
This is the skyline of Old Aberdeen, I think. In other words, I imagine there would be the historical part of the city and the more modern looking part. My impression is that this is facing south-east, but I could be wrong.
Apparently the University of Aberdeen is 15 minutes walk from the ocean. One peice of propaganda claimed you could see dolphins from the shore sometimes. That would be something. I guess there are castles and parks and highlands to check out too.
But word on the street is that the 5 1/2 hours of daylight in the winter is a bigger deal than the cold. You get frigid winds but none of this sub-arctic -40 stuff like in northern Canada. I guess you'd be wearing hoodies and jackets all year though. I don't mind that.
One other interesting thing I just found out is that my Coutts family roots go back to McDuff, Scotland (which is right about where the "O" in Scotland lands on the map there). So that's kind of cool. Maybe we'd get there and find we had long-lost wealthy relatives with a parcel of land they want to give us in the highlands.
Anyway, here's the legendary part of the school I'd be attending. Its officially King's College, Aberdeen, in the University of Aberdeen.

Personally, Aberdeen has a lot going for it. It is a bit cheaper than the other front-runner, it seems to have more inroads to community life for families of students (although it is hard to tell), it is in a cool part of the world, and it seems like the primary school system would be pretty good and accessible for my kids.
That's the city and the school. Tomorrow I'll post about the teacher and the topic.
1 comment:
Very cool! So what are the other two? Here's my little comparison of Aberdeen and Edinburgh student community life, in case Edinburgh is one of them. It seems Aberdeen had a formal time when families could come to the college and have lunch together and fellowship. The women would also get together perhaps monthly I believe.
Edinburgh didn't have as many formal things--but we absolutely loved living in the grad student family housing--we ended up in a very rich but natural community setting that way. Ladies met for tea and fellowship weekly, and we would often go to New College and have lunch at the dining hall there.
Exciting to think about!
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