scotland-flag

On Wednesday morning when I arrived in Scotland’s Edinburgh Airport slightly knackered from my overnight 2-legged journey, I privately sighed. I was now back in a country that I not so privately love.  I don’t want you to get the wrong impression, I love America too. But if America owns my heart, for some reason, and one I can’t truly articulate, Scotland owns my soul.

The purpose of my visit was to meet up with the Monarchs House (our home in St Andrews) team of Angus and Kevin. Kevin has been the chef at the house since we bought it in 2001. If well over a thousand visitors to Monarchs House can be trusted, Kevin is St Andrews’ best chef. I wholeheartedly concur but his demeanor, in addition to his cooking, make Kevin a treat to be around. Angus Mitchell, our general manager since taking over from his daughter Amanda six years ago, is the best go-to-guy one could ever dream up. He has lived in St Andrews for his entire life and knows where all the bones are buried, no small feat in medieval St Andrews. Angus is knowledgeable, thorough, trustworthy, loyal and hard working. If you’re an absentee homeowner and this fellow was looking after your interests, you could sleep at night. He is also retiring at the end of November. Figuring out what to do without Angus in the mix was the meaning behind the trip.  BUT it was far more than that.

Waiting for me as I came around the corner signage proclaiming Edinburgh’s beauty was Club Cars, the taxi company Angus had sent to retrieve me. The driver was a familiar, friendly face that was keen to know how long it had been since I last visited. After a few comments about the fate of Hamilton Hall, the iconic red sandstone building I was involved with, the conversation turned light, warm and breezy just like the weather that day. As much as I talked and listened, my eyes searched the rolling hills of Fife as we made our hour’s journey into St Andrews. Farms, distant ruins, and a steam billowing train running vein-like through the middle of the county made everything seem so familiar. It was familiar because not much had changed since I last made this journey 2+ years ago and 33+ years ago.  Would St Andrews be the same? I had very little time ahead of me to before I could bear witness.

As we circled the Guardbridge roundabout for the final leg of the ride, I noticed my breathing. It was shallow. Once I saw the Eden Estuary, I knew it would be moments before I saw the church spires and the Hamilton Hall dominated St Andrews skyline. And then, there it was, in the distance, the building that was my dream project, Hamilton Hall. I shook my head in a final indignation at how unceremoniously the restoration had abruptly ended for everyone but it was right there in the taxi that I decided to put this disaster behind me once and for all. Of course, it wouldn’t be easy because everyone I saw in the ensuing 4 days had questions and lots of them. But it was a starting point.

Monarchs House was the final destination and as always, Kevin was there to greet me with a toothy smile and a warm welcome. Though I wanted to crawl into bed for a short nap, I also wanted a Monarchs House French press coffee. I was exhausted and I knew that if you are over tired, you can forget about getting sleep. (There’s your special bonus travel tip du jour.)  Shortly afterwards, Angus walked in displaying the warm Scottish hospitality that Monarchs House is known for. Both Angus and Kevin looked precisely as they did when I last saw them. It was like my ride into town. Nothing changes. We agreed to meet at 1 PM and Kevin would join us at 3 PM. We needed to get Angus outfitted with the sloped shoulders that retirement would bring him but we needed a plan for Monarchs House. I went upstairs to the Robert the Bruce bedroom and quickly released myself into the arms of Morpheus. Visions of Scotland danced through my head.

After meeting with Angus and Kevin, I decided to go for a walk around the town. It was a cracking day and unseasonably warm, perfect for exploring. Directly to the left of our house is Lade Braes Lane, a ten-foot walled in passageway into the town. On occasion, it is used as a smoking outpost and hideaway for the young students of the next-door Madras College. The really great thing about the lane is that it starts in town, runs by our house and ends 2.5 miles down the road at the Botanical Gardens.

Town is exactly like I remembered it, which is not to say there wasn’t changes, it is just that the changes were small and subtle. Things move glacially at St Andrews on purpose. If it went any other way, you’d see a McDonald’s on the corner. I noticed that many shops had closed and more storefronts than ever before were now available for let. After much resistance, the town has parking meters now. They installed the tower system, which serve multiple parking spots replacing the archaic voucher system. Another change I noticed is that it appears like St Andrews has become the coffee-drinking epicenter of the free world. There are coffee shops everywhere. In a town of over 15,000 university students, you can now get coffee or beer at multiple locations on any street in town. One pub that did close was the ubiquitous Aikman’s on Bell St. KT Tunstall used to gig there in the early 2000s but after 20+ years, it seems shuttered. On a further look around, I did see a couple of new buildings but all in all time stands still in St Andrews.

