Sept. 11 - Sept. 12th
Andrew, Stacy, and Allen... leaving on a jet plane.
The plane ride was actually not that bad. Stacy and I sat together and there was a decent amount of room, so we weren't too upset about it. Arriving in Heathrow, we figured out why it's known as a wretched airport. We were new to it, of course, but we waited for almost an hour to get through Immigration. We got through alright, picked up our luggage, and wandered out to the "Meeting Point" to wait for Andrew, whose plane was landing two hours later. I had developed a cold a few days before, so I was generally miserable sitting there for three hours. We were hungry, tired, and I was all stuffed up. Eventually Andrew showed up
Bob's mom and sister got home and it was even better.
The three of us were completely dead on our feet, and so at 9pm we crashed in Bob's family's living room, which was surprisingly comfortable. We slept for almost 14 hours, we were so tired.
Sept. 13
We spent the rest of the day with Bob, going for a walk, making plans for Scotland. Bob's mom made us more Indian food, which was again amazing. We're so ridiculously spoiled on Indian food now, Americanized Indian food will never again suffice. Ever.
We left late Thursday night for Edinburgh, taking a night train. We almost weren't able to get on, we got the last three seats. There were four guys from Notre Dame sitting near us, but they weren't very talkative, so we all just tried to sleep all night. The train ended up an hour late into Edinburgh, which didn't bother us since we had no plans, but the Notre Dame kids were pissed off about it.
Edinburgh is gorgeous. Absolutely beautiful. We spent that Friday wandering about. The only thing of real importance we did was go to the National Gallery of Scotland. There we saw several pieces by Raphael, Botticelli, Degas, Van Gogh, Monet, and others.
Later in the day we looked around for hostels, but not having made a reservation, we weren't able to find a place, all the hostels were full. So, what to do? Change of plans, go north.
We found a train to Inverness, which is in Northern Scotland. On the train we got kicked out of our seats by a group of middle-aged Scottish women, who nearly ruined our love of the accent by how rude they were. They got drunk on the train and were completely obnoxious, and since we were already tired, I was still sick, and a little stressed about having to change our plans, we were pissed off most of the train ride.
But the view of the Scottish Highlands up north was amazing. The Fife of Forth, a large bay on the east of Scotland, was alongside us for much of the first part of the trip. We got into Inverness late, found our hostel, and found some food and beer as quickly as possible. We made plans for a two-hour hike up to Loch Ness the next day, and went to sleep after a long day.
Inverness was an important city to Scotland, hundreds of years ago. A sort of crossroads from Edinburgh to the south, and then Urquhart Castle to the west. That morning it started raining, and after picking up some supplies (Stacy and I did not bring warm enough jackets, and Stacy forgot socks... oops), we decided to take a bus instead of hike. Urquhart Castle was an important strategic outpost on Loch Ness, and we spent the day there. It's in ruins now, but the castle on the lake is still breathtaking.
Getting back to Inverness, we ate dinner at the Blackfriar Highlands Pub to get some traditional Scottish food. It was delicious, and
The First Week, Part Two will come soon.
2 comments:
yum, yum, and was the haggis served with neeps and tatties? not sounding so good to me....hope it was the new way of preparation and not the traditional :-)
OF COURSE Stacy forgot socks!!!
I love it!
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