While I don’t know of her ever attempting to play the bagpipes, she did catch salmon and brown trout in Scotland. But more than that, Daisy enthusiastically embraced the Scottish national pastime of curling. Here’s what she wrote to her brother Arthur’s wife, Margaret Gordon:
“[A]ll day we curl on the ice. Arthur knows what curling is—big stones with handles which we hurl over the ice and the game is like bowls.”
She wrote that from her bedroom in Meggernie Castle, in Perthshire, which is located in central Scotland right on the edge of the Highlands. It was owned at the time by Scottish textile magnate John Bullough. Daisy thought there was almost nothing as breathtaking as Meggernie in the snow. “It looks like what we used to read in fairy tales of turreted castles,” she told Margaret, “and at night the moon (now full) transforms it into a dream of beauty.” [i] At Meggernie in the winter there was dancing, skating, hiking, horseback riding, and curling.
Curling was probably created in Scotland sometime in the sixteenth century. It was played for fun generally with two teams of four players, and eight stones. Each player slid two stones to one end of the ice. They had a brush or a broom that helped to clear the ice of debris. The team with the most stones closest to the target won. (This is a very abbreviated version of the rules!) The stones were heavy (25-44 pounds) and necessitated some arm strength. Curling was a collegial game, especially when played by castle guests who, after hours on the ice, were no doubt glad to come in from the cold and trade their stones and brooms for a scotch and a seat beside a roaring fire.
Women did not begin to curl competitively in Scotland until the late nineteenth century, when the first women’s curling clubs were established. One hundred years later, in 1998, curling became an Olympic sport. Today there are female curlers in Scotland and the U.S. and many other countries, especially Canada, where Scottish immigrants introduced the game.
Daisy enjoyed curling so much, she would no doubt be thrilled to see the sport gaining in popularity as a result of the heightened publicity from the Olympics. Girl Scouts and Girl Guides can try curling at Our Chalet, the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scout camp in the Swiss Alps. If you know of any other Girl Scout or Girl Guide connections to curling, I hope you’ll let us know about it by commenting on this blog!
VERY COOL Stacy!
I will think of Juliette busily sweeping down a runway of ice next time I see her in her very beautiful pink gown at the Portrait Gallery. :)
Thanks, Katherine and Krissi, for your comments. I love that Juliette Low can BOTH curl and carry off that fabulous pink gown!
My daughter, who is a lifetime GSUSA member is also a curler. Who knew?
Awesome, Pat!