Saturday, June 2, 2012






Scotland 8:  Glamis Castle, St. Andrews & Falkirk Wheel


Glamis Castle

Glamis Castle was very elegant and majestic and we thoroughly enjoyed this castle.  The dining hall was amazing and there was a armor room as well that was pretty cool.  This was one of the first places we heard of castle ghost stories & some of them were pretty spooky!  The castle is still a residence for the Lyon family, which it has been since 1376!, but obviously that part of the castle was not on our tour.  


Our tour guide was a lovely Scottish woman and when we got to the castle's game room she asked if anyone played the piano.  Of course I spoke up for J and he played the lively American piece, "Maple Leaf Rag".  The piano is dated from 1899 and Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother played on it as a child.  Pretty neat!


Glamis Castle also has some nice gardens and they were fun to walk around.  They had a fun tree tunnel, to my left.  The castle also had a room for some of the gowns and outfits The Queen Mother has worn and a bit of her history.  I was more interested than J in that stuff but he humored me and we browsed.

St. Andrews

Can you tell he's excited to be at one of the most famous golf courses in the world?!  He played the old course on a trip with his family a number of years ago and I'm sure he remembers about every hole on the course.....in great detail.


Awwww.  So cute, right?!  This was officially our 10th anniversary trip so we had to put it in writing, even though I'm sure it was washed away by morning.  Nine years into raising children, though we love them dearly and missed them every minute, we loved reconnecting with just us two for such an extended trip.  Ah, young love.  Funny to look back on how we've changed in the last ten years and it seems like it has flown by.  J still means the world to me and I'm sure in another 10 years I'll still feel the same.


We stayed at another hostel in St. Andrews and this one was more accommodating--bigger room and they pushed our twin beds together we could be sleeping next to each other instead of on bunks.  So nice.  We took a walk around town and found this fun tunnel and checked out the castle and cathedral quick before dinner at a pub where we watched a futbol game.


The cathedral must have been absolutely enormous!  

We ended up having a little time to kill so we decided to check out the Falkirk Wheel

This thing is Nuts!  The wheel was only built in 2002 but it is engineering genius.  The wheel connect the Forth and Clyde Canal with the Union Canal so that Glasgow and Edinburgh could be connected by canals.  The elevation difference between the canals is about 159 feet and a boat transfer used to use a series of 11 locks and took all day.  Now it takes only 24 minutes or something like that with the wheel and a couple locks still needed.  


We made it just in time to see one of the last boat tours of the day use the wheel.  It is incredibly quiet and they say it uses very little energy.  

We then decided to eat in Paisley near the airport but unfortunately everywhere we tried to go in they had already closed the kitchens (at only 7pm!)  So we ended up at McDonald's!  Not the way we planned to eat our last meal in Scotland but ironic that it would be the only place we could find that was still serving food at 7:30pm.  Still, this was the trip of a lifetime and I hardly ever thought during the long 8 years of nearly-starving student mode and all that we've been through that we would have this opportunity so soon into "real life".  




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