The Scotsman

Highland hopes

As the Queen enjoys her annual visit to Balmoral, Sarah Marshall takes her mum to nearby Braemar for a restorativ­e post-lockdown break

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A restorativ­e trip to Braemar, Royal Deeside

To aim for the highest point is not the only way to climb a mountain,” wrote Nan Shepherd in her 20th century nature masterpiec­e, The Living Mountain. The Aberdeen-born poet and writer, whose face now adorns the Scottish £5 note, made it her life’s quest to find the “essential nature” of the Cairngorms. In the process of exploring its graceful, gleaming rivers and high plateaus “as delectable as honey”, she discovered a lot about herself too.

Twice the size of the Lake District, East Scotland’s Cairngorms National Park is a wilderness area of crisp, clear lochs, ancient forests and glens bristling with vibrant purple heather. Promising calm, quiet and the freedom of space, it seemed an obvious choice for a post-lockdown adventure with my mum, Gabriella.

Aged over 70 and recovering from heart surgery, my mum had been shielding since March. I’m not a fan of Zoom or Facetime, so when we met at Heathrow airport to catch our flight to Aberdeen, it was the first time I’d seen her in four months.

In a world where every move seems to be dominated by Covid-19, the decision to travel isn’t an easy one to make at any age. But as days disappear and months march on, there’s an urgency to get moving. I’ve never really understood why time accelerate­s with age. The harder we grip, the more it slips away. Maybe it’s the realisatio­n that everything is finite, including us.

Then there was the risk of being indefinite­ly confined by anxiety.

“If I don’t go out soon, I’ll never have the confidence,” my mum confessed.

So, armed with face masks, sanitiser and a sensible degree of caution, we refused to be beaten by fear.

Nan chose to camp her way around the Cairngorms. But we’ve opted for a greater degree of comfort at the Fife Arms, a regal Victorian property in the village of Braemar on the banks of the River Clunie, matched in magnificen­ce to its surroundin­g mountain landscape.

After having our temperatur­es checked, we’re ushered inside by the hotel’s welcoming ghillies who apologise profusely for the impersonal­ity of Perspex panels on reception, visors and the absence of Fife’s bespoke tartan blankets in rooms.

Since the tourism industry emerged from lockdown on 15 July the hotel has adapted to a new and unfamiliar way of working. Rooms are deep cleaned between guests, breakfast buffets have been ditched in favour of timed sittings, and a one-way system is in place throughout the property.

Otherwise, it all feels refreshing­ly normal.

Owned by art dealers Iwan and Manuela Wirth (owners of the Hauser & Wirth gallery), who breathed new life into its rundown shell and re-opened in 2018, the Fife is filled with 16,000 artworks, antiques and collectabl­es.

When you’ve been indoors for so long, everything has a new and shiny appeal. But here in this Disneyland of culture and creativity, my mum has the wide-eyed wonder of a child embracing infinity and beyond.

Paying homage to Braemar’s Victorian roots, furnishing­s reflect the grandeur of that time: an ornately carved walnut wood fireplace depicting works by Robert Burns dominates the reception; chairs upholstere­d in Liberty fabrics decorate the drawing room; and natural history specimens are displayed in curiosity cabinets, or used to create whimsical tableaux in bell jars. Not to everyone’s modern

It’s easy to see why the royals come here to escape and recuperate

PC tastes, one corridor alone has 100 pieces of taxidermy, upstaged only by an eerie waxwork model of Queen Victoria in the library, purchased from Madame Tussaud’s.

If a wall of stags’ heads is divisive, modern artworks incorporat­ing antlers are pleasingly palatable: hanging above the main staircase, Richard Jackson’s Red Deer

Chandelier is a tangle of neon bagpipe drones and glass antlers.

From outspoken sculptures to understate­d sketches, every corner of the Fife is covered in conversati­onprovokin­g art.

Works by Picasso, Brueghel The Younger and Man Ray hang on walls; one of Louise Bourgeois’ bronze spiders straddles the courtyard. But an even more impressive find are some watercolou­rs of royal estates painted by Prince Charles and a sketch by Queen Victoria of a stag shot by her close confidant John Brown.

Braemar’s relationsh­ip with royalty reaches back to 1852 when Prince Albert purchased Balmoral Estate for his sovereign wife. “She was passionate about this place,” Katy Fennema of Braemar Highland Experience tells me. The former musician, whose family have 300 years of history in the area, now runs local history, wilderness and wildlife tours with her husband, Julian.

During a morning driving tour, she shares tales of brigands hung from tree boughs, and delights in stories of Chanel’s fashion rival Elsa Schiaparel­li, who became fascinated with Braemar when her friend,

Vogue editor Frances Lovell Oldham, married a laird. The two ladies would literally go on to paint parts of the town shocking pink, and an art deco bar at the Fife is named after Elsa.

Much of the land here has been shaped by aristocrac­y. Patchworks of charred heather on the hillside are the remnants of controlled burns, used to boost a grouse population in time for shoots.

Yet so much remains wild. Along the Queen’s Drive walking trail, trees are laden with tufty beards of lichen, an indicator of the air’s purity.

At 5:30am one morning, mum and I ramble through the Morrone Birkwood, a relic of deciduous woodland that once covered the Cairngorms. On the way up, we watch hares and red squirrels scamper through a stadium used to host the Braemar Gathering, one of the most popular Highland Games. And we detour past the house where Robert Louis Stevenson spent a miserable, rainy three months in 1881, emerging with the first 16 chapters of Treasure

Island.

It’s a very different scene today. Sunlight splinters through gate pickets as we clamber onto a trail scattered with pinecones. Streams trickle melodicall­y from the mountainsi­de and the scent of honeysuckl­e is dizzying.

Juniper, blaeberrie­s, meadowswee­t and yarrow – so many plants thrive in this healthy environmen­t. Later in the day, herbalist and forager Natasha Lloyd introduces us to her open-air medicine cabinet. She recommends treatments for my mum’s liver, and I learn how to eat a raw nettle without getting stung. The common nettle is packed with vitamin D, which may boost the immune system against respirator­y viruses such as Covid-19.

Fortunatel­y, there were no cases of coronaviru­s in Braemar. Although one famous figure down the road made headlines: Prince Charles selfisolat­ed at Balmoral when he fell ill at the beginning of lockdown.

It’s easy to see why the royals come here to escape and recuperate. This month, the Queen arrived for her annual summer holiday. We follow one of her favourite trails through the Ballochbui­e Forest, a protected tract of 300-year-old pines saved from felling by Queen Victoria, leading to the Honka Hut – a simple cabin where Elizabeth II likes to picnic.

In the past, hikers claim to have “run-into” Her Royal Highness walking the corgis, but blissfully, we don’t see a soul.

It was silence and solitude that guided Nan Shepherd into the mountains. Similarly, it helps my mum readjust to an outside world fraught with complicati­ons, but beautiful at its core. ■

Rooms at the Fife Arms start from £230 (including breakfast) in a Croft Room. For more informatio­n or to book, visit thefifearm­s.com

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 ??  ?? The spectaular Upper Deeside landscape, main; the Queen’s Drive trail, above
The spectaular Upper Deeside landscape, main; the Queen’s Drive trail, above
 ??  ?? Sarah Marshall’s mum, Gabriella, on the Queen’s Drive trail
Sarah Marshall’s mum, Gabriella, on the Queen’s Drive trail

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