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He wants to start an Outward Bound centre on the estate but the locals do not want city youths visiting. Acorn Media UK produced the original DVDs, but in 2006 a box-set featuring all seven series on 22 discs was produced by the BBC themselves. Golly and Molly have an emotional late night talk; Archie and Lexie have a tear-filled talk themselves.
He wonders whether he is too old to have a relationship with her but they appear to enjoy one another.Meanwhile, after an old diary emerges, it appears that Katrina is in fact Hector's daughter; distraught with this revelation, Molly decides to move out. In The Netherlands series 4-7 were released in an edited form of 50 mins per episode instead of the UK 60 minutes. This episode features special guests Julian Fellowes as Kilwillie; Hamish Clark as Duncan and Richard Briers as the ghost of Hector MacDonald. When he arrives, he finds that the news was a ploy by his mother, Molly, to get him to Scotland He learns he has inherited his father's title and estate, Laird of Glenbogle. If you like slice-of-life stories that involve relational and financial conundrums, you'll probably like this.
Lexie wonders whether she has what it takes to be Laird after Archie leaves Glenbogle to go mountain climbing in Nepal with his sister Lizzie in honour of their late father. Meanwhile, Molly must decide between Golly and Killwillie, Donald must face up to his future, alone, Paul must confront his true feeling. Lexie, Dorothy, Golly and Molly get marooned on an island in the middle of the loch, while Paul starts to think Jess has a crush on him. Andrew thinks Molly is cheating on him when he overhears Molly with another man; but she has really set up a dating agency. The engagement causes friction between Archie and Hector, who disapproves of the match because he fears Lexie may feel trapped on the estate and leave Archie — as Molly once left him.Paul becomes close to a local shepherdess, Iona McLean, but his romantic dreams are temporarily dashed when Iona's former fiancé arrives in the glen. Created by Michael Chaplin, based on the Highland novels of Sir Compton MacKenzie (he of Whisky Galore), the show was never intended to be high drama and as such was ideal Sunday evening fodder for the family to curl up watching.