The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Links to tragic monarch will be seen from the sky

Flights will capitalise on rich history of Kinross-shire

- KirsTy mcinTosh kmcintosh@thecourier.co.uk

A series of leisure flights over Loch Leven are to celebrate Kinross-shire’s links to Scotland’s most tragic monarch.

Visitors to the area will be able to get a bird’s eye view of the places which played a crucial role in the life of the 16th Century queen.

Mary Queen of Scots was imprisoned at Loch Leven Castle for almost a year, until her escape on May 2 1568. There she miscarried twins and, just days later, was forced to renounce her throne in favour of her infant son James VI.

The flights, which will be run by the Balado Micro-Light Academy, are part of a larger bid to capitalise on the area’s links to the queen, and the first flights will run alongside the Mary Queen of Scots Festival this weekend.

The idea was suggested to Academy owner Keith Edwards by Graham Hadley, of Mary Queen of Scots Enterprise­s.

He said: “I went out on a flight and it’s quite fun – you can zip up for a 45minute flight over the whole area where Mary Queen of Scots used to ride and hunt and hawk.

“It’s an amazing experience to dive down low over Loch Leven Castle, then you can go over the Lomond hills where there are lots of thermals and swoop down on Falkland Place, which was a favourite of King James and was also visited by Mary Queen of Scots.

“I gave him a nudge – I said to him that it could be another string to his bow, as well as promoting the Mary Queen of Scots links.”

Graham has previously “trademarke­d” the queen by designing a coin-style image of the queen, which bears the words Maria Regina Scotia – Mary Queen of Scots. It has already been placed on products ranging from whisky to shortbread.

The first product in the line-up was a blended whisky and fudge made with the whisky will be available for the first time at the festival in Kinross tomorrow and Sunday.

Organisers are hoping that this year’s event will draw record crowds.

Linking in with Scotland’s Year of History, Heritage and Archaeolog­y 2017, the festival will feature a live jousting event and a recreation of Queen Mary’s court.

Thomas Moffat, of Visit Dunfermlin­e, said: “Drawing attention to, and celebratin­g our famous historical figures provides terrific opportunit­ies for the local towns they are associated with. Locals and tourists are attracted by the history and pageantry of the occasion.”

 ?? Picture: Aerial Photograph­y Solutions. ?? Mary Queen of Scots was imprisoned at Loch Leven Castle for almost a year.
Picture: Aerial Photograph­y Solutions. Mary Queen of Scots was imprisoned at Loch Leven Castle for almost a year.

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