Na Seannachaidh Stiùbhardaich – “The Stewarts’ Storyteller”

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Meall Odhar and Stuc a Chroin, Callander, Balquhidder

by | Nov 19, 2020 | General Interest | 0 comments

Thursday is Meall Odhar and Stuc a Chroin day. Or Mail Order and Stuck Groin if you are looking at the Commissariat of Dunblane documents. The sun shone and I did not get lost. It was good to go higher and enjoy the views but it was rather cold. Enjoy the icicles. The swaying icicles should have chimed like bells but they didn’t and the other icicles looked like organ pipes ready to make some noise but all I could hear was the wind. I like eating them like lollipops but you have to check there isn’t a dead sheep nearby. I got a sunny Arivurichardich photo too.

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  • Shuna Mayes lives in Dunblane, Scotland well within hiking, biking or kayaking distance of every locale where a Stewart of Balquhidder once lived. She enjoys getting outside with her camera and capturing sights that we would never have access to without her generosity and enthusiasm. Shuna has traced her ancestry to an 18th century soldier named James Stewart, who is genetically linked to our clan, but remains frustratingly elusive in his exact relationship.

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Shu Shee

Shu Shee

Contributing writer

Shuna Mayes lives in Dunblane, Scotland well within hiking, biking or kayaking distance of every locale where a Stewart of Balquhidder once lived. She enjoys getting outside with her camera and capturing sights that we would never have access to without her generosity and enthusiasm. Shuna has traced her ancestry to an 18th century soldier named James Stewart, who is genetically linked to our clan, but remains frustratingly elusive in his exact relationship.

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