Merryn Glover is an author who lives in Badenoch in the Cairngorms National Park. She talks about being the Writer in Residence for the Cairngorms National Park and shares her favourite things to do in the Cairngorms National Park and the wider Scottish Highlands.
I live with my GP husband, our golden retriever and our two sons, when they’re home from university. I’m an author, with a published novel, short stories widely anthologised and four plays on BBC Radio Scotland and Radio 4.
This year I am the first Writer in Residence for the Cairngorms National Park, facilitating the project Shared Stories: A Year in the Cairngorms, encouraging people from all walks of life to tell and write their experiences of nature in this special place. You can follow the unfolding story of this project on my blog, Writing the Way.
I’ve lived in this small village on the River Spey for 13 years, which is the longest I’ve lived anywhere. I was born in Kathmandu, grew up in Nepal, India and Pakistan, went to university in Australia – the country of my passport – and first moved to Scotland 25 years ago, living in Dunblane and Stirling. My husband and I worked together back in Nepal for nearly 5 years and still return there or Australia every few years to see family and friends.
There are so many, but Skinnet Beach on the Kyle of Tongue is a hidden jewel.
There is no ‘best’ – just hundreds of discoveries. Recently I have enjoyed exploring Glen Banchor, a kind of forgotten valley near Newtonmore.
Each season brings its gifts, but here in the Cairngorms I especially love clear days in October when the the sky and lochs are a rich blue and the forests radiant with the changing leaves.
Take time and tread lightly. Don’t race through leaving car fumes, litter and resentment. Enjoy this place with respect, recognising that its beauty is fragile and it is home for hard-working people and endangered wildlife. Have a conversation and learn something a guide book can’t tell you.
A walk with a wildlife guide up Glen Feshie on a snowy January day, where I saw black grouse lekking, ravens kissing and three golden eagles high up in the sky.
The road that runs beside Loch Morlich, for the views through trees of the water and the Cairngorms behind.
Any view in the last light of midsummer when the sky turns green.
Am loving the newly opened café in Kincraig: The Old Post Office Café and Gallery.
Website: merrynglover.com
Photos © Merryn Glover
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