVIS, WHAT...

Ben Nevis. Here at Fort William in the highlands. Weather has really clamped in, temp dropped to 9deg, raining all the time, windy & cloud base at 500 feet, so although we are at the base of Ben Nevis we haven't had a glimpse of the mighty Ben. Getting to grips with Scots law. Supermarkets open 8am til 10pm, but you can't buy alcohol until 10am. Went on steam train ride behind the Lancashire Fusiliers. It is interesting that it was built by the guy whose house we are visiting next week - Armstrong. Mallaig, the destination was a real one horse town, the train passengers took up every restaurant seat in town. No booking, no eating. The scenery from the train would have been stunning, if it wasn't raining. The viaduct, the lochs & glens are beautiful. Bonny P Charlie is famous here as he landed just up the coast. Drying off with a drink in hotel before dinner. Next stop monster.