Thursday 21 July 2022

Findochty, Portknockie and Cullen: Scotland '22 Part 6 (Updated 2023)

This post has been updated since our 2023 visit with 7 new photographs and a new section on (unlikely as it might seem) shipbuilding in Findochty.

Three Villages on the Moray Coast
14-Jul-2022 to 21-Jul-2022


Scotland
Moray
After driving north from Glasgow, we spent a week in a borrowed cottage (thank you Jenny and Bob) in the delightful fishing village of Findochty, pronounced (for no obvious reason) ‘Finechty’ beside the Moray Firth. Our ‘outings,’ south to (Huntly and Fyvie), east to (Fraserburgh and Portsoy) and west to (Culloden and Cawdor) are described in the preceding posts. This post is about the times we spent between visits exploring our temporary home and its surroundings.


Findochty, Portknockie and Cullen and the position of Buckie in Scotland
For scale: Glasgow to Buckie is 135 miles in a straight line, Buckie to Findochty is 2¾ miles

14-Jul-2022

Arrival

After a leisurely start from Glasgow, we reached the fishing port of Buckie, less than 3 miles from Findochty in mid-afternoon. With a population of 9,000 Buckie is the local metropolis, so we popped into Tescos to equip ourselves with essentials, a bottle of malt (Tamnavulin) and a venison steak, and some optional extras like milk and bread, before completing our journey.

Our borrowed cottage, beside the harbour was a delight. Tiny, but well-equipped and with an interior design that made it feel more spacious, it was perfect for two, and could cope with four (at a pinch).

The Cottage, Findochty - small but perfectly formed

Good fortune has lined up the kitchen window with the harbour entrance and Jenny had mentioned that it is possible to stand at the kitchen sink and watch the resident pod of dolphins working its way up or down the firth. It cannot happen often (unless you spend all day in the kitchen) but it happened once during our stay.

Dusk view from the kitchen window - there is never a dolphin when you are holding a camera

We did little for the rest of that day, except take a walk to orientate ourselves.

Looking landward across Findochty harbour

15-Jul-2023

Eat Mair Fish

Next morning we revisited Buckie. Eat Mair Fish is an instruction (in the local dialect) but it is also the name of a shop run by the Mair family for the last 40 years. Opposite the harbour, it is somewhat understated from the outside, but inside is an Aladdin’s Cave Davey Jones’ Locker of the freshest fish that can be bought. After some deliberation we invested in a fillet of halibut big enough for two meals.

Eat Mair Fish, Buckie

Cullen and its Skink

Lunch with Norma and Wilson

Last year we had the pleasure of staying with Wilson and Norma, whom we first met in North Korea, at their home in Forres. Returning to the area we asked them to suggest where we should meet for lunch and the answer was the Rockpool Café in Cullen.

Lynne (left) with Norma and Wilson outside their home in Forres (2021)

Ten minutes east of Findochty, Cullen is only slightly larger, but feels like a small town. It has shops (plural!), a minor parking problem, three of four hotels and several places to eat and drink.

Norma and Wilson were waiting for us in the café, it was good to see them again after a year. As we picked up our menus Norma said, with some confidence, ‘we know what you are going to order.’ So did I, but I read the menu anyway. My eye rested briefly on the Korean chicken salad which looked good though hardly reminding me of North Korea, but when you first visit a place with a dish named after it, what else would you eat? With one voice Lynne and I said ‘Cullen Skink’ exactly as Norma knew we would.

Skinks are short-legged lizards, and with 1,500 species there is a skink for every environmental niche - except north east Scotland. Cullen Skink is a soup containing chunks of smoked haddock (preferably finnan haddie), potatoes and onion. Traditionally the liquid element was water, but is now universally milk, sometimes with a little cream, (traditional is not always best). It resembles an American chowder, but the delicate flavour of clams is replaced by the powerful smoky haddock. Served with chunky bread, it makes an excellent lunch.

