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Five Fun Tours in Edinburgh Scotland: Whisky, Royal Family, Castles And More

EDINBURGH – This one of the world’s great cities; a handsome, sturdy, regal place of stone and rock and history that seeps into your bones. There are also lovely gardens, sumptuous hotels, excellent food, and, yes, the odd place to try a wee sip of whisky.

I recently visited for a few days and did five tours that included the Royal Mile, the Palace at HolyroodHouse, Edinburgh Castle, the Royal Yacht Britannia and a Johnnie Walker whisky experience.  Here’s a look at all five.

MERCAT ROYAL MILE AND EDINBURGH CASTLE TOUR

The Mercat Secrets of the Royal Mile Tour (Mercat is Scottish for market) is a very entertaining, history-filled tour that covers lots of ground. We had a wonderful guide named Veni, who said she was named after Venice, grew up in Germany, but fell in love with Scotland and moved here a couple decades ago.

Veni told us the land between the castle and the Palace of Holyrood House is called the Royal Mile, but that it’s actually a mile and 106 yards. Close enough for government work, I say.

At one time, the rocky promenade that the castle now sits on was a volcano, and lava flowed hot and mighty down its eastern side, creating the gently sloping hill where the Royal Mile is now found. The original settlement here was built two to three thousand years ago and called Dunedin, or fortress on the hill.

The Royal Mile in Edinburgh, Scotland. JIM BYERS PHOTO

The Royal Mile in Edinburgh, Scotland. JIM BYERS PHOTO

Early on, Veni asked our group what we thought the number one form of entertainment was in the city hundreds of years ago. “Executions and torture,” she said. We were told there’s a nearby bar called “The Last Drop,” which refers not only to the last bit of liquid in a bottle of whisky, but the last time a criminal would feel the weight of gravity.

Outside St. Giles Cathedral (founded 899 years ago) she pointed out a statue of King Charles II on a horse that dates back to 1685. The horse was apparently hollow, and cracks allowed it to fill with water over the years. Authorities supposedly drilled a hole in the horse’s backside to relieve the pressure, which created what locals called the statue of the Piddling Pony.

“Ladies would avert their eyes when they walked past,” Veni said with a sly grin.

John Knox, the founder of the Scottish Presbyterian Church, wanted to be buried near the Cathedral, and was. Later, town officials decided to move the burial ground and create a parking lot on the very ground. They did just that, but left Knox where he was and put a small plaque in the ground to show where he’s buried. Knox is one of the most famous people in this country’s history, but there he is, buried under car park spot number 23, albeit with a spiffy plaque. Veni told us the cathedral priest has the coveted parking spot, which seems fair.

Outside the cathedral you’ll also find a mosaic etched in the sidewalk, called The Heart of Midlothian, Midlothian being a county in the Edinburgh area. Fans of the Heart of Midlothian football team are said to spit on it for good luck. Rival fans of the Hibernia club spit on it out of disdain, Veni said. As she explains about modern football and two approaches to the heart, I hear an older street performer a few steps away crooning “I’ve looked at love from both sides now.”

We also prattle down Tweeddale Court to see old city walls that dates back to the mid 1400’s. After returning home I read that the court was featured in an episode of the TV show, “Outlander.”

The Royal Mile being a rather popular spot for tourists, we also passed numerous gift shops selling tartans and other Scottish gear. I smiled at a hosiery store called “Soctopus,” and moaned at a gift shop sign that reads “Thistle Do Nicely.”

Veni also told the story of a famous physician who lived in Edinburgh back in the day and believed in walking as much as possible. This was in the day when dignitaries were carried about in covered carriages (sedan chairs) that rested on long poles. The doctor wore a wig in public, but he didn’t want it to get wet. If it was raining he would place it in the covered sedan chair and walk home bare-headed. The wig stayed dry and was safely taken home by the physician’s sedan chair carriers.

Before heading up the former lava flow to Edinburgh Castle, Veni pointed out the Balmoral Hotel, where author JK Rowling retreated to write some of her books when fans around here became as thick as customers at 5 p.m. on a Friday at The Last Drop.

Veni, our tour guide in Edinburgh with Mercat Tours. JIM BYERS PHOTO

Veni, our tour guide in Edinburgh with Mercat Tours. JIM BYERS PHOTO

At the castle, we learned that the fortifications exchanged hands between the Scots and English many times. It’s been burned, dismantled and rebuilt, but remains a powerful, unique symbol of the city.

Our last stop was a quick visit to see some of the crown jewels on display. The most notable are what’s called The Honours of Scotland, which are the oldest crown jewels in Britain. They include a red crown ringed with silver, gold and precious jewels that was first worn by King James V in 1540.

If you opt for the package that includes Edinburgh Castle you can skip the line-up for castle tickets. Mercat Tours also runs ghost tours, Halloween tours, witch tours, whisky tours and more.

