winterbadger: (scotwed)
[personal profile] winterbadger
After a fair amount of discussion, Herself and I have decided not to do a "if this is Tuesday, it must be Belgium" sort of trip (i.e., one where you spend each night in a different place), but to pick a couple of locations (maybe two, maybe three) and take day trips from there. We're trying to decide which two or three places to choose. Current opinion is for St Andrews and Aberdeen, with Perth and Stirling as possible alternate contenders. What do you, the readers suggest? We're looking to maximise the following attributes: an interesting and agreeable place to stay (we'll be looking for B&Bs--I've converted Neta to the B&B lifestyle vice hotels and motels), historic sites, cultural attractions, scenery for viewing/walking, restaurants.

[Poll #1099787]

I've shied away from the West Coast only because I know it (fairly) well, and I thought it would be fun to go somewhere new together...

Date: 2007-12-06 04:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] curiousangel.livejournal.com
We did the "honeymoon in Scotland" thing back in 1999, and had the advantage of meeting a local friend in Dundee while we were there. He drove us to St. Andrews, and we enjoyed wandering about the town. We also went to Stirling, and saw the castle, which was amazing; however, we were pretty fried by that time, and only had about one day, so we didn't do much besides see the castle, stop in for food somewhere that I don't recall, and sleep. I do remember that we ate at a Czech restaurant in Dundee where we actually got to try REAL Budweiser, not that nasty horsepiss they try to pass off here in the US, and it's a damn fine beer.

We did go to Kirkwall up in the Orkneys, which was the high point of the entire trip. I totally recommend it, though I'm not sure that January or February would be a good time to go (and I'd damn sure stay off the ferry at that time of year). We saw Maes Howe, Skara Brae, the Ring of Brodgar, the Highland Park distillery, thought about going to Scapa Flow but gave it a pass, and wandered all around Kirkwall proper. We also hired a local guide, which was the best way to actually get to know how some of the locals lived; she told us about how she went to a boarding school as a child because there just wasn't a large enough population of schoolchildren to make a school feasible where she lived, and we also had an interesting time discussing how different religious traditions worked -- she had never heard of Unitarians, and we'd never heard of "Wee Frees" outside of a Terry Pratchett book. We stayed in a local B&B, which was run by a very nice woman who had such an accent that we found her almost unintelligible, even though she was amazingly friendly; given my own Tennessee drawl, she probably found me just as unintelligible.

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