Upon leaving Edinburgh, we passed the site of the Battle of Falkirk when we were on the motorway:
This was the site of one of the battles that William Wallace fought at (and I believe this is where he lost and was captured). Apparently Wallace was a pretty crazy dude and not as cool as I thought he was. Well, anyways, Braveheart's a good movie. :) Apparently he had no education in warfare, but he paired up with a guy who was. When that guy died, Wallace didn't fare so well anymore. Then he was captured and had a death so grisly that people still don't like to mention it so much here. Let's just say the movie was very gentle in comparison to reality.
Our first stop was Calandar, where Queen Victoria and Prince Albert honeymooned! This is the hotel they stayed at. It was a pretty cute little town and apparently Queen Victoria thought so too. She fell in love with the Highlands and, therefore, so did everyone else in the UK.
This was a beautiful loch that we stopped off at on our way. The weather was pretty unpredictable that day, so I was glad to have caught some sunlight. And, yes, the water was freezing!
Proof I was in the Highlands.
What you see here is all boggy marshland. Our coach began to sink as we stood there taking pictures, so we had to get on quickly before it got stuck!
We must've seen 15 rainbows that day. Unpredictable weather!
This is Glencoe, the site of an infamous massacre. Back when Scottish clans were having to choose between declaring loyalty to King James (they were known as Jacobites, which derives from the Latin word for James, jacobus) or the English King. The clan that lived in Glencoe, the McDonalds, were Jacobites but had been instructed to declare loyalty to the English King until King James had enough support in France, where he was hiding. Apparently, the clan chief got the memo a little too late and didn't declare loyalty in time. The English King needed someone to make an example of and a very small clan in the Highlands fit the bill.
The Highlands is composed of very unforgiving geography and weather. As such, Highlanders had a rule to never deny anyone hospitality, no matter who they were. Not only that, but the guests were given the absolute best of everything the clan had. The Campbells, who were loyal to the English King, called on that hospitality when passing through making sure that everyone was behaving themselves. They stayed for 12 days with the clan before they got the message to murder the entire clan. In the middle of the night, they shot the clan chief and his family with muskets. The fact that they used muskets is significant because it made noise, waking the rest of the clan. The remainder of the clan ran for the hills in the dead of winter in nothing more than their pajamas. Those who weren't outright murdered died from exposure. Of a clan of 200 people, only 8 survived that massacre. There is a saying in Scotland, "Never trust a Campbell", which is where that saying came from. There were two rules that were not to be violated amongst the rough Highlanders: Never murder on sacred ground and never murder under trust. The Campbells violated that, murdering under trust.
To this day, if your last name is Campbell, you will be refused service in Glencoe. My guide told of a customer that she had who was backpacking along the Scottish Way, which runs through Glencoe. He began to feel poorly and so decided to stop in Glencoe and get a hotel room. The first hotel he stopped at took one look at his credit card and refused to serve him, telling him that because his last name was Campbell, he was not welcome there. He had to go another 5 miles, stopping at many hotels along the way before he could find a hotel that would take him (and even then they changed his name in the registry).
She also told an amusing story about the singer, Glen Campbell. Apparently he was in Glencoe at a pub having a few drinks and getting a little rude with the waitress. She went to her boss and let him know how rude Glen was being and that she refused to serve him anymore. Being a good boss, he went over to Glen Campbell to tell him to finish his drink and get out. Glen pulled the "Do you know who I am" card, to which the manager replied that, no, he didn't know who he was. Upon learning that he was a Campbell, Glen didn't even get to finish his drink and was summarily thrown out on his rear.
Searching for Nessie...I think I'll say that dark blur on the far left hand side of the picture in the water is her. Right? :)
I do have to say, I did not want to get out in this water. No way, no how. Not because of a theoretical human eating dinosaur, but because of GIANT EELS that have dragged people down in the past. Ugh!
Apparently, this was a famous place of training military men in WWII.
When they unveiled this statue, they had some WWII pilot/veterans attend. The sculptor had been working on a photo he had obtained, but nobody knew the names of the subjects, so just assumed they were casualties of the war. When they unveiled the statue, one of the vets looks up and goes, "Hey that's me!" Small world, huh?
I have many many more stories that the guide told, which I hope to blog about soon! It was a long day, 8am-8pm, but it was so awesome! Highly, highly recommended.
Holyrood Park.
On my walk through the park. It was a beautiful, slightly windy day.
The best latte of my life (thus far). This was my second one!