Stage Index

From The Largs to Largs Grand Tour
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Stage Index: This page lists all stages of the Largs to Largs Grand Tour in their canonical order.

  • Red links indicate stages not yet created.
  • Blue links indicate completed stage pages.

Page titles intentionally use straightforward, human-readable names (e.g. Glasgow to Lincoln).

The short descriptions below preserve the original narrative intent of the Grand Tour and may evolve as individual stage pages are completed.


Optional Pre-Stage

Ceremonial opening loop through the Scottish Highlands, including Inveraray, Fort William, Inverness, Cawdor, Aberlour, the Cairngorms, and return via Pitlochry to Edinburgh. Establishes emotional tone without committing the journey eastward.


Europe & Near East

Glasgow, Largs and the Clyde as origin; withdrawal from the coast; Roman Britain through Hadrian’s Wall and Arbeia; continuity through York; Britain exhausted deliberately as a complete interior system, closing at Lincoln as the inland hinge.

Eastward thinning of England’s interior; North Sea crossing as system transfer; entry to the Low Countries as corridor rather than destination; Britain exited decisively at Antwerp without narrative resolution.

Industrial Europe, the Ruhr, Saxony and the Elbe, Bohemia and Prague, the Romantic Road, Alpine crossings, Salzburg, and the Danube Basin, concluding at Vienna as imperial hinge.

The Danube corridor and the Balkans, tracing the gradual transformation from Central Europe into the Eastern Mediterranean, culminating at Istanbul as convergence rather than destination.

Istanbul as cause rather than prelude; a deliberate southern loop to the Gallipoli Peninsula; return through Istanbul; east across Anatolia via Ankara, Cappadocia, Erzurum, and Kars; entry to the Caucasus at Tbilisi.

A short but symbolically dense passage across the Caucasus, compressing terrain and history before arriving at the Caspian shore in Baku.


Central Asia & China

Caspian Sea crossing as mid-stage hinge; landfall at Aktau; inland continuity through Central Asia via Tashkent; arrival at Osh as staging, regrouping, and decision city.

Mountain commitment at Irkeshtam Pass; Kashgar as western gate; desert basins through Turpan and Dunhuang; conclusion at Xi’an as civilisational anchor.

A deliberate southward traverse of interior China, shifting from Silk Road linearity to vertical compression, ending at Kunming as the southern plateau hinge.

Controlled release from China into mainland Southeast Asia, descending from the Yunnan Plateau to the Mekong basin and arriving at Vientiane as hinge rather than climax.


Southeast Asia

Deliberate inland traversal of Northern Thailand via Phrae, Nan, Phayao, Wat Rong Khun, Mae Salong, and Doi Ang Khang, concluding at Chiang Mai as Lanna cultural hinge and pause point.

Western arc via Mae Sariang; consolidation through Sukhothai and Ayutthaya; descent into Bangkok as compressive political and cultural core.

Southern Thailand and the narrowing Malay Peninsula, with Malacca as historic maritime hinge and Port Klang as modern handover, closing the Eurasian land journey at Kuala Lumpur.


Indonesia & Australia

Sea departure from Malaysia; entry to Indonesia; eastward island logic through the archipelago, resolving at Bali as a stable archipelagic hub.

A committed open-sea crossing from Bali to Australia, arriving at the continent’s tropical edge. Australia is encountered first as reef, rainforest, and latitude — not yet as interior distance.

A deliberate continental traverse from the tropical margin through Australia’s interior, accepting distance, emptiness, and endurance before resolving into the southern city of Adelaide.


Return & Closure

The journey resolves quietly at the point of origin. No further stage is required; the return is implicit in the design of the tour itself.


Optional Pre-Stage

  • Stage 0 — GLA–EDIThe Highlands Loop (Scotland)
    Ceremonial opening loop through the Scottish Highlands, including Inveraray, Fort William, Inverness, Cawdor, Aberlour, the Cairngorms, and return via Pitlochry to Edinburgh. Establishes emotional tone without committing the journey eastward.


Europe & Near East

  • Stage 1 — GLA–ANRScottish Origin, Roman Britain & Departure to the Continent
    Largs and the Clyde as origin; Roman Britain through Hadrian’s Wall, Arbeia, Colchester, and York; continuity through Cambridge; Western Front memory; departure from Europe via Antwerp.
  • Stage 2 — ANR–VIEThe Classical European Grand Traverse
    Industrial Europe, the Ruhr, Saxony and the Elbe, Bohemia and Prague, the Romantic Road, Alpine crossings, Salzburg, and the Danube Basin, concluding at Vienna as imperial hinge.
  • Stage 3 — VIE–ISTFrom Empire to Threshold
    The Danube corridor and the Balkans, tracing the gradual transformation from Central Europe into the Eastern Mediterranean, culminating at Istanbul as convergence rather than destination.
  • Stage 4 — IST–TBSConsequence, Interior & the Caucasus
    Istanbul as cause rather than prelude; a deliberate southern loop to the Gallipoli Peninsula; return through Istanbul; east across Anatolia via Ankara, Cappadocia, Erzurum, and Kars; entry to the Caucasus at Tbilisi.
  • Stage 5 — TBS–BAKCaucasus Crossing & the Caspian Edge
    A short but symbolically dense passage across the Caucasus, compressing terrain and history before arriving at the Caspian shore in Baku.


