Just south of Berriedale, on the way to the north, the
A9 road passes the
Berriedale Braes, a steep drop in the landscape (
brae is a
Scots word for hillside, a borrowing of the Scottish Gaelic
bràighe). The road drops down steeply (13% over 1,3 km) to bridge a river, before rising again (13% over 1,3 km), with a number of sharp bends in the road – although some of the hairpin bends and other nearby gradients have been eased in recent years, with the worse hairpin removal completed in 2020 at a cost of £9.6 million. The impracticality (and cost) of bridging the Berriedale Braes prevented the building of the
Inverness-
Wick Far North Line along the east coast of Caithness; instead the railway runs inland through the
Flow Country. ==References==