Filling in some gaps in Spain, a Greenland cruise and I'm getting a tattoo!

Evening walk to the venue. Gotta love a city that respects its rocks.

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One day, I might stay at the Balmoral, not the Ibis.

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Past St Cuthbert's church and pay respect to more ancestors.

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The queue starts in an adjacent terrace, so like a good Brit :oops: , I joined the queue 30 mins before admission opened - 90 mins before showtime.

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Big mistake. The queue flowed freely once the gate opened and then there was nothing much to do for 90 mins. Merch and bars under the stand, and lots or booze carts on the esplanade grounds.

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My seat circled. Premium seats in red - they get a padded seat, fast track admission and a free program.

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Being the discerning visitor (and bored after 30 mins - not drinking at all) - I looked at some of the history under the stands

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A tight fit.

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I'm sure most if not everyone here has seen the tattoo on TV. But can't resist a few mementos

T-20 mins

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T-10, the booze carts leave in scrappy formation

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Showtime

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Was expecting massed bands at first, but got a King's Guard

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And a Bentley (I think), carrying the Duke of Edinburgh. Full Royal Salute.

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Then the proper stuff

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The Ukranians were on early and got the most sustained applause of any act for the night.

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Scots dancers

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The Grand Pooh-bah with his stand

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The 'storyteller' who didn't add much.

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Crowd favourite - Swiss 'Top Secret drum corps'. Amazinf what some feathers and white spats will do.

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The Poles were a bit dreary.

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American precision guard with their very sharp bayonets (see video, later). Excellent.

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American drum and fife corps. Not much except costumes and drums.

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So did you enjoy it and are you glad you went? I went in 1982 and loved it.

Yes and yes :) For a price of half the cost of a room at the Ibis, it was excellent value!

Crowd surged out of the area down the Royal Mile

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Before heading to the Highlands, I had some unfinished business in Northumbria. It was teeming when I last tried to visit Holy Island and Lindisfarne, so I headed SE after picking up a car at the EDCI car rental depot. What a zoo.

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It was only about 90 mins down to Holy Island which od course has particular crossing times, due to the tide and the low causeway. Those are walkers to the Island. Its some sort of thing.

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When I was here last time, I had the same pic as this, but it was teeming, and still they walked!!

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On the island there is a paid car park - min 3 hrs, for 7 quid. I reckoned I'd be 90 mins.

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Lindisfarne town is quaint, and busy


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The masses head to the castle

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And here oit is

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My interest in Holy Island and Lindisfarne is two fold. The history but also because I guy am researching lived on the mainland in a grand spread with views to the island. He got a grant on the eastern shore of Hobart and called it 'Lindisfarne'.

So I went to drive up to the house, but its on private land of course. I poked around the bottom of a long curved drive and decided against driving up.
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I drove away but a few seconds later spotted someone coming down the drive. Very quick u turn and its the guy who lives right next door and sure, he'll show me the house. Not what I was expecting

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Apparently it was taken over in WW2 and a camp to house German officers established. After the war, it was just left to ruin.
 
We saw the US Drum and Fife Corps perform at Big Tex (Texas state Fair) and the presentation was excellent. We were identified as Aussies so they posted a junior officer at our side to explain everything including the Corps history. And just don't call them a band. We thoroughly enjoyed their show.
 
Glad you found the Scottish house...recently found an ancestor's grave over there myself with a bit of luck and help from a local.
 
From Holy Island to Melrose, to the west in the Scottish Borders. It was both a convenient place to stop before heading north, and an opportunity to visit and photograph a locale (and others) of friends of mine, who had ancestors from the area.

Melrose is quite pretty, the main feature being Melrose Abby

It was founded in 1136 by Cistercian monks. A lead container believed to hold the embalmed heart of Robert the Bruce was found in 1921 below the Chapter House site; it was found again in a 1998 excavation and documented in records of his death. The rest of his body is buried in Dunfermline Abbey.