Cullen skink, Le Café Coull, Buckie 2023 (the Rockpool was temporarily closed)

Norma and Wilson are always good company and we talked of our families and our travels, long ago, recent and future. Sadly, I had left my camera in Findochty so there is no photographic record. I have recycled last year’s picture of Norma and Wilson - they haven’t changed – and used a picture from a different cafe, visited in 2023. After we parted I realised I had a phone in my pocket, with, of course, a camera. I apologise for my extended senior moment.

Cullen

Cullen is a place of some antiquity. The Geography of Claudius Ptolemaeus, a Roman Citizen living in Egypt and writing in Greek around 150 CE mentions a River Celnius in North East Scotland. Some feel a need to identify this river with Cullen Burn.

A more reliable mention dates from 962 when King Indulf of Alba finally freed his kingdom from marauding Norsemen at the nearby Battle of the Bauds, though at the cost of his own life.

Robert the Bruce and Elizabeth de Burgh
from Forman's Armorial 1563

Cullen held royal burgh status between 1153 and 1214 CE.

In 1327, Elizabeth de Burgh, the wife of Robert the Bruce died after a riding accident while staying at the Royal Residence in Cullen. Her body was sent south to Dunfermline Abbey, while her entrails were buried in Cullen. This sounds weird but was, apparently, normal at the time, her husband is buried in Dunfermline Abbey (body), Melrose Abbey (heart) and St Serf’s, Dumbarton (viscera).

In 1600, Cullen House was built on the edge of the town as the seat of the Ogilvies of Findlater, later Earls of Seafield.

In 1820-2 Lewis Grant-Ogilvy, 5th Earl of Seafield, had the old town demolished and rebuilt 800 metres down the hill. Cullen House had more privacy, the townspeople had modern dwellings, and a flooding problem was solved.

'Modern Housing', Cullen

The closure of the Moray Coast Railway in 1968 means that Cullen is left with a redundant but scenic viaduct...

Cullen with its viaduct

...in some places the streets are threaded through the viaducts arches.

The viaduct crosses a Cullen street

Every burgh must have a Market Cross, and although Cullen no longer holds that status, the cross from the old town was re-erected on the square, outside the Rockpool Café.

Mrket Cross, Cullen

At least that was the story, but everybody seems to accept that the stonework is mostly ‘recent’. There is, allegedly, a weathered Virgin and Child of some antiquity and I presume it is the figure at the very top, though from this angle it looks like a stoat reading from a parchment roll. Virgins and Child are two-a-penny and I would admire any town that erected a Stoat and Parchment.

Climbing Findochty's Hills

A coastal plateau, 20 to 50 metres above sea level stretches From Portgordon, 8 km east of Findochty, to Fraserburgh 80 km west. Often there are cliffs, elsewhere there is some flatland before the (usually sharp) rise to the plateau. In several former fishing villages, like Portknockie, the harbour is isolated well below the village dwellings, while at others, like Pennan, there is enough low-lying land for the village to curl round the harbour.

Findochty splits the difference, the higher ground retreating a short way inland, so half of the village is by the harbour, half is above. The retreat leaves a small hill on either side, the western hill crowned by the village war memorial, …

The Hill with the War Memorial, Findochty

…the eastern hill by the kirk.

The hill with the church on top, Findochty

Climbing up to the kirk gives a good view of Findochty’s unusual geography, …

Findochty's two levels with a grassy bank between them

… and a view along the coast where the cliffs reassert themselves.

To the east the cliffs try to reassert themselves

Findochty straggles on beyond the church through some very typical local streets…

Duke Street, Findochty

…to Findochty Beach, past an inlet known as the Crooked Hythe.

The Crooked Hythe, Findochty

The Crooked Hythe – Shipbuilding in Findochty

In 1900, Thomas McKenzie, a ships’ carpenter from Dumbarton was holidaying in Findochty. He looked at the view above and, perhaps surprisingly, saw the perfect site for a ship building yard.

He returned in 1903 and, with his business partners W & J Herd, built a slipway, remains of which can still be seen. Herd and McKenzie Shipbuilders won their first order for a steam drifter in 1905 which cost £915 and built another 31 between 1905 and 1915. After World War I, the improved and enlarged harbour at Buckie lured away Herd and McKenzie along with most of Findochty’s fishing fleet. The last ship was built here in 1934.

