History meets modern as Scottish Highlands grow beyond whisky and Loch Ness


By AGENCY

The entrance to the renovated Victorian Market, hosting over 30 independent businesses, in Inverness. — Photos: ALBERT STUMM/AP

As we crossed the Keswick Bridge into the rolling hills outside Inverness, green fields of early spring barley still had months to grow until harvest. The grain will be sent to a nearby malting factory and eventually made into whisky at some of Scotland’s 150-plus distilleries.

Interspersed among the barley fields were yellow rows of flowering rapeseed, used to make cooking oil, and herds of grazing sheep that seemed to outnumber people.

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scotland , highlands , tourism , loch ness , inverness

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