Windsor’s Scottish Heritage – Culture – Folklore: Wild Haggis

Windsor’s Scottish Heritage – Culture – Folklore: Wild Haggis

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Wild Haggis

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Culture > Folklore > Other:Wild Haggis

Culture: Folklore
Wild Haggis:

Wild Haggis

In the Highlands of Scotland, a hairy, nocturnal creature, no bigger than a grouse, scuttles around the mountains and hills.
Hunters have been searching for the highly elusive Wild Haggis (Haggis scoticus) for centuries, but
only the most skilled trackers and trappers can catch the source of the country’s (in)famous national dish. (There are a few
domestic haggis farms in the Highlands, but fanciers insist that the meat is vastly inferior to that of the wild haggis.)
The wild haggis is a shaggy, four-legged mammal with one set of legs longer than the other. While this feature allows the animal
to quickly tromp around the steep mountains and hillsides of its natural habitat, it is a double-edged sword since it restricts
the wild haggis to movement in just one direction. There are two different varieties of haggis, one with a longer set of right
legs that can only run counter-clockwise, and one with a longer set of left legs that can only run clockwise around the Highland
hills. The two varieties co-exist peacefully, but they cannot usually interbreed in the wild, since a male of one variety must turn
to face the same direction as a female of another variety in order to mount her. When turning, the male haggis often loses his
balance and tumbles down the hill before he can breed. On the rare occasions that the male haggis is able to accomplish this
incredible balancing act the offspring produced from a union of two haggis are so unstable that they often tumble helplessly down
the hills and right into a hunter’s net.

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Wild Haggis Specimen

There are many places in the Highlands that offer tourists a chance to search for the haggis in the creature’s natural habitat.
Tourists, however, are forewarned that the haggis rarely come out during the day, and to catch even just a glimpse of one is
extremely lucky. The Scotsman newspaper even runs an online haggis hunt, where entrants can win
prizes such as a trip to Scotland if they manage to spot a haggis on one of the site’s may webcams that monitor areas where the
animals have been known to live. Several herds of haggis roam the interior of the Caledonian Forest, feeding on fallen pine kernels
and mint leaves, which is said to add a distinct flavour to their meat.
If you happen to be lucky enough to encounter a wild haggis in broad daylight, there is one trick you can use to try catch it: as
it runs away from you, chase it around the hill in the opposite direction. It won’t be able to turn around.
The Scotsman’s on-line haggis hunt (Good Luck!)Please note this link will open in a new window or tab

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The opinions and interpretations in this publication are those of the author and
do not necessarily reflect those of the Government of Canada.
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