It is difficult to imagine ships being built in this cramped space in the open air but the Banffshire Field Club photograph collection shows how it was done…

The Crooked Hythe boatyard, copyright Banffshire Field Club

…the road heading off to the right is the Duke Street shown above.

17-Jul-2023

The path up the war memorial hill starts on the edge of the village by the Stroop Wal, or spout well. Water still gushes from the spout which must have been important in Findochty’s past.

The Stroop Wal, Findochty

The sign above says, rather proudly wir ain stroop wal and wir ain toon hall. (Our own spout well and our own town hall). I do not know when it was written, but I would guess not so long ago. The local dialect, known as Doric, can be difficult (hear story teller David Campbell on the Doric Wikipedia page) but we never encountered anybody with a difficult accent. I suspect many people have moved away from the Moray coast in search of work, and others have moved in seeking an improved work/life balance, so change happens gradually. Findochty Town Hall still exists, though those words might suggest an administrative function that it does not have. If you want to hold a party, play table tennis or learn qi gong, this is the place for you.

The War Memorial on top of the hill was unveiled in April 1922, it now commemorates those who died in two world wars.

War memorial, Findochty

But the main reason for climbing up here, is the view across Findochty and its harbour. What a delightful place!

Findochty

Findochty to Portknockie

The Moray Coastal Trail is an (intermittently) waymarked coastal path from Forres in the west to Cullen in the east. The sky was hardly an azure blue, but the air was pleasantly warm so we decided to walk a gentle 2.8 km (1.7 miles) of the 72 km trail to Portknockie, the next village along the coast.

A sign pointed our way out of Findochty and we were soon following the route of the former Moray Coast Railway. It was easy walking (and, indeed, cycling).

The Moray Coastal Trail east out of Findochty

The path largely follows the 50m contour line, sometimes straying left, down towards the coast…

Moray Coastal Trail

…or right to Hillhead Cemetery. Everybody knows that Scots are all called MacThis or McThat, but actually they aren’t. The most visible names in my photo are Salter, Smith, Anderson, Littleson and Flett. There are more obviously Scottish names like Duthie and Campbell but locally Macs are thin on the ground (or, in this case, under it). The 1841 census (I use only the most up-to-date sources!) found the four most frequent names in Moray were Grant, Ross, Macdonald and Fraser - so not entirely unMacked.

Hillhead Cemetery, Findochty

Dry, nutrient-poor grassland is the natural habitat of Harebells (aka Scottish Bluebells) and here in the rain-shadow of the Highlands, is the perfect place.

Harebell, Moray Coastal Trail

Soon Portknockie and its harbour came into view.

Portknockie and its Harbour

Portnockie sits on a promontory with the harbour nestling in its sheltered base. It is very much on the edge of the village, but separated from the houses by 40 metres of cliff. Once this was a fishing harbour, but the few moored boats looked like pleasure craft while kayakers and paddle-boarders were more numerous than fishermen.

Looking down on the harbour from Portknockie village

Continuing round to the end of the village we looked down on a beach, a selection of rocks and a sign board stuffed with information.

The fortified iron-age settlement on the promontory known as Green Castle was built around 1000BCE and the site was still in use when the Vikings were marauding some 2000 years later. Burnt remains of timber-laced walls are of Pictish design. The left-hand end of the sandy area was a somewhat cramped boatyard where over 50 fishing boats were built between 1883 and 1905. At that time the harbour was home to 100 active fishing boats.

Green Castle and Horse Head

Turning slightly to the right (I should have taken a panoramic picture), there are The Twinnies, named for obvious reasons, The Claries, which is more obscure, and Shitten Craig, shining brightly from the guano that gives it its delightful name.

The Twinnies and he Claries

Portknockie is too small to fill its promontory and to see its most famous rock, you must walk a little way out of the other side of the village. The Bow Fiddle Rock is impressive but as a musical instrument it is fit only for a rock band of trolls - and Scotland is too far south for trolls.

Bow Fiddle Rock, Portknockie

Had it been warmer we might have sought out an ice cream, but it wasn’t so we walked back home. The return journey was much quicker as we did not keep stopping to look at things.