COST: The Mercat Royal Mile tour without Edinburgh Castle costs 22 GBP for adults and 17 GBP for kids (roughly $37 CAD for adults and $28 for kids, and about $27 USD for adults and $21 for kids).

ROYAL YACHT BRITANNIA

The world’s fascination with the British Royal Family never seems to diminish, and Edinburgh is a great place to explore their history and habits.

The Royal Yacht Britannia was one of the late Queen Elizabeth II’s favourite possessions, and you can take a tour of her (the boat, not the queen) on the Edinburgh waterfront. It’s a massive ship that weighs in almost 6,000 tons and stretches 412 feet and 3 inches, making her a little than one-third the size of Cunard’s Queen Mary II.

The Royal Yacht Britannia in Edinburgh. Visit Scotland-Kenny Lam Photo

The Royal Yacht Britannia in Edinburgh. Visit Scotland-Kenny Lam Photo

You can book a private tour, but we opted for the audio tour, which requires a good 90 minutes to complete.

I was amused straightaway by the audio description, which insisted with a seemingly straight voice that the emphasis for the Royal Yacht Britannia was simplicity. Ahem. It’s true that all the beds (except the double mattress used by Prince Charles and Diana for their honeymoon) are singles. And it’s also true that the Queen’s quarters are relatively modest; more Vancouver Hyatt than Paris Ritz-Carlton. But the Royal Family insisted on having a Rolls Royce on board at one point, and it’s said it took three hours to set the dining room table with ornate silver for visiting dignitaries such as Bill Clinton and Nelson Mandela.

 

Still, it’s interesting to hear how the ship was launched in 1953 and ultimately decommissioned (much to the Queen’s dismay) in 1997. It’s also instructive to see the staff quarters down below, which featured lots of bunk beds and a stack of cassette tapes.

It’s a fun tour for people of all ages, and they’re strategically placed stuffed toy Corgi dogs in various parts of the ship for a game kids can play. There is, naturally, an immense gift shop with Corgis and royal doodads of all kinds. They also do special events, including dinners in the dining room and Hogmanay (New Year’s Eve) programs.

The Royal Yacht Britannia in Edinburgh. JIM BYERS PHOTO

The Royal Yacht Britannia in Edinburgh. JIM BYERS PHOTO

As you walk towards the ship, look for the photo of Diana greeting Harry and William on a visit to Toronto. It’s one of the best photos I’ve seen of her; bursting with exuberance and shining love. In retrospect, it’s heartbreaking.

COST: $18.50 GBP (About $31 CAD and $22.50 USD). Discounts for students, families and others.

NOTE: You’ll find the Royal Yacht Britannia in the Leith area of Edinburgh. Time Out Magazine just named Leith one of the top 20 coolest neighbourhoods in the world.

PALACE AT HOLYROOD HOUSE

At the end of the Royal Mile you’ll find the Palace at Holyroodhouse, where the royal family stays when they have business to conduct in Edinburgh. The audio tour doesn’t try to play down the pizzazz, including a royal bed rimmed by deep red curtains, 16th century tapestries and a large dining room that no doubt hosted some lively conversations over the years. Above the grand staircase, check out the life-size angel holding the Scottish crown.

Just outside the former bedchamber of Mary Queen of Scots is one of the most famous areas in the palace. It’s where Mary’s private secretary, David Rizzio, was killed by her jealous husband and a gang of Scottish lords. Poor Rizzio was stabbed 56 times, and his body left on display for all to see. I didn’t see it, but some say you can still spot blood stains in the floor.

The Palace of Holyrood House in Edinburgh .Visit Scotland-Kenny Lam Photo

The Palace of Holyrood House in Edinburgh .Visit Scotland-Kenny Lam Photo

As you progress through the palace, each room seems to be more and more posh. Our audio narrator explained that it was designed that way, seemingly so the guest would be so overcome or discombobulated by the time they his or her majesty that they’d simply stare, or perhaps give in to the royal request of the day with a mindless nod.

The ruins of the medieval abbey out back (it was built in 1128) are very cool and mysterious, and there are lovely gardens brimming with brilliant flowers.

COST $18 GBP for an advance adult ticket (about $30 CAD or $22 USD)

REAL MARY KING’S CLOSE

This is a tour where someone in costume leads you into a narrow close, which is what the Scots call the tiny laneways that lead down the hill from the Royal Mile. The Real Mary King’s Close is in the heart of the mile, just across from St. Giles Cathedral. It’s a fun way to learn about the city’s colourful history and how people lived.

Our guide told us that people with money burned beeswax for light in the dark rooms of the close, but that the poor had to burn cow fat or fish oil which made the city aromatic enough to smell from a mile away.

