Every August, in the small town of South Queensferry beneath the shadow of the Forth Bridge, something extraordinary happens. A man is dressed from head to toe in thousands of sticky green burrs. He cannot sit down. He cannot eat. He can barely walk. And for nine hours, he shuffles through the town streets supported by two attendants, accepting whisky through a straw.
This is the Burry Man — and no one is entirely sure why it happens.

A Costume Made of Thorns
The preparation begins before dawn. The man chosen to be the Burry Man that year — always a local, always male — puts on a full suit of white flannel long underwear. Then, for several hours, helpers press burdock burrs onto every inch of his body.
Burdock burrs are the spiky, hooked seed cases of the burdock plant. They cling to fabric, to fur, to anything they touch. By the time the helpers are finished, thousands of them cover the Burry Man from ankle to chin. A floral bonnet crowns his head. Two staffs decorated with flowers become his only means of support.
He cannot bend his arms or legs. He cannot sit or lie down. He is, quite literally, a walking thornbush.
The procession begins at 9am. For the next nine hours, the Burry Man walks nine miles through South Queensferry, stopping at houses and businesses along the way. Residents come out to press coins into his burr-covered hands. He accepts drams of whisky through a straw — the only way he can drink. At 6pm, the burrs are carefully removed. The tradition is over for another year.
How Old Is This Tradition?
The honest answer is: nobody knows exactly.
The earliest written record of the Burry Man dates to the early 18th century, but locals believe the custom is far older. Some researchers suggest it may connect to pre-Christian scapegoat rituals, where a figure adorned in plant material would symbolically absorb bad luck before being cast out of the community.
Others link it to fishing superstition. South Queensferry was once a working harbour, and the ritual may have been performed to bless the boats before a new season. Another theory connects it directly to the Ferry Fair — the Burry Man walks the day before the fair begins, as a kind of living mascot who blesses the town ahead of the celebrations.
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Scotland has preserved many extraordinary living traditions. From the common ridings of the Scottish Borders, where riders still trace the boundaries of their towns on horseback each summer, to the Beltane Fire Festival on Edinburgh’s Calton Hill, ancient customs have a way of surviving here. The Burry Man belongs in exactly that company — a ritual that has somehow outlasted every explanation for its existence.
Why South Queensferry?
South Queensferry sits on the southern shore of the Firth of Forth, just nine miles west of Edinburgh city centre. The town looks directly up at the Forth Rail Bridge — one of the great engineering achievements of the Victorian era and a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The town’s history stretches back to the 11th century, when Queen Margaret of Scotland used the ferry crossing here as she travelled between Edinburgh and Dunfermline. That royal connection gave the town its name. Today, visitors come for the bridge views, the cobbled main street, and the harbour. Those who time their visit to the second Friday of August witness something else entirely.
If you’re planning a day trip to South Queensferry, it pairs beautifully with a visit to a Highland Games event nearby — the summer months bring dozens of gatherings across Central Scotland and beyond.
Who Becomes the Burry Man?
Being chosen as the Burry Man is considered an honour in South Queensferry. The role typically goes to a long-standing local resident — often someone who has grown up in the town and is known to the community. It is not a position that is advertised or contested. It is given.
Preparation takes days. Burdock burrs must be gathered from the surrounding countryside in the weeks before the event. The flannel suit must be fitted precisely so the burrs adhere evenly across every surface. On the morning itself, the dressing process alone takes several hours.
The physical demands are considerable. Standing upright for nine hours, unable to sit, unable to eat, walking nine miles in August heat while thousands of burrs press into your body from every direction — it requires real stamina. The reward is not financial. It is the knowledge that you have carried an ancient tradition forward for one more year, in a town that has been doing this for centuries.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Burry Man tradition in South Queensferry?
The Burry Man is an annual folk custom in South Queensferry, near Edinburgh. Every second Friday of August, a local man is dressed head to toe in thousands of burdock burrs and walks nine miles through the town, supported by two attendants. It is one of Scotland’s oldest and most unusual living traditions.
When does the Burry Man walk, and can visitors attend?
The Burry Man walks on the second Friday of August each year, the day before the South Queensferry Ferry Fair. The procession begins at 9am at the town hall and finishes at around 6pm. It takes place on public streets, so visitors are welcome to watch — simply turn up and follow the crowd.
How do I get to South Queensferry from Edinburgh?
South Queensferry is about nine miles west of Edinburgh city centre. You can reach it by bus (the 43 from St Andrew Square), by train to Dalmeny station (a 20-minute walk to the town), or by car via the A90. The town is well worth visiting year-round for the Forth Bridge views, the harbour, and the independent shops and restaurants along the High Street.
Why is the Burry Man covered in burrs?
No one knows for certain. Theories range from pre-Christian scapegoat rituals to fishing community superstitions and good-luck blessings before the annual fair. What is clear is that the tradition predates written records, and South Queensferry has kept it alive out of pride and a deep sense of community identity.
The Burry Man defies easy explanation. He is neither hero nor villain — neither fully human nor quite something else. He is simply a man, dressed in thorns, walking through his town, keeping a promise that no one can quite remember making. And in that strangeness lies something profoundly Scottish: a quiet determination to honour the old ways, long after the reasons have been forgotten.
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