SarahND wrote:DavidWW wrote:I'd have thought that you know him better than I do
Well, I trust I do

And hence the porcelain angle. But I was hoping someone would know of some brilliant collection in Edinburgh that he hadn't heard about yet

Or, better yet, some specialist in Chinese porcelain who he could spend several days (or several weeks

) comparing notes with

(I snuck out to the SOG when he was doing that in London

)
Regards,
Sarah
Now here's a thought

Send him across to the Burrell Collection in Glasgow, -
http://www.glasgowmuseums.com/venue/index.cfm?venueid=1 , - I'm next to certain there's Chinese porcelain there; that plus Kelvingrove, -
http://www.glasgowmuseums.com/venue/index.cfm?venueid=4 , should keep him fully occupied for at least a couple of days ............
![[woohoo] [woohoo]](./images/smilies/woohoo.gif)
, not least the "highly reliable" rail travel possibilities from Embra tae Glesca, - let's put it this way, - on a scale of 1 to 10, where Swiss Rail rates at the top mark of 10, with Swedish Rail, German Rail, and French Rail not far behind at 9½, ScotRail is about 1½ as regards reliability, cost, lack of modern rolling stock, cleanliness, the Embra-Glesca link still not electrified, etc., etc ..........
And there just has to be one or more Chinese porcelain experts in either/or
Edinburgh and Glasgow
![[5 cups] [5 cups]](./images/smilies/sm-5cups.gif)
, - ask the auction houses in Embra and Glesca
It would be better to get him to hire a car but that might be too efficient in terms of the time saved compared to rail travel.
If he's in any way a railway fan, you could even persuade him to travel to Glasgow via Inverness, Kyle of Lochalsh, and Mallaig. Scenically, given the weather, of course, there's nowhere with better scenery in the world than Inverness to Kyle of Lochalsh, and Mallaig to Glasgow.
The Kyle of Lochalsh to Mallaig connection can either be done, in the summer by a wee boat that connects with the train and sails down the Sound of Sleat to Mallaig, or all year round by a bus across to Skye and down to Calligarry to connect with the ferry across to Mallaig, - that will give you two solid days.
It's goes without saying that the scenery on the sail down the Sound of Sleat or the bus to Calligary involve scenery that can't be bettered anywhere else in the world, including the latter passing close by to two locations where Gavin Maxwell lived, with his otters.
An overnight in Mallaig is required, but could be prolonged by staying for 2 or 3 nights and taking a trip or two out to the The Small Isles - Rum, Eigg, Muck, Canna, - see
http://www.scotland-inverness.co.uk/small-is.htm .
David