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Tour Perthshire, Scotland

Of all the places you could visit, few can capture the hearts as my Scotland can. It is a timeless place, soft and green, yet wild and beautiful, where narrow roads meander along the banks of sparkling rivers - and sheep have the right of way. Quaint rows of cottages hug the seashore, or sit bunched shoulder to shoulder in village after historic village, and every churchyard, and castle, and palace has a story to tell of the folks whose spirits still haunt the ruined crofts and live in the misty moors of my Scotland.

" Well, that's the typical Scottish sales Pitch ! "

I prefer to show my travelers the Real Scotland. A more Personal Scotland. A country not only of Castles and Crofts, Lochs and Mountains. But a country of real people with a distinct, and fascinating, Scottish Culture which Scots are more than willing to share with you.

Leave The Herd Behind

My small group tours of Scotland are paced for discovery and understanding - not just notching sites. I do not put 52 people on a huge coach with an endurance test for an itinerary. In fact, each group is limited to an absolute maximum of 18 people ( unless by special request ), with a typical small group being just 8 people. Whilst touring Perthshire we will normally stay at the Dunalastair Hotel in Kinloch Rannoch. This is an excellent hotel, in a wonderful location, from which we can easily tour much of the " Best of Scotland."

I prefer to guide groups through Scotland in a relaxing manner, staying at two or three base locations from which we can visit sites of interest - and not have to move luggage every day. My small group members tend to be
travelers rather than tourists, enjoying seeing behind the tourist façade, while visiting with " locals " and seeing sites not normally seen by the regular tourist.

Many group members visit Scotland to trace their Scottish ancestry; others to golf or fish; most come to simply enjoy the beautiful scenery,
historic buildings and gardens, and most of all, to meet and enjoy the people of Scotland.

My wee tours of Scotland can best be described as being " couthy. "

It's a Scottish word meaning " gentle."

If you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me at;

sandystevenson@thefreesite.com

Or browse my site to learn all about Perthshire !

Perthshire

By any standards Perthshire is one of the truly great old counties of Scotland. In size it is the fourth largest of the old counties in Scotland, comprising 1,595,804 acres. But size is not everything; and despite having no extremely large city, it has a much larger population than the other Scots counties which top it in size, Inverness, Argyll and Ross and Cromarty. Yet it has no industrial area, apart from the town of Perth itself. It has its great mountain tracts, of course, including some of the most beautiful scenery in the United Kingdom; but there is an enormous amount of fertile, populous countryside--far more, probably, than is generally realised--its great green straits, or wide open valleys, its especial pride. Contrary, therefore, to frequent pronouncements, the true glory of Perthshire is not only its hills and lochs, however fine; but also in its magnificent, age-old settled lowlands, its characterful small towns and its unnumbered villages. Especially the latter.

Perthshire has probably, more ancient and interesting small communities than anywhere else in Scotland. And these communities are unfortunately generally bypassed by the typical traveler.
But not by the folks on my tours !

Basically, Perthshire is the basin and catchment area of the great River Tay; although the south-west section, or Menteith (more properly Monteith) as its name suggests, is the mounth of the Teith, principal tributary of the Forth. But in the main, Perthshire's innumerable and often splendid rivers reach the sea via the silver Tay. The county has another basic feature--the great Highland Fault, which runs across Scotland from the Gareloch to the Tay, most of it in Perthshire. This, because in general it marks the division between Highlands and Lowlands, is important. The old county, therefore, has a split personality.

Owing to its great size and ancient lineage, Perthshire has always been split up into large sub-provinces, with very pronounced characteristics and identities of their own, mainly themselves ancient earldoms--Menteith, Strathearn, Gowrie, Atholl, Breadalbane, each with its own subdivisions. These, all themselves mighty areas, are the very stuff of Scotland's story, an integral and vital part of Scotland's exciting past.

