Ok, I’m not going to fake it this time. It really is mid-September. It’s over a month since I last posted anything – mainly because I was in Scotland for three weeks and computerless. This picture was taken on the way up there at Aberfoyle, which my parents visited on their honeymoon, and where they bought a painting. I was trying to photograph the bridge from the same viewpoint as the painting, but this proved impossible because of foliage growth in the intervening 70 years! However, the bridge and mountain behind are easily recognisable from the picture by F Livesey. Very nice painting, but can’t trace the artist on the Internet.
How to distil more than a month of life into a single blog entry? Well, let’s start with Scotland. A lovely, relaxing three weeks, and we felt we’d really achieved things despite not climbing a single Munro! I did manage to climb Morven at last – something I’d been meaning to do for about 15 years. I came across a route up which looked much more attractive than the others – starting by the lone tree on the Ballater-Corgarff road and walking via Morven Lodge. A beautiful walk, but quite tiring. In fact I almost ground to a halt on the approach slopes, which shows my age. I lay down and got my breath back, then took it very slowly. Reached the summit cairn at roughly the same time as masses of clouds, followed swiftly by quite heavy rain. Got soaked on the way down: 10 miles in all, but very worthwhile.
Dot was with me on our other big walk – to the end of Glen Ey, a stunning glen and a beautiful day. This turned out to be nearly 12 miles, and we were both just about finished by the time we got back to Inverey. But again, very worthwhile – with lovely scenery leading up to a pretty abandoned hunting lodge in a copse of conifers.
Other than this, a brief diary:
14 Aug 414 miles Norwich-Abington. Weather dull, sometimes wet.
15 Aug 200 miles Abington-Ballater, taking in Aberfoyle, Callendar and the “tourist route” via Dunkeld. Coldish in Ballater, but went for an evening walk.
16 Aug 62 miles (3.8 walking) Quite cold, blustery showers. Went for walk at head of Loch Muick.
17 Aug (4.8 miles walking) Warmer and dry. Walked up Craigendarroch and ate in the Hayloft.
18 Aug 47 miles (about 1) Rain. Drove to Braemar, but this was the only day we couldn’t do any walking because of the weather.
19 Aug (over 8 miles walking) Dry, cool. Mainly cloudy. Church in morning, then did Seven Bridges Walk, plus an extension to Knock Castle, which we’d never found before. Dee very full (apparently 5ft up) after yesterday’s rain.
20 Aug 193 miles (1.7) Drove to Black Isle, which seemd a bit disappointing till we hit Cromarty. Beautiful, bleak, exposed place. Watched the smallest ferry in the UK (2 cars) cross to Nigg and saw obelisk commemorating emigrants.
21 Aug 33.3 miles (about 5) Warmer and dry, but cloudy. Followed a historical walk above Glen Gairn, followed by tea at Log Cabin and evening meal at The Green Inn. Excellent, of course. Duck.
22 Aug 43.4 (over 12) Warm, sunny and dry. Glen Ey.
23 Aug 42.3 (4.13) Sunny and warm. Quiet day after yesterday’s efforts. Walked golf course path while Dot shopped.
24 Aug 54.6 (3.5) Warm and dry but with a cool wind at 3000ft, which is where we found ourselves after a trip on the Cairnwell chairlift. Fife Arms, Hayloft food.
25 Aug 38.8 (1.5) Showery, becoming cooler. Lonach Gathering; party of 30.
26 Aug 34.6 (3) Much cooler and clouody. Church, then Fife Arms for lunch. Short history walk by Dee and saw salmon leaping for the first time!
27 Aug 62.3 (2) Cool and wet, then brighter with showers. Crannach for tea: cafe gradually metamorphosing into bakery (shop in Aberdeen). Drover to Braemar then Linn of Quoich, but amazingly assaulted by midges – first time ever in this area. Retreated, wrote postcards and had excellent lamb shank in Glen Lui hotel.
28 Aug 45.1 (10.93) Morven. Dot did first mile then returned to more sensible pursuits.
29 Aug 163.3 (just over 1) Mild with high cloud to start with, so drove to Pennan, where weather turned for worse and rain started. Unknown to us, Pennan had been hit by mudslides a couple of weeks earlier and many of the people were evacuated. Saw mud being cleared away. Inn closed: landlord had moved to Canada. High tide spraying water on to quay. Left in search of food and eventually ended up at Boyndie, a visitor centre beyond Banff staffed partly by disabled people. Had tea and excellent rock cakes, but it was still raining. Home via Keith and Dufftown and found roadside inn that Dot and I remembered independently from years back. I had thought it was something I’d seen in a dream. Didn’t stop. I don’t know why. Oh yes I do: we were headed for the Green Inn again.
30 Aug 74.6 (5) Mostly dry and fairly mild, but a bit windy. Fife Arms for lunch. Longer walk at head of Loch Muick.
31 Aug 26.9 (about 4) Mainly dry, fairly mild. Another quiet day. Walked round golf course together and had an early evening meal at Victoria Tea Rooms, Dinnet. Quite good.
1 Sep 0.6 (1.89) Warm at first, then showers, then brighter and finally cold. To Braemar Gathering with Ella (group of 8 including us). Complicated arrangements resulted in an initial stop at friends for a snack and a dram, then walking to the arena. Stayed for a while, then had lunch in another friend’s garden: we took wine and cheese, others had enough for small army. Back to arena for heavy events, massed bands and arrival and departure of Queen (she was there about 90 minutes). Most people left after that, but we stayed to watch the heavies (caber-tossing, etc), as it turned colder and colder. Back to the first friends’ to pick up car, then Ella drove us home. A fascinating experience: good fun.
2 Sep 46.9 (4) Windy, coolish but dry. Church, then to Tomintoul road, where I did the 3-mile walk down to Corgarff that I had been promising myself for some years. Lovely walk, with three beautiful old bridges, surpassing expectations. Dot did a little at each end.
3 Sep 42.1 (over 8) Started wet, but eventually windy and mainly dry. Up late – Dot finished Harry Potter book. Lunch at Fife Arms, then walked to Loch Callater. Lovely, but a chill wind. Back home to pack, then a final meal – excellent – at Glen Lui.
Drove home on 4 and 5 September, staying the night at Killington Lake, near Kendal (Premier Inn). Changed room because TV didn’t work and we wanted to watch the second episode of Silent Witness! Receptionist – one of several East European girls we had encountered – was really helpful. Mileage on first day was 258, and on second 311.8, including a brief detour to visit Andrew. He was very down, but quite a bit improved on my last visit. Dot, who hadn’t seen him for months, thought he was pretty bad. Arrived home about tea time: our sitter had already left.