Central Asia & China

  • Stage 6 — BAK–OSHSea, Steppe & the Mountain Threshold
    Caspian Sea crossing as mid-stage hinge; landfall at Aktau; inland continuity through Central Asia via Tashkent; arrival at Osh as staging, regrouping, and decision city.
  • Stage 7 — OSH–XANCommitting to China — Silk Road to Imperial Core
    Mountain commitment at Irkeshtam Pass; Kashgar as western gate; desert basins through Turpan and Dunhuang; conclusion at Xi’an as civilisational anchor.
  • Stage 8 — XAN–KMGChina as Interior
    A deliberate southward traverse of interior China, shifting from Silk Road linearity to vertical compression, ending at Kunming as the southern plateau hinge.
  • Stage 9 — KMG–VTEDescent to the Mekong Threshold
    Controlled release from China into mainland Southeast Asia, descending from the Yunnan Plateau to the Mekong basin and arriving at Vientiane as hinge rather than climax.


Southeast Asia

  • Stage 10 — VTE–CNXNorthern Thailand by Choice
    Deliberate inland traversal of Northern Thailand via Phrae, Nan, Phayao, Wat Rong Khun, Mae Salong, and Doi Ang Khang, concluding at Chiang Mai as Lanna cultural hinge and pause point.
  • Stage 11 — CNX–BKKFrom Highlands to the Siamese Core
    Western arc via Mae Sariang; consolidation through Sukhothai and Ayutthaya; descent into Bangkok as compressive political and cultural core.
  • Stage 12 — BKK–KULThe Final Continental Traverse
    Southern Thailand and the narrowing Malay Peninsula, with Malacca as historic maritime hinge and Port Klang as modern handover, closing the Eurasian land journey at Kuala Lumpur.


Indonesia & Australia

  • Stage 13 — KUL–DPSLeaving the Continent, Entering the Archipelago
    Sea departure from Malaysia; entry to Indonesia via Northern Sumatra; eastward island logic through Java and the Lesser Sundas, returning to Bali as a stable archipelagic hub.
  • Stage 14C — DPS–CNSThe Tropical Threshold
    A committed open-sea crossing from Bali to Australia, arriving at the continent’s tropical edge. Australia is encountered first as reef, rainforest, and latitude — not yet as interior distance.
  • Stage 15C — CNS–ADLThe Long Interior Crossing
    A deliberate continental traverse from the tropical margin through Australia’s interior, accepting distance, emptiness, and endurance before resolving into the southern city of Adelaide.


Return & Closure

  • Largs Bay, South AustraliaThe Circle Closed
    The journey resolves quietly at the point of origin. No further stage is required; the return is implicit in the design of the tour itself.

Route Chart

Style 1

Largs to Largs Grand Tour — Stage Flow (Tree Chart)






Grand Tour
Stage 0GLA–EDI
Optional warm-up loop
Stage 1GLA–ANR
Glasgow → Antwerp
1A Direct (short)
No detour
1B Lincoln detour (long)
Extra step(s)
1B.1 Lincoln sub-leg
(waypoint-level add-on)
JOIN → Antwerp (resume spine)
Stage 2ANR–VIE
Antwerp → Vienna
2A Corridor A
Longer / scenic
2B Corridor B
Shorter / direct
2A.1 Extra segment (only on Corridor A)
JOIN → Vienna
Stage 3VIE–IST
Vienna → Istanbul
Stage 4IST–TBS
Stage 5TBS–BAK
Stage 6BAK–OSH
Stage 7OSH–XAN
Stage 8XAN–KMG
Stage 9KMG–VTE
Stage 10VTE–CNX
Stage 11CNX–BKK
Stage 12BKK–KUL
Stage 13KUL–DPS
Kuala Lumpur → Denpasar (Bali)
13A Longer island chain13B Shorter chain
13A.1 Extra hop / sub-stage
JOIN → Denpasar (Bali)
Stage 14CDPS–CNS
Stage 15CCNS–ADL
15C-A Longer finish15C-B Shorter finish
15C-A.1 Extra segment
FINAL JOIN → Adelaide → Largs Bay


Style 2

Largs to Largs Grand Tour — Stage Spine with Forks & Joins
Variant / fork A Main spine (canonical) Variant / fork B
GLA–EDI
The Highlands Loop (Scotland)
Fork example (within Stage 1):
Optional Lincoln detour
GLA–ANR
Glasgow/Largs → Antwerp
Fork example (within Stage 1):
Direct spine (no detour)

Rejoin before AntwerpAntwerp

Variant corridor A
(e.g. Romantic Road emphasis)
ANR–VIE
Antwerp → Vienna
Variant corridor B
(e.g. alternate Alpine crossing)

Join pointVienna (all Stage 2 alternates converge)

VIE–IST
Vienna → Istanbul
IST–TBS
Istanbul → Tbilisi
(includes Gallipoli loop)
TBS–BAK
Tbilisi → Baku
BAK–OSH
Baku → Osh
(Caspian crossing)
OSH–XAN
Osh → Xi’an
XAN–KMG
Xi’an → Kunming
KMG–VTE
Kunming → Vientiane
VTE–CNX
Vientiane → Chiang Mai
CNX–BKK
Chiang Mai → Bangkok
BKK–KUL
Bangkok → Kuala Lumpur
Fork example (Stage 13 variants):
Island-chain A (ports/hops vary)
KUL–DPS
Kuala Lumpur → Denpasar (Bali)
Fork example (Stage 13 variants):
Island-chain B (ports/hops vary)

Rejoin pointDenpasar (Bali)

DPS–CNS
Bali → Cairns
Variant corridor A
(interior alignment choice)
CNS–ADL
Cairns → Adelaide
Variant corridor B
(rail/road emphasis choice)

Join pointAdelaideLargs Bay (closure)