2024-12-05
38 分钟In this poignant final episode, Andi and Miquita explore the depths - both literal and metaphorical - of Scotland's most famous loch. At Great Glen Distillery, Scotland's smallest gin maker, they discover how Loch Ness water transforms into award-winning spirits using innovative botanical combinations. Their journey takes an intriguing turn as they meet Adrian Shine, the renowned Loch Ness expert and Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, who shares fascinating insights about the intersection of possibility and probability in the famous waters. As mother and daughter embark on a Jacobite Cruise across Loch Ness, passing the historic ruins of Urquhart Castle, they reflect on their transformative Scottish odyssey. In an emotional conclusion, they contemplate the power of heritage, storytelling, and the bonds that connect us to places and people. Their final moments by the loch, complete with a traditional blessing, mark not just the end of their Highland journey, but Miquita's awakening to her Scottish identity and the beginning of a new chapter in both their lives. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Welcome to stirring it up on the road.
This morning, we were finally taken to Loch.
That's the only bad Scottish accent I've done in this whole series.
Thank you very much.
But Loch Ness was somewhere I was very intrigued by.
I was worried that it would be too touristy, maybe a bit of a silly endeavor for us to go looking for a monster.
But we weren't looking for a monster.
We were looking into this idea of where possibility and probability meet and why we choose to believe in things.
It was all unraveled by this wonderful man called Adrian, who was one of the first people to really start investigating Loch Ness and to try and get to the bottom.
And he had a few expeditions down to the bottom, and they still couldn't really get down to the bottom.
It's so deep, so deep, and it's.
So long and it's so wide.
You know, Loch Ness.
This is so.
Remember, I have quite a lot of Loch Ness information stored in my brain now.
All of the water in England and Wales can fit into Loch Ness.
Yes.
You loved that fact, because it's a wild fact.