All of that walking made me a bit thirsty myself. I could have stopped at any of the many pubs that I passed on my way around town but I wanted to put in an appearance at the St Andrews Golf Club where I am a member. I knew that I would be interrogated at the Club but I wanted to drop in and say hello to my inquisitors.  After entering the club with a swipe card, I walked into the main room where there is usually epic socializing taking place. I glanced down at the blue couch to my left and sitting there, as expected, were the four horsemen of the apocalypse, my drinking mates for that early evening. I will spare you their names only because they would hate to get a reputation for being nice to me. But being nice to anyone without a couple of well-considered and good-natured digs is the modus operandi of this group. After greeting me with  “we were just talking about you 10 minutes ago,” I was then told that my (new) haircut was “poufy” and that the “extra weight looks good on you.” Welcome back.

Later that evening, I met up with an old friend and one that I have kept in touch with for years. Since he had something else on his diary that evening, our best option was for drinks at 9 PM at the Russell Hotel. My friend suggested it, though he knew it was my favorite local place, in order that we could be in the company of the lovely and friendly manageress there, Helen. Later in the evening, my friend’s wife popped in for a final drink and some final laughs. What a great way to spend my first day back in St Andrews.

Rather than bore you with a day by day accounting of my travails, I will leave it at this. My trip was everything I expected and more, just as it always is. When I paid my final visit to the St Andrews club on Saturday, one of my friends there, the most curmudgeonly of the lot, came over to me and hugged me as he was leaving for the day. He leaned over and quietly said so that no one else could hear, “next time, don’t be as long, lad.” It was like the first time I had been to St Andrews 33 years ago, when a total stranger invited me off the street and into his house to have supper with he and his wife. Nothing changes. And I like it like that.

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scotland-flagA million times I have professed my love for St Andrews and Scotland. I know. You’re tired of it. Well, stay with me this one last time, if you will and instead of telling you, I’d like to show you why I love it. What follows is a brief gallery of all of the wonderful places I can walk to from Monarchs House in less than 10 minutes. And I promise you, there are hundreds more places that are equally wonderful and breathtaking.

Okay. That’s my piece said.

Have a look for yourself.
(if you roll over the photos, you will see a navigation bar. The last icon on the right gives you a full screen look-see, if you’re interested that is.)

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five5 Cars I have owned
505 Peugeot STI
British Rover
Challenger
Delta 88
Lexus LS400

5 Favorite Food Styles
Italian
Sushi
Shabu-Shabu
Spanish
French

5 Underrated Pleasures
Peanut Butter Sandwich
Serendipity (movie – Kate Beckinsale is in it!!!)
Any bodily function (All in moderation of course – yawn, sneeze, well you know the rest)
Survivor Samoa
Looking out the window at nothing (like in the third grade)

5 Things to Consider When Emailing
Don’t get the last word. (Writing back “Tks” is unnecessary)
Never hit “reply all” when you meant to respond to just one person.
Don’t write with anger or lust. (sit on it for a day and reread it)
Email is a permanent record. Nothing off color or something to come back and haunt you.
ALWAYS check the “to” field before you hit send

mcewans805 Things I am Looking Forward to When I Get to Scotland
Visiting with friends
Playing the Castle Course
Drinking a McEwan’s /80
Walking around St Andrews seeing what has changed
Awaking to a Scottish sunrise

St Andrews' sunrise from my bedroom window

St Andrews' sunrise from my bedroom window

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mindthegapA week from today, I will arrive in Scotland for the first time in 28 months. I am hoping to play a round of golf but the primary reason for my visit is to bid farewell to our long time general manager, Angus. Angus is retiring and calls my visit the “hand over.” If you’re a long time reader of this blog, you know that a small group of us have a home in St Andrews called Monarchs House that is rented out to golfers making the pilgrimage to the home of golf. Angus has been looking after the house and all the golfing visitors for 8 years.

St Andrews is not like many other places and very far removed from any town in the States. First of all, it is a magnificently beautiful medieval town. Unlike the U.S., there are no signs of wooden structures; everything is built from stone. Throughout the town, there are ruins that tell of the violence of the Reformation in the mid 1500s. St Rules Tower dates back to 1127. St Andrews also is home to Scotland’s first university and the third oldest in the English speaking world, founded in 1413. But it’s not just the history of the town or even the golf that makes me love St Andrews in particular and Scotland in general. I love the way of life, the people and the topography.

