Some places you visit don't even register as a fleeting blip in your memory. Some, impress a long-term stamp on your visual cortex. Others burn into your psyche like glowing coals: distilled into dreams, rehatched and rehashed and reminisced into myth and legend.
When I was a wee babbling bairn, toddling around the heather strewn highlands of Scotland, we moved around from place to place with alarming regularity: Edinburgh, Crail, St Andrews, Aberdeen, Inverness, Dingwall... And one place in particular left an undying memorial ember that has to glowed ever stronger for the last 36 years.
Farr Mains. A lovely little estate near the oft-mapless hamlet of Farr a few miles southwest of inverness. Our family was lucky to be able to rent this place for a year from the Murray's, a military family often stationed in the far pavillions of the ever-dwindling empire.
A large, solid, bright and airy home, its sunny face looking south over glorious grazing land and the low rolling hills at the the foot of the highlands. Bounded by hedgerows and a cherry tree, the grassy back garden hosts a berry patch (rasp, black, straw and goose) some incredible rosebushes and an old barn.
A little brook winds along the back boundary where many an afternoon was spent playing and picnicking.
I arrived one warm, brilliant morning to find the Murray's still in residence and only too happy to let me look around my childhood home. I wandered around the house as memories came flooding back. I strolled thrugh the meadow and dangled my feet in the chilly mountain stream. Nothing had changed. It was all as I remembered. I knew instinctivley where to find everything: the crooked tree, the fairy garden, the haunted elm thicket and the trolls' bridge.
I also visited the little loch nearby where we used to paddle out and fish for trout. It's glassy, tranquil surface reflecting the vivid colours of the Scottish Summer.
Cycling down the backroads I even stumbled on a set of artist's cottages designed by no less than Charles Rennie Mackintosh.
Back at the house the Murrays had a wonderful salad prepared from their own vegetable garden with wild mushrooms form the adjacent forest. Bidding them farewell, I trundled off to see the surrounding countryside buzzing as long-latent memories smacked me in the face at every turn.
In many ways, this little side-trip was a driving force behind my entire journey. I had envisioned this homecoming many times over those 36 years. And with the stunning sunshine and the beaming welcome from the Murrays transformed it into a truly magical moment.
For more pics of Farr Mains: click here
For more pics of the Farr district: click here
For More pics of Inverness: click here

































