Glasgow
There is nothing much of interest in the southern part of Scotland. As we drove through Northern England we didn't even realise we had crossed the border until we figured we had to be because Glasgow was getting so close.
Then suddenly before we knew it we were in Glasgow, Scotland's largest (and Britain's third largest) city. Glasgow is beautiful and vaguely reminded us of a smaller and older version of Melbourne. Plagued by an extremely high crime rate, Glasweigens have attempted to turn their city into Scotland's most modern to catch up with the booming popularity of nearby rival, Edinburgh.
A busy Glasgow thoroughfare
The Royal Concert Hall
Glasgow really reminded us of Melbourne
We ate our packed lunch in Glasgow which we had made before we left our hostel in Shap
Bagpiping buskers in Glasgow
Dundee and Glen Clova
That afternoon we arrived in Dundee, where we would be staying for a few days with my friend Elodie and her boyfriend Colin. Elodie is French and since it had been a few years since we had seen each other, I wasn't prepared for the Scottish accent I heard on the other end of the phone when I called! A French/Scottish accent is a strange thing.
Elodie and Colin's apartment was right in the city centre with a prime view of the River Tay.
View from the apartment in the evening and the view at night.
To kickstart our Scottish adventures, Elodie cooked us up some traditional Scottish quisine - haggis and oatcake. For the uninitiated, haggis consists mainly of sheep's heart, liver and lungs usually boiled in the animal's stomach. For the most part it tasted like pate´.
I sample the fine Scottish dish
The next day Elodie took us on our first Scottish hike. We drove about an hour to Glen Clova, one of the five Highland glens in the western portion of the Angus region of Scotland, before we started on what has to be one of the most scenic walks we have ever done.
The hills were covered in heather
The girls on the trail
The view as we climbed
We finally arrived at our destination, the beautiful Loch Brandee
Pure fresh Loch goodness!
Candice and Sally
Ahhh, Scotland!
More amazing views
The crew: Elodie, Sally, Nat, Candice
Dundee is Scotland's fourh-largest city. Like most cities in Britain, Dundee is beautiful and full of history. Here are some snapshots:
Sadly, this old church has now been turned into an Islamic Education Centre
The city centre
Desperate Dan
Sally and Candice discover Primark, mecca for cheap clothes!
Finally I sampled a taste of that good old Scottish family restaurant:-
McDonalds!
Funnily enough that night we watched the movie Braveheart on TV. Fitting, since we were actually in Scotland.
Sally, Candice and Colin hanging out
We left Dundee early the next morning to do some more Scottish driving. This time, all the way to the highlands! But we'll leave you with this interesting specimen we spotted in front of us:-
The number plate says it all
For more pictures of Glasgow and Dundee visit:- http://www.new.facebook.com/album.php?aid=52901&l=3e65a&id=681501850
Hi Pigs! We're Nat and Candice Kitingan and this is our round-the-world travel blog. We're from Melbourne, Australia and between June 2008 and February 2009 will be visiting Oceania, North America, Europe and Asia. The bulk of our time will be spent in Uppsala, Sweden where Candice is studying for a semester (Uppsala Universitet). During this time, Nat will probably just loaf around or he might even get a part-time job.
Glasgow, Dundee and trekking up to Loch Brandy
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Posted by Nat and Candice at 2:51 AM
Labels: Candice Chauncy, Dundee, Glasgow, Glen Clova, haggis, Loch Brandee, Nat Kitingan, Scotland
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