Perthshire is, in fact, a historically exciting county. Here, indeed, the past can be studied at its earliest, as far as Scotland is concerned, better than most; for it so happened that into Perthshire, Strathearn in especial, came the early Christian missionaries of the Irish Celtic Church, via Iona, the Brethren of Columba, to set up their cells and churches in these lovely valleys. The greatest concentration of early Celtic Church sites are here; also a large number of those quite extraordinary Pictish sculptured stones, with their symbols, things of splendid beauty and workmanship, full of as yet unsolved mystery, which so give the lie to the folly that the Picts were a race of savages, painting their bodies and going about half naked. Quite clearly these Pictish ancestors of ours, whom the Celtic Church missionaries Christianised, were a highly developed and artistic people, with unique culture. The whole county is steeped in history - Romans, Picts and Celts and many of the main players in Scottish history all contributed to the creation of present day Perthshire - Pontius Pilot, Ossian, Macbeth, William Wallace, Robert Bruce, Mary Queen of Scots, John Knox, Montrose, Rob Roy Macgregor, Bonnie Prince Charlie, Robert Burns - a who's who of Scottish history. Perthshire is truly " All of Scotland. "

Each town, village and parish of the county is dealt with hereafter in some detail. But perhaps some reference here to the ancient basic divisions would be appropriate and revealing. Menteith is the most southerly, a large area stretching from the Allan Water to Loch Lomond, including the Doune, Callander and Trossachs districts; and of course the parish of Port of Menteith itself and the Lake thereof--no significance about that appellation of lake, despite the nonsense talked by some about it being the only lake in Scotland. It was called Loch of Menteith until well into the last century. The early Celtic Earls of Menteith were a great force in Scotland, for their territory straddled the waist of the country, and, moreover, held the line between Highlands and Lowlands. Their principal castle was on the island of Inch Talla, in the Loch of Menteith, where they kept up princely state, with the Priory of Inchmahome on the next islet; but when Murdoch Stewart, Duke of Albany, James I's cousin, married the heiress in the early 15th century, he found the island-fortress inconvenient, and built a great new castle at Doune, which thereafter became the capital of Menteith. On his execution, for treason, James split up the earldom, as being too powerful for any one subject, giving Doune and the eastern part to another branch of the Stewarts--who still hold it--and the rest, with the earldom itself, to the Grahams. Certain descendants of the Grahams, also, are still landholders here, though the earldom itself was eventually suppressed by Charles I in shameful fashion. Menteith is half Highland, half Lowland, fertile, scenic, non-industrial, typical indeed of the county as a whole. Being within easy reach of Edinburgh and Glasgow, it is very and deservedly popular with the visitor who has not time to 'do all of Scotland properly'.

Strathearn is the next stratum of Perthshire northwards, and even larger. As the name implies, it comprises the very wide and fertile vale of the River Earn, from Lochearnhead right down to the river s confluence with the Tay estuary near Bridge of Earn, with all its feeder glens and flanking territories. Crieff is its largest town, with the more ancient Auchterarder, however, its capital. The sheer extent and rich fairness of this magnificent strath ( wide valley ) has to be seen to be appreciated--and nowhere is it better observed than from high on the north-facing Ochil Hills that separate it from the Forth plain, above Dunning or Forteviot. From one of the side-road summits up there, on a clear day, Strathearn is a splendid sight indeed, one of the finest in the land--although seldom remarked upon. Some two hundred square miles of Scotland's best is spread out below, great fields, rich pastures, ancient parkland, rolling woodlands, villages, castles and mansions innumerable, all flanking the noble, coiling river, and all contained within the vast bowl of the hills, the green Ochils to the south, the infinity of the Highland giants to the north.

All this splendid heritage was the domain of another line of Celtic earls. The Strathearn earldom, if slightly less strategically placed, was much richer than that of Menteith; and for the same reason, was finally incorporated into the Crown--so that, for instance, one of Queen Victoria's sons was Duke of Connaught and Strathearn. But the place was royal even before the earls, for this was Fortrenn, the Pictish kingdom, with its capital at Forteviot--in the parish church of which there are still sculptured stones dating from that early period. The famous Dupplin Cross near by, too, is one of the finest early Christian monuments in the country. At Forteviot was the palace of Angus MacFergus (A.D. 731--61) of St. Andrew's Cross fame, and a long succession of kings thereafter until Malcolm Canmore. Here died the great Kenneth MacAlpine who, conquering the Picts, finally united the Dalriadic Scots kingdom with that of the Picts to form the Scotland we know today. Perhaps, because of these royal origins, the Celtic Earls of Strathearn always styled themselves 'by the Indulgence of God'!

