Tag Archive | "Scotland"

Tug of War Commercial

Separation anxiety? Don’t worry, there’s plenty of Drambuie to go around.

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Sean William Scott Interview

Sean William Scott Interview

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Pursuit of 1745.com

Pursuit of 1745.com

Pursuit of 1745 Sign UpDrambuie’s official web site, pursuitof1745.com, is worth the visit. Whether you want to register for next year’s Pursuit or read up on the latest Drambuie drink recipes, the site has something for everyone.

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Bring Back the Drambuie Girls

Bring Back the Drambuie Girls

dramgirls

The Drambuie Girls, also known to moonlight as the Bonnie Price Charlie girls, represent everything good about the brand. We’re not sure if the Prince had any help from the local lasses while he was fleeing the English, but if a cadre of Drambuie girls had been there, we know the journey would have been just as sweet as the secret elixir.

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Purrrfect for Drambuie Pursuit

Purrrfect for Drambuie Pursuit

drambuie08_0106Last year’s Pursuit had a little bit of everything … action, adventure and really, really great scenery. Heather Vandeven, a Penthouse Pet of the Year in 2007, led Team Penthouse to a respectable finish in the 2008 Pursuit. Vandeven eschewed her glamorous persona as she got down and dirty mountain biking, hiking and fighting her way through the Scottish Highlands.

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Pursuit Winners in Times Square

Pursuit Winners in Times Square

Team Current TV

Team ‘Current TV’ Keeps the Spirit Alive in 2008

Smokejumping, Modern-Day Rebels take Victory in Extreme Adventure

INVERNESS, Scotland (May 2, 2008) /PRNewswire/ – A native Scotsman and three smokejumpers who fight forest fires in the American West emerged victorious in the Drambuie Pursuit Sunday. This was the third annual Drambuie Pursuit, but the first allowing Americans to compete.

The 10-stage adventure race across the Scottish highlands pitted 10, four-person teams against one another in events as diverse as white-water rafting, mountain biking, buggy racing and archery. Such a feat proved attainable for Steve Stroud, Brian Cresto and Alex Abols, of Boise, Idaho, who are accustomed to wielding chain saws and shovels for 16 hours a day during fire season.

The men applied to join the Drambuie Pursuit and were paired with ‘Current TV’ personality Scott Logan, a Scot now living in Southern California. He was determined not to be the weak link among his teammates, especially on his home soil.

“Back home, people call me ‘True Braveheart,” Logan said. “I always say to myself, it’s really nice, because all these friends of mine I work with, it’s a nice quote, to be called a true Braveheart. I feel like today I proved that.”

Logan’s sentiment was appropriate, given the history of Drambuie. The drink descended from a formula by the personal apothecary of Charles Edward Stuart, better known to Scots as Bonnie Prince Charlie. After the Prince’s rebel army was routed by the English-led government forces at the Battle of Culloden, he fled across the country for several months with a bounty on his head.

Legend has it he blended spices with Scotch Whiskey to revive himself on his flight and bestowed the recipe on a loyal clansman in gratitude for safe harbor before he fled to France. The prized elixir, handed down over generations, still remains a secret to all but the MacKinnon family.

Team ‘Current TV’ distinguished itself by winning the first two events – the archery round and a land-sea sprint in Zapcat boats – and further established itself as the team to catch midway through the day by beating the other nine teams up an alternately muddy and loamy mountainside.

Naturally, if there was any activity in which the firefighters excelled, it would be dashing up a remote mountain.

“We’re used to this from our work, gravity’s the same,” Cresto said. “It’s just wetter.”

Among the teams they beat were a foursome led by film and television actor Jerry O’Connell and another anchored by 2007 Penthouse Pet of the Year, Heather Vandeven.

For more information on the Drambuie Pursuit, or to apply for a chance to relive the legend of Bonnie Prince Charlie in the 2009 race, visit www.pursuitof1745.com.

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2008 Drambuie Pursuit Photo Gallery

2008 Drambuie Pursuit Photo Gallery

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If this gallery does not appear in your browser it can be found at http://issuu.com/coxgroup/docs/pursuit08

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Eilean Donan Castle

Eilean Donan Castle

72castle600The name Eilean Donan, or island of Donan, is most probably named after the 6th century Irish Saint, Bishop Donan who came to Scotland around 580 AD. There are several churches dedicated to Donan in the area, and it is likely that he formed a small cell, or community on the island during the late 7th century.

The first fortified structure was not built on the island until the early 13th century as a defensive measure, protecting the lands of Kintail against the Vikings who raided, settled and controlled much of the North of Scotland and the Western Isles between 800 and 1266. From the mid 13th century, this area was the quite separate “Sea Kingdom” of the Lord of the Isles where the sea was the main highway and the power of feuding clan chiefs was counted by the number of men and galleys or “birlinns” at their disposal. Eilean Donan offered the perfect defensive position.

Over the centuries, the castle itself has expanded and contracted in size. The medieval castle was probably the largest, with towers and a curtain wall that encompassed nearly the entire island. The main keep stood on the islands highest point. Around the end of the 14th century, the area of the castle was reduced to about a fifth of its original size, and although the reason is unclear, it probably relates to the number of men required to defend the structure. By the 16th century, a hornwork was added to the east wall to offer a firing platform for the newly introduced cannons.

Eilean Donan also played a role in the Jacobite risings of the 17th and 18th centuries, which ultimately culminated in the castles destruction.

In 1719, the castle was garrisoned by 46 Spanish soldiers who were supporting the Jacobites. They had established a magazine of gunpowder and were awaiting the delivery of weapons and cannon from Spain. The English Government caught wind of the intended uprising and sent three heavily armed frigates, The Flamborough, The Worcester, and The Enterprise, to quell matters. The bombardment of the castle lasted three days, though met with limited success due to the enormity of the castle walls, which in some places are up to 14 feet thick. Finally, Captain Herdman of The Enterprise sent his men ashore and over-whelmed the Spanish defenders. Following the surrender, the government troops discovered the magazine of 343 barrels of gunpowder which was then used to blow up what had remained from the bombardment.

For the best part of 200 years, the stark ruins of Eilean Donan lay neglected, abandoned and open to the elements, until Lt Colonel John Macrae-Gilstrap bought the island in 1911. Along with his Clerk of Works, Farquar Macrae, he dedicated the next 20 years of his life to the reconstruction of Eilean Donan, restoring her to her former glory. The castle was rebuilt according to the surviving ground plan of earlier phases and was formally completed in July of 1932.

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Red Hot Chili Pipers

Red Hot Chili Pipers

Rocking Scotland StyleScotland’s answer to American Gansta Rap could very well be the Red Hot Chili Pipers. It’s not everyday that you meet bagpipers with attitude, but the winners of the BBC show “When Will I be Famous” are known for their blazing hot rock shows. The Pipers performed at last year’s Pursuit and are scheduled to return in 2009. For more information about the band, check out the Pipers’ official web site!

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