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Showing posts with label Falkland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Falkland. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 March 2012

A Sojourn in the Kingdom of Fife

I'm over in Fife staying with an aunt for a few days.Here are some of the pictures I took.

On my way to Glenrothes I decide to go by Auchtermuchty, where I began my working life.


After leaving school my first job was in Auchtermuchty.
I was employed as an apprentice weighing machine mechanic at John White and Son , Burnside.
Established in 1715 they're still on the go, but have moved shop to Back Dykes
.

This was where I worked. It's now a block of flats, but I like the way they've retained the name and called it Whites Weigh.


It's colourful in Rowallan Green in Glenrothes.
They have their very own Community Garden
It's the first such project in Glenrothes



My first short walk is to Stenton Ponds where a good variety of birds reside



These ring necked doves were unconcerned by my proximity


An action shot on the Thornton road


Over towards St Andrews is the RAF base of Leuchars.
As a youngster I'd go and watch the brilliant air displays.
What I didn't know  was the existence of  Tentsmuir National Nature Reserve 
( there's a downloadable pdf leaflet/map on the Forestry Website )
So, on the last day of February 2012, my aunt and I went through Leuchars and Kinshaldy to park up in Tentsmuir for a beach walk. 


Out on the wide expanse of sands, St Andrews can be seen to the south


Leuchars is home to the Raf Typhoon Air Display Team and we're treated to some practise 


There's no lack of information


To get distance photographs, my Powershot SX10IS was on full zoom with a few coming out blurred.
Here, we're looking at cormorants on a thin sandbank, with the links of Carnoustie on the other side of the Tay


Directly north is Broughty Ferry. If we'd walked all the way to Tentsmuir point we'd have been looking over to Dundee


A very blurry zoom in catches a multitude of seals basking on a sandbank


There are a lot of people out walking today, but since it's such a large area you could easily miss bumping into anyone


Falkland
It's another day, and I'm heading up East Lomond hill, otherwise known as Falkland Hill.
(Anyone who read my previous Fife posts may remember my recollection of my first climb of  this hill. Myself and my cousins lived in the village of Springfield about 6 miles away. We were only ten or eleven, and we decided one day we could walk to it and climb it. We did it, but we were in trouble when we got home)   
The car park is by the phone masts at 330 mtrs.
Falkland Hill is only 424 mtrs so it's not a difficult climb
Distant views are hazy but all the nearby villages can be seen.


Directly below is Falkland


This is the Smith Anderson Paper Mill.
They've been making paper in Fife for over a hundred and fifty years

  
This of course is Falkland Palace .
Acquired from Macduff in the 14th century, Kings James the 4th and 5th, between 1501 and 1541 transformed it into a beautiful palace


Above are pictures of the Falkland Estate and West Lomond.
I'm minded to go down for a closer look.

A drive through Falkland fetches me here.
A sign says the Falkland Estate welcomes walkers and cyclists


The sun arrives as I begin my stroll around the estate


Above is the unfinished Memorial Chapel and the stable block


There's a downloadable PDF map of the estate


Nowadays, the house is a private boarding school for boys with special needs
Copyright 'The Gazetteer for Scotland 1995 - 2005'
"Built between 1838-44 by William Burn (1789 - 1870) for Onesiphorus Tyndall-Bruce (1790 - 1855) and his wife, the heiress Margaret Tyndall-Bruce (1788 - 1869) at a cost of £30,000. The couple lived at Nuthill House, but this was demolished and the stone reused for this new house. Burn's style was subdued, perhaps not wishing to eclipse the nearby Falkland Palace. The house comprises two connected sections; a main block of two storeys and a single storey service range attached to the northwest. The chimneys are copied from Winton House in East Lothian.
The House of Falkland was bought in 1890 by John Patrick Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute (1847 - 1900). He immediately employed Robert Weir Schultz to redesign the interior, in the Arts & Crafts style, featuring an idiosyncratic medley of inlaid wood, exuberant plasterwork, heraldic glass and opulently painted ceilings."



Mary, Queen of Scots loved this place. She'd play at being a 'country girl' in the woods and park


The school is private of course, but I got close enough to get these pictures



Back at the stable block I've only seen a small section of the estate.
I'll explore more on my next visit.


On my way back to Glenrothes  I stopped to snap these interesting farm signs.
Although I grew up in Fife, there's much I don't know about.
I'll look forward to my next visit

Sunday, 9 August 2009

A visit to Fife

I had occasion to go over to the East Coast in the first week of August 2009.
These are some of the places i went.

The first three pictures are from Culross...


...pronounced 'Cooros'



The Forth Bridges from South Queensferry.

Panorama of Forth Bridges on CleVR.com



Stenton Pond,Glenrothes.


The Lomond Hills...

...and historic Falkland.

Friday, 22 August 2008

A few days in Fife-Falkland Hill

Tuesday the 19th of August 2008
After a very soggy Monday in Edinburgh,i'm heading over the Forth Road Bridge to the kingdom.
I'm staying with an aunt in Glenrothes for a few days,and i get to meet one of only two first cousins i've never before met.

FALKLAND HILL
The Lomond hills are only a short way from Glenrothes,so we head out there hoping there'll be a break in the weather so we can do a little climb.My aunt's a member of her local ramblers group,so there's no fitness problems.
When me and my cousins were small boys we took off from Springfield one day to climb East Lomond locally known as Falkland hill.We must have been around ten or eleven years old,and we were away all day.It's around seven miles each way.We got some telling off that night.I haven't been up since.

It's still raining as we get to the car park,but it soon eases off a bit.

Armed with umbrellas we start climbing.The heathers in full bloom at this time of year.We meet some very wet people making their descent.

As well as the sheep on the slopes we're treated to a deer bounding over the heather.

Were soon up the top,visibility's very poor,but the comprehensive viewpoint indicator tells us what we would be looking at on a clear day.

Falkland with it's palace lies below us...

...and the weather gives my pictures a different parspective.

This looks like Freuchie and i think that would be the Clatto reservoir in the distance.

In the other direction are the Harperleas,Ballo and Drumain reservoirs..

..a zoomed in Harperleas.

We make our way back down via the trig point which is is on a slightly lower summit,getting back in the car just as the heavy rain comes back.
I wonder if we enjoyed it as much 55 years ago.
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