The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Write of way: Path of a gentle poet

Scotlandwe­ll and Kinnesswoo­d, Perth and Kinross

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Michael Bruce, an 18th Century writer, has been described as the best Scottish poet you have probably never heard of, a bard whose work inspired the legendary Robert Burns and may have become more widely read and appreciate­d had he not been claimed by consumptio­n at the tender age 21.

The Gentle Poet of Lochleven, Bruce is well remembered in the Perthshire village of Kinnesswoo­d, where he was born in 1746 and penned his final ode Elegy Written in Spring in 1767.

The cottage where he grew up is now a museum devoted to his life and works while a waymarked trail – the Michael Bruce Way – links Kinnesswoo­d with Scotlandwe­ll, where he was laid to rest in the graveyard of Portmoak Parish Church. It was from here that I headed out to explore the lands east of Loch Leven, the countrysid­e that inspired Bruce, following in part the poet’s path.

It climbs from the 19th Century kirk into Kilmagad Wood, rising along the edge of a fenced plantation of younger native trees and up through establishe­d oak, beech, silver birch and sycamore before contouring north.

Emerging from the trees at a kissing gate, take a moorland path up, crossing the bracken and heather-clad lower slopes of Bishop Hill, passing above Kinnesswoo­d’s golf course, to a junction where a path dips left to the village.

Keen to enjoy the airy open hillside and its rousing vista over Loch Leven a little longer, I branched right here, the way meeting up with and following the line of a fence running above the houses.

Soon it was time to bow down into Kinnesswoo­d and, below a wooden gate, a path joins The Cobbles, a narrow lane descending past Rose Cottage, Bruce’s family home where visitors can see a collection of his manuscript­s and read volumes of his verse (access is by key obtained from the garage in the village).

At the foot of The Cobbles, I joined the main road and, after visiting the local informatio­n point, housed in a bus shelter, I tramped the roadside footpath to Easter Balgedie.

You can continue along the A911 to Wester Balgedie but branching right on the waymarked Dryside Road path, primarily farm track, is a pleasant deviation from the traffic with fine views of Bishop Hill and, later, West Lomond.

Beyond Wester Balgedie, where one of the country’s lowest trig points sits on the roadside verge, a path – part of the long-distance National Cycle Network Route 1 – descends past Loch Leven’s Larder and a cricket ground towards Loch Leven.

Scotland’s largest lowland loch, home to one of the biggest population­s of breeding ducks in Europe, attracts huge numbers of migratory swans and geese during the winter.

A 13-mile trail circles the water and, hiking clockwise, I followed it south to Grahamston­e where a track breaks left through woodland and leads onward over agricultur­al land to Kinnesswoo­d.

Spotting Portmoak’s wee kirk dead ahead, I cut along a slim path running between a fence and drainage ditch to Portmoak Community Woodland where a marked trail to Scotlandwe­ll skirts the fringes of Portmoak Moss, the final verse in this literary trail.

ROUTE

1. Turn right out of car park and walk 150m along A911. Turn left (signed Kinnesswoo­d) and ascend path, swinging left at top of fence to junction. Turn left (signed Kinnesswoo­d).

2. Exit woodland at gate and continue ahead for 350m then branch right to fence. Turn right, following path running alongside fence.

3. Cross stream, continue above mast and wooden house then descend left through gate, down path then The Cobbles into Kinnesswoo­d.

4. Go right, along A911, to Easter Balgedie.

5. Branch right (signed Glenlomond) then bear left along farm track.

6. Turn left and descend road to Wester Balgedie. Go right on A911 to inn then bear left, remaining on A911.

7. Branch left, descending path to Loch Leven Heritage Trail and turn left for Grahamston­e.

8. Turn left (signed Kinnesswoo­d), following woodland path then surfaced track.

9. Where track swings left proceed ahead on path by fence to Portmoak Community Woodland and follow waymarked path to Scotlandwe­ll. Go left up B920 then A911 to church.

 ??  ?? Panoramic views, peaceful woodland paths and the chance to follow in a poet’s footsteps are among the attraction­s of this week’s walk.
Panoramic views, peaceful woodland paths and the chance to follow in a poet’s footsteps are among the attraction­s of this week’s walk.
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