St Rules Tower

St Rules Tower

Recently, after all my years, I finally came to conclusion about why I love where I live and why I love the other places that I visit. There is a commonality in all of the places I gravitate toward. In Boston’s Back Bay, I overlook the Charles River and I am very close to Boston Harbor. I can also walk to anything that could satisfy my needs; food, drink, shopping, entertainment, open spaces and friends. In St Andrews, I am a 2 minutes from any of the beaches and able to walk the entire town and visit its shops and play golf. Here are a few of the other places I love: Plymouth, Sag Harbor, Newport, Marblehead, Savannah, Saucelito, Puerto Banus and San Francisco. All are water centric and all have lovely walkable old towns. Bring me to the mountains, away from water, and I can feel myself silently die.

In St Andrews, I intend on visiting all of my old haunts. They can expect me at the Russell Hotel for dinner and to say hello to Helen the manageress. I will have a drink at the St Andrews Golf Club to say hello to Gordon, Oggie, Alf and the rest of the boys (all over 70). I plan to see my old friend John, the one that always refers to my wife as the lovely Christine.  I am going to have a dram with my friend Mike and commiserate about what could have been with Hamilton Hall. But mostly, I am going to breathe Scotland and all that it is to me. I never get excited about travelling until it happens but this trip has me on edge. As I found out 28 months ago, you never know when it will be your last.

* DUM SPIRO SPERO means “While I breathe, I hope” in Latin and is generally attributed to Cicero. The notable origin of the motto is St Andrews, Scotland. It’s attribution to Saint Andrew and his bones (relics) being taken to this small fishing village on the North Sea, contributed to its direct linkage between the saying, the town, the University of St Andrews and the Saint.

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personal

It was time to write this story. It has bothered me for so long that I need it off my chest once and for all. This is the (very) brief accounting of what happened to my partner and my purchase of Hamilton Hall.

Sometime in 2004, my business partner and I  submitted  the winning bid to buy Hamilton Hall from the University of St Andrews. While we were clever enough to recognize a great building, we had no real estate development experience. Our cleverness ended there when we failed to select the right partner. We are responsible for bringing this wonderful, Victorian landmark to Wasserman Real Estate Capital (WREC). That was our grave error.

3-St Andrews Grand

Hamilton Hall

While the possibility of a economic score seemed possible and probable, our primary concern was that the project was done properly and with consideration for St Andrews, Scotland and the world of golf. If this happened, everything else would take care of itself. We were, after all, homeowners in the town and long time visitors to St Andrews and Scotland. Although Hamilton Hall has many constituencies, this was completely lost on WREC. Until the time of purchase, the WREC principles had been to Scotland once and that was on a boondoggle hosted by Bentley Motor Cars. Seeing Scotland through the eyes of a luxury automobile company hardly qualifies one to develop one of Scotland’s most important and iconic buildings. In retrospect, Wasserman Real Estate Capital wasn’t remotely qualified to develop this building. They didn’t have the necessary capital, the knowledge or the experience to turn this into a success for all. They expected it to sell itself. And while this is not a viable strategy, it almost did sell itself.

For months on end, I sounded like a broken record. “It’s a great building but what are we selling,” I asked repeatedly. “When people/members arrive here, what type of experience are we delivering to them?” I was not alone. In the course of 18 months, WREC hired and fired not less than 11 sales/marketing/public relations companies, all of whom were saying exactly the same thing. This was not a good message to send to the marketplace. Deadline after deadline was missed. Bills weren’t paid or were delayed indefinitely. Lies were the order of the day. David Wasserman  would constantly tell us that if we got more members to sign up, then we could spend money on marketing material and amenities. I have email after email where he would blame everyone but himself for the lack of sales. Yet, he said he would handle the sales exclusively. But think about this for one second, how can a project be set up for success if sales were needed to drive the expenditure for marketing materials? David Wasserman ensured his own failure and those around him.

His lips are moving......

His lips are moving...

Today, the building stands vacant, a shell of its former glory as the Grand Hotel. Nothing has been done for over two years. I remember hosting a series of cocktail parties at my home in St Andrews where David Wasserman presented his plan to the local citizens. Not one word of his plan ever came to fruition. He constantly told people that work would begin, only for that deadline to uneventfully expire.

I couldn’t be more sad about a project that started with so much promise. I am convinced that in the right hands, this project would have not only worked but flourished. Now, it is the perfect Harvard Business School case study…for what not to do. I do not expect WREC to be the lead developer on anything that goes forward with this project. They don’t have the resources. Their professional staff has left and the bank holds the mortgage for the total of the purchase price. Shortly, the bank will determine the future of this wonderful building by announcing its new owner.