We also saw the replica of the type of room where Mary Queen of Scots might have stayed back in the day. Apparently she only spent one day in the city in her life, and that was the night before she abdicated. Her loss, I say.

One of the more gruesome parts of the tour focuses on the plague. We learned there was both a bubonic plague (roughly 50% survival rate) and a pneumonic plague, which killed something like 95% of its victims. Bubonic plague victims developed immense boils that were sometimes the size of a fist, which would be opened and then lanced with a burning stick.

The Real Mary King's Close Tour in Edinburgh, Scotland.

The Real Mary King’s Close Tour in Edinburgh, Scotland.

There was also some ghost talk, of course, and (to my mind) a little too much talk about emptying of bed pans in tight quarters. It was a task that was usually accompanied by a warning shout of “gardy loo,” which is rough French translation of “gardez l’eau,” or “watch out for the water.”

 A true history scholar might scoff at this tour, but it’s a fun attraction that a family would probably enjoy.

Cost: 21 GBP and up for adults ($26 USD, roughly $35 CAD), 15 GBP for those 15 and under.

THE JOHNNIE WALKER WHISKY EXPERIENCE

The Johnnie Walker Princes Street Edinburgh Whisky Experience isn’t really a tour so much as a high-tech, whisky extravaganza. That being said, it’s fairly educational, quite engaging, and very tasty.

Before you start, you’re asked to tell them a little bit about yourself to build a flavour profile for the type of whisky (most folks here don’t call it Scotch; it’s just whisky) you might like. For example, you might be asked, “How often do you eat a banana,” or “How do you feel about rosemary?” Once they’ve established your flavour faves, you’re given a wrist band in a certain colour that you will use later to create a whisky cocktail you might like.

Our guide/host, Patrick, was an entertaining fellow with a very good sense of humour, and not overly cheesy. Most Scots would run screaming into the night if you mixed whisky and Coke, but Patrick insisted there are no rules.

After his intro, we went into a small theatre with a woman reclining in a chair, drinking a (mock we assume) glass of whisky. She quickly rose up and did an active talk about the distillery’s history in front of a screen flashing bright images while she moved about and mimicked the “Johnnie Walker walking man” logo.

Johnnie Walker Princes Street. Visit Scotland-Kenny Lam Photo

Johnnie Walker Princes Street. Visit Scotland-Kenny Lam Photo

We learned that Dear John got started in business when he opened a grocery store in the Scottish town of Kilmarnock in 1820. He brought in tea from around the world and (light bulb moment approaching) and started blending the best ones into special mixes. One magical day he awoke and decided to try the same thing with whisky, which was pretty rough around the edges at the time.

Voila! Blended whisky was born. Some single malt afficionados may frown, but with Johnnie Walker you get dozens and dozens of single malt products blended into a bottle that tastes identical year after year after year.

The company later began slapping the labels on at a jaunty angle to make them stand out on a store shelf. In 1908, the “Striding Man” logo was created, a symbol that is now recognized around the world but likely netted its creator a few measly shillings.

Distilled grain and water is a big deal in Scotland, probably even more important to the Scottish psyche than wine is to the French. Somewhere in her discussion our performing walker/entertainer/lecturer issued a wise comment: “You can’t separate whisky from Scottish culture, and you can’t separate Scottish culture from whisky.”

Johnnie Walker Princes Street, Edinburgh, Scotland. JIM BYERS PHOTO

The Johnnie Walker Princes Street Edinburgh Whisky Experience tour in Scotland. JIM BYERS PHOTO

Following her performance, it was time to enter a bright tasting room, where a machine served up a whisky and soda cocktail that matched our flavour profile. Guests then choose from a variety of bits to float on top for added flavour, including everything from dried pineapple to sun-dried tomatoes.

After passing a sign that said “Today’s rain is tomorrow’s whisky,” we learned more about how whisky is made. There’s only water, yeast and barley, we were told. Some whisky is air dried, but some is dried over peat for that smoky flavour that many whisky drinkers adore.

Our final stop was a tasting room, where we were able to order drams of whisky to try on their own or have the bartenders create something special. I chose a spicy old-fashioned with Johnnie Walker Black Label whisky, a bit of tawny port, a few drops of Angostura bitters, and some crystallized ginger. My notes are a little hazy but I seem to recall proposing to the bartender.

Tickets cost 30 GBP (roughly $50 CAD or $37 USD). You also get 10% off in the gift shop, so that’s a bonus.

GETTING THERE: Air Canada flies directly from Toronto to Edinburgh.

HOTELS: More to come later, but we stayed one night at the posh and historic Balmoral Hotel, part of the Rocco Forte Collection, and three nights at the relatively new Virgin Hotel, which was wonderful.

MORE INFORMATION: www.visitscotland.org.