Being on one of the main routes towards Edinburgh from the south, it was vulnerable and has had a rough but fascinating history

One of the earliest accounts of the Magna Carta agreement reached at Runnymede in 1215 is found in the Chronicle of Melrose Abbey. Melrose was located on one of the main roads running from Edinburgh to the south making it particularly vulnerable to attack. In 1322, the town was attacked by the army of Edward II of England, and much of the abbey was destroyed. It was rebuilt by order of King Robert the Bruce, with Sir James Douglas being the principal auditor of finance for the project. In 1385, the abbey was burned by the army of Richard II of England, "partly because of support for the Avignon Pope Clement VII" he forced the army of Robert II of Scotland back to Edinburgh. It was rebuilt over a period of about 100 years – construction was still unfinished when James IV visited in 1504.

From 1541, the abbacy was held by a series of commendators. In 1544, as English armies raged across Scotland in an effort to force the Scots to marry the infant Mary, Queen of Scots to the son of Henry VIII, the abbey was again badly damaged and was never fully repaired. On 29 September 1549 an English soldier discovered the pyx that had been suspended over the high altar and gave it to the Earl of Rutland. War damage led to its decline as a working monastery. The last abbot was James Stuart (an illegitimate son of James V), who died in 1557. In 1590, Melrose's last monk died.

The abbey withstood one final assault, and some of its walls still show the marks of cannon fire after having been bombarded by Oliver Cromwell's troops during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms. In 1618, a portion of the abbey's church was converted into a parish church for the surrounding town. A plain vault was inserted into the crossing, removing the original ribbed vaulting in the central section. It was used until 1810 when a new church was erected in the town. In 1812, a stone coffin was exhumed from the aisle in the abbey's south chancel. Some speculated the remains were those of Michael Scot, the philosopher and "wizard."

At the beginning of the nineteenth century, Sir Walter Scott was appointed Sheriff-Depute of Roxburghshire. In 1822, with the financial assistance of the Duke of Buccleuch, Sir Walter supervised the extensive repair work that was to preserve the ruins. In 1918, the duke gave the ruins to the state, by which time the abbey had undergone further restoration and repair.[6] It is now in the care of Historic Environment Scotland.

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The town itself is pretty but unexceptional

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Bridge over Gala water between Melrose and Gattonside.JPEG
 
Accommodation that night at Mill Cottage Garden Studio. No pics, but a nice modern studio in a quiet location.

Next day, off to Inverness, about 4 hours drive. But first a stop at Heriot, about 30 mins up the road from Melrose. You'd never visit it unless you were doing family history, as I was again.

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It was a fine and warm day and the drive was oddly unspectacular for me. I had a B&B just outside Inverness and as it was still early I walked around Inverness which was a lovely town. Like everywhere else, it was heaving with tourists.

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Then to the accommodation, which was very difficult to find. I remember when booking, I couldn't find any place in Inverness or surrounds that was reasonably priced and looked OK. I eventually settled on this Air B&B place, which bizarrely insists on calling itself 'Cabin in Highland Council' . It looked weird when I booked it, and it was. The doors - inside and out, are about 5' or less, high.

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cough all around outside and nick-nacks everywhere inside. Again, that door to bathroom abt 5' high - yes, I beaned myself several times.

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And about the front door inside is this exit sign - fully illuminated.

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The next morning opened foggy. I drove up to Culloden battlefield but you could see nothing - but the car park was still full! So I drove south-west, destination Glenfinnan. Quite excited, as I'd be driving down the Great Glen Fault, a massive fault that slices through Scotland and continues in nth America, although it is offset by the mid Atlantic ridge and ocean. From Wikipedia

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The day fined up quickly as I drove south. I hoped for a view at Urquhart Castle, but my policy for this trip of not super planning every day backfired. as I didn't realise you needed tickets and again, the car park was full (as in guy at the entrance turning people away).

The outlook over the fault valley is quite pretty, as there is a lake in the valley, but there were very annoyingly few spots to pull over and take pictures and where there was, trees were in the way and/or cars were already there. Scotland in summer, eh?

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The lake I believe is well known - Loch Ness.
 

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