
Despite its small size, Scotland has many treasures  crammed into its compact territory – big skies, lonely landscapes, spectacular  wildlife, superb seafood and hospitable, down-to-earth people.
 
Scotland harbours some of the largest areas of wilderness  left in Western 
Europe,  a wildlife haven where you can see golden eagles soar above the lochs and  mountains of the northern Highlands, spot otters tumbling in the kelp along the  shores of the Outer Hebrides, and watch minke whales breach through shoals of  mackerel off the coast of 
Mull.  It's also an adventure playground where you can tramp the tundra plateaus of the  
Cairngorms,  balance along tightrope ridges strung between the rocky peaks of the Cuillin,  sea-kayak among the seal-haunted isles of the Outer Hebrides, and take a  speed-boat ride into the surging white water of the Corryvreckan whirlpool. 
Scotland is a land with a rich, multilayered history, a  place where every corner of the landscape is steeped in the past – a deserted  croft on an island shore, a moor that was once a battlefield, a cave that once  sheltered Bonnie Prince Charlie. Hundreds of castles, from the plain but  forbidding tower houses of Hermitage and Smailholm to the elaborate machicolated  fortresses of 
Caerlaverock and Craigmillar, testify to the country's often turbulent past. And battles that  played a pivotal part in the building of a nation are remembered and brought to  life at sites such as 
Bannockburn and Culloden.
Be it the poetry of Robert Burns, the crime fiction of Ian  Rankin or the songs of Emeli Sandé, Scotland's cultural exports are appreciated  around the world every bit as much as whisky, tweed and tartan. But you can't  beat reading Burns' poems in the village where he was born, enjoying an  Inspector Rebus novel in Rankin's own 
Edinburgh, or catching the  latest Scottish bands at the T in the Park festival. And museums such as  Glasgow's Kelvingrove, Dundee's Discovery Point and Aberdeen's Maritime Museum  recall the influence of Scottish artists, engineers, explorers, writers and  inventors in shaping the modern world.
An increasing number of visitors have discovered that  Scotland's restaurants have shaken off their old reputation for deep-fried food  and unsmiling service and can now compete with the best in 
Europe. A  new-found respect for top-quality local produce means that you can feast on  fresh seafood mere hours after it was caught, beef and venison that was raised  just a few miles away from your table, and vegetables that were grown in your  hotel's own organic garden. And top it all off with a dram of single malt whisky  – rich, evocative and complex, the true taste of Scotland.
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