Returning to Findochty

18-Jul-2022

A Day of Record Temperatures

On the Monday we visited Fraserburgh and Portsoy. Temperature records were set that day across the whole of Great Britain and if the high 20s on the Moray Coast hardly challenged the 40°+ in Lincolnshire, it was still an unusually warm and pleasant day and maybe a local record. On our return we sat out the back of Harbour Cottage and drank a cold beer, while young lads jumped from the harbour wall, punctuating our supping with their splashing.

Jumping off the harbour entrance, Findochty; There is a similar, but not identical, photo on the Fraserburgh post.

Later we walked round the harbour. On the corner, an old fisherman, known as the ‘White Mannie’ sits on a plinth surveying the boats and their comings and goings. He is the work of local artist Correna Cowie and has sat here since 1959.

The White Mannie, Findochty

On the back of the plinth is a biblical quotation.

The back of the White Mannie

19-Jul-2022

The Admirals Inn and Other Services

Findochty’s resident population of 1,100 swells in the summer when holiday lets are full and the caravan park is busy. Services are limited, but the General Store and next-door Post Office/Pharmacy seem to cope, but the apostrophe-free Admirals Inn, the only place to eat or drink, struggles with the numbers.

We like to cook local produce, but we also like to eat out, so on the 15th we presented ourselves at the Admirals around 7.30. We had not booked, and given the start of the previous paragraph, and it being a Friday, we should have expected being turned away, but we still felt disappointed.

Outside on the green was a pizza van with a sign saying they would close in five minutes. We joined the short queue thinking we were just in time. ‘We’ve run out,’ they said when we reached the front, ‘had you booked?’ They were relieved to discover they were not failing a booked customer; we were bemused to find that in Findochty you must even book the street food. Fortunately, we had supplies in the cottage.

On the 16th, I pan fried the halibut with lemon zest and juice, herbs and garlic, and was well pleased with my efforts. The fish was firm, fresh and delicious. On the 17th we had the venison swiftly fried in a splash of hot olive oil, the outside browned the inside oozing blood; it was a fine piece of meat. On the 18th the remaining halibut starred in a gentle Keralan style curry (or as near as could be managed).

On the 19th, having booked, we returned to the Admirals. I had requested 7.30, but they suggested we arrive at 7.15. We did, and were asked to wait, fortunately there is always something to do when waiting in a bar.

We had a table before 8 o'clock. The menu seemed a relic of the 1980s, but the cooking was competent and the service good. Both my chicken breast and the dish Lynne has now forgotten were enjoyable. [Update: The September 2022 menu currently (05/23) on the website is a distinct improvement.]

Like the west of Ireland in 2016, we concluded that the Moray Coast (and maybe more of Scotland) has too many diners for too few restaurants. That problem should be solvable.

The Admirals faces the harbour but turn left from the door and you are on the rocky foreshore. On a fine evening the Moray Firth is a sight to behold…

Evening sun on the Moray Firth, Findochty
This photograph also appears in the Fraserburgh post. I think it bears repeating.

…and that feels the appropriate way to end this record of our week in Findochty.

Wednesday 20 July 2022

Huntly and Fyvie: Scotland '22 Part 5

Two Very Different Castles and Some Shortbread

Setting the Scene


Scotland
Moray
After driving north from Glasgow, we spent the next week in a borrowed cottage (thank you Jenny and Bob) in the delightful fishing village of Findochty, pronounced (for no obvious reason) ‘Finechty’, beside the Moray Firth. During our week we travelled west as far as Culloden, east as far as Scotland goes, south to Huntly and Fyvie and north to the harbour wall. This post is about the journeys south to Huntly and Fyvie.

Our travels around Findochty just about fit into the red oval

19-Jul-2022

Huntly


Aberdeenshire
Huntly is 18 miles (29 Km) south of Findochty, as the crow flies, but there is no direct route and the pleasant drive through rolling, green Aberdeenshire countryside took 40 minutes or more.

The small town (pop: 4,500) sits between the rivers Deveron and Bogie, just above their confluence. Traces of neolithic settlement have been found in the area and the remains of an Iron Age Hill Fort are still visible a mile east of the modern town centre. During the first millennium CE there was a large Pictish settlement at Tap o' Noth a couple of miles to the south.

