Wednesday 17 June 2015

Day 11 - Kinross to Ballater, 82 miles


We continued from Kinross with a final destination of Balloter, 82 relatively tough miles with a big climb to the ski resort of Glen Shee after lunch. We skirted around Perth crossing the River Tay and then on to Blairgowrie, the Cairngorms and a long descent to Braemar. Finally we passed the Queens country home at Balmoral finishing in highland town of Ballater.



At first it is cloudy, but the sun emerges in patches



Perth, Scotland is different from Perth, Australia. There was no beach, no surfers and no Fosters, but a medieval town, previously known as "St. John's Toun”, dedicated to St John the Baptist (origin of the local football team’s name, St Johnstone).













We cycled past Scone Palace, a Georgian Gothic building and the crowning-place of the Kings of Scots. 

Here 38 Kings of Scots were crowned at the Stone Scone or Stone of Destiny. Well known figures were anointed here include Shakespeare’s Macbeth, Robert the Bruce and Charles II. 



No King of Scots has the right reign unless crowned upon the Stone of Scone.




After Perth we descended through woodland only to be waylaid by traffic works. 






We were told to wait whilst heavy machinery was unloaded. 











This was only 2 minutes above our lunch stop. 
We wait...













...and wait











How long? The traffic is backing up, 20 minutes have passed.























At last we're free to go, but after the cars. Very annoyingly, as the early starters and faster riders lost their right to first pick of the sandwiches.

We travelled north along the A93, passing the stunning Cairngorm landscape climbing higher and higher until a final steeper ascent to the Spittal of Glenshee and Glenshee ski centre for our final brew stop. 






The ascent to Glensshe was a fairly gruelling ‘drag’ (cycle term for long slow climb, not necessarily steep, but this one was moderate at 9-12%).







The photos don't do this breathtaking scenery justice.










Beyond the brew stop the descent was outstanding   ...and fast!


Fabulous views of the Cairngorms, a meandering river and increasing pastureland as the scenic route transformed into broadening landscape, the drama of the mountains receding behind. 




On the very long steep descent, my speedometer hit 48.1mph.









This felt risky.














We crossed over a bridge to Balmoral and, as a sign alerted us, we caught sight of a red squirrel. A live one! Road kill spots that day were very high.













Balmoral has been one of the residences for members of the British Royal Family since 1852, when the estate and its original castle were purchased privately by Prince Albert. They remain as the private property of the royal family and not the Crown.  


Queen Elizabeth was in residence at Balmoral at the time of the death of Diana in 1997. Her private discussions with Prime Minister Tony Blair were dramatised in the Stephen Frears film, The Queen (2006). 

The 1997 film Mrs. Brown with Billy Connolly and Judi Dench (grieving Queen Victoria) was also based at Balmoral. Both of these films touchingly portray the suffering and human face behind these two monarchs.



Ian, Trevor and Tamlin, the super-fast cyclists in our group kindly tolerated me hanging off the back of their peloton. 





Our descent from Kinshee averaged 19.5mph over 26 miles. All good training for my July triathlon.
We cross the river into Ballatter.  I was tired but exhilarated.
Ballater, our highland destination.












Statistics
Distance 82.3 miles
Duration 5:26
Average speed 15.2mph (drafting on the back of SA chain gang + Trevor); final 26 miles were at 19.5mph
Maximum speed - 48.1mph
Climbed 1379m
Heart rate (ave) 99bpm; Max HR (129bpm) - it didn’t feel that low going up Glenshee!
Temp cooler at 12.6 C
Road kill - 4 birds (pigeons x2, unidentifiable x2); 16 small furry mammals - large number of mostly unidentifiable sitings but one definite hare, 2 rabbits and a lamb.

1 comment:

  1. Nice to see a afleetung patch of sunshine.
    the graph does tell the story of the sharp hill.

    ReplyDelete