A Very Special Character

I only met Bob Bisset once and that was as a teenager I thought he was an eccentric old man .Bob was Head Stalker on Invermearan estate for forty years, it was only many years later
when I went to Invermearan as a stalker (unfortunately Bob had been dead for a number of years by that time) that I realized what an interesting and complex character he was.
When I say that I thought he was an eccentric old man , it was only after going to Invermearan that I found out that when I had met him as a teenager he was only in his forties but then I suppose when you are eighteen someone in their forties does seem old
I had heard a bit about him over the years mostly about his skill as a leather worker he made shoes and hill boots the story goes that he was dissatisfied with always having wet feet
with store bought boots that he decided to have a go at making his own.
Before long he was in demand by stalkers ,keepers and shepherds to make their boots he also made telescope cases that any stalker would be proud to own in fact Donsider on this forum is the proud owner of one,
He was also a scholar of Burns ( the poet) and had a huge library of books on Burns and his poetry
He not only played and taught the fiddle but made fiddles and a well known Shetland fiddler wrote a fiddle tune and named it Bob Bisset of Glen Lyon in his memory.
Bob was a larger than life Highland character not overly tall but stocky with a big bushy beard and he wore the kilt summer and winter both as dress and for work.

He also had a huge collection of clocks mostly cuckoo clocks which adorned the cottage he shared with his wife Peggy, it was apparently out of this world when they all struck the hour, despite having such an interest in clocks Bob steadfastly refused to shift the clock in spring and autumn so for six months of the year he was an hour behind it was known to the locals as Glen Lyon time.
Any travels in the Glen were always welcome at Peggy's door with a cup of tea and her home baked scones or maybe a bowl of home made soup and if you were very lucky and
Bob took to you maybe a dram of Glenmorangie which was the only whisky he would drink.

If you were invited into the house then you had to sign the visitors book I kid you not the visitors book and it was apparently full of well known signatures I think many people
went to find out if there was any truth in the myth, boy were they in for a surprise.

As well as his job as Head Stalker on the estate Bob took on the self appointed role as Servant or Keeper of the stones in Glen Caillach a glen that runs can be found a unique
structure the house of the Caillach the creator Godess in Celtic mythology and Bob was her servant the Godess and her family the Bodach (old man) and their daughter
Nighean while two smaller children stay in the house.
The family are represented by small heavy water washed stones shaped like dumb bells the family only lived in the house from the first of May until the end of October when the Celtic festivals took place that celebrated the beginning and end of summer.At the end of summer the Servant or Keeper of the stones would shut the family in the house making sure it was weather tight and come first of May the house would be opened up and the family placed outside the door and the house would get a new thatch and any necessary repairs.
This pagan practice has been carried out for centuries firstly by those that striving to make a living from grazing a few cattle on the hill in the summer these early farmers and some not so early lived on hill with there animals during the summer months the legend being that if those living in the glen took care of the Caillach's family she in turn would make sure that they would prosper.
This carried on for hundreds of years until the cattle were replaced in the Highlands by sheep but always some one stepped into the role maybe a shepherd at one time even the Laird of the estate, when I went to Invermearan it was Hamish the then Head Stalker who had stepped into the role.

Bob carried out his role as servant until he died ,Bob knew exactly where he wanted to be buried in his beloved hills but not just anywhere he had picked the spot his favorite place to spy his ground and also overlooking the Caillachs house where he could also look out for it.(not as daft as it sounds there have been several attempts to steel the stones over the years)

Bob knew where he wanted to be buried but that's not as easy as it sounds on a hill face but Bob would not be put off by something like that he spent several years working the ground and removing stones till he had an area that could be dug deep enough to take a coffin, oh and he built his own coffin.

Unfortunately when he died the Laird was against Bob being buried on the hill but agreed that if he was cremated his ashes could be buried on the spot he had chosen and they were
and some years later Peggy joined him.
There is now a cairn built on top of where their ashes are and into the bottom of the cairn are cemented a bottle of his favorite tipple and his telescope.

A fitting tribute to a remarkable man.

I do so wish I had not dismissed him as an eccentric old man, Ah the folly of youth.
 
Bogtrotter
He was the stalker for Witherspoon in Glen Lyon, i cant remember the name of the estate that was a few years back when i was fortunate enough to be invited for a stalk at the hinds.

Foxinmad
Think i seen him with a motor full of hounds in the Inverness area a couple of years back ,but wasn't sure
 
Bogtrotter
He was the stalker for Witherspoon in Glen Lyon, i cant remember the name of the estate that was a few years back when i was fortunate enough to be invited for a stalk at the hinds.

