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Nethy Bridge Over River Nethy 57°15′54″N 3°39′28″W / 57.265091°N 3.657653°W / 57.265091; -3.657653 ( Nethy Bridge Over River Category B
Castle Roy is a ruined courtyard castle dating from the thirteenth century, situated just north of Nethy Bridge near Grantown-on-Spey, Scotland. It is a scheduled monument . [ 1 ] The castle is associated with the Comyn family .
Nethy Bridge (Scottish Gaelic: Cinn Drochaid or Drochaid Neithich) is a small village in Strathspey in the Highland council area of Scotland. The village lies 5 miles (8 km) south of Grantown-on-Spey within the historical parish of Abernethy and Kincardine , and the Cairngorms National Park .
Rudolf van Brederode: "Having a lovely encounter with a hairy local at Castle Roy near Nethy Bridge [Inverness]." [Rudolf van Brederode] Doris Enders: "In autumn, most of the acorns had already ...
Abernethy and Kincardine is a civil parish, and former registration district and ecclesiastical parish, in the Highland council area of Scotland.The name is not in use for any modern administrative entity, but remains as the usual description for historical purposes, in the case of the registration district being only a name change.
Urquhart Castle Glenfinnan Viaduct Mallaig Wick, Old Castle Loch Watten Dunnet Head Armadale Castle Kyle of Lochalsh Lighthouse, Cromarty Plockton Station Ullapool Duncansby Head Lighthouse Beauly Priory Torridon Wick Glencoe Fort Augustus, Loch Ness Loch Assynt Jacobite Train, Glenfinnan Oil Rig, Cromarty Over the bridge to Inverness Loch Ness Thurso, St. Peter's Kirk Ullapool
The Speyside Way (Doric: Strathspey Way; [citation needed] Scottish Gaelic: Slighe Shrath Spe) is a long-distance path in the Scottish Highlands. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5 ...
Abernethy Forest. From about 1766, cattle droving was carried out on a large scale to move cattle from Scotland to England. Beef cattle from the far north and northeast of Scotland were driven through several passes through the Cairngorms, but particularly the Lairig an Laoigh, to reach Braemar and then onwards south often to the Falkirk Tryst where English drovers continued the journey.