We only had about seventy miles to go between
Bankfoot and Achnagairn, the mansion where the wedding was taking place. But rather than go up the motorway-like A9
we settled on a ‘slight’ diversion which doubled the mileage. We left Bankfoot in bright sunshine. It always makes the scenery so much more
attractive.
Before long we passed the Staredem standing
stones near Waterloo. This pair of
stones sit in the middle of a field in the parish of Auchtergaven.
They don’t
appear ever to have formed part of a circle, being as they are orientated
SW-NE, and about 5m apart.
The NE stone is particularly interesting, as it has
an inscribed cross on it, supposedly carved by a passing missionary. The NE stone is 1.4m tall and the SW stone is
1.3m tall.
This is the Birnam Hotel where Jo has stayed a
few times on her way up to the Western Isles to meet up with me and have a brief
holiday.
A small garden nearby is
dedicated to Beatrix Potter.
It was during a family holiday at Birnam that
Beatrix Potter first wrote what was to become the famous Peter Rabbit stories. We didn't know about this garden when we were there; I only found out about it afterwards on a site called,appropriately, undiscovered Scotland.
We passed through Dunkeld where this gateway
leads to the ruins of Dunkeld Abbey.
Everywhere we went there were signs of people’s
views on the forthcoming referendum on Scottish independence from the rest of
the UK. We didn’t see many ‘No’s.
The
Meikleour Beech Hedge, four miles south of Blairgowrie is the longest hedge in
Britain and the highest of its kind in the world.
Recognised
by the Guinness Book of Records as the highest hedge in the world, the
Meikleour Beech Hedge was planted in 1745 and is one third of a mile long (530
m) and 100 ft (30 m) high. It is thought
the men who planted it were called to fight in the Jacobite Rebellion and none
of them returned alive. In tribute the trees were allowed to grow and the hedge
acts as a living landmark to them. The
hedge is cut and re-measured every 10 years, a complex operation that takes
four men approximately six weeks to complete.
We went up the
A93 to Glenshee.
The A93 road, part of
General Wade's military road from Perth to Fort George, runs North from
Glenshee into Glen Beag, where it crosses the Cairnwell Pass, at 2200 feet
above sea level the highest public road in the UK. The road climbing to the
summit is now wide and straight but until the late 1960s included two notorious
hair-pin bends with a 1 in 3 (33%) gradient known as the Devil's Elbow. One of
the most spectacular roads in Scotland, this was a favourite subject for
postcards.
We stopped off
in upper Glen Clunie which links the high pass of the Cairnwell with the
lowland plain of lower Glen Clunie and the wooded glens of Deeside.
Partner-who-loves-tea
could not resist having a paddle.
Stunningly set
in splendid isolation on a barren moorland, Corgarff Castle’s medieval tower house,
built in the mid-16th century, is surrounded by a distinctive star-shaped
perimeter wall of 18th century date. It
has reconstructed barrack-rooms which show something of the atmosphere of
barrack life here in 1750, when redcoats from were stationed here.
The original
castle was built around 1550 by a branch of Clan Forbes. It was typical of
contemporary small houses of the gentry throughout the country. Its nucleus was
the tall tower house. Above a basement for storage was the family’s main living
room, the hall. Their private chambers were above. Around the tower house,
within a stout stone courtyard wall, there would have been other buildings,
including a stable, bakehouse and brewhouse. The latter have all gone, but the
lofty tower still stands.
From the
mid-18th century the tower was turned into soldiers’ barracks, through to 1831,
when the army abandoned it. For those 95
years, the redcoats of Pulteney’s 13th Foot patrolled Strathdon from thebold
tower, hunting down Jacobite sympathisers. Latterly they helped the excisemen
stamp out the illegal production and smuggling of whisky.
The first
reference to the castle at Corgarff spills onto the pages of history in the
winter of 1571. That November, Adam Gordon came with his men to Corgarff. He
was laird of Auchindoun Castle, in Glen Fiddich, over the mountains to the
north, and his plan was to capture Forbes of Towie. The Forbeses and Gordons
were often feuding. The laird of Corgarff was away, but Margaret, his wife, was
at home and refused them entry. And so the assailants savagely set fire to the
castle, burning Margaret, her family and servants to death in the process. In
all, 27 people perished. The tragedy is remembered in the old ballad ‘Edom o
Gordon’ which runs to 34 verses of 17th Century Scots so I won’t
repeat it here!!!.
In addition we passed Braemar Castle and Invercauld and at Braemar had a brief chat with Invercauld's very English factor.
And at dinner time we arrived at Achnagairn House where the wedding was to be held on Saturday.
Washington rang the bell...
We stayed In one of the mansion's lodges on the first night and moved into the mansion itself on Day three.