Gowrie is the next great division, and rather less easily delineated. Indeed, not everyone even in Perthshire could tell you what was in Gowrie and what was not. Many think of it merely as the Carse of Gowrie, that level plain between the Sidlaws and the Tay, between Perth and Dundee. But this is not to take into account Blairgowrie, many miles to the north; nor the Gowrie in the Stanley area; nor the fact that the seat and centre of the Earls of Gowrie was at Ruthven, north-west of Perth. The name merely means the Plain of the Wild Goats, which is not much help. In fact, Gowrie seems really to have been all eastern Perthshire, from the head of Strathmore and the flanking Grampians down to the Tay estuary, including the western Sidlaws. The city of Perth itself, therefore, is in Gowrie. Also the highly important areas, in previous ages, of Scone, Dunsinane and Inchtuthill--all of which indicates the enduring status of the area, from Roman times onwards, The great family of Ruthven dominated most of it, once, and in 1581 became Earls of Gowrie. The notorious Gowrie Conspiracy, one of the murkiest incidents in Scots history, is linked with their name--but they were the victims of it, not the perpetrators. That shame belongs to James VI, who, owing the young Earl 80,000 pounds, organised his murder, and that of his brother, at Perth in 1600; and six weeks later, to clear his own name, had the two dead bodies tried for treason in court at Edinburgh, himself attending. The Murrays of Tullibardine, who had aided the King in this sorry business, were rewarded with large sections of Gowrie, especially in the Stormonth or north-western area. Their representative, the Earl of Mansfield, still holds sway hereabouts from Scone Palace, his eldest son Lord Stormont.

The northern parts of Perthskire are divided between Breadalbane and Atholl, huge tracts both, and largely mountainside. Breadalbane is the more westerly, stretching from the edge of Argyll, at Strathfillan, Mamlorn and Moor of Rannoch right across the country to Glen Almond, Aberfeldy and Strathtay--braid Alban indeed, the very geographical centre of Scotland. It measures almost a thousand square miles, 33 by 31 miles, according to the gazetteer, and is basically the basin of the upper Tay, including the great Loch of that name and all the catchment area. Aberfeldy is sometimes claimed as its capital; certainly it is the largest town and only burgh. But Kuhn, at the other end of Loch Tay, has the better claim, as the original centre, where the Campbell lords had their main seat, at Finlarig Castle. Strangely, although the name is ancient and the area an entity from early times, there were no great Celtic earls or mormaers here. It was not until 1681 that the 11th Campbell of Glenorchy, having by then got rid of the MacGregors who anciently lorded it hereabouts, got himself created Earl of Breadalbane, and by peculiar means. His successors became almost the greatest landowners in Scotland, being able, at one time, to ride from the Atlantic shores to the North Sea on their own land--or so it is said. These territories include some of the most renowned scenery in the Central Highlands, from Glen Ogle to the Tarmachans, from Glen Dochart to Glen Lyon.

Finally there is great Atholl, another 500 square miles, celebrated in song and story--even for a special drink compounded of whisky, eggs and honey, called Atholl Brose--its duke the proud possessor of the only private army still left in these islands, The Atholl Highlanders. Everybody knows Dunkeld, Pitlochry, Killiecrankie and Blair Atholl, amongst the most popular tourist areas of the land. Not so well known, however, are the great stretches of Strathardle, of Tilt and Tarf and Edendon, of Errochty and Fincastle, of Craiganour and Talla Bheith, mainly far from roads. Atholl was always a semi-royal territory. Indeed it is claimed that there were once Kings of Atholl. But less misty is the fame of Madadh, grandson of King Duncan, Earl of Atholl, whose own grandson Henry, dying in 1210, left only a legitimate daughter--though his illegitimate son, Conon, was the forebear of the Robertsons of Clan Donnachaidh who, next to the earls, were the greatest landholders in Atholl. The Crown bestowed the earldom on one of the sons of Robert III, the second of the Stewart kings, and for long the Stewarts lorded it here. Then, in the early 17th century, the 2nd Murray Earl of Tullibardine married the Stewart heiress, and got Atholl--and have held it ever since, becoming marquises thereof in 1676 and dukes in 1703. Their castle at Blair is a treasure-house, one of the most magnificent in Scotland, with no fewer than 32 rooms, filled with objects of value and interest, open to the public.