Moray and Aberdeen with Huntly and Fyvie ringed

Huntly Castle

The Pictish language and culture died out (exactly how or why remains unknown) and it was the Gaelic speaking Donchaid McDuff, Earl of Fife who built the first motte-and-bailey castle, known as Strathbogie Castle, at the confluence in 1180. Robert the Bruce stayed here in 1307 before defeating one of his rivals during his struggle to establish himself King of Scotland.

The motte of the original Strathbogie Castle

Seven years later, David of Strathbogie swapped sides on the eve of the Battle of Bannockburn, deserting the future winner, Robert the Bruce, for the loser, King Edward II of England. After the battle Robert the Bruce, now the unchallenged King of Scotland, gave Strathbogie to the more reliable Sir Adam Gordon of Huntly. Despite their origins in far away Berwickshire, in southeast Scotland, Clan Gordon would become one of the most influential clans in the northeast.

Records from this period are sketchy, but apparently the Gordons did not bother replacing the wooden castle until it burned down in 1452. Then, Alexander Gordon, the first Earl of Huntly built a strong stone rectangular tower house adjacent to the original motte.

For the next 250 years the Earls, later Marquesses of Huntly, then Dukes of Gordon backed the wrong sides; the Catholics in the Reformation, the Royalists in the Civil War, James II in the Glorious Revolution and finally the Jacobite incursions. Although one or two came to a sticky end, they twisted and turned and somehow magicked their ‘strong rectangular tower house’ into, quite literally, a palace. They lost that after the Civil War, but kept their money and continued to upgrade their titles.

Despite rebelling against Mary Queen of Scots, being declared an outlaw and dying of apoplexy (allegedly) when arrested, the 4th Earl, George Gordon (known as the Cock o’ the North) was responsible for extensively remodelled the castle in the 1550s, the period just before his life became ‘interesting’.

Huntly Castle as it is now, after all the re-modelling, and the ruination.

His grandson (another George) the 6th Earl and 1st Marquis of Huntly was educated in France and introduced new architectural ideas. The lower building to the right of the four-storey palace included a loggia, because northern Scotland’s weather is uniquely favourable to a north facing outdoor seating area (on one or two days a year, maybe).

The Gordon's Grand Design

A full inventory from 1648 exists, and the Historic Environment Scotland sign board above gives the highlights. It also shows part of the loggia, with nobody sitting around waiting for someone else to invent the barbecue.

This was actually the rear, the front was round the other side, across a courtyard containing the remains of outbuildings and the footing of the ‘strong rectangular tower house’.

Huntly Castle and the courtyard at the front

The 1st Marquis was responsible for the grand tower with much heraldry above the door.

The Great Tower, Huntly Castle

Inside you can descend to the brewhouse, kitchen or bake house; there is also a prison.

The Bake House

Upstairs the grander rooms do not look so comfortable when they are bare stone…

One of the Grander rooms

…but the fireplaces hint at what they may have been. The one below, placed in a public room by Henrietta Stewart the 1st Marchioness in 1600, has the Royal Arms of James VI placed centrally, with the monogram of the marquis and marchioness below. The top has been defaced, probably because it contained some catholic imagery.

Fireplace, Huntly Castle

While in a room used for entertaining the most favoured guests, she placed her husband and herself in the mantelpiece.

Another Huntly Castle fireplace

The castle played its part in the Civil War. The 2nd Marquis (another George Gordon) was the last Gordon to live there. As a prominent catholic and a royalist, his refusal to sign the protestant Covenant resulted in his execution at the Market Cross in Edinburgh in 1649.

The 1648 inventory, mentioned above was made when George Gordon was on the run. The house was then cleared and the Gordons never returned. It was used on an ad hoc basis by both sides during the Jacobite uprisings, but was then left to become a quarry for local housebuilders.

Huntly Castle was left to deteriorate

In the 19th century attitudes changed and the ruin was looked after. In 1923 it became a Scheduled Monument in the care of Historic Environment Scotland.

