We finally visited one of Edinburgh’s biggest tourist attractions, the Castle. The fog over our understanding of what the fighting was all about is lifting: the castle of course, but more importantly its riches: immeasurable riches, those already in hand (the Honours, the name given to the Royal Paraphernalia) and riches to be had from all the lands and the taxpayers living off it and any other loot available to the winners.
We had also been curious about The Stone, the place on which Scottish kings had been crowned for hundreds of years and which the English had kept until not very long ago. Both the Honours and the Stone are back inside the castle after being lost or carted off to England, centuries ago. We lined up with people from all over the world and waited patiently to have a fleeting glimpse of the these symbols of royalty, encased in glass in a tiny windowless room with metal doors of the bank vault type, impregnable and unstealable.
There must have been thousands of people traipsing up and down pathways and worming their way through narrow entrances into small rooms not made for such crowds. Although the audio guide told us we were in for a good 3 hours, we decided not to stay that long as the crowds were getting to us.
We returned to the café to have our smoked salmon for lunch. The Quakers who had gone to the later meeting as well streamed out just as we were served our lunch and bloody maries (Mary’s?)
[Sidebar: I had wondered whether the drink was named after Mary Queen of Scotts, because of her bloody death but later learned from Wikipedia (right or wrong) that it was named after the Tudor Mary because of all the bloodshed she caused.]
We chatted some more with our new friends, making firmer commitments this time.
We finished our lunch just in time to catch the start of the Carnival Parade on the Mound below us. The sun came out (and miraculously stayed out for the rest of the day) doing justice to all the glitter and colors. At least three quarters of the parade was made up of Asian groups, some dancing (the Chinese and Thai) and some not (the Nepali and the Tibetans and their supporters) but everyone was making music on drums, with bells, with trumpets. Unlike the more serious Carnival Parades I have seen in other parts of the world, this was more of a home-made one and for that very reason very charming.
From the frivolous and the raucous we went to the hushed rooms in the National Gallery since we were standing right in front of it. We admired many great portraits and landscapes until my legs said ‘enough!’ It was the cocktail hour anyway. We landed in an old pub and had our pints. I also sampled a whiskey and learned, from a friendly Polish bartender, how to drink it properly: a drop of water trasnferred via straw from a water glass to the bottom of the whiskey glass. This apparently creates a chemical reaction that enhances the drink (and who figured that out I wondered). Axel’s mother splashed her whiskey with water, doing it all wrong all her life!
I pitied the bartenders being inside on such a lovely day but they didn’t want my pity as they thought it was much too warm. It seems that Poles and Scotts alike think that 65F is warm enough. It must have been in the mid seventies on the terrace outside, lovely!
We finished our day with a bus ride to the Leith waterfront and splurged again on a seafood extravaganza: oysters, mussels, salmon, crab and shrimp, all locally sourced.

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