Boston Herald

Following path of Scotland’s own Robin Hood

- By AMY S. ECKERT CHICAGO TRIBUNE

ABERFOYLE, Scotland — Two hundred years ago, Sir Walter Scott penned one of the world’s great tales, “Rob Roy.” Published in 1817, the book heaped fame on its title character, a man Scott described as “still remembered in his country as the Robin Hood of Scotland, the dread of the wealthy, but the friend of the poor.”

If “Rob Roy” was fiction, the man himself was assuredly not. Born near Loch Katrine in 1671, Robert MacGregor, the Jacobite sympathize­r and eventual outlaw, lived his life mostly within the bounds of modern-day Scotland’s Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park.

On a sunny morning in May, I set off in search of Rob Roy. I was looking for traces of the real man along the long-distance trail called the Rob Roy Way, stretching from the town of Drymen (about 20 miles from Glasgow) northeast to Pitlochry. The 78-mile route meanders along the border between the Scottish Lowlands and Highlands, traversing MacGregor’s chief stomping grounds: the glen where he raised his children, the town where he’s buried and the countrysid­e where he hid from an angry English crown.

I left the logistics — lodging, luggage transporta­tion, etc. — to tour organizer Wilderness Scotland, which can customize a tour to any length. The Rob Roy Way typically takes five to seven days to complete.

From my starting point near Drymen in the town of Aberfoyle, the Rob Roy Way rose gradually, passing through varied topography, beneath stands of towering Scots pine trees, through pastures of skittish sheep and across open heath that Scott described as “a happy interchang­e of bog and shingles (pebbly hillsides).”

Over the course of three days, the countrysid­e grew more dramatic. As the path headed northeast, the 2,000-foot hills called grahams were gradually replaced by 2,500-foot corbetts, and corbetts by 3,000-foot munros. (The Scottish categorize their hills by elevation.) Butteryell­ow gorse and purple rhododendr­ons bloomed in wide-open spaces. Carpets of delicate bluebells, columbines and primroses brightened the forest.

“There is an abundance of wildflower­s along these paths all year long,” said Mary Amos, who was hiking the trail with her husband and their four border collies from their home in Lochearnhe­ad. “Soon the wild orchids will appear,” Amos promised.

It was in this Scottish countrysid­e that Robert MacGregor likely felt most at home. A man of property and a large-scale cattle dealer, MacGregor spent much time riding the

Menteith Hills, checking on stock and selling cattle “protection” to fund the Jacobite cause of restoring deposed King James VII.

When, at age 40, Rob Roy defaulted on a debt, the Duke of Montrose declared him an outlaw. MacGregor had a price on his head. His family was evicted. And a legal prohibitio­n against using the family name forced him to go by his Gaelic nickname, Rob Ruadh. Pronounced “roy,” the word meant “redhead.”

The Scottish Robin Hood, a man on the run from the English and able to disappear into the forest, quickly became legend.

A 2-mile detour from Strathyre took me to the churchyard at Balquhidde­r, the tiny town where Rob Roy lived his adult years and where his grave lies.

Here, in the shadow of an old stone church, a low, steel fence framed the graves of the MacGregor family: Rob Roy; his wife, Mary Helen; and sons Coll and Robert. The headstone bears the clan crest — a roaring, crowned lion — and the words “MacGregor Despite Them,” an epitaph meant to defy the English.

While Rob Roy’s life ended in Balquhidde­r, the trail named for him does not. I continued eastward and upward, past the mirrored surface of Loch Earn, its banks dotted white with sheep. I continued over the stone arches of the Glen Ogle viaduct and through Glen Ogle itself, a steep gorge with a narrow stone footpath at its bottom.

From here, the route descended abruptly into Killin, a resort town famous for its waterfall. The River Dochart rushes over a tumble of rocks in the town center. While I would have liked to linger, I had a castle to check out first.

Just one mile from Killin’s center, Finlarig Castle stands nearly invisible, hidden by a century’s worth of birch and sycamore trees. They say that Rob Roy first took shelter here with the Campbell clan in 1713 not long after being declared an outlaw. The four-story stone sanctuary stood precarious­ly, its time-worn edifice crumbling. A disintegra­ting spiral staircase led to nowhere, stopping abruptly at chest height. Ferns and ivy threatened to rip apart what remained of 300-year-old archways.

“This is absolutely my favorite part of Scotland,” said Suzie Queripel of East Lothian, her ancestors part of the Campbell clan that sheltered Rob Roy. “You’ve got a wee bit of everything here. You’ve got the lochs, you’ve got the mountains. It’s full of magic, atmosphere and beauty.”

 ?? CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS, BOTH PAGES ?? HIDDEN CASTLE: Rob Roy is said to have taken shelter in Finlarig Castle, above. Visitors to Scotland can tour the countrysid­e, complete with Highland cows, opposite, that was home to the real man, including the Glenogle Viaduct near Lochearnhe­ad, below.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE PHOTOS, BOTH PAGES HIDDEN CASTLE: Rob Roy is said to have taken shelter in Finlarig Castle, above. Visitors to Scotland can tour the countrysid­e, complete with Highland cows, opposite, that was home to the real man, including the Glenogle Viaduct near Lochearnhe­ad, below.
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