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Things to do in Melrose, a 'well-to-do oasis' in the Scottish Borders

Things to do in Melrose, a 'well-to-do oasis' in the Scottish Borders

The National2 days ago

Not in a bad way: this is a well-to-do oasis that proudly holds on to its heritage, its fiercely independent shops and, yes, its rugby. Melrose is the home of Rugby Sevens, after all. And so much more besides. Melrose is a town built on sturdy foundations. Various English kings tried to shake them in battle and, although its landmark abbey was sacked in the process, the land of the Borders Reivers held firm.
Rambling around the abbey's ruins today you get a real sense of both its original grandeur and Melrose's importance when the Cistercians chose it as the site of their first Scottish abbey after David I granted them permission to build in 1136.
(Image: Borders Abbey Way) Melrose saw off the Romans, too, letting them mess around with building the doomed Antonine Wall using the Trimontium fort here as a supply depot, before the local tribes combined to kick them out. They were expelled with such force the director of the town's Trimontium Museum, John Reid, once told me: 'Scotland was Rome's Afghanistan'.
As well as all manner of exhibits on a Roman theme you can fulfil childhood fantasies and dress up as a scarlet-clad legionnaire or hurl back in time to the days when emperors visited Scotland's largest Roman fort with the aid of the striking new virtual reality headsets in the impressive museum extension that opened last year.
You'll need more of your own imagination out at the sprawling fort site, though information boards tell the tales we know so far and the most northerly amphitheatre in the Roman Empire has been unearthed. They've just secured the site for another 25 years so expect some serious digging to follow once all of the usual hurdles have been overcome.
This town on the mighty River Tweed swims in history far beyond the Romans. Legend has it King Arthur still lies interred in the Eildon Hills that gave the Romans inspiration for naming their fort. A much earlier Iron Age fortification sits atop one of the three Eildons, offering views of the Tweed Valley, easily up there with the more celebrated 'Scott's View' nearby.
(Image: Getty Images) Also in the shadow of the Eildons, just a short walk south of Trimontium, is the Rhymer's Stone. It is on the site where the Eildon Tree once stood, the arbour that transported Thomas the Rhymer off from the Thirteenth Century into the magical world of the fairies. At the time the prophecies and 'wisdom' he returned with were not treated like fairytales. Perhaps King Alexander III should have paid more heed as the soothsayer predicted the monarch's tragic death on that stormy night in Fife.
Grounding ourselves back in the solid stone reality of Melrose's High Street, I find the town's residents proud both of their history but also of how Melrose shapes up today. No massive supermarkets – or small ones for that matter – suck the lifeblood out of Melrose's core, which unfurls around a grand mercat cross topped with a unicorn.
What Melrose does have is proper wee businesses: an old-world butcher, deli, galleries, wines store, antique shops and even a book binder. There is, too, of course, a locally made Melrose Gin.
(Image: Robin McKelvie) Nick Henderson, whose family have run Burt's Hotel for 54 years – and the Townhouse Hotel across the road for 21 years – told me: 'Melrose is a town with one foot in the past and one foot in the present. We are proud of both here and you can easily enjoy both sides as a visitor, which is a large part I think of why people love to come here.'
