Dear Edinburgh (Festival) Tourist

Dear Edinburgh (Festival) Tourist

I love Edinburgh most of the time, but during the festival it doubles its number of inhabitants, which means a distance I could once walk in five minutes I now struggle to complete in five hours.

So there we go – first written formal warning from BlueBeretMum.

Dear Edinburgh (Festival) Tourist

Oh how I loathe thee at times.

Your obvious ignorance to the rest of us, the non-tourist population. Snail – steps and that indecisiveness as to whether to walk into a shop or stand outside and block everyone else's chance of doing their shopping/passing by and getting home before their blood sugar levels get so low that they will collapse in the street in front of you.

You see, if someone is walking very fast with a roaring toddler in their buggy it probably means only three things: they are in a bloody hurry, yes, they are local and no they have no idea where that café from your guidebook (11th edition from 1999) is, and they are probably late so no they cannot spend the next 100 years trying to figure out where it is you should be right now (that makes four things but I don't care).

The truth is that you, your family and that herd of Highland cows that you got on sale during your two hour trip of All Things Worth Seeing in Scotland (the cows, the hills and the Loch Ness monster) are taking up my public pavement space. The rest has been monopolised by a woman with 1,000,001 piercings in her face, a dubious Spanish singer, an incompetent belly dancer and a guild of pickpockets, which means that plain pedestrians like me have to either develop a superpower to fly or use whatever means they have to make any headway.

In my case, the weapon of choice is German and it has four wheels. The Hauck Shopper buggy has brought down a barrage of luggage and de-heeled the owners on a few occasions.

Not everyone speaks English but if you hear a loud voice behind your back, followed by 'Raaaaaaaaaah raaah raaaah' that may imply that someone is trying to tell you something, like 'Get out of our way or Peanut will miss In the Night Garden and things will get NASTY.'

On the other hand, I must admit that not all tourists are bad and some representatives of your species have provided me with an endless supply of giggles and party jokes.

Life is full of trials and tribulations and I feel for your dilemma: 'Should I get a cashmere scarf or shawl? Do they sell them in pink?'

Alex Salmond is bound to love this great feedback on one of the famous visitor attractions: 'How convenient they built that castle so close to the shops.'

There are more similar quotes of random spontaneous wisdom that make me question how we, the supposedly thinking kind, manage to get by from one day to another but my bruised subconscious has erased them all in a heroic act of self-preservation.

I understand you are on holiday. You have never been to Scotland before. You are in no hurry and want to cherish the sweet moment of admiring the intricate display window of Primark. You perambulate up and down the Royal Mile in hope you can spot the Queen stuffing her face with the heavenly Edinburgh fudge.

Please, be my guest, take your and my time and have a good long look at the legendary tram works and the workers digging yet another hole in the ground. Yes, pay extra attention to the famous cracks on show (no, not the pavement ones).

I really understand all that. After all, I have been on holidays myself (believe it or not) and I cannot read a map to save my life either, but please have mercy because that woman with wispy hair and mad confused expression on her face has probably endured a morning of having bananas rubbed into her only clean pair of trousers and a mini toothbrush shoved into her ear. Then she spent 45 minutes chasing a toddler around her house. Said toddler decided to go to nursery bum-bare. Then he decided to hide. Toddlers are pretty clever. They can squeeze into fairly small spaces like the washing machine, the kitchen cupboard, the bin and the favourite of all times, the toilet bowl.

So that woman lost all her patience within the first 63 minutes of her awake time. Now anything else means war.

Every good relationship is about compromise, as in 'If you move your pile of rucksacks, shopping bags and other travel attire by two millimetres I could just squeeze through without risking getting run over by a taxi driver who does not seem to have a great start to the day either.'

Please don't get me wrong. I support tourism and the livelihood it provides with all my heart.

Travelling shapes one's character and expands one's horizons.

However, hell is other people with suitcases on wheels, so dear Edinburgh (Festival) Tourist , I am asking you nicely.

Please get out of my way.

I will not repeat this request. Again.

I am off to rub some oil into the wheels on Peanut's buggy.

Yours truly,

BlueBeretMum

BlueBeretMum writes and rants about life, universe and everything else. She also writes haiku, short stories and she doodles.

Blogs at: Blue Beret Mum

Twitter: @BlueBeretMum

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