The Sunday Post (Inverness)

An empty landscape, packed with history and crammed with memories: Writer on his very personal tour of the high country

- By Patricia-ann Young payoung@sundaypost.com The Highlands by Paul Murton is published by Birlinn

In the obliterati­ng darkness, drenched by torrential rain, beneath the shadow of Buachaille Etive Mor, Paul Murton struggled to dampen a growing sense of dread.

The elements were foreboding enough but the teenager’s rising terror had more to do with the Creag Dhu mountainee­ring club, nicknamed the Glencoe Mafia and made up of tough, hard men from Glasgow. Legend had it that the group would menace any unsuspecti­ng mountainee­rs they found sheltering for the night in their Jacksonvil­le bothy, and Murton had given their patch a wide berth on every previous visit.

This night, however, Murton and his friend had struggled to hitchhike and arrived to the glen late, well after the sun had set and facing down intensely bad weather that made it impossible for them to pitch their tent. The pair had no choice but to seek shelter at the infamous bothy although, much to their relief, found the hut empty on arrival. Still, the boys were so afraid of being discovered they refused to light any candles or use torches, petrified they would give themselves away to an angry Creag Dhu member.

Today, Murton, one of Scotland’s most popular presenters behind a series of travel programmes charting the Highlands and islands, can laugh about his schoolboy fear but admits his treks through the high country can still make him a little nervous – although he says that is a part of what draws him there.

He said: “The Highlands can be scary. The mountains can be dangerous and the weather can be dangerous. But if there was no danger there would be no excitement. I think the whole point of the Highlands is there is that wee frisson of danger to the experience. It’s a challenge, but it’s good to have a challenge and to measure yourself against it,” said Murton.

“If you go to Edinburgh Castle you won’t feel anything because you’re surrounded by thousands of people. You’re not going to have a strong atmosphere, but some places do, like the ruins of a wee township. You can sit in the doorway of these ruined houses and get a strong sense of the people who lived there. There’s plenty of places like that in Scotland.”

Murton was fascinated by the Highlands even as a small child, growing up on its borders on the shores of Loch Long, looking out to the Arrochar Alps and Breadalban­e. His love for exploratio­n was fostered by his father, whose idea of the perfect family holiday was following a winding road into the Highlands, only stopping to set up camp somewhere beautiful they had never been before.

The Highlands called to Murton even when he grew up and moved

away, first to university in Aberdeen when he would often return to climb and explore on weekends to de-stress from the responsibi­lities of coursework. His new book, The Highlands, is part travel guide and part a hike down memory lane. Murton, who has presented hit TV shows like Grand Tours Of Scotland and Scotland’s Clans, uses the book to give readers insight into the history of some of the Highland’s most famous landmarks, all the while weaving in his own personal experience­s of these areas too.

“If you know a country or a city or a town really well, its various landmarks can form an index of your life. It’s almost as if your own story is written into its landscape. I’ve got a very intimate relationsh­ip with the Scottish Highlands because it’s part of my story,” said Murton. Some of Murton’s anecdotes are from the recent past, recounting his travels through the cliffs and gullies of Coire an t-sneachda with friend and actor Greg Wise, while others hark back to his days as a 13-yearold hitchhiker, alone for the first time in the Scottish mountains. Unlike travel guides designed to get the reader from A to B, or the fantastica­l but remote romances of Sir Walter Scott, Murton’s book populates the often empty landscapes with memories, his

own and others, bringing them alive for readers, a place of excitement and adventure and even danger.

Murton was inspired to thread the personal throughout his book by inspiratio­nal predecesso­rs, travel writers from the past who loved the Highlands then just as much as he does now. The first was Scottish mountainee­r WH Murray, who wrote his book Mountainee­ring In Scotland while he was a prisoner of war and missing home during the Second World War. The second was the remarkable Sarah Murray (no relation), a 52-year-old English widow who ventured into the Highlands to better understand her late Scottish husband in the summer of 1796. Her book about the experience, A Companion And Useful Guide to The Beauties of Scotland, was published in 1799.

“She was a gentlewoma­n living in Kensington in London and married later in life to John Murray, a Scotsman. He died early in the marriage, and to remember him better she went on this pilgrimage in his honour to the Scottish Highlands. She was a woman travelling alone with a driver in a horse-drawn cart, which was very unusual. When she wrote, she loved describing torrential rain and getting soaked to the skin and enjoying waterfalls.”

Murton added: “She was great and in a way that was my approach to writing The Highlands. It was based on her idea of incorporat­ing the personal, because it really gives you this wonderful sense of place.”

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 ??  ?? Trip to stunning Buachaille Etive Mor, above, was an epiphany for presenter Paul Murton, below
Trip to stunning Buachaille Etive Mor, above, was an epiphany for presenter Paul Murton, below

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