My favorite photos from Scotland
Surprisingly exactly no one who remembers how long it took to finish my thoughts on Italy, I’m running behind on writing out my thoughts on our recent trip to and through Scotland. Or perhaps it’s better said that I’m running behind on publishing those thoughts, as writing them out is coming almost too easily (to the present tune of somewhere over 4000 words just to cover the first couple days.)
[Edit] The final tally was 22,000 words over 43 pages, which you can read blissfully broken up into chapters starting here.]
Suffice to say that a proper travelogue of our trip may take a little more time to finish and edit down so it doesn’t feel like you’re joining us in real time. [Second edit: HA!] I’m not sure what format that will take once I’m done putting everything on paper and organizing it into some semblance of order and storytelling worth reading, so in the meantime I thought that I would put together a quick post in a new format to showcase something that struck me deeply about Scotland.
See, the very plain truth is that I’ve never visited a more photogenic country. Over the twelve or so days we were there, I took 1400 photos. No, that’s not a typo. Between my two cameras (Sony A7R III, iPhone Mini 12) I averaged roughly a hundred photographs a day. And it wasn’t just me either. Beth took her own fair share in addition.
Scotland was so painfully beautiful that it took us twice as long to get anywhere as we’d planned, simply because we would gesture out towards the countryside and say something to the effect of “Look at this beautiful bullshit” before pulling over (again) to try and accurately capture the absolute majesty.
So to shake things up (read; “stall for time”) and maybe help me edit down and reduce some of the forthcoming posts on our trip through Scotland, here’s a photo essay with some of my favorite photographs from the two weeks we spent in the most beautiful country I’ve ever visited. Some are my favorites because the composition matches what I was seeing in that moment. Some are my favorites because they capture a particular feeling, or because they evoke a specific memory. Some just feel like they encapsulate a moment in time.
So more words to come soon, but in the meantime: enjoy the pictures.