Foxinmad
Think i seen him with a motor full of hounds in the Inverness area a couple of years back ,but wasn't sure

If it was Witherspoon he worked for then it would have been Glen Lyon estate, as I said previously there are a lot of estates in Glen Lyon it is after all the longest glen in Scotland.
There are differences of opinion on what is and is not considered Glen Lyon so the length is quoted as anything from
25 miles to 34 miles long depending on the source.
 
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Donsider,

Could I ask you to post up some pictures of your telescope and case?

I am sure that many others besides myself would be very keen to have a look.

Thank you!


Hi Caberslash,

Came back from Glen Lyon last night after two days stalking. Success on my first day with a fine 8 point stag. we were spoilt for choice as we saw quite a few mature stags. There was the odd stag with hinds but I would say next week there will be much rutting activity with the rut. Sadly, the weather on Tuesday was very much against us with a swirling wind, rain, and mist so we pulled stumps at 3 and headed back to the Landrover for a well-earned cup of tea. However, we did get in amongst a stag with quite a few hinds but the grazed into an area with we could not get in close enough for a shot.

I did as I wrote in an earlier thread take my Bob Bisset case with a Ross scope to the hill and, have a spy on the hill I thought of my meeting with Bob in his cottage many years ago. Ah, how time flys by...

As requested I attach a few photographs of the case and scope. I hope the show up well. I would like to know who "H H" would be as the case was made especially for that person. Can anyone help?

I'm back in the Glen at the end of October for four days at the hinds and hopefully, we may experience the end of the rut. Until then I will be salmon fishing on the Dee and the Don. Oh, what joy retirement brings....................

Regards

Donsider
 

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Donsider

That’s a great addition to Bob’s story by Bogtrotter, just love Boggy’s recollections of great characters, real naturally talented people.

Thank you for posting the photos of Bobs leatherwork and your glass, now both Historical items, every time you touch the leather you will remember Bob !
Let’s hope someone on here knows who “H H” is, fingers crossed.

More recollections please Bogtrotter.
 
I’m a retired ecologist. During my working life I was involved in a number of land-use change surveys. On one of these surveys, I was working with my team in Glen Dochart and staying B&B in Crianlarich. My boss was ‘back in the office’ sorting out access permissions. One evening, after a hard day on the hill, I returned to our digs to find a message from my boss instructing me to meet with the head stalker at Pubil in Glen Lyon that evening. I had about an hour to get there for the appointed time. It is about 35 miles, some of it on single track roads, and I was driving a long wheelbase landrover. Needless to say, I did not have time for dinner!

I made it to the stalker’s house 8 minutes late and introduced myself to the lady who answered my knock. A voice from ‘ben the hoose’ shouted “Tell him tae bugger off, he’s late”. I thought the comment was a joke and explained the reason for my tardiness. The reply made it obvious that the comment was serious. At this point, fired up by the high-speed drive and the lack of food in my stomach, I ‘lost it’ and shouted over the lady’s shoulder just exactly what I thought of his comments, using language in a similar vein to his. The reply was “You’d better come in then”. In this way, I met Bob Bisset! I signed the visitors book and was treated to a plate of soup followed by tea and cake and access permission was gained without fuss. He offered to measure me for a pair of boots which to my regret, having since heard of the quality of his work, I declined. I met him again on the days we were surveying on ‘his’ land and thereafter, we exchanged Christmas cards until his wife wrote, informing me that he had died. There was much about him that I didn’t know although, from the start, it was obvious that he was an extraordinary man. I didn’t know about his love of Rabbie Burns or that he made fiddles. I, myself, have made the odd mandolin and I would have loved to have discussed the finer points of musical instrument making. I’m sure he would have had strong views! Over a lifetime wandering around the countryside both for work and leisure, I have met many memorable people but Bob Bisset must be one of the most memorable. The more I hear about him, the more I wish that it might still be possible to meet him again but, alas, that cannot be.
 
