Leisure/outdoor walks

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Leisure/outdoor walks

Thanks Stephen, what wonderful photo's you take. The gardens look absolutely lovely. I like wandering around these sort of places and, if I'm ever down your way I'll make a point of trying to get round them.

When I was young, probably around 17/18 years old, one of our "crowd" up here in Edinburgh had been raised in Alnwick. I think his Dad was the local vet? I remember one epic new year where the future Mrs J and I saw the new year in at my parents in the mid borders then went over to Alnwick where our friend's parents had an open house with a band playing in their extensive cellars and the celebrations went on for a couple of days. Once that was wound up some of us decanted to Lindisfarne Island (Holy Island) where we discovered that once the causeway was flooded, so there was no easy access to the mainland, the pub would stay open for as long as you went on buying! Detailed memory of the celebrations are a little cloudy!
 
Thanks Stephen, what wonderful photo's you take. The gardens look absolutely lovely. I like wandering around these sort of places and, if I'm ever down your way I'll make a point of trying to get round them.

When I was young, probably around 17/18 years old, one of our "crowd" up here in Edinburgh had been raised in Alnwick. I think his Dad was the local vet? I remember one epic new year where the future Mrs J and I saw the new year in at my parents in the mid borders then went over to Alnwick where our friend's parents had an open house with a band playing in their extensive cellars and the celebrations went on for a couple of days. Once that was wound up some of us decanted to Lindisfarne Island (Holy Island) where we discovered that once the causeway was flooded, so there was no easy access to the mainland, the pub would stay open for as long as you went on buying! Detailed memory of the celebrations are a little cloudy!

Thanks one day I'll break out my old Pentax P30t...but it's an absolute mission to carry round a camera and bag full of lenses rather than just a phone :ROFLMAO:

Gardens are definitely worth a look if it's your sort of thing...

Here's an example of me accidentally taking the same photo twice. Apparently I like the view from this bench.. 20210514_124727.jpg

You may recognise the view from the last post..but it's Jun last year hence all the flowers being out...but if the flowers were out I'd have missed the blossom.

Northumberland in general is just a lovely place to spend time...though don't mind Yorkshire either...or Durham..or..:ROFLMAO:
 
For today's walk I decided to go back down the Water of Leith and try to get some pics for you of that cable rail system - just to wind up my last post about it.

To get there I walked, as I did last time, through the small park to our south and as I was going along I realized there's an excellent view up over the centre of the city with the castle:

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The Calton hill where you can see the Observatory with it's dome and beside it the "Time Ball" on Nelson's Monument which drops at exactly 1.00pm every day. Historically it was watched for by shipping in the Forth for a time check. Today it's the dropping of this ball which is observed at the castle and informs when the famous daily one o'clock gun is to be fired. To the left is "Edinburgh's disgrace" which is some pillars which were supposed to look like the Parthenon in Greece I believe? but was never finished due to lack of funds. It's actually very nicely presented and interesting to visit:

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Between these two, is a new feature on our skyline, The new St James Quarter (replacing the St James Centre) Seems to have been under construction for ever and I believe cost a billion pounds? Apparently, and perhaps not surprisingly when you look at it's central feature, it's been named the "Walnut Whip" locally!

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Continuing on the same route as last time I climbed up the embankment before going through the wee tunnel and got right up to the fencing. South, to my right, maybe 50 yards away, is the northern boundary of the old Refuse compacting site, now cleared and being prepared for construction. I stuck my camera through the fencing and took this pic looking north, away from the construction site (previously the compacting centre):

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You can plainly see the wire ropes of the shunting system. Then I went through the tunnel and followed the fencing further north until it got a bit more difficult to walk near the fence:

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A pic taken through the fencing at this location shows the line getting even more overgrown:

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As I didn't want to ruin my jacket on the vegetation, I had to deviate away from the line for a wee way but was able to get back up to it where it terminates and here you can see the tensioning block and the two large screw tensioning strainers which appear to be operated by hand - you can see the wee cranking handle with it's black knob if you look carefully:

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The adjustment looks to be quite well taken up but the cables are slack so I assume the northern end, where the construction will shortly be starting, has been dismantled and the cables probably cut at that end?

On my last walk down here I was interested in "The Edifice/Parapet" - as I named it, and the fact that I thought a second rail track probably actually went over the slightly lower level track which has now been turned into the "Water of Leith Walkway". Walking along the side of the river I came upon some more evidence for this in the form of the parapets for a substantial bridge over the water. On this side they consist of considerably massive buttresses:

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And on the other bank you can see how the old bridge support has been incorporated into the new wall defining the housing estate which has been built here:

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If you line it all up by eye - that's the edge of the buttress on this side on the right side of the pic - you can see how the line ran right through where the houses now are, takes a gentle left turn, and then lines up perfectly with the "edifice/Parapet" I showed in the last post about this (the one with all the graffiti on it) but which isn't visible in this pic.

Walking on up and away from the river's level I come out on the walkway which is the line of the lower of the two rail routes I've discovered. Looking to the left you can plainly see how the line ran straight towards town and, eventually, into the newly refurbished tunnel outside Tesco. Very handy if you want to pop in for a pint of milk as it's just a 15 minute walk or so for me:

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Then looking right you can see the "edifice" on the left where the higher level line must have run over the line I'm now standing on. You can see how they've deposited a lot of earth and landscaped it to make it easier to walk up to the left and join the path which now runs along the higher level route and into the "big" park:

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Walking on round this landscaped mound - last time I went up onto the higher level to the left and walked through into the big park - I soon come to what must have been the Newhaven Road station. The road goes over the top and I notice there is now some large steel supports under the bridge. I don't remember them from the last time I walked or cycled down here and I often drive the car over that bridge - hope there's nothing too seriously wrong with it!

