Monday, 4 September 2023

Being Tourists for a change

 Friends from near Dundee were heading for Stranraer, so we suggested meeting for lunch near us..as they would be passing...

Just off the A75... the Burns Experience..they had never been and we hadn't for a few years. A good lunch outside, then a wander around the museum.

Our friend's mother's family is Burns from Ayrshire...who knows if there is a connection..but his father was Polish, and brought him up as a good Caithness lad! (Having met his Ayrshire wife in Glasgow)

We picked up on something we had missed previously...Burn's father spelled his surname Burness..and that is a name from Eastern Scotland. Something for further research!

A wander then over to the cottage where Robert Burns and three of his siblings were born, before they moved to Mauchline.

A willow sculpture of Tam o'Shanter
A long cottage with the byre on the left, then two living rooms with the sleeping platform above where the children would have slept..and the garden as it would have been.
A willow sculpture in the orchard, where many fruit trees, mainly Scottish varieties, have been planted
And a woodland walk


Next to the Brig o Doon (bridge over the River Doon) which features in the poem about Tam o'Shanter







We missed the mausoleum...but that was ok...it meant that I got a picture of the gates!!

So we had a really relaxing four hours in the sunshine....and added to that, they are taking a pair of wheels back to a purchaser in Inverness!! The best...cash sale, no fees and no postage!!

12 comments:

The Weaver of Grass said...

I love that willow sculpture of Tam O'Shanter!

Yamini MacLean said...

Hari OM
What a braw day oot! YAM xx

Amy said...

I wonder how many names have been changed over the years that are Scottish based?

Debby said...

Good heavens! If Pat hadn't have pointed it out, I would have never noticed that Tam O'shanter was willow. That is very cool.

It sounds like you have a great stretch of time.

Raewyn said...

((o))
I love the photos and a glimpse at that wee bit of Scottish history. And the willow sculture is very cool.

jeanie said...

Hello from the antipodes (near enough). I came via Debby - very interesting to see some of (for a few of my forbears at least) the home country.

Steve Reed said...

A day out in the sun -- what's not to like? Although that cottage looks pretty dark. Not many windows!

Damselfly said...

Love the willow sculptures!
Looks like a fine day to spend outdoors & with friends.
Stay safe & well.

Amy said...

Definitely a worthy part of history, I'd be interested in the mausoleum

deanna said...

It's nice to again be a virtual tourist on your page. Thanks for the glimpse into another day in your world.

gz said...

Amy we have never been to the mausoleum there, but the one in Dumfries not far from the small cottage in the town where he and Anne Armour lived is worth seeing. We haven't been to Ellisland where he farmed and was an exciseman either, just north of Dumfries

gz said...

Amy, plenty of names that are Gaelic and Scots have been altered