The last of Atholl is the lumpish mountain, the Sow thereof, facing the Boar of Badenoch at the Pass of Drumochter, and thereafter we are in Inverness-shire. Perthshire therefore is more like half a dozen counties than one-- and even so, great semi-subdivisions such as Strathallan, Strathbraan, Strathardle, Rannoch, Glen Shee, Stormont and Mamlorn, have scarcely been mentioned, if at all.

Sir Walter Scott, that fervent Borderer, yet said: "If an intelligent stranger were asked to describe the most varied and most beautiful part of Scotland, it is probable that he would name the County of Perth." The present day visitor would find no fault with that statement.

Perthshire, and Kinross, are ideally situated for base locations from which to tour much of Scotland. If you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me at;

sandystevenson@thefreesite.com

Or why not visit my extensive
Travel Scotland
Web site at:
www.scottravel.com

Scottish Genealogy
Scottish Clans
Scottish Links
Perthshire Genealogy
Dunning St Serf's
Grave Yard Survey
Strathearn Placenames
Strathearn People
Clan Robertson
Clan Donnachaidh
Donnachaidh Musem

Clan Donnachaidh
Society (Robertson)

Southern Cal Branch
Clan Societyof the Mid-Atlantic States
of New England
of Nova Scotia
of Rocky Mountains
of Florida
of the South


Famous Names
Of Perthshire
Including nearby Angus

Alexander Duff
( Missionary )
Dugald Buchanan
( Religious Poet )
Fox Maule Ramsay
( 11th Earl of Dalhousie )
Katherine M. Murray
( Duchess of Atholl )
Carolina Oliphant
( Lady Nairne Poet )
John S. McDiarmid
( 14th Lieutenant
Governor of Manitoba )
Neil Gow
( Fiddler )
John Mylne
( Architect )
Alexander Mylne
( Clergyman )
Sir Donald Currie
( Shipping Magnate )
Sir James Barrie
( Author, Dramatist )
James B. Lindsay
( Scientist )
Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon
( The Queen Mother )
Archibald Douglas
( 5th Earl of Angus )
Alan Cumming
( Actor )

Family Names
Of Perthshire
Including nearby Angus
Balfour
Campbell
Dalhousie
Erskine
Farquharson
Graham
Haig
Lorimer
Lundy
MacGregor
MacNab
Menzies
Murray
Ramsay
Robertson
Scyrmgeour
Sharp
Sibbald
Spalding

Perthshire Genealogy
Mailing List
Perthshire Scotland
Genweb

ScotRoots

If you know names and dates for some of your Scottish ancestors.

Why not put some flesh on the bones?

Or are you just starting to search for family roots in Scotland?

Either way find out how Scot Roots can help
E-mail Brian Thomson

thoms@scotroots.com Scot Roots

Small Group Tours
Visit my extensive
Travel Scotland
Web site at:
Travel Scotland

Independent Travel To Scotland

I can also help travelers who enjoy the fun of planning their own trips and the adventure of independent travel in Scotland.

If you're looking for tips, advice and great recommendations for Car Rentals and good quality Accommodations in all of Scotland, please e-mail

Innfinite Hospitality

For Golfing Tours of Scotland go straight
to my web site at:
Golf Scotland

Highland Perthshire
And Tayside
Golf Clubs

Aberfeldy Golf Club
Alyth Golf Club
Alyth Strathmore Golf
Arbroath Golf Club
Auchterarder Golf Club
Bishopshire Golf Club
Blair Atholl Golf Club
Blairgowrie Golf Club
Brechin Golf Club
Buddon Links Golf Club
Burnside Golf Club
Caird Park Golf Club
Camperdown Golf Club
Carnoustie Caledonia
Carnoustie Golf Club
Carnoustie Golf
Carnoustie Ladies Golf
Carnoustie Mercantile
Comrie Golf Club
Craigie Hill Golf Club
Crieff Golf Club
Dalhousie Golf Club
Dalmunzie Golf Club
Downfield Golf Club
Dunkeld Birnam Golf
Dunning Golf Club
Forfar Golf Club
Gleneagles Golf
Glenlomond Golf Club
Kenmore Golf Club
Killin Golf Club
King James Vi Golf
Kirriemuir Golf Club
Letham Grange Golf
Milnathort Golf Club
Monifieth Golf Links
Montrose Caledonia
Montrose Golf Club
Montrose Mercantile
Muckhart Golf Club
Murrayshall Golf Club
Muthill Golf Club
North Inch Golf Club
Panmure Golf Club
Pitlochry Golf Club
Royal Montrose Golf
Royal Perth Golfing Soc
St Fillans Golf Club
Strathtay Golf Club
Taymouth Castle Golf
The Edzell Golf Club