The Gordons may have lost their castle, but did well enough otherwise being raised from the rank of Marquis to Duke of Gordon. Marriages have brought the Dukedoms of Gordon, Lennox and Richmond together and the current incumbent styles himself Charles Lennox-Gordon, 11th Duke of Richmond and lives in the sort of style you might expect.

Huntly Town

Originally growing up to service the castle, the 17th and 18th centuries saw Huntly (formerly Milton of Strathbogie) develop as a market town with merchants and artisans serving the surrounding countryside. Largely rebuilt by Alexander Gordon, 4th Duke of Gordon, in the late 18th century, Huntly became a planned town with roads on a grid-pattern.

Straight streets crossing at right angles, Huntly

Although hampered by its isolation the town became a centre for the growing of flax and production of linen, and the early 19th century saw the population grow from around 1,000 in 1800 to 2,500 in 1834, despite the post-Napoleonic War depression. In 1845 the arrival of the railway boosted the economy; Huntly station, on the Aberdeen-Inverness line, is still in use. The late but swift Scottish Agricultural Revolution saw capitalist agriculture replace peasant farming and by the mid-19th century Huntly had become an important market and shipping centre – at the cost of a depopulated countryside.

Stewarts Hall, built as Huntly Town Hall in 1875, now a venue for concerts and other entertainments

In 1836 George Duncan Gordon, 5th Duke of Gordon died without legitimate issue and the title died with him. In 1862 a second creation of the title saw Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, 6th Duke of Richmond add 1st Duke of Gordon to his portfolio. As his main seat was at Goodwood in Surrey, some 900km to the south, it is legitimate to wonder what sort of a reception he received in Huntly. Surprisingly his tenants immediately raised money to put up a statue to him, but then he was a nephew of the old 5th Duke.

Charles Henry Gordon-Lennox, Huntly

Today Huntly is, in part, an Aberdeen commuter town, but local employment is available on a substantial industrial estate. One of the town’s notable companies is Dean’s, makers of highly rated shortbread and other comestibles. Founded in 1985 they opened a purpose-built bakery in 1999 and a ‘bistro’ in 2007. We thought it a good place to lunch. While I do like their shortbread, particularly the lemon version, and we made good use of their shop, we were a little disappointed that the ‘bistro’ is in fact just a ‘cafeteria on an industrial estate.’

Dean's Bistro, Huntly

Buckie and District Fishing Heritage Centre

On our way home we passed through the local metropolis of Buckie (it’s got a Tescos and everything!) and stopped at the Fishing Heritage Centre.

Run by volunteers they have artefacts, photos, models, a serious archive and three elderly men (so about my age, then) who were keen to talk about their experiences at sea.

Fishing boats, Buckie Fishing Heritage Mueum

For some reason we started discussing railways and they asked what we knew about the Moray Coast Railway. Apart from observing the viaduct in Cullen and that Findochty had a Station Street, but no station, we knew little.

Completed in 1886, it ran for 25 miles from Portsoy to Elgin linking two pre-existing lines. It did good business in the early years but struggled in the second half of the 20th century. The first station closed in 1951 and it withered away to full closure in 1968 when the tracks were removed. We were asked if we would like to see a film taken from the cab of a steam train and speeded up to cover the whole journey in a few minutes. We would.

I am glad we dropped in, they were good people and the film was well worth seeing.

20-July 2022

Findochty to Fyvie

Next day we made a similar journey, first heading east through Cullen where the road threads its way through the arches of the viaduct that once carried the Moray Coast Railway over the lower part of the village.

Cullen and its viaduct - and a rainshower

Again, we drove through the green and gently undulating country of eastern Aberdeenshire. We took a different route from yesterday, heading further east and then south through Turriff to Fyvie. The roads are not large, but they are largely untroubled by traffic.

The green Aberdeenshire countryside

Turriff is a town, a little smaller than Huntly, and rather less self-important, but a town nonetheless. Fyvie is not. Having set the satnav for Fyvie Castle, we were 10km south of Turriff, and 2km short of Fyvie with a forest to our right and a high brick wall to our left when the satnav announced our arrival.

