Cawdor Castle – A Living Highland Legacy
Today we arrived in Invergordon, a small port town in the Scottish Highlands, known more for its strategic location than for its own sights. It’s a quiet gateway to the surrounding beauty — dramatic coastlines, hills, and ancient estates just beyond the docks.


Our destination: Cawdor Castle. Around an hour’s drive inland, this striking medieval castle sits in a landscape that feels both wild and carefully tended. Built in the 15th century, Cawdor Castle is still a private residence — the Dowager Countess Cawdor lives here part of the year, which gives the place a unique character. It isn’t a museum. It’s a home with history.
Inside, many of the original furnishings are still in place. The rooms are richly decorated, but not overly grand — wood-panelled walls, portraits of ancestors, antique books, and personal belongings give you the sense that life here continues, just offstage. Each room tells its own story, blending Scottish heritage with a lived-in warmth.


The legend of the castle’s origin is part of its charm. According to local lore, a donkey carrying a chest of gold was set loose to decide where the castle should be built. It lay down beneath a holly tree, and the builders took that as a sign. The tree is still visible in the castle’s basement — encased, but present.
Outside, the gardens are just as inviting. Divided into three main areas — the Walled Garden, the Flower Garden, and the Wild Garden — they feel designed to be wandered. Neatly clipped hedges lead into colorful flowerbeds, while narrow paths disappear into wooded corners. Even on a cloudy Highland day, the place is alive with greens and deep floral colors. In spring and summer, the garden is a true highlight.


There’s also a small café and gift shop near the entrance, unobtrusive and tasteful — much like the entire estate. Cawdor Castle isn’t flashy. It’s personal, quietly elegant, and layered with history still in motion.
Travel Notes:
Allow at least 2–3 hours to explore both interior and gardens at a relaxed pace.
Open seasonally from late April to early October.
Entrance fee is approx. £13 for adults (garden access included).
Photography is not allowed inside the castle rooms.