Visitors do come to Melrose but mercifully they don't descend in the campervan-driven hordes that can blight other holiday spots in Scotland. Bar the summer book festival and the annual Melrose Sevens rugby extravaganza, I've never found Melrose overrun. Its environs make the town itself look like Manhattan. On this visit I hiked on the Borders Abbeys Way from Sir Walter's Scott's old Tweed-side gaff at Abbotsford all the way up through the forests and farmland to Lindean Loch and didn't see another human.
(Image: Robin McKelvie) At Lindean Loch I did encounter Laura Mitchell, the bubbly presence behind Cedar Hus Sauna. They don't mess about in this corner of Scotland and, pleasantries exchanged, Laura soon led me into the chill waters. Laura wasn't done with just a post-swim sauna either, as she imbued the steam with the spirit-soaring scent of pine, then proceeded to thrash me with birch in a scene definitely more Malmo than Melrose.
The Borders Abbeys Way is just one of the impressive local walks. You can hike off from Melrose Abbey on a 68-mile circular hike around the quartet of ruined Borders abbeys or continue the ecclesiastic theme joining St Cuthbert on his way – a 62-mile march south across the border to Lindisfarne.
If you're really keen, you can bash over west to Portpatrick on the Atlantic coast, for a challenging long-distance trail that sweeps you from the Borders 215 miles west to the far extremities of Dumfries and Galloway. Community-led Melrose Paths publish a wee map and leaflet revealing some more modest local walks.
All too soon – it always is with Melrose – I was leaving, joining the Borders Abbeys Way again as it snakes off west from Melrose along the Tweed. It was just me, a brace of dog walkers, a gaggle of ducks and a buzzard doing a decent eagle impression on the three miles walk along the river and back to Tweedbank railway station.
The train nips you from here to Edinburgh in just an hour. I strongly suggest you enjoy a voyage in the other direction and explore the most trim of the Borders market towns.
Foodie Melrose
Tempest Brewing Co
You'd expect a brilliant new venue from a brilliant family-owned brewery and this doesn't disappoint. No mere brewery, this vast space is also a US-style taproom, beer hall, well-stocked shop, beer garden and an informal restaurant. Wash the smash burgers down with beers from the 16 taps, all within staggering distance of Tweedbank railway station.
tempestbrewco.com/pages/taproom
The Townhouse
Run by James, brother of Burt's owner Nick, James, there is the choice again between two dining spaces – this time the bright brasserie or the slightly more formal restaurant. Local produce abounds in both. Kick off with the likes of haggis pakora or locally smoked trout, before a sirloin of Borders beef, or sea bream fillets spiced with a Thai curry sauce.
thetownhousemelrose.co.uk
Burt's
Owner Nick Henderson ensures local produce and local butcher meat feature heavily on both the bar and the restaurant menu. Kick off with the likes of Belhaven smoked salmon then move on to a rump of perfectly pink Borders lamb. They stock the excellent ales from local brewery Tempest Brewery Co too.
burtshotel.co.uk
Bed Down in Melrose
Burt's Hotel
In the same family – the Hendersons – for five decades, this trim, welcoming hotel on the High Street is perfectly located. Choose from 20 en suite rooms. I first stayed here almost two decades ago and it has barely changed – here that is a very good thing at a traditional hotel that still has an old school residents lounge.
burtshotel.co.uk
The Townhouse
Just across the road from Burt's Hotel, this equally welcoming bolthole is also owned and run by the ubiquitous Hendersons. It has a bit more of a contemporary boutique vibe but is still cosy.
thetownhousemelrose.co.uk
Harmony House
A grand old stone dame owned by the National Trust for Scotland. This palatial retreat is ideal for extended families or groups of friends, as it sleeps a dozen in some comfort. This self-catering option feels like having your own mini-Abbotsford in the heart of Melrose. You also enjoy privileged access to the celebrated Harmony Garden.
nts.org.uk/venue-hire/harmony-garden

