A steam engine pulling a luxury train which charges passengers tickets up to £3,575 per trip is on its way to Edinburgh.
The Great Britain XV left London's Paddington station on Saturday en-route to the capital.
It due to steam into Edinburgh on Tuesday April 18 after leaving Wales on a nine day sightseeing tour.
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The train's trip through England, Scotland and Ireland has been organised by the Railway Touring Company, and passengers are paying quite the premium to enjoy the holiday.
As well as a night at a capital hotel, guests will also enjoy optional trips to other parts of Scotland before leaving Edinburgh Waverley and making their way through Princes Street Gardens to Haymarket, following the former North British route to the Forth Bridge.
The Forth Rail Bridge was opened in 1890 and is 2467 metres long (1½ miles), still the longest steel cantilever bridge in the world.
Taking in the spectacular views as you cross the Firth of Forth and enter Fife, passengers will then follow the coastline through Burntisland and Kirkcaldy to Ladybank. Here you take the direct link to the ‘Fair City’ of Perth as immortalised by Sir Walter Scott.
The best tickets - labelled the 'Premium Price' - comes with a price tag of £3,575 per passenger, and that's only based on two people. A single-supplement will cost you a further £395 on top of that while there's also an option to spend more for a guided excursion of Aberdeen when the train pulls into Scotland - that will cost another £299 per person, reports North Wales Live.
However, you do get quite a lot of luxury for that price. The Premier Price plan comes with eight nights worth of hotel accommodation and breakfast in either 3* or 4* hotels, coach transfers, luggage transfers (from hotel to hotel), an allocated seat in the first class open carriage, an 'at seat' drinks service and six breakfasts, four lunches and four 'silver service' dinners while on the train.
For those who think that's a bit too rich for their blood, there is a slightly cheaper option. 'First class' trip tickets costs £2,765. And if you can't afford any of that, you might have to settle for waving the passengers goodbye from Waverley station.
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