It took us a wee while to get there. Mhairi had been playing in a tennis tournament (where she got to the semis in the doubles, yay!) and I'd had a job interview out in the wops, so we didn't manage to leave until rush hour. Once we were over the Firth of Forth road bridge (an impressive structure) we were away laughing but just getting that far seemed to take half the journey.
Scotland/NZ difference no. 1: they have traffic lights to enter, and move around, multi-laned roundabouts. Hence it can take you 5 mins to actually pass through a roundabout. I'm no traffic engineer, but this seems to defeat the purpose of having a roundabout in the first place.
Scotland/NZ difference no. 2: Every house here (and in North America, and in fact the rest of the world) is well insulated and has double glazing. That it is legal to build a house in the cooler parts of NZ with only single glazing is criminal, no wonder our houses are always cold and we have to spend a fortune heating them.
It was mostly just overcast and raining lightly, not enough to deter two hardy Kiwis and a Scot from enjoying the outdoors. Mhairi was an excellent tour guide, and if she ever got bored taking us to places she'd been to heaps, she never showed it. When she didn't quite know the background of a place or place name she was quite happy to make something up, which could be corrected by her father once we got back to the house.
On the first day we explored a little locally on foot, climbing high enough to see over the village and its setting. We walked a bit of a loop and came back through the village, visiting a shop called Braemar Mountain Sports which I had to be dragged away from before I spent any of the money I didn't have. We couldn't see any of the munros (mountains over 3,000') due to the low cloud but there was enough scenery in the mist-clad lower slopes, patches of broadleaf woodland and caledonian pine forest, and the extensive heather to impress us. I caught the occasional tantalising glimpse through the cloud of snow on more distant peaks.
Scotland/NZ difference no. 3: we Kiwis consider ourselves a fairly egalitarian society, and tend to look down on the Brits with their upper class and lots of land locked up in "estates". I think it's because we're lucky to have so much land in crown ownership in New Zealand that we tend to ignore the fact that there is actually pretty dismal public access to private land. There is a historical tradition in Scotland (now enshrined in legislation) of the "right to roam" on private land, and you may be surprised to know that the owners of these highland estates are quite happy to have people walking, biking and riding horses all over them as long as they're sensible. Here we were, strolling all around the Queen's residence in Scotland, chatting away in her garden, and we were allowed to be here without paying a cent. It wouldn't happen in New Zealand. I kept looking over my shoulder in case someone was chasing us with a rake or something.
Scotland/NZ difference no. 4: our cows don't look like this. I wish they did. Some of the highland coos had such long fringes that it's a wonder they can see anything at all.
2 comments:
Actually i think you do pay to visit the Balmoral grounds. You guys just sneaked in the back, ie a "scottish discount".
Looks like fun! Great to see you've discovered the benefits of double glazing ;) Feels like 39 Fendalton is in the middle of the next ice age!
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