Some Golf Clubs in the Kingdom of Fife

St Andrews
St Michael's Golf
Saline Golf
Scotscraig Golf
Ladybank Golf
Cupar Golf Club

Dunfermline Golf

Listen To Great
Scottish Music While You Browse
( Complete  Albums )

Karen Matheson sings Ailein Duinn
( as heard in the film
"Rob Roy" )

Gaelic Voices
( Songs in Gaelic  )

Andy M. Stewart
The Houghs of Cromdale
( my favourite Scottish
Traditional singer )

Wolfstone
( Not your average
pipe band!! )
Seven
The Half Tail

Capercaillie
( intricate instruments and stunning vocals )
Delirium
To The Moon
Crosswinds
Sidewaulk

Aly Bain &
Phil Cunningham
( Scotland's fiddle &
accordion masters )
The Pearl
The Ruby

Sileas
( harps and gaelic song )
Play On Light
Delighted With Harps
Beating Harps

Celtic Voices
( The beauty of Celtic song )

Anam
( Scottish folk pop )
Riptide

Joyful Noise 1
Joyful Noise 2
( the most requested Celtic songs )

Dougie MacLean
from Dunkeld
My favourite Scottish Singer/Songwriter
Rightful King Video Clip
Isle Of Lewis Video Clip

Silly Wizard
( One of the best bands Scotland has ever known)
A Glint Of Silver
Live Wizardy

From Tannahill
Weavers
( wailing pipes and classic Scottish songs )
Best Of The Tannahills
Tannahill Collected

All the albums above are available from
Green Linnet Records

You will need RealPlayer to hear the above files. You can download a free RealAudio basic player from their web site.

Scottish Culture


Scottish Music
Scottish Humour
Learn Scots Words
Scottish News
Best-Loved
Scottish Books

" No one in Scotland can escape the past.
It is everywhere, haunting like a ghost."

More Scottish Quotes
Highland Games

My on-line photo

Images of Perthshire
Map of Perthshire
( Perth & Kinross )

Highland Perthshire
List of Events

Main Attractions
in and around
Highland Perthshire
Including nearby Angus
and the Kingdom of Fife

Aberfeldy
Aberfoyle
Abernethy
Abernyte
A'Bhuidheanach Beag
Airlie Castle
Aldie Castle
Allean Forest
Alyth
A'Mharconaich
Arbroath
Ardoch House
Ashintully Castle
Auchtermuchty
Ballathie House
Balmanno Castle
Balmerino Abbey
Balquhidder
Balvaird Castle
Balhousie Castle
Belmont Castle
Birnam
Blair Castle
Blairgowrie
Braco Castle
Branklyn Gardens
Brechin
Burleigh Castle
Caithness Glass
Callander
Castle Menzies
Ceres
Crieff
Doune
Edzell Castle
Drummond Castle
Dunalastair
Dunfallandy
Dunkeld
Dunning
Dupplin Castle
Earthquake House
Edradour Distillery
Elcho Castle
Falkland Palace
Fergusson Gallery
Fettercairn
Fingask
Forfar
Garth Castle
Glamis Castle
Grandtully Castle
The Hermitage
Huntingtower Castle
Inchture
Innerpeffray Castle
Innerpeffray Library
Kenmore
Killiecrankie Pass
Kincardine Castle
Kinnaird
Kinross
Kinross House
Killiecrankie
Kinloch Rannoch
Kirriemuir
Lindores Abbey
Linn of Tummel
Loch Leven Castle
Loch Rannoch
Loch Tummel
Megginch Castle
Meigle Stones
Muthill
Newburgh
Fair City of Perth
Pitlochry
Pitlochry Theatre
Rannoch
Rossie Priory
St Andrews
Schiehallion
Scone Palace
Soldier's Leap
Strathmore
Tummel Hdyro

Everywhere In

Highland Perthshire

( Well almost …. )

