First time in Europe I would hit the big stuff; three days back in London, another three in Paris and fly home from Paris. Save the sidetrips through the countryside for your fourth or fifth trip over there.
Any "can't miss" recommendations? What are the top 5 places you visited?AGROAg88 said:
Spent 23 days tooling around Scotland in 2023. Trains and buses will get you anywhere you want to go, including small towns. If you rent a car, watch some videos on navigating roundaboutsreally the only challenging things. We visited 5 or 6 distilleries. All tours include ~4 pours of various whiskies. All distilleries were happy to provide to-go bottles with screw-top lids that the driver can take with them to enjoy later. Plenty of castles/museums/pubs and restaurants to enjoy if the weather outside is unpleasant. Enjoy!
Looks like most of the places you mentioned are north of Glasgow/Edinburgh. What's that area like in March? Still worth going?AGROAg88 said:
Wife and I did a ~65 mile walk along the Speyside River, from Buckie to Aviemore. The company (Gemini Walks) arranged for a room at a guesthouse or B&B, then hauled your suitcase to the next night's venue. They all fed you breakfast and most had a sack-lunch purchase option. Gorgeous area with surprisingly few walkers.
We spent a couple of nights in Edinburgh (castle tour was nice, and the military band tattoo is supposed to be fantastic) and a couple in Inverness/Culloden battlefield. We caught the Highland Games in a little town called Dufftown. It was a blastthink small town Texas rodeo fair with bagpipes and tug-of-war.
Distilleries are all over, with generally similar tours. The newer ones don't have as much to offer, so some of them have food pairings/chocolate tastings. My favorites were Strathisla, Oban and Cragganmore. If you enjoy whisky, it's heaven. We went into a bar in Craigellachie with a huge selection, arranged by "Made within 1 mile of this bar, 5 miles, 10 miles, 50 miles".
Definitely on my "visit again" list.
Can someone explain the Railcard on the app? Does this only apply in London or is it applicable to/from Scotland or other countries?Danger Mouse said:I strongly suggest getting the Trainline mobile app., which will provide you with all the necessary rail information/options you need when taking the train from Point A to Point B.reedsterg said:What are your thoughts on the train from London vs the train from Manchester as someone mentioned above? Looks to me like it's only about an hour difference, but seems like it would be more.Matsui said:
It is very nice 4 hours or so. get the first class seat
Also recommend getting 1st class when traveling long distance. Will have wifi and usually more room than traveling coach.