“My heart's in the Highlands, my heart is not here;
My heart's in the Highlands a-chasing the deer;
A-chasing the wild-deer, and following the roe,
My heart's in the Highlands wherever I go.”
The Brattleboro Bear meets Buchaille Etive Mor... |
PLACES OF INSPIRATION
This past August we traveled back to Scotland – sometime home
of Pamela and Naia for the timeless inspiration of Edinburgh, and the subtle
elegance of the Highlands awash in heather blossoms. From the braies of the Killiecrankie on Blair
Atholl, to the immovable Buchaille Etive Mor (The Shepard of Etive) beside
Glencoe and Rannoch Moor. It was a sweet
treat in visiting our Falkland where Naia had her first year and sometimes
known as “Inverness” in the TV Series Outlander. East Lomond, an old volcanic plug that
oversees the village has been a beacon hill for the Picts, Celts, Romans, and
Scots, sending fire signals from The North Sea (think Viking invasions which
left words like “brau and bairn in the local dialect) inland to Stirling, the
first place where a medival arch could span the Forth River and allow foot
traffic into the Highlands. If you’re
ever in the Hague and see the stone houses on it’s shores, those were made of
ballast in trade ships sold to wealthy merchants as their land was little more
than a spit of sand.
Fetching the whiskey... |
FABRICS OF INSPIRATION
Scots stick to their wool.
Truly a magnificent, and timeless fabric. In particular the tartan dyed with plants are
of interest to our future color spectrum. And much like our American recessions – the Scots
have had to claw their way back from failed rebellions, the Clearances, and
more recently Maggie Thatcher’s shutdown of the coal industry in the 80’s. They are doers born and bred, bringing
dignity and honor to even the most simple of crafts, with an eye to enduring
the centuries as a standard measurement. A
brilliant realization being why Linens are traditional in the UK, of course
they could not grow cotton in such weather and so grew flax!
Glencoe, nursery of the glaciers and home to species that turn white in winter. |
ANIMALS OF INSPIRATION
Their largest predator is a fox, of which there are many –
thankfully farmers seem to be learning how to build good fences and hunts no
longer set hounds on the foxes. Deer are
abundant with the lack of large predators, and there is a vicious condemnation
of the grey squirrel, which was imported to London over a century ago and has
spread being the versatile omnivore it is!
Sadly at the same time the lovely Red Squirrel has become endangered as
it’s pine trees are cut down for developments.
The greys number in the millions and are being trapped and subjected to
the ravenous Pine Marten (think Fisher) despite it being clear they will never
be eradicated. Scotland has even
reintroduced beaver after their local demise several hundred years ago with
unfettered trapping. Brava!
Blair Atholl for the International Horse Trials
Happy Fall!!!!
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