Lifestyle

A Highland fling: the ultimate Scottish road trip as a family of four


Drunk on visions of silver lochs, kilts, castles and general Scottish fantasy, my husband and I crafted our Google maps loop, in great anticipation of cinematic car journeys connecting each turreted hotel with the next Victorian coaching inn or swishy treehouse. We fancied ourselves a bit of a Highland fling — a two-week road trip absorbing the incalculable majesty of those craggy, soaring peaks and losing our city cortisol somewhere in the soft, watercolour landscape of the glens. We wanted our minds to be rattled by the winds and our eyes stretched across the inky spines of distant hills, occasionally broken by a roaming stag. I wanted to wear tartan, to peel back the thick tartan curtains of a laird’s four poster and dress my children head to toe in the stuff, like an American losing their mind over their Scottish lineage. But most of all, I wanted to explore the resplendent stretch of the Highlands surrounding a lonely white house on the metallic Loch Maree, where my Great Grandfather and the extended family once escaped to for long weekends, and later, A.A. Gill, who wrote evocatively about his stalking trips there.

Dividing and conquering, my husband drove from London to Edinburgh with our luggage, hitting the pillow somewhere north of York, while I drew the short straw and chugged it up from Euston to Edinburgh (our road trip launchpad) on the train with two lively cubs, aged one and three.

Rosalyn’s girls dressed in their tartan best at The Fife Arms

Rosalyn Wikeley

Courtesy of its hilly character, Edinburgh’s homogeneously austere, grey houses always seem to spin past your car window like a stage setting in a West End. It’s a city whose warmth is in its flickering amber windows on brutally cold nights, packed, whisky-soaked pubs, and the hard-to-plumb humour of its residents who seem to collectively adhere to a TOAST lifestyle shoot dress code: book underarm, thick rubber sole underfoot, everything under an absurdly oversized scarf. It’s also a city we have visited enough times to warrant jumping north from at speed, though for first-timers, Gleneagles Townhouse sits like a plush, plugged-in oasis in what is otherwise a rather underwhelming hotel scene (all tartan, no kilt).



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