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Friday 26 June 2015

Urquhart, Fort William and Ardverikie

Today was a long day of travel and visits. We left Inverness at 9 am and travelled by road the length of the Caledonian Canal - Loch Ness, Loch Locky and Loch Oich with the connecting canals. The weather was what I think the Scots call 'a wee soft' - cloudy with fine misty rain from time to time.
Our first stop was at the ruins of Urquhart Castle on the banks of Loch Ness near Dromnadrochit. Urquhart was seized by Edward I when he invaded Scotland, then taken back by Robert the Bruce. It was repeatedly attacked by the MacDonald Lords of the Isles in the 15th and 16th Centuries. It is a most picturesque ruin. 


I didn't trust my knees to walk around the castle but enjoyed the views from the observation platform.
From there we went into Fort William for a lunch and shopping break. Fort William did not seem to have changed a lot since I was last here in 1972 - apart from the addition of some contemporary chain stores.Ben Nevis was invisible - shrouded in mist and cloud. 
I was interested in the green, with its Memorial to those who died in the World Wars. Statue of Donald Cameron of Lochiel, head of the clan and MP,  and a commemoration of WWII linked to friendship between Fort William, Dudley and Hiroshima - and in hope of peace.
Each face of the memorial has a plaque - from the Boy Scouts of the USA
 the Rotary Club of Lochaber
and the Boy's Brigade. I found it very moving and uplifting - especially in a park with a War Memorial and in a community that has known wars and battles for a millennium.
From Fort William we made our way back through Spean Bridge,
to Ardverike Castle,
where we had been invited to high tea and to view some of the beautiful needlework collection held by the family. The staff and family were very generous with their time, knowledge and hospitality.
We were shown around the garden and house,

heard a talk on the history of the estate (a summary is available at http://www.ardverikie.com/history.htm) over a remarkable high tea prepared on site, then allowed to examine a range of embroideries, including some Ottoman pieces. The rooms are comfortable and organised for family life, as  well as bearing witness to the hunting tradition which attracted Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.
It was a remote and beautiful location, a most relaxed and welcoming visit with interesting and lovely embroideries. A privelige.
From there we made our way through the Grampians. skirting the Cairngorms national park, still in the cloud and misty rain, with snow still visible high on the mountains to Pitlochry,
just about in time for a leisurely dinner - and a birthday celebration for one of our group. It was a companionable and relaxing end to a pretty remarkable day. It has taken me a long time to load this post so the next might be shorter!

5 comments:

  1. The ruins are beautiful, and what lovely gardens you're seeing. We, too, had lunch at Fort William on a chilly day. So enjoying your blogs - Vivienne

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    1. Glad the blog is serving its purpose. I suspect the chances of mist and rain in Fort William are well above average!

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  2. Ben Nevis does not exist. I have been there 3 times in the past 40 years and never seen it. Maybe, like Brigadoon, it pops up every 100 years! Jim

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  3. Monarch of the Glen! I recognized it right away. Looks chilly, but really lovely too.

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