Abbots Deuglie
Aberargie
Aberdalgie
Aberfeldy
Abernethy
Abernyte
Aberuthven
Achalader
Acharn
Achnafauld
Airntully
Aldclune
Aldie
Almondbank
Alyth
Amulree
An Stuc
Ardler
Ardtalnaig
Ardvorlich
Atholl
Auchnafree
Auchterarder
Balado
Balbeggie
Baldinnies
Baledgarno
Balhary
Balholmie
Ballechin
Ballindean
Ballinluig
Ballintuim
Balloch
Balnaguard
Balnald
Balvarran
Bamff
Bandirran
Bankfoot
Beinn Dearg
Beinn Ghlas
Beinn Mhanach
Ben Lawers
Birnam
Blackford
Blacklunans
Blair Atholl
Blairgowrie
Blairingone
Bolfracks
Braco
Braegrum
Bridge of Balgie
Bridge of Cally
Bridge of Earn
Bridge of Ericht
Bridge of Gaur
Bridge of Tilt
Bridgend
Bruar
Buchanty
Burnfoot
Burrelton
Butterstone
Calvine
Camasericht
Carn Dearg
Camghouran
Camserney
Caputh
Cargill
Carie
Carie
Carnbo
Carsebreck
Cashlie
Chesthill
Clathy
Cleish
Clunie
Colenden
Collace
Comrie
Concraigie
Coshieville
Coupar Angus
Craig
Craigend
Craighall
Craigie
Cray
Crieff
Crook of Devon
Dalcapon
Dalchruin
Dalclathick
Dalcrue
Dalginross
Dalguise
Dall
Dalnacardoch
Dalnaspidal
Dalquiech
Deanshaugh
Dowally
Downhill
Dron
Drum
Drumchastle
Drunzie
Dull
Dunan
Duncrievie
Dunkeld
Dunning
Easter Balgedie 
Enochdhu
Errol
Fearnan
Findo Gask
Forgandenny
Forteviot
Fortingall
Foss
Foulford
Fowlis Wester
Funtullich
Gairney Bank
Gairneybridge
Garthwhinzean
Gauldswell
Gellyburn
Gilmerton
Glen Almond
Glen Artney
Glencarse
Glendevon
Glendoick
Gleneagles
Glenfarg
Glenlomond
Glenshee
Grandtully
Greenloaning
Guay
Guildtown
Harrietfield
Hosh
Inchture
Inchyra
Innerwick
Inver
Invergeldie
Invergowrie
Inverhadden
Invermay
Keillour
Keithick
Keltneyburn
Kenmore
Kettins
Killichonan
Killiecrankie
Kilspindie
Kinclaven
Kincraigie
Kindallachan
Kinfauns
Kingoodie
Kingseat
Kinkell Bridge
Kinloch
Kinloch Rannoch
Kinnaird
Kinnaird
Kinnesswood
Kinross
Kinrossie
Kintillo
Kirkmichael
Kirkton Collace
Lawers
Lawgrove
Leetown
Leitfie
Lethendy
Levenmouth
Little Dunkeld
Logierait
Longforgan
Longleys
Lornty
Luncarty
Madderty
Maryburgh
Meall Garbh
Meigle
Meikle Obney
Meikleour
Methven
Middleton
Mill of Fortune
Milnathort
Milton
Milton Morenish
Moneydie
Monzie
Morenish
Moulin
Moulinearn
Muir of Thorn
Muirton
Muirton
Murthly
Muthill
Netherton
Netherton
New Alyth
New Scone
Obney
Path of Condie
Pathstruie
Perth
Pitcairngreen
Pitkeathly Wells
Pitlochry
Pitroddie
Port Na Craig
Portmoak
Powmill
Rait
Rannoch Station
Rattray
Redgorton
Redstone
Remony
Rhynd
Riechip
Roromore
Rosemount
Ruthvenfield
Saucher
Scone
Scotlandwell
Spittal Glenshee
Spittalfield
St David's
St Fillans
St Madoes
St Martin's
Stanley
Straloch
Strathtay
Strelitz
Stron-fearnan
Struan
Tarvie
Tempar
The Ross
Tibbermore
Tillyrie
Tomaknock
Tressait
Trinafour
Trinity Gask
Trochry
Tulliemet
Tullybelton
Tummel Bridge
Turrerich
Waterloo
Weem
West Tofts
White Bridge
Wolfhill
Woodside

Packing Tips
For Scotland

Reducing jet-lag