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'I don't want this ride to end' - play-off coaches on season finale
'I don't want this ride to end' - play-off coaches on season finale

BBC News

time7 minutes ago

  • BBC News

'I don't want this ride to end' - play-off coaches on season finale

English rugby's leading coaches say they are determined to revel in the pressure of leading their sides into do-or-die Premiership semi-finals this weekend."If you can't love this, then get another job," says Bath's Johann van Graan, as the league's runaway leaders prepare to host local rivals Bristol on Friday night."If you're not enjoying it, what's the point?" adds Leicester boss Michael Cheika."When the heat is on, that's the time to go: 'how good?' You would rather be here than not, s o just get after it." 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This isn't one of those times. I don't want this ride to stop."Pat Lam of Bristol adds: "I use that word 'privilege'. I've got five children. The oldest is 32, the youngest is 18. That's the playing group that I've got."I get a real buzz seeing the experiences and what they are going through. It takes so much and you have to go out and earn it."When you look at the Champions League final, PSG winning 5-0, that is a team that decided to go out and enjoy themselves. "Every time I have these moments I feel just privileged to be here and feel lucky to be doing what we do."Van Graan added: "This game is not about fear. This game is about attacking it - and may the best team win."What would the world be without sport? I'm privileged to be part of it and part of a team that wants to achieve."And if we want to get to the next stage, we've got to get past a very good team on Friday night." 'Premiership can be like NRL' In his first and only season in the league, Cheika says he has "enjoyed the ride" in the East Midlands and has been surprised by the diversity of playing styles across the Premiership, citing Bristol's free-wheeling also believes the league has the potential to rival Australia's National Rugby League (NRL) and become one of the world's leading sporting products, with plans afoot to bring in a franchise model in a bid to take Premiership rugby to the next level."I think it should be like the NRL, when you think about the population. The game deserves a bigger economy. It needs the league to get it bigger, more money in there so there can be more impact," Cheika said."There's a really good thing going on here that we can build on, but it needs a central economy to create that energy, so teams don't go to the wall and they're able to benefit from a strong central economy with more sponsors, more people, more merchandising, a bigger TV deal, all that type of stuff that runs off the back of it."As an outsider there is definitely the potential for the game to be much bigger on a national scale."But with the game's status quo under threat from a breakaway league, Van Graan has highlighted how the sport's foundations are built on tradition, and believes the league is in a strong place after a challenging few years."That experience in Cardiff a few weeks ago, when Bath played Bristol, was amazing. It felt like a Test match," he said."There are so many good things about the Premiership. My Dad went to the 1991 World Cup and he brought me back some grass in a little bottle, which I still have. Twickenham was always the place and I remember our game there against Quins three years ago, I thought: 'this is amazing'."I can't control anything that happens about franchising, or rebel leagues, or the outside. All I can control is our team, and I'd like to think all 10 Premiership teams have done their bit to make this a spectacle in all of our different ways."We are all different, but there is all respect for each other. I think the Premiership is in a good place." 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Stephen McGowan: Martin can prove Rangers doubters wrong with one fix
Stephen McGowan: Martin can prove Rangers doubters wrong with one fix

The Herald Scotland

time14 minutes ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Stephen McGowan: Martin can prove Rangers doubters wrong with one fix