Though I am sad that I am no longer involved in my dream project, I am thrilled to hear that the building will be resold. My fondest hope is that  Hamilton Hall’s new ownership understands the building’s importance to the town, Scotland and the world of golf.  This grand building deserves to be restored to its former glory and once again be a source of great pride for the people of St Andrews.

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phunterThis week’s theme is sports and I maintain, if you’re walking, it’s a sport. If you are riding, it’s a game. Just my opinion, you don’t have to agree with it.

For years now, I have traveled to Scotland on a regular basis with a group of seven other guys. There is nothing better than golf buddy trips. This photo was taken of me in the mid-nineties standing on the Old Course’s Swilcan Bridge in St Andrews. It was a great black and white shot that I have since PhotoShopped to give it an early 1900’s “colored in” postcard like feel. (you are wondering, I’m the guy who looks like a fridge with a head!)

Visit TNChick.com to see the PhotoHunter photo of the week,

Photo Hunter

photo

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Like last week’s Photo Hunter, this picture is also from St Andrews, Scotland. The bench and the building belong to the Royal and Ancient Golf Glub of St Andrews (R&A). It sits directly behind the first tee of the Old Course. The window above the bench shows the reflection of a setting sun over the Old Course. It’s my favorite reflection shot at my favorite place.

I look at this photo with great melancholy. It seems now like my 47 year run of visiting the UK will stop this year. I can’t even believe I said it. If anything changes I will keep you posted.

Photo Hunter

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The St Andrews Castle was fortified around 1100 and a hundred years later it became the home of the bishops and archbishops of St Andrews. The Castle saw little in the way of encroachment from foreign lands but it was front and center during the Reformation in the mid-1500s. Cardinal Beaton, who lived at the Castle, burned a Protestant preacher at the stake in front of the castle.  It wasn’t long thereafter that the Protestants took the Castle by building a mine underneath the Castle walls in order to compromise its structural viability. Once they gained entry, they assassinated Cardinal Beaton in his residence. It is believed that King Henry the VIII of England was pleased to be rid of the Cardinal because Beaton stood in the way of the King’s initiatives in Scotland. A year later, a French fleet reduced the Castle to ruins but its stones can be seen today as they were used to build residences in the town of St Andrews. These ruins are what remains of St Andrews Castle.

Photo Hunter

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It’s difficult to believe that Halloween with its goblins and witches is upon us already. But imagine a place where you can encounter ghosts and the paranormal not just in October but every month.  Due to it’s somewhat bloody history, ghosts are not unusual in Scotland. However, they are positively commonplace in St. Andrews and the County of Fife.

I’m sure you need convincing.  How about the “ghost car” driven by a malevolent looking man that speeds down the “A7″ causing reoccurring accidents?  You need more don’t you?  Of course you do.  There’s always the assassinated Archbishop of St Andrews, James Beaton, who rides down Strathkinness Road in a phantom coach drawn by four large horses.  The murdered Prior who can be observed on moonlit nights watching over the Tower of St. Rules might convince you. Or the “white lady” would definitely scare your hair straight.  It’s not unusual for this “ghosty” woman to run right through you by the square tower.  I know I’m not making a strong case for you but name one other country who recognizes the Ghost Tracking profession.  A few years ago, one of our friends in St Andrews awoke to a wee, ghoulish, girl at the foot of her bed…on a regular basis.

About two years ago, I was at our home in St Andrews while Christine was in Boston. One Sunday afternoon, I called Chris from the drawing living room while making myself comfortable in a big winged back chair. Five minutes into our conversation I heard the unmistakeable sound of hoovering vacuuming from the next floor. Chris heard the startle in my voice and asked what was up. “I thought I was in the house alone. Someone is upstairs,” I hesitantly remarked. I shifted in the chair, mistakenly thinking that somehow I would hear better. But there was no doubt that someone was vacuuming. I got out of the chair and moved toward the living room door. Chris was still on the phone with me. The sound was definitely louder and coming from the 1st 2nd floor landing. “Chris, I can’t explain this. I have to go upstairs,” I told her in a completely unconvincing tone. And up the stairs on tiptoes, I went. The stairs are carpet covered stone and there was minimal noise squeeking out from under the weight of me. Chris asked what was going on but I didn’t dare respond. It was unnecessary because she could hear the vacuuming too. When I reached the midway landing, the noise stopped…dead. I bounded up the remaining stairs and looked in the rooms. Nothing. Then, I opened the linen closet and found the hoover still hot from finishing its chores. Gulp.

Next time I will tell you about the case of the missing cushions pillows.

See for yourself, visit St. Andrews.  Have a ghoul on us.

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