Paul Kirkwood sets out on two wheels to explore the villages on Scotland’s east coast
Arbroath and Montrose. I must have heard the names hundreds of times in that Saturday tea-time litany of the football results. But what are these towns like? When I spotted that they were linked by the National Cycle Network I had the perfect means of finding out.
I began at Gayfield, home of Arbro...
By Paul Kirkwood
from Issue 31 published on 16/02/2007
Paul Kirkwood tries two contrasting bike rides in the south of Scotland
I was in the Borders with a bicycle and a day to spare but I couldn’t make up my mind which route to take. Should I do what I usually do and go for a gentle on-road tour of the countryside, or be a bit different and try mountain-biking for the first time? After all, I was just a few miles away from ...
By Paul Kirkwood
from Issue 30 published on 01/12/2006
Paul Kirkwood traces the origins of the bicycle in Dumfriesshire
The principal defies logic but is the basis of my favourite invention: it’s easier to balance on two wheels if you’re moving along than it is standing still. I no more believed it to be so when I was being pushed around the garden on my first bike by my father than my children believe me now when I’...
By Paul Kirkwood
from Issue 29 published on 25/10/2006
Paul Kirkwood concludes his two-day bike ride around Perthshire by pedalling from the wilds of Rannoch Moor all the way back to Pitlochry
It was nine o’clock on a Sunday night and I couldn’t work out why my fellow guests were checking out of our remote hotel.
Like them, I’d just had dinner and my thoughts were turning to bed. That, as it happens, was where they were bound – on the sleeper train that remarkably connects Rannoch Statio...
By Paul Kirkwood
from Issue 28 published on 20/09/2006
In the first instalment of a two-part feature, Paul Kirkwood pedals his way across Perthshire
As Kathmandu is to Nepal so Pitlochry is to Perthshire. For yak hair read tweed. Both towns are multi-national base camps for expeditions and mine was to take me 40 miles due west by bike to the fringe of Rannoch Moor, one of Britain’s last great wildernesses.
My route followed the southern shores ...
By Paul Kirkwood
from Issue 27 published on 09/06/2006
In a new series of cycle rides for Scotland Magazine Paul Kirkwood will go mountain biking in the Borders, pedal around lochs in Perthshire and cycle to the smithy where the bicycle was born. He starts in the capital
You don’t need me to tell you about the appeal of the centre of Edinburgh. But what about the suburbs? Running through them to the southwest and out into the countryside is a cycle route along a canal, river and railway trackbed which provides an ideal introduction to another side of the city, as I ...
By Paul Kirkwood
from Issue 26 published on 21/04/2006
In a new series we look at journeys you can make in Scotland by bike. First up: Craig Whyte explores Cowal
The journey across Cowal doesn’t have to be done by bike, but there is no better way to explore the quiet roads and the intimate tangle of hill and sea loch that makes up this oftenforgotten corner of the Highlands.
This is the bit of the Highlands that lies not north, but west of Glasgow. It’s so ...
By Craig Whyte
from Issue 25 published on 17/02/2006