I’ve spent a fair bit of time in Edinburgh (in the last 15 years) and Aberdeen (in 1996/97) but have only explored the west coast a couple of times and had never been north of Inverness. It had been a few years since I had seen Nefarious due in part to COVID and in part to him no longer doing the annual Formula Ford race at Silverstone. So my initial plan was simply to pop up to Edinburgh for a few days and catch up. But when I contacted Ascender and Mik too, and some family in Nairn, a vague plan formed to drive round the NC500 to join them together. My wife stayed at home to look after the animals - and probably because she’s a normal well adjusted human being who thinks it’s odd to drive the best part of 2000 miles to meet a few weirdos from the internet. So the overriding purpose of my trip was to see people, catch up and the journey would be a bonus. And an opportunity to double the mileage I’d covered in my MX5 since buying it last July.
You can never predict the weather for Scotland but you’d have got particularly long odds on it being sunny, dry and warm all week. While the S6 would have been a fine back-up if it had been inclement, it’s being serviced on 20 May and would be way over the mileage if I’d taken it. Fortunately I put the top down by the time I got to Edinburgh and only really had it up when parked until I got to Tebay services on my way home a week later. There was a brief shower while I was with Scott on Sunday so I tried putting the roof up and then down again while moving - works fine at 20mph but it’s a bit sudden at 40

So I had a nice relaxing long weekend with Nef then headed north - first to the Grampian Transport Museum, having heard it mentioned on Smith & Sniff a couple of weeks earlier. Definitely worth a visit, it has the old TG cars now and is very densely packed with vehicles, displays and info. It’s a bit of a trek to get to, being about 30 miles west of Aberdeen, but well worth the journey. The chaps who run it are not old men as you might expect with a motor museum and they are enthusiastic, very happy to chat and should be safe hands to keep it thriving for years to come. I followed Google Maps’ recommended route from the A90 so I turned off at North Water Bridge, went north to Fettercairn and picked up the B974 Old Military Road. Google Maps had a bit of a habit of directing me onto tiny roads later in the day but at this point its suggestions were spot on and the drive was absolutely amazing. Here’s the view from the Cairn o’the Mount viewpoint:

By the time I’d finished at the museum I was pondering a visit to Pennan (famous from Local Hero, and where I spent a lovely evening on 24 June 1997 in the pub watching the sun barely go down and then come back up an hour later in almost the same place on the north horizon). But with dinner booked for 6pm in Nairn I went straight there - still lovely roads, and this time avoiding the Google suggested route, I jumped off the A97 down the B9002 and picked up the A941 through Dufftown to Elgin. Nairn is a lovely seaside town and if you are ever in the area, do go to MNMs cafe (they have one in Elgin too) - the lorne and fried egg roll for breakfast was divine.

Well fed again (did I mention that the food was one of things I was most looking forward to?) I headed to a lay-by on the A9 overlooking the Cromarty Firth to meet up with Ascender. What a gent, and what a fantastic sight his Dakar was to have behind me for miles and miles across the most amazing terrain and roads up in Caithness. He had booked lunch in Lairg so we headed there avoiding the A9 and crossing some beautiful scenery along the B9176. The one viewpoint I regret not stopping for a photo was along here, looking out towards the Dornoch Firth bridge. So have a photo from the next viewpoint along which faces inland:

We had discussed heading towards Tongue from Lairg but decided to go a different way, since I was keen to visit John o’Groats (just to say I’d been). So we headed east out of Lairg, up the A9 a bit (plenty of traffic but some amazing scenery to make up for that) and then went up the A897 from Helmsdale to the north coast, about 40 miles of single track with passing places. That was my first proper single track A-road of the trip and it was great; plenty of passing places so not too difficult to pass what little other traffic came the other way. It was very scenic but I wasn’t going to keep stopping for photos - though when we got to the most vivid yellow gorse patch I did for the colour. A great road.

At the top we turned right towards Thurso and JoG. This might have been a great driving road in the past but there’s more traffic and average speed cameras so we enjoyed the few twisty bits and just made our way otherwise. The view out to the sea and the islands is stunning though; the landscape is much flatter here and between Thurso and JoG it feels quite other worldly. Despite not having any great desire to see JoG except to say I’d been, I rather fell in love with it.

Mike and I headed down to Wick - for him, to visit Tesco en route home; for me so that I didn’t just double back to my hotel at Bettyhill. Again the JoG to Wick road - now the A99 - was lovely and due to the time of day, maybe, wasn’t particularly busy. We said our goodbyes at Tesco and, almost immediately missing my Dakar companion, I unwittingly followed the nav directions rather than my intended route and ended up doing 4 miles down the single track B874 rather than the expected A882. That took me past the end of Loch Watten though, which was rather picturesque at least. Then up to Thurso and back the way we’d come, less traffic by this time and still possible to enjoy the road and overtake despite the average speed cameras. I carried on past the A897 turning we’d come from and the road became more interesting, almost like Iceland, so unexpectedly the last 14 miles of A836 were yet another amazing drive. And the view from the hotel as I arrived was rather lovely too:

I’ve had this much saved for a day so I’m going to post it and add part 2 when I have had the chance to type it.