Fyvie Castle

Fyvie itself is just off the main road, and in the village we found a sign to the castle. A drive through the extensive grounds took us to the car park from where a garden path, for want of a better description, wound through some woods…

Approaching Fyvie Castle

… and after a final turn to Fyvie Castle. Unlike Huntly it is not a ruin, also unlike Huntly it is owned by the Scottish National Trust so we had free entrance as English National Trust Members.

Fyvie Castle

The first castle may have been built as early as 1211 by William the Lion (William I of Scotland) making it older than first wooden fort at Huntly. Just over 100 years later Robert the Bruce held an open-air court here. In 1390, it ceased to be a royal stronghold and possession passed to a series of five successive families – the Prestons, Meldrums, Setons, Gordons and Leiths – each of whom left their mark on the building, and erected a new tower (though the Leith Tower is really a projecting wing).

The result is a large and complicated building. Seen from above it is L-shaped with a second smaller L attached to the upstroke, it is a building that grew organically, without being planned.

Fyvie Castle, main façade

From the front, the Preston tower built between 1390 and 1433 is on the right. It is tempting to call it the oldest visible part of the castle, any stones left from the days of William the Lion will be in the foundations. But it looks no older than the Meldrum Tower on the left (1433-1596) or the Seton Tower, interpolated between them in 1599. The shape might be organic but the building does not have obviously old and new parts.

Inside the House


Grand Hall, Fyvie Castle

From the Main Hall in the Seton Tower, where we waited for the guided tour to start, a wheel staircase delivers visitors to the upper floors. It is a development of the common-or-garden medieval spiral staircase, but much wider, much more gently graded and with even steps. If I had realised it was important, I would have photographed it, but I didn’t. Allegedly the younger Gordons were known to race their horses down it.

This led us to the Billiards Room…

Billiards Room, Fyvie Castle 

…and then to a dining room.

Dining Room, Fyvie Castle

The final owner before the National Trust, Alexander Forbes-Leith was born in Aberdeen in 1847. The son of an admiral he joined the Royal Navy aged 13 and by 22 was a Lieutenant. He left the navy and went to America where in 1871 he married Marie Louise January, whose father was director of an Illinois steel mill. There is a portrait of her by Francisque-Edouard Bertier in the dining room.

Marie Louise January, Fyvie Castle

Forbes-Leith had his own career in the steel industry, and became a partner in a merchant bank. By 1889 he had made his pile and bought Fyvie Castle. He poured money into its restoration and moved here with his wife, son and daughter. What we see today is a Scottish architectural extravaganza on the outside and early 20th century luxury living on the inside.

We continued into a comfortable sitting room.

Sitting Room, Fyvie Castle

Most of the art on the walls is from the Forbes-Lieth collection, but not the painting of a warlike, young (if thinning on top) highlander with an inappropriate classical background. The portrait by Pompeo Batoni is of Colonel William Gordon and was commissioned by Gordon in 1766 on his Grand Tour.

Col William Gordon

Among the many paintings are works by Thomas Gainsborough, John Millais and 13 portraits by the Scottish artist Henry Raeburn, best known for The Skating Minister.

There are other sitting and dining rooms, a library and some bedrooms, but I think we have the idea.

Library with person entering. Why did I not do this shot again?

During the long pre-Leith-Forbes era, the house (allegedly) collected several ghosts and has the reputation of being one of Britain’s most haunted. Although our guide told these stories with relish and seemed to believe them, I will not waste time on such nonsense.

Outside the House

We lunched in the wee tea room and proceeded outside.

Like all 18th century aristocrats worth their salt, the Gordons landscaped their grounds and created gardens.

Lawn and a collection of magnificent, mature native trees

It is easy to believe such people spent their vast and often unearned wealth with frivolity and narcissism – maybe William Gordon struck that pose in those garments against that background with due irony, or maybe not. But, to be fair, many planted trees, not for themselves or even the next generation, but for those of us who have come after, and we should thank them for that - and do the same.

And we can enjoy their walled gardens…

Walled Garden, Fyvie Castle

…and an impressive onion patch.

Now that's an onion patch, Fyvie Castle

And having done that, we drove back north to Findochty.