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Historic (and allegedly haunted) Deeside castle to give ghostly Halloween tours

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A Deeside castle dating back to the 16th-century is gearing up to give locals a glimpse of its spooky history.

Crathes Castle, which some believe to be haunted, will be giving ghostly tours in the run-up to Halloween next Monday.

The National Trust for Scotland (NTS) will open up the doors of the property – the ancestral home of the Burnett family – after dark from Friday, October 28 to Sunday, October 31.

A film fright night will also be held in the woods on Saturday with a nighttime screening of The Blair Witch Project.

Trick-or-treaters are also being invited to attend the Children’s Traditional Scottish Halloween – for those aged between five and 11 – on Friday and Saturday.

Youngsters will make a scarecrow – or “tattie-bogle” during the event.

The castle is said to be the home of two ghosts – the Green Lady and the White Lady.

The Green Lady has been spotted throughout the years carrying an infant child, which is said to have been fathered by a servant from the castle.

The skeletons of the two are said to have been discovered under a fireplace in the building, with the ghost usually spotted walking into it.

Queen Victoria is said to have spotted the apparition on a visit to the castle.

Legend states that the White Lady is either Lady Agnes Burnett or a youngster she allegedly poisoned out of spite, Bertha de Bernard.

An NTS spokeswoman said: “No guarantee can be made that participants in the ghoulish ghost tour will see either of the ladies – but they can be sure of a scary time as they drift along gloomy corridors and staircases, listening to shiversome stories of madness, murder and gore.”

The tours will start at 7pm and 9pm and cost £13 per adult, while the film will screen at 9pm also at the cost of £13.

The Traditional Scottish Halloween will be at 11.30am and 1.30pm at the cost of £6 per child.