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Scotland Travel Guide (5th Ed.)Scotland is deliciously wild and woolly, full of raucous festivals, remote islands, tempestuous weather, bucolic golf courses and cities bursting their seams with galleries, cafes and rich Scottish spirit. You don't do this place in half-measures.

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Maps Of Scotland Regions


Scottish Borders Hotels

Welcome to Scottish Borders 

Intro · Duns · Eyemouth · Galashiels · Hawick · Jedburgh · Kelso · Lauder · Melrose · Peebles · Portpatrick · Selkirk · St Boswells · Stobo ·

From the south, there are four main routes into the Scottish Borders, each offering a particular introduction to this distinctive region. The upgraded A1 follows the east coast and is the easiest to drive with long stretches of dual-carriageway and pleasant coastal views. The alternative A68 through Carters Bar is undulating and scenic although slightly more demanding for the driver. It crosses the pastoral and hilly heart of Borders country. The A697 through Coldstream is similar and from the west the A7, signposted from the M6 as the tourist route for the Borders and Edinburgh, passes through the market towns of Hawick and Selkirk. Despite acting as a crash barrier through many tumultuous centuries between Britain's two largest countries, the Borders is now one of the most peaceful and gentle of Scottish regions. Its rolling country roads and picturesque villages, compared to other regions, are quiet, even at their busiest times. In the east, quilted rolling landscapes are occasionally interrupted by higher elevations such as the Eildon Hills, whereas the west is more remote and wild in character. The larger towns of Hawick, Jedburgh and Peebles are more greatly influenced by the modern world with super-stores set next to woolly jumper and fishing tackle shops.

The river Tweed contributes immensely to the character of the region. Therefore the Borders are famous for fishing with salmon beats, depending on the season, available throughout the district. Trout fishing is also available from March to October on some rivers. The area's history has contributed greatly to local traditions and perhaps even the local disposition. A predominant and persistent factor over nearly 400 years was the aggression between Scotland and its southerly neighbour, England. Between 1296 and the Union of the Crowns in the early seventeenth century, the Borders was a battleground (or the main route to one) between the two constantly warring nations. This virtual no-man's-land, as it became, fell into a lawless state where robbery and cattle stealing were rife, even amongst close neighbours. Not until the Union of the Crowns did the wild Borders settle into the peaceful province that it is today.