Perth’s profile is pointed, designed by Gothic guglies of Rossiccia sandstone and spots of oak woods and Silvestre pine of Caledonia. To make noise, in the bucolic landscape that wraps it ordered and steep, is mostly the flow of its great river, the Tye.
Here you arrive by the train that starts from Edinburg Crossing the expanses of shiny green. He runs west to a route of small stations valued by red iron bridges and white lace to slip into the vatuary of Tye who throws himself into the North Sea.
The old Perth bridge reconstructed in 1771 after an induction destroyed him. Photo by: Visitcotland / Kenny Lam
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Scone Palace, photo Rohan Stratie
Rohan StratieDundee, not far away, is known to be the sunniest city in Scotland, but Perth is his most beautiful girl. So they call it in these parts citing one of Walter Scott’s Waverley’s short stories, the Edinburgh writer who first made the 800’s historical novel famous with his Ivanhoe. Even today, Walking in the small medieval village, the show offered is a dip in a slow and immortal dimension: the history and present of Perth.
On the north point of the Scottish coast, Mey Castle for the royal family represents “home”. Open to the public since 2001, it was the place for the holiday favorite by Queen Mother, now moved to the King’s Foundation of King Charles III. Here’s how it is and how to visit

Scone Palace and the Scottish queens
Perth no longer has his castle, but he has Scone Palace whose beauty is made of stone, a lot of solidity and a few frills, wrapped in brush strokes where you can still go hunting, take walks and picnics immersing yourself in a generous nature. Between towers and white bifores the interiors that the public can visit remembering the Catholic Queen, Maria Stuardathanks to the exposure of his embroidery made during the captivity in Loch Leven in 1568 and Queen Vittoria Which, in 1842 he accepted the invitation to Palazzo giving two years of time to the Count of Mansfield to refresh their furnishings.
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Scone Palace, photo Rohan Stratie
Rohan StratieThe walls of the dining salon of fine turquoise thirst They light up with the gold calls designed to reverberate the light of the candles, when there was still no electricity. The curtains are from Tartan and on the table stand out the crystal glasses of Edinburgh decorated in Balmoral, which is not far away. On the upper floors still live the family of the IX Conte of Mansfield and VIII of Middensex, but the rest of the building welcomes guests for private dinners with a butler.

Murrayshill Country House
If you want to stay outside the center of Perth, you can choose the Murrayshall estate Country Summer with the country residence, today Hotel. Here, in the morning You can walk in silence between fawn and hares and climbing the hills You can reach the Lynedock Obelisk or the Ancient MacDuff’s Monument, with a bench overlooking the infinite.

The Stone of Destiny – Culture Perth & Kinross/Rob McDougall
The stone of fate that returned to Perth
In Scone Palace the “Stone of fate” otherwise called “incoronation stone”. The boulder of sandstone who transferred his power to the Scottish kings And then to those of the United Kingdom and his great empire, after 700 years he returned to Perth, finally exposed for free in the city museum To tell the pride of Kenneth The Alpin, first to be crowned here in 843 AD up to Charles II, the last sovereign of Scone Palace. The stone, traced back to a biblical step linked to Jacob, Today he travels to Westminster in a special Scottish oak wood container, only when a king is crowned; just as the May 6, 2023 for Charles III.

Bernam Wood’s Sicomoro, three hundred years in the woods of the three macbeth woods, in Dunkeld
On the West Higland Way, taking advantage of the Scottish “right of roam”, the right to wander and – for those who want – to plant their tent in nature. A unique journey for pace and emotions

Perthshire, land of myths and legends
In a path through The medieval charm of Perth, still palpable in the city, We also follow the fate of a very controversial Scottish King: Macbeth. Memories celebrate him as a sovereign capable of bringing prosperity, but Shakespeare, with his novel written 500 years later to please King James I, changed his narration and of Lady Macbeth which today finds justice.
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Lady Macbeth, Ellen Pollock (1902–1997), AS Lady Macbeth by James Proudfoot © Culture Perth and Kinross
To retrace this story of Fake News Ante Litteram, between myth and reality, you have to cross the Bernam Wood forest Where you can get into centuries -old trees that inspired Shakespeare, such as the oak (7 meters high), or you can embrace the mighty 8 -meter Sicomoro in which the three witches of Macbeth’s prophecy were hidden. The twenty minutes walk on the hill of Dunsinane Hill, Instead, it gives a breathtaking panoramic view of Perthshire, letting the boundaries of a fort attributable to the sovereign made famous by history and mistreated by the Shakespeare pen. An exhibition dedicated to this story, complete with original memorabilia, is open from 25 April to 3 August at PERTH MUSEUM
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The Perth Museum, photo of Greg Holmes Photography
Greg Holmes PhotographyThe UNESCO city of crafts and popular art
Walking towards the ancient stone bridge, the Smeaton, reconstructed in 1771 on nine arches of pink stone, can be reached North Inch Park or, in the neighbor Dunkeldwhere the river flows in front of the medieval cathedral. The landscape is ancient, the history of this land made of ups and downs, like the flood of the Tye river which in 1209 brushed its fortified castle away, as well as the streets of modern trade cut it out of the central role occupied until the mid -19th century.

The church of St Matthew, Perth, Visitcotland / Kenny Lam
Yet, here, nobody has ever surrendered, his notes of character get to manifest a laborious, creative, tenacious and above all proud personality of your story that conferred them The title of UNESCO city for crafts and popular artunique in the United Kingdom.

The glass sheep of Carrie Ferig exhibited in the Glass exhibition in Perth, copyright Sally Jubb 2025. All rights reserved
Copyright Sally Jubb 2025. All rights reserved.In parks, art is confused with nature and works are also widespread en plein air (The River Tay Public Art Trail), while the Art Gallery And the Perth Museum celebrate the popular tradition, the glorious royal and commercial past together with the enhancement of ancient manufacturing traditions. The successful glass decoration today is remembered with the Glass exhibition, Open from April ’25 to February 2026. The drive for creativity, but in Scottish style, You can breathe in the streets of Perth, even outside the museums, because it is still alive and vibrant.

Haggis Neeps and Tatties, a typical Scottish dish. Photo by Visitcotland / Luigi Di Pasquale
Perth, between Pink Gin and Haggis
Perth participates in the Scottish festival of food and Haggis (a sausage/pudding of eine with eine Neeps (Pastinaca puree, a white carrot tuber) and Tatties (puree potatoes) served with whiskey sauce. But for some time, in the city, it has also been working on the production of local gin that knows of forests, juniper, berries and thyme. Elaine’s distillery, in Tay Street, focuses on the Pink gin made such by the strawberries and raspberries immersed in Cocktail “Perth 75” with prosecco and sugar syrup.

The Tye River, Perthshire
On the meadows, like the one in front of the cathedral of Dunkeld, you can give yourself a snack based on Tea Loaf, Rock Bun or Scone with Palmerston jam And whipped butter, or cookies and Loaf (Plumcake type) to lemon and chia seeds from the Aran Bakery. Perth’s hills look downstream between plots designed with order in a ups and downs of woods, conifers and sheep’s pecore pastures and Angus cattle, while in the fishy river Tye the salmon, jump to ritualize in the water. But there are also trout, The perfect potatoes for the Fish & Chips that here they say to be special and many berries, from strawberries to typical Tayberry, an intersection between blueberries and Lamponsthe.

Perth, photo of Visitcotland / Kenny Lam
Source: Vanity Fair

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