Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Edinburgh Part 2: The Grand Tour


Edinburgh is beautiful.


Monday morning, Sarah began my tour around the town. This is the path that she takes every day through the park to get to classes.


We are both super jealous of the people that get to live in this building.


Sarah standing in front of her school!


One of our first stops was the Greyfriars Graveyard. This was also our first stop on the Edinburgh tour of Harry Potter because this is the graveyard that J.K. Rowling used to walk in to gain inspiration for her book series. And you can find Tom Riddle's grave here.

We didn't find it yet. But it was exciting to know that it was there nonetheless.


This is the grave of Greyfriars Bobby, the dog of the man Greyfriars. Bobby is known as the most loyal dog because after his owner died, Bobby sat on his grave for 14 years.


And here's a statue of Bobby. There's a lot of stuff dedicated to Bobby around the town -- taverns, stores, restaurants, etc.


The graveyard is also beautiful.


And of course kind of creepy. I can't walk through a graveyard without that eery inkling sitting in the back of my mind.


Next, we went to the roof of a really cool museum.


The view is awesome.



I feel the need to climb things in every city I go to just to get the view. So worth it.


A really awesome street that I forced Amelia and Sarah to walk down with me.


The castle!


While Sarah went to class, Amelia picked up the tour and took me to a beautiful park with tons of doggies running around.


After Sarah's class, we met up for part 2 of the Harry Potter tour of Edinburgh: The Elephant House. AKA where J.K. Rowling WROTE Harry Potter.



Not only is this place awesome because of J.K. Rowling, but also because the food is amazing as well.

If there's one thing they did perfectly in London and Edinburgh, it was pots of tea. This pot was filled with looseleaf chai and may have been the best pot of tea I've ever had.

I also enjoyed a "malteser cake"--a shortbread type thing coated with a layer of chocolate and a malt bar. Delicious.


Sarah enjoyed her hot chocolate and millionaire bar.


And Amelia her coffee and brownie.


One of the most amazing parts of The Elephant House was the bathroom. Every inch of the wall in the waiting area and each stall is covered with letters to Rowling herself.

It was pretty overwhelming. Luckily, I got my pen to work on the wall after a couple of minutes so that I could write my own thank you.


A larger shot of the dining room.


Sarah and I continued the tour after Amelia left by walking the Royal Mile--one of the main roads in town with tons of souvenir stores and restaurants.

As you can see, Sarah and I had success with souvenir-buying that day.

P.S. The unicorn is apparently the official animal of Edinburgh. Or Scotland. I can't remember.


This is where the Queen lives. The building is at the bottom of the Royal Mile and the castle (pictured earlier) is at the top of the hill, at the other end of the Royal Mile.


We decided on a pub for dinner based on the fact that they had food to share.


Sarah and I shared the meat and cheese plate: three different kinds of bread, pickles, sun-dried tomatoes, brie cheese, blue cheese (blech), cheddar cheese, salami, turkey, roast beef, and prosciutto.

No offense Edinburgh, but your prosciutto crudo just doesn't compare to Italy's. Yes, I've become an even bigger food snob since coming to Italy.

Our meal was delicious nevertheless. Oh, and this was supplemented with cider of course.


My one requirement for the restaurant we went to was that it had to have Sticky Toffee Pudding on the dessert menu. Because that stuff is AMAZING.

But Sarah had never tried it! Thankfully, I was able to correct that problem. She's a huge fan now.


Overall, a fabulous tour of a beautiful city.


Next time in Edinburgh: I climb a mountain!

-Meri

1 comment:

  1. I was just surfing on internet and found your blog after reading this i realize that i should come here often. Edinburgh..

    ReplyDelete