Travel: Edinburgh and Fife

THE ICONIC rail bridge is a gateway to a spectacular break in Edinburgh and Fife, writes Nicholas McAvaney
The view from the top of the Forth Bridge. Picture: Ian RutherfordThe view from the top of the Forth Bridge. Picture: Ian Rutherford
The view from the top of the Forth Bridge. Picture: Ian Rutherford

I close my eyes momentarily and hold my breath, as our temporary construction lift jerks upwards on its way to the top of the Forth Bridge. The squalling winds do little to abate my dislike of heights.

Sensing my discomfort, my guide assures me the lift is safe – “but it does bounce around a bit,” he adds with a cheeky grin.

Hide Ad

The Forth Bridge celebrates its 125th birthday this year and has recently been named a UNESCO World Heritage site, Scotland’s sixth on the list. I’m trying out a makeshift viewing platform on the iconic structure, which ScotRail hopes will be transformed into a permanent viewing platform within the next few years.

It’s part of plans to turn the Forth Bridge into a tourist attraction in its own right, rather than just a passage over the Firth for hundreds of trains each day. If it all gets signed off, there will be an information centre on the North Queensferry side as well as the observation deck at the top, 110m above the Firth of Forth.

My gaze follows the red iron girders of the bridge, which curl away from me towards Edinburgh Castle in the distance, while the gentle rolling hills of Fife up to Kirkcaldy on the other side of the water, seduce me into taking dozens of photographs.

Suddenly I hear a thunderous rumble beneath my feet; a train is crossing the bridge’s 8,094ft span. For its first 27 years, this was the longest single cantilever bridge in the world, and it’s still well used today. “All other cantilever bridges are based on this one,” my ScotRail guide proudly proclaims.

I can only imagine the sheer bravery of the men and boys who completed the build over eight years in the 1880s, tossing white hot rivets from one beam to another, 360ft above the water. Sadly for some, the work proved fatal, as safety standards were virtually non-existent then.

Far braver were they than I, as I don’t need much convincing to return from the windswept platform and its dizzying heights to the solid ground below.

Hide Ad

It’s an eye-opening start to my long weekend, which is about to change focus onto my stomach.

Along with a five-course meal at Michelin-starred restaurant The Kitchin, I’m served a map of Scotland explaining the provenance of each dish. Oban oysters, Orkney scallops, beef shin from north of Aberdeen, and sea salt from the Outer Hebrides are all on the menu in the modernist foodie Mecca, located in the capital’s former rough and tumble docks.

Hide Ad

Before retiring for the night, I enjoy a nightcap at V Deep, a ‘craft beer and curry bar’ under the helm of celebrity chef, comedian and TV presenter, Hardeep Singh Kohli. I try some of his 13 draught beers (all sourced from small suppliers), which can be matched with tapas-style dishes.

Passing the Forth Bridge once more, I make my way to St Andrews, thoroughly enjoying the drive along the Fife coast.

I borrow a 1960s MG from rental company Caledonian Classics and zoom through rolling green hills and beautiful sandy beaches on my way to Crail. My base for the night is the Kinnaird Estate in Perthshire; although not technically in the Highlands, it’s rural enough to sate my desire to ‘get back to nature’.

The remarkably well-kept eight-bedroom stone house is surrounded by acres of woodland and open fields, leading down to the River Tay. As I stroll through the grounds in the late afternoon sun, deer bound through the forest and rabbits hop about nearby, refusing to pose for photos.

But I have more opportunity to stalk wildlife when I head to Aberfeldy for a two-hour Highland Safari along the Tay Valley, where there’s an abundance of birds, some deer, mountain hare and even rare sightings of Scottish wildcats.

The mountain views are as intoxicating as the dram I sip, as my kilted safari ranger Sandy explains the growing popularity of the wildlife tours. “People really enjoy the experience,” he says. “They want to feel like they are in nature.”

Hide Ad

As we travel back to safari HQ Sandy stops our reconstructed military jeep one more time and encourages me to take in a sweeping view of Loch Tay.

Queen Victoria honeymooned across the way at Taymouth Castle. That visit was the beginning of a love affair with the Scottish Highlands, leading her to acquire Balmoral Castle, still visited by the Royals every summer.

Hide Ad

As my weekend draws to a close, I too have a desire to return. On the way to Edinburgh, my taxi driver shares his thoughts on the subject.

“Scots have invented many things, Dunlop tyres, bitumen, Mackintoshes. All things that seem to be to help people get away from Scotland,” he says, with a laugh. “But I don’t know why you’d ever want to leave,” he adds.

Nor do I.

• Nicholas McAvaney was a guest VisitScotland, see www.visitscotland.com