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            Welcome to Been there. Your tips on the places you know - that you love,
            live in or have just visited - are what make this guide.
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                <title>Christmas in Edinburgh</title>
                
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                <description><![CDATA[To get a real flavour of the celebratory nature of the locals and the town, it is a good idea to visit just before or at Christmas time, when the Christmas fair is on in the city centre. It brings alive the kid in you with a ferris wheel, a very enchanting fortune teller and other rides. Besides, you can gorge on mulled wine every evening and eat scrumptuous street food while you browse through local knick knacks at the German market or empty your purse at the high street big brand sales. Very memorable!]]></description>
                
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                <title>The atmosphere of Edinburgh</title>
                
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                <description><![CDATA[Late afternoon in dark and dreary November. Wreaths of smoke and mist swirl around the glistening damp blocks of sour granite. Echoes of footsteps ring off the high walls of the close, while dark forbidding doorways watch impassively.<br><br>Not much has changed since Burke and Hare stole along these passages in the nineteenth century with fresh, or not so fresh, bodies for the medical students in the Infirmary to practise their dissection skills on. <br><br>The worn flags underfoot wind deeper into the labyrinth of narrow alleys, or closes, made all the more intimidating by the haloed lights glimmering through the raw air. A doorway suddenly opens, but it is warm ochre light that floods out with the welcome sound of voices and laughter and music. Inside the Tam O’Shanter, glowing coals in a grate, the scrape of a fiddle and a dram of Glenfiddich soon chase away the gloom.<br><br>Auld Reekie, home to Dr Johnston, the Fringe and shopping for Christmas. Princes Street and all the other little streets off it will soon drain your pounds, euro, dollars...]]></description>
                
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