The Electronic Tims website claimed the appointment didn't 'make any sense whatsoever.' Another supporter called it a 'reckless gamble. Board embarrassing themselves again.' When the Australian lost three of his opening six league games the prophets of doom nodded sagely. Over time they were silenced by good recruitment and a winning catch phrase. 'We never stop' became Postecoglou's personal mantra at Parkhead and he was true to his word. By the time he left for Tottenham Hotspur supporters were inconsolable. Fickle old game, football. Russell Martin has spent his career proving the naysayers wrong. Defying the people who didn't believe he could step up to the plate. Growing up in Brighton his Scottish father Dean served time in prison for domestic violence towards his mother. Living next to a bookmakers' the family home went when the gambling debts mounted. The second of four brothers cleaned windows and pub toilets and worked in the local Spar to make ends meet and through all found a way to become school head boy. Later a diagnosis of ulcerative colitis prompted a switch to veganism. Pitch in a flirtation with Buddhism and a past membership of the Green Party and the former Scotland defender strikes no one as the new late Jock Wallace. Rattle off a list of clubs Martin has worked at, however, and it's a common reaction. He has never been welcomed in with open arms anywhere. He played non league football when no one believed he was good enough to be a pro and, when he finally caught a break under Tony Adams at Wycombe he moved up the ladder to Peterborough and Norwich. A stalwart under Paul Lambert, he was shown the door by Daniel Farke, then packed off on loan to Glasgow for an ill-fated loan spell at Ibrox. That six months – when he played in 5-0 and 4-0 defeats to a rampant Celtic – clouded the judgement of supporters who had set their heart on a Davide Ancelotti or a Francesco Farioli this time. Reflecting on that period yesterday Russell admitted he was nowhere near his physical peak and failed to do himself justice. Back in Glasgow on a mission of redemption, he plans to make amends. Read more: When Rangers were toiling trying to break down Queen's Park and Motherwell last season, there were no shortage of C words around Ibrox. The unveiling of Martin as the club's new head coach added two new additions to the vernacular. Fans can expect to hear a courage and culture at the Rangers. The words cropped up so often yesterday Patrick Stewart should plaster them underneath 'aye ready' on the club crest. It took courage for the new manager to keep Leicester dangling while he placed Rangers on speed dial. Courage to take a job where a decent number of supporters patently didn't want him. He'll need a strong constitution to take on a Brendan Rodgers Celtic team which has monopolised the Champions League money and the trophies in recent years. And to do it by playing possession based football, dominating games with the ball, breaking down low blocks and aggressively winning it back when they lose it. Rangers supporters have spent much of the last two year screaming out for a coach with an identity and style. Someone in stark contrast to Michael Beale and Philippe Clement. Now they have one they don't seem to want him and the coming weeks will be spent vying for hearts and minds. Martin calls his dedication to possession based football 'belief, desire, playing the way we want to play'. When it goes wrong critics prefer to call it stubborn, arrogant and inflexible. Defensive frailties contributed to Southampton shipping 63 goals in the Championship the season they finished fourth. In the English Premier League they were torn to shreds, opponents employing a high, hard press to exploit a dogged determination to build from the back. Some seem to think that a manager who fails in the English Premier League can't possibly succeed in Glasgow. Try telling that to Ange Postecoglou. Success or failure in one offers no real gauge to what might happen in the other. A thread on social media site X by Saints Statistics offered fans some pointers on what to expect from Martin's Rangers. Exceptional man management, extreme possession football and defensive frailties were the headline bullet points. Beating rivals in big games was another and, in Glasgow, that does wonders for a manager's approval ratings. Most striking was an ability to break down low blocks effectively. When Blackburn and Swansea put eleven men behind the ball against Martin's Southampton side it cut no ice. They shipped five goals anyway. Rangers could have used some of that last season. Against Celtic, playing in the Europa League, they pressed hard, set traps and played dynamic, attacking football. When they went up against a 4-5-1 or a 5-3-2 they shipped points to Kilmarnock, Aberdeen, St Mirren, Dundee United, Hibs, Dundee and Motherwell. Had they won all of those they might have given Celtic a serious run for their money. While the cameras and the focus fell on Russell Martin, the most important new arrival at Ibrox was sitting to his left Sporting Director Kevin Thelwell calls Rangers a 'complicated problem to solve.' And while beliefs, tactics, philosophy and culture will go some way towards fixing the conundrum, nothing trumps the importance of good recruitment. Put Russell Martin in the Championship with the best players and he wins promotion. Put him in the English Premier League with the worst and all he wins is a P45. There's nothing terribly complicated about that. Games of football are won by good players and, in recent years, Rangers haven't signed nearly enough of those to win them consistently. Improve the hit rate this summer and the club's 20th permanent manager has an even chance of proving people wrong. And not for the first time either.

Gabriel Ibitoye is the most divisive player in English rugby
Gabriel Ibitoye is the most divisive player in English rugby

Telegraph

time16 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Gabriel Ibitoye is the most divisive player in English rugby

