Callater Burn

The Callater Burn is a river in the Scottish council area of Aberdeenshire.[2] Queen Victoria's last excursion with her husband Prince Albert, who died in 1861, is said to have taken place on 16 October of the same year through Glen Clunie to Glen Callater, which Albert is said to have admired for its beauty.[3]

Callater Burn
Location
CountryScotland
Council areaAberdeenshire
Physical characteristics
Source 
  locationDrain from Loch Callater
  coordinates56°56′34″N 3°21′12″W
  elevation501 m (1,644 ft)
Mouth 
  location
3 km (1.9 mi) south of Braemar into the Clunie Water
  coordinates
56°58′44″N 3°23′30″W
Length6 km (3.7 mi)[1]

Geography

The Callater Burn flows on its northwest bank from Loch Callater, located at an altitude of 501 m (1,644 ft)[4] in the central Grampian Mountains. It initially flows for two kilometers in a primarily northwesterly direction. It then turns north for another 2.5 km (1.6 mi) before flowing northwest again. Three kilometers south of Braemar, after a total of around six kilometers, the Callater Burn flows from the right into the Clunie Water, which drains into the North Sea via the River Dee. The Callater Burn passes the Creag nan Gabhar, the Creag an Loch and the Meall an t-Slugain.[1][2]

Its valley, Glen Callater, also includes Loch Callater and its main tributary, the Allt na Loch. It leads to the Tolmount near the Angus border.[5] The banks of the Callater Burns are unpopulated. Near its mouth, Auchallater Bridge, a modern bridge along the A93, spans the river.[1]

References

  1. Ordnance Survey map
  2. "Callater Burn". Gazetteer for Scotland.
  3. Callader or Callater in: F. H. Groome (Hrsg.): Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland: A Survey of Scottish Topography, Statistical, Biographical and Historical, Grange Publishing Works, Edinburgh, 1882–1885.
  4. "Loch Callater". UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology.
  5. "Glen Callater". Gazetteer for Scotland.
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