Crossing
Black Bridge – turn left (roughly NNW) following the four-wheel drive road up
Glen Lui and towards
The Derry. This part of
Glen Lui is a broad
glaciated valley dotted with
moraines – the remains of the ancient glacial past. Other remains – seen as grassy, roughly rectangular outlines – are those of the townships and farms. In
Gordon (1925) the author laments: Fortunately for us – in
Gordon (1925) and
Gordon (1948) the author has done much to record local place-names, and knowledge of the
Cairngorms, that would otherwise be lost. For example, – in
Gordon (1925) the author gives name to the two moraines of
Glen Lui just upriver from
Black Bridge –
Da Shithean – Two Fairy Mounds. Black Bridge - Rebuilt in 1988 by 118 Field Squadron 1 Troop and 3 Troop. Captain Michael Emsley commanding.
Clais Fhearniag A little more than half-a-mile above
Black Bridge – just before the burn named ''Allt a' Mhadaidh
on the Ordnance Survey 1:25 000 maps – a footpath leads up the hillside, and through the narrow valley named Clais Fhearniag – The Hollow of the Alder
– the track leads through Clais Fhearniag
to Glen Quoich. According to Watson (1975)'' Clais Fhearniag was created as a result of the
Ice Age – the rivers under the ice created by the melting glaciers 'cut the dry cliffed gullies so common in the region' – presumably in some kind of waterfall action. The dam at the east end is man made.
The Townships Before the
Jacobite rising of 1715 Glen Lui supported many people and the valley floor was dotted with farms and townships. Following the acquisition of the forfeited
Mar Estate by
James Erskine, Lord Grange and
David Erskine, Lord Dun in 1724 the 'Farmers of Glen Lui were forcibly evicted in 1726' –
Watson (1975). In
Gordon (1948) the author quotes from a letter dated
15 September 1726 from
Lord Grange to
James Farquharson of Balmoral who was Factor and Forester of the estate at the time, referring to
Glen Lui and instructing him to
eject those people after their harvest is over. The reason for this clearance appears to have been economic, to make timber extraction from the glen easier. In any case the glen appears to have been resettled by 1732, and finally cleared again by 1777 by which time all the tenancies in
Glen Lui had reverted to the landowner –
Earl Fife –
Dixon and Green (1995). Some old maps show place names in the glen, but do not fix locations accurately. To the north of the
Lui Water –
Roy (1747–1755) shows :
Achavadie,
Aldvattigally, and
Rinton, and to the south :
Dalgirmich, and
Knockinted – showing that these place names (at least) existed in
Glen Lui before 1755. Although these place names appear to be phonetic transcriptions of the
Gaelic there is no great difficulty in connecting these phonetic-transcriptions with the actual place names they represent. Similarly to the north
Dixon and Green (1995) shows :
Wester Auchavrie,
Easter Auchavrie,
Croislish, ''Allt a' Mhadaidh-allaidh
, and Ruigh an t-Sidhein
, and to the south : Dail Rosaigh
, Dail Gainimh
, and Cnoc na Teididh''. However – in
Gordon (1925) the author gives the name of the burn as ''Allt a' Mhadaidh Allaidh – the Wolf's Burn
, commemorating the killing of the last Wolf in the Forest of Mar
. In Watson (1975)
the author gives its name as Allt Mhad-allaidh
and the pronunciation as like Vat Aalie''. In
Gordon (1948) the author suggest the township named
Aldvattigally by
Roy (1747–1755), and ''Allt a' Mhadaidh-allaidh
by Dixon and Green (1995)
should be Allt a' Mhadaidh Allaidh – Burn of the Wild Dog (Wolf)
, and the township named Achavadie
by Roy (1747–1755)
, and the Wester
and Easter Auchavrie
by Dixon and Green (1995)
should be Ach' a' Mhaidaidh – Field of the Dog''. Image:glenlui_moraines.jpg | Moraines Image:glenlui_townships_01.jpg | Cnoc na Teididh Image:clais_fhearniag.jpg | Clais Fhearniag (1970s) Image:glenlui_townships_03.jpg | Easter Auchavrie, and Wester Auchavrie
Derry Wood The name
Derry Wood (colloquially 'The Derry') is from
An Doire – the grove (Watson 1975). Approaching Derry Wood from
Linn of Dee – Carn Crom a spur of
Derry Cairngorm is seen directly behind it. In the
Derry Wood is the old
Hunting Lodge named
Derry Lodge – in spite of the speculation by
Dixon and Green (1995) that it '''was possibly the Head Keeper's house ... A building of one storey and attic, it was suitable for the person second in rank on the estate to the factor'
– local knowledge and existing records (Census records for example) indicate that Ronald McDonald
the Head Keeper
at the end of the 19th and the start of the 20th centuries lived at Claybokie
– and that Derry Lodge'' was probably intended as temporary accommodation for hunting parties. The routes through
Derry Wood can be confusing – especially when trying to follow a map. Arriving from the direction of
Linn of Dee – the four-wheel drive road leading SW to the
Lui Water does not lead to a bridge. Just beyond
Derry Lodge another four-wheel drive road leading SW to the
Derry Burn does not lead to a bridge either – it once did continuing over the
Luibeg Burn towards
Luibeg Cottage where
Bob Scott lived for many years. To continue – straight on – past
Derry Lodge crossing
Derry Burn by the footbridge and (roughly W) staying close to the North bank of the
Luibeg Burn until picking up the four-wheel drive road again. On the West bank of the
Derry Burn – a (roughly N) route leads up
Glen Derry to
Lairig an Laoigh. Image:bob_scott's_bothy_mk3.jpg | Bob Scott's Bothy (MK3) Image:derrylodge_01.jpg | Derry Lodge Image:luibeg_cottage.jpg | Luibeg Cottage Image:derry_bridge.jpg | Derry Burn footbridge ==Derry Wood to Glen Dee==