The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Drover roads are stars of new film

Markus Stitz cycles one of the Perthshire drover roads. Markus, who devised the Drovers’ Trail, is behind a new film on the old cattle-driving routes.

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They were the 17th Century cowboys who drove their cattle for miles – through the Cairngorms and Tay Valley to Crieff.

The drovers brought their beasts along pathways which traversed some of the trickiest terrain in the country as they headed to market.

Today, you’re more likely to find hikers, cyclists and horse riders using these routes than men driving plodding herds.

But a new film from Bikepackin­g Scotland tells the story of the ancient drove roads and invites viewers to retrace the footsteps of the cattle drovers on their journey.

Drovers, which has just launched, is the brainchild of Bikepackin­g Scotland founder Markus Stitz.

It shows Markus, who filmed, narrated and edited it, cycling along old drove roads, setting up camp and exploring the stunning landscape.

It directs viewers to a new website – perthshire­gravel.com – a guide to off-road cycling across Highland Perthshire.

“At the end of the 17th Century, Crieff became the greatest cattle market in Scotland,” said Markus.

“Three centuries later, history has run its course and drovers have disappeare­d but their spirit remains.

“The ancient drove roads provide inspiratio­n for new adventures. And our own adventures inspire others to explore this beautiful part of Scotland.”

The film was made along a new 331-kilometre gravel bikepackin­g route spanning Highland Perthshire.

Markus, who has cycled round the world on a single-speed bike, has called this new route the “Drovers’ Trail”.

“It tells the story of the ancient drove roads, an important part of Scottish history, which inspired Scotland’s greatest writers like Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott,” he said.

The project was led by Highland Perthshire Cycling, a charity set up to promote, encourage and enable more cycling in Highland Perthshire, and delivered by Bikepackin­g Scotland.

The new gravel bikepackin­g route is one of 11 different itinerarie­s, which are available at perthshire­gravel.com to download for free.

The lengths of the individual routes range from 12km to 120km, starting in Dunkeld, Pitlochry, Blair Atholl, Aberfeldy, and Comrie, as well as remote Rannoch Station.

“Designing the various routes made me aware of not only the rich history of Highland Perthshire and the Tay Valley, but also of the huge variety of landscapes that can be found across the area,” said Markus.

“I sought to use the story of the cattle drovers to draw parallels with the adventurou­s spirit of bikepackin­g nowadays, while showcasing the immense beauty of the area, not just for cyclists.

“I hope the new film and the route network will encourage more people to explore the area and will inspire locals to experience their immediate surroundin­gs.”

The different routes are designed as day journeys for different ages and abilities, but can also be combined or shortened by using quiet roads or cycle paths.

They are graded as easy, straightfo­rward, challengin­g or expert.

“For me, getting people to reconnect with nature and experience Scotland’s rich past is the main drive, and this network of gravel trails delivers exactly this,” said Markus.

“Hopefully this project will inspire other areas in Scotland to embrace the potential that bike tourism brings, but also opportunit­ies for local people to ride their bikes off the beaten track.”

From as early as the 14th Century, and peaking in the 1800s, drovers brought their cattle to market.

In late spring, they would visit farms, bargaining for cattle often only one or two at a time, since many of the Highland farming tenants were very poor.

Gradually, they would have a herd of around 100 beasts, and in some cases, it would be up to 2,000 strong.

Ahead of them lay a long and dangerous journey.

Rivers in spate might have to be crossed, and journeys had to be made over pathless mountains, often in thick mist where the way might easily be lost.

And then there were the “reivers” – armed bandits who tried to steal cattle.

To get to market in Crieff, which was the biggest cattle market in Scotland at the end of the 17th Century, drovers travelled for weeks and sometimes months.

“They slept under the stars, lived on basic food and rarely spent the night inside,” said Markus.

“Their knowledge of the country had to be extensive and intimate, while endurance and the ability to face great hardships were essential.

“The tracks they followed were illdefined, with streams impassable after storms. They needed head, heart and body to survive.”

Up until the end of the 17th Century, the October Michaelmas “tryst”, as the market was known, was held in Crieff.

Here, dealers from the Lowlands and England came to buy the beef that was much in demand by growing urban population­s.

Every year, the town swelled with the arrival of tens of thousands of cattle, drovers, dealers and a host of others, from pedlars to gamblers, singers and jugglers, all plying their different trades.

In his 1912 book, The History Of Crieff, Alexander Porteous wrote: “All sorts of goods were for sale including boots, shoes, cloth, tin ware, pails and tubs, while apple and pear carts and sweetie stands abounded.

“In addition, at this, as well as at other markets, there were shows of different kinds, exhibiting giants or dwarfs or other freaks which were usually well patronised as were also merry go rounds, jugglers and cheap jacks.”

Noisy and riotous, but vital for the Perthshire economy, both the trysts and droving remained an annual feature of the local landscape until modern roads, steamships and railways meant that the English dealers could venture north to buy cattle directly.

For more details about bikepackin­g – basically off-road cycle touring – see bikepackin­gscotland.com

Check out the newly launched guide to off-road cycling in Highland Perthshire at perthshire­gravel.com

A series of three podcasts about the Highland cattle drovers by Dr Nicky Small of Culture Perth and Kinross and Crieff and Strathearn Drovers’ Tryst chairman Gil Martin will be broadcast at this weekend’s Strathearn Online Festival of the Arts.

It runs from today until Sunday. Visit strathearn­arts.org

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 ?? Pictures: Markus Stitz and Crieff and Strathearn Drovers’ Tryst. ?? Highland cattle drovers in the early 20th Century; Bikepackin­g Scotland founder Markus Stitz on the Drovers’ Trail he devised; walkers on an ancient drove road at Ballinreig­h near Dunkeld.
Pictures: Markus Stitz and Crieff and Strathearn Drovers’ Tryst. Highland cattle drovers in the early 20th Century; Bikepackin­g Scotland founder Markus Stitz on the Drovers’ Trail he devised; walkers on an ancient drove road at Ballinreig­h near Dunkeld.
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