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There are access stairs, in solid sandstone, from both sides of the bridge - depending I suppose on whether you wanted to travel south to the city centre or go north to Leith and the docks:

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Climbing up onto the old platform level I take these ones which are on the north bound side and come out here on Newhaven Road. Lovely wrought iron gate and I wonder if the metal "thingy" on top of that pillar was once home to a gas lamp?

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Continuing north on Newhaven road takes me over the Ferry road and into the park again and eventually, 15 to 20 minutes later, I'm back home.
 
Thanks Stephen, what wonderful photo's you take. The gardens look absolutely lovely. I like wandering around these sort of places and, if I'm ever down your way I'll make a point of trying to get round them

Indeed.

Maybe our Staycation could get us there this year..
Looking forward to some better weather..at least it is getting warmer.

My wife google account pings us 'on this day' photos

2 years ago we were on the Amalfi coast..looking out at Capri.. the weather here in the UK was great too
 
Indeed.

Maybe our Staycation could get us there this year..
Looking forward to some better weather..at least it is getting warmer.

My wife google account pings us 'on this day' photos

2 years ago we were on the Amalfi coast..looking out at Capri.. the weather here in the UK was great too

Given the choice of Northumberland coast or Amalfi coast would probably take the latter..though somewhat less convenient than popping 40 minutes up the road.

While it's a lovely place in summer on the right day...if I was booking a few days well in advance I'd want a bit more consistent weather. Sort of place where you could book a week and if it was sunny it would be beautiful and you'd wonder why anyone goes anywhere else...then you'd come back another year and it'd be raining sideways under slate grey skies and you'd wonder why the hell you'd done it to yourself.

Oddly enough last time I went to Lindisfarne was on the way back from Edinburgh..it was raining and windy and November. However we'd done a Rose Street pub crawl the night before and I couldn't cope with another hour of the A1 in a badly crash repaired Punto so over the causeway we went. I'm sure in other conditions it would be lovely but had a stotting head and had not slept so nope. Least interested I've ever been in somewhere I've paid to get in ever...at least the castle walls stopped the wind.
 
Accidentally attended Belsay International horse show today notice the steeplechase course in the foreground.

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Lovely day all round, toddler behaved etc.

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Even got a bit of a tan...
 
Well, we've had a rather special event at the park I've previously featured in this thread and which is part of one of my most favourite walking routes. Prince William and Kate paid us a visit! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nwjtKrPy0M

I wasn't there and, truth be told, I would have avoided it anyway as I dislike these contrived situations. I'm also not an ardent royalist although I must confess to a quiet admiration for Prince Philip for having done things "his way" and for our Queen for the dignified and dedicated way she conducts herself. Other opinions are probably best kept to myself.
 
Having mentioned Starbank Park above I actually incorporated it into my walk today. The purpose of which was to visit a new, and slightly "different" charity book shop which has opened in the old Howard Johnston car showroom down Ferry road towards Leith. It seems to be based around a recycling operation with it's main shop/office in Dunbar and links to the council recycling facilities. I've now had six books from them, 3 paperbacks which I could have had for nothing but voluntarily offered a pound for each - Outside on the pavement are bins with free books in them for you to simply take as you pass - Inside the shop are book cases stuffed with all manor of books and 2 whole bookcases crammed with Science fiction - heaven to me! Hard backs are recommended at £1 to £2 and paperbacks considerably cheaper. Their prices are all based around it being voluntary so I think you can just walk out with them if you've got the nerve? I asked today what they do with the monies collected and was told it all goes to charitable works, especially a couple of food banks but others as well. Apparently the shelves are restocked weekly so I'm intending to make it a regular stop off for me.

The outward walk, down Ferry Road, was somewhat amusing as it's been a long time since I've witnessed so many vehicle related points of interest in quite some time. First one was a transit with an obviously inoperable O/S/R shock absorber. It's been some time since I've seen one so completely worn out that the tyre was actually bouncing along like a child's ball, loosing contact with the road surface almost as much as it was in touch with it. Almost immediately after that an elderly VW transporter turned right off the Ferry road into one of the cobbled side streets and immediately, from the noise and wheel movement, you could see that the O/S/R shock absorber lower mounting was sheared off and jangling merrily about against the axle.

About eight minutes later I was approaching the book shop when there was the sound of an engine pulling hard. I looked up to see one of those large VW group SUV type things being leathered away from the lights controlled pedestrian crossing, he was really pushing it. Then I noticed it had no number plates and a trade plate propped up against the inside of the windscreen. So probably some poor sod's new car being relocated from one sales outlet to another - disgraceful way to treat a new car.

Now I'm browsing the free books in the bins on the pavement when something went by quite fast behind me - 20 mph here - so I looked round. It was a very nice, relatively new, black BMW with special wheels and 4 exhaust pipes - probably an "M"? I'm not really into BMWs - Anyway it sounded nice and purposeful when accelerating, a powerful, quite pleasant, 6 cylinder burble. But when he took his foot off the loud pedal my