Whether you are staring at his entrancing footwork or examining his mind-bending statistics, you can quickly start to feel dizzy around Gabriel Ibitoye. At the end of the regular season, the Bristol Bears winger finished as the Gallagher's Premiership joint top try scorer with Ollie Hassell-Collins, having played fewer games. Among English wings, he finished top for carries (152), break assists (11), metres gained (1179), offloads (25) and passes (117) – the latter three categories by massive margins. Extrapolate that across the United Rugby Championship and Top 14 and no other wing in Europe scores more tries, gains more metres, passes more frequently or carries more on a per-80 minute basis than Ibitoye, according to statistics provided by Opta. Even Bordeaux sensation Louis Bielle-Biarrey does not match his strike rate of more than a try a game. And yet the 27-year-old remains uncapped by England and did not even feature in head coach Steve Borthwick's most recent training squad, which did not include any Lions, Bath or Northampton players. Certainly with the likes of Tommy Freeman, Immanuel Feyi-Waboso and Tom Roebuck, England are well stocked in the wing department, but Ibitoye's combination of devastating footwork and freakish handling skills seem born from a different planet. A classic @BristolBears counter attack is finished in style by Kalaveti Ravouvou after the Gabriel Ibitoye basketball pass ⚡️ #GallagherPrem #BRIvLEI — Rugby on TNT Sports (@rugbyontnt) April 20, 2025 "That footwork is filth"! 🔥 Ibitoye has his second! #GallagherPrem | #EXEvBRI — Rugby on TNT Sports (@rugbyontnt) October 12, 2024 It is hard to escape the feeling that there's a peculiar English mistrust of those who possess a startling point of difference over more well-rounded alternatives, a sentiment shared by Pat Lam, the Bears director of rugby. 'I honestly believe he would be an All Black if he was born there, I really do,' Lam told Telegraph Sport. 'I know Scott Robertson well and if he was a Kiwi he would be an All Black and thriving at that.' 😱 Oh my Bristol Bears!! 👏 The passage of play that had it all! Coast to coast, out-the-back passes and the captains hat-trick! #BRIvSAR | #GallagherPrem | @BristolBears — Rugby on TNT Sports (@rugbyontnt) October 19, 2024 Beyond reference to the 'competitive arena' in the wide positions, Borthwick has not directly referenced why he has overlooked Ibitoye. Others have taken up that mantle on his behalf, referencing Ibitoye's defence, high-ball work and perceived work-rate. There are few more divisive players in the Premiership on social media. Lam is keen to address what he calls some 'lazy narratives' that have sprung up around Ibitoye, authorising Bristol's strength and conditioning team to release the metrics they keep on players' work-rate in games. On average, Ibitoye will record up to 1,200 metres of high speed running, which is defined as 19km/h in an average game – more than a Bronco Test and more than 400m of very high-speed running, defined as 25.2 km/h; this would be the equivalent of running a 5km race in 11min 54sec. Ibitoye will also record 23 repeat-effort bouts which consist of three individual efforts separated by 20 seconds or less. 'Sometimes with the guys who are different you find that they don't work but honestly his work-rate is so high,' Lam said. His other standout quality, according to Lam, is his game intelligence and being able to anticipate how play will develop. 'It is not an accident that he ends up in the right places,' Lam said. 'When you understand the game, you're one step ahead so then you can get to those positions really quickly.' As an example, Lam highlights Ibitoye's try against Harlequins at the Stoop earlier this season (see 1m 33sec into video below). By his standards, it was a fairly routine affair, taking Kieran Marmion's pass and running 40 metres untouched, but the simplicity of the finish belies the anticipation of where the space would be. 'He came from the other wing on that score because he could see that the D was coming up on the edge and he started to wander down the front line and then he saw there was no one down the short side,' Lam said. 'We have a call for it and he said that to Kieran and then, bang, he was able to give the dummy. He knew that Gabs was there without looking. Gabs changed his angle as well to get the run-in. That's an example of his ability to know what is going to happen next and put himself in a position to do it.' Lam does not pretend that Ibitoye is the complete package. He would not match the high-ball work of either Freeman or Roebuck. Defensively, he can occasionally look vulnerable, but Lam believes that Ibitoye's failings are put under a greater microscope than his rivals. 'He has made mistakes,' Lam said. 'I have seen all those England wingers miss tackles but when they miss tackles no one talks about it. When he misses a tackle, everyone focuses on that rather than the eight or nine that he makes. Same with his high-ball work. You can set the narrative to anything you want if you go searching for examples.' After being named in the Premiership's team of the season, Ibitoye will have a further opportunity to put his name in lights in Friday's Premiership semi-final against Bath at the Rec. Lam believes that should Ibitoye carry over his form into next season then Borthwick would have no choice but to pick him. 'There's no doubt when Steve came in with the England team a couple of years ago that he would have struggled in the way they were playing,' Lam said. 'But the England team now, with the way they have evolved, the generation that are coming through now and the desire to attack, he would really thrive with that. 'There's so many good players, but Gabs is something that is slightly different to everyone else. Someone like Tommy Freeman is a class player, but you need a complement to him. Tommy does the basics really well. He might not have the skill-set that Gabs has but he has the basics of chase hard, get up quickly, he's strong, he's powerful, he's tall. If those two played together you would have a great complement.'

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