The Electric Brae Scotland

1 - I can do better 2 - Jury's out 3 - Pretty darn good 4 - Splendiferous 5 - Awesometastic by 0 people | Log in to rate

Ranked #1,334 in Travel, #51,986 overall

The tourist attraction of the electric brae in Scotland



The Electric Brae is an optical illusion located in Ayshire Scotland.

The Electric Brae is known locally as Croy Brae

It is a quarter of a mile long hill that gives the impression that you can 'free wheel' up it.

The significant thing about The Electric Brae natural illusion is that it is not what is commonly called a Mirage which is created by the way in which light rays reach the eye. It is more of a Trompe L'Oeil where the eye is fooled by the way in which things actually look.

If you travel to Scotland then visiting Ayrshire (the home of Robbie Burns writer of Auld Lang Syne amongst other things) is a must to see this unusual natural phenomenon.


 

Where Exactly Is The Electric Brae? 

Here's The Proof! 

The Electric Brae natural illusion in action


Electric Brae

Runtime: 62
7583 views
11 Comments:


Electric Brae

Runtime: 220
420 views
0 Comments:


Croy Brae (working)!

Runtime: 25
4461 views
2 Comments:

curated content from YouTube

Electric Brae 

powered by MySpaceTV

Electric Brae  

powered by Vimeo

Electric Brae in Fiction 

Electric Brae

Amazon Price: (as of 01/04/2010)Buy Now

Electric Brae Links 

Eelctric Brae
Bloggers take
Electric Brae article
Undiscovered Scotland
Electric Brae
From Nothing To See Here
Girvan to Ayr
The Electric Brae is located on the coastal road from Girvan to Ayr, just 1m south of Dunure.

The Electric Brae Cairn 

Stay at The Ranch Holiday Park when you go to see the Electric Brae

Dwight D.Eisenhower and the Electric Brae 



Eisenhower stayed at Culzean Castle just down the road and used to take visitors to see the Electric Brae.

He was given the freedom of Maybole the ancient capital of Carrick

Electric Brae Blogs 

Things that matter: The Electric Brae
I like to think of myself as a fairly non-materialistic person. When people ask me what I want - for birthdays, for Christmas - I tend to just say that I don't need anything, that I have put myself in a place where I can simply buy the ...
A missing monkey, a castle and an electric brae!
After crossing Maidenhead Bay we left Ailsa Craig astern and slipped through a gap into the lagoon behind Glasson Rock.We found ourselves in the shelter of a delightful cove. The sands of Carrick shore lie at the foot of wooded Barwin ...
Electric Brae
The climbing up is thematic too, as is the falling down, and the book's title taken from a description of the Electric Brae where a road going down seems to be going up, and a road going up seems to be going down. ...
1 on Bonnie Brae | Pacific Electric Railway Historical Society
About PERyHS. The Pacific Electric Railway Historical Society (PERYHS) is a non-profit association dedicated to the preservation of the memory of the Pacific Electric Railway. Click here to learn more about the organization. ...

Get To Know About The Electric Brae 

The Electric Brae is a gravity hill in Ayrshire, Scotland where cars appear to be drawn uphill by some mysterious attraction. The Lowland Scots word brae means a hill-slope or brow (with which it is cognate), and the "electric" name was given when electricity was a new technology associated with strange forces.

There is more than one stretch of road known as Electric Brae, but the most famous is on the A719, south of Dunure, not far from Ayr, between Drumshrang and Knoweside.Alexander, Marc (2002) A Companion to the Folklore, Myths & Customs of Britain, Sutton Publishing, p.84 Though the road appears to be running uphill, a suitably free-running vehicle will slowly move off from a standstill. It was widely believed that vehicles were being propelled uphill by a mysterious magnetic force, but the road's apparently uphill slope is an optical illusion. Metal road signs which used to mark the place have tended to be taken by visitors, and have been replaced by a stone which is inscribed with an explanation:

:"The ELECTRIC BRAE", known locally as CROY BRAE'.

:This runs the quarter mile from the bend overlooking Croy railway viaduct in the west (286 feet Above Ordnance Datum) to the wooded Craigencroy Glen (303 feet A.O.D.) to the east.

:Whilst there is this slope of 1 in 86 upwards from the bend to the Glen, the configuration of the land on either side of the road provides an optical illusion making it look as if the slope is going the other way.

:Therefore, a stationary car on the road with the brakes off will appear to move slowly uphill.

:The term 'Electric' dates from a time when it was incorrectly thought to be a phenomenon caused by electric or magnetic attraction within the Brae.

During the Second World War, the brae was visited by many American personnel from the air-base at Prestwick, and General Dwight D Eisenhower who had a flat nearby at Culzean Castle brought visitors to see the phenomenon. In 1992, the name was brought wider fame by the novel Electric Brae'' by Andrew Greig. The name has also been applied to other slopes in Scotland: for example, on the Struie Road in Easter Ross, about ten miles (15 km) from Ardgay.

Have You Experienced The Electric Brae? 

Have you travelled on the Electric Brae? Do you know about any other natural illusions similar to Croy Brae?

submit

by reasonablerobinson

Why not check out my blog Gullibility and my lenosgraphy too?




I'm really interested in what makes people tick. Hobbies include the piano, water...
(more)

Explore related pages

Create a Lens!