I only met Bob Bisset once and that was as a teenager I thought he was an eccentric old man .Bob was Head Stalker on Invermearan estate for forty years, it was only many years later
when I went to Invermearan as a stalker (unfortunately Bob had been dead for a number of years by that time) that I realized what an interesting and complex character he was.
When I say that I thought he was an eccentric old man , it was only after going to Invermearan that I found out that when I had met him as a teenager he was only in his forties but then I suppose when you are eighteen someone in their forties does seem old
I had heard a bit about him over the years mostly about his skill as a leather worker he made shoes and hill boots the story goes that he was dissatisfied with always having wet feet
with store bought boots that he decided to have a go at making his own.
Before long he was in demand by stalkers ,keepers and shepherds to make their boots he also made telescope cases that any stalker would be proud to own in fact Donsider on this forum is the proud owner of one,
He was also a scholar of Burns ( the poet) and had a huge library of books on Burns and his poetry
He not only played and taught the fiddle but made fiddles and a well known Shetland fiddler wrote a fiddle tune and named it Bob Bisset of Glen Lyon in his memory.
Bob was a larger than life Highland character not overly tall but stocky with a big bushy beard and he wore the kilt summer and winter both as dress and for work.

He also had a huge collection of clocks mostly cuckoo clocks which adorned the cottage he shared with his wife Peggy, it was apparently out of this world when they all struck the hour, despite having such an interest in clocks Bob steadfastly refused to shift the clock in spring and autumn so for six months of the year he was an hour behind it was known to the locals as Glen Lyon time.
Any travels in the Glen were always welcome at Peggy's door with a cup of tea and her home baked scones or maybe a bowl of home made soup and if you were very lucky and
Bob took to you maybe a dram of Glenmorangie which was the only whisky he would drink.

If you were invited into the house then you had to sign the visitors book I kid you not the visitors book and it was apparently full of well known signatures I think many people
went to find out if there was any truth in the myth, boy were they in for a surprise.

As well as his job as Head Stalker on the estate Bob took on the self appointed role as Servant or Keeper of the stones in Glen Caillach a glen that runs can be found a unique
structure the house of the Caillach the creator Godess in Celtic mythology and Bob was her servant the Godess and her family the Bodach (old man) and their daughter
Nighean while two smaller children stay in the house.
The family are represented by small heavy water washed stones shaped like dumb bells the family only lived in the house from the first of May until the end of October when the Celtic festivals took place that celebrated the beginning and end of summer.At the end of summer the Servant or Keeper of the stones would shut the family in the house making sure it was weather tight and come first of May the house would be opened up and the family placed outside the door and the house would get a new thatch and any necessary repairs.
This pagan practice has been carried out for centuries firstly by those that striving to make a living from grazing a few cattle on the hill in the summer these early farmers and some not so early lived on hill with there animals during the summer months the legend being that if those living in the glen took care of the Caillach's family she in turn would make sure that they would prosper.
This carried on for hundreds of years until the cattle were replaced in the Highlands by sheep but always some one stepped into the role maybe a shepherd at one time even the Laird of the estate, when I went to Invermearan it was Hamish the then Head Stalker who had stepped into the role.

Bob carried out his role as servant until he died ,Bob knew exactly where he wanted to be buried in his beloved hills but not just anywhere he had picked the spot his favorite place to spy his ground and also overlooking the Caillachs house where he could also look out for it.(not as daft as it sounds there have been several attempts to steel the stones over the years)

Bob knew where he wanted to be buried but that's not as easy as it sounds on a hill face but Bob would not be put off by something like that he spent several years working the ground and removing stones till he had an area that could be dug deep enough to take a coffin, oh and he built his own coffin.

Unfortunately when he died the Laird was against Bob being buried on the hill but agreed that if he was cremated his ashes could be buried on the spot he had chosen and they were
and some years later Peggy joined him.
There is now a cairn built on top of where their ashes are and into the bottom of the cairn are cemented a bottle of his favorite tipple and his telescope.

A fitting tribute to a remarkable man.

I do so wish I had not dismissed him as an eccentric old man, Ah the folly of youth.
Not many of the old school left these days in the countryside. Real old characters the likes of which we will probably never see again. On the large lease I had near Ardgay was an old shepherd, now gone, who was in his eighties when he passed on and lived at the end of the glen with a well for his water and an old tractor engine for his electric. He had a pet Goat for many years that he eventually sold to two germans who wanted to take a trophy Goat, and had enquired in the local watering hole, also now gone (two fires saw to that). Needless to say the german clients had no idea what they paid for :)
Great read Boggy, thank you.
 
Great read thank you
my very first outing on the hinds was at Glen Lyon, 3 days of pure bliss 17 hinds taken between 2 of us the stalker was Mr G grant.
 
Brilliant account of a very, very interesting man of the hill. They don't make them like that anymore

Patrick
 
Amazing story, its nice to hear that some of the old traditions of men still remain, & remain a mystery to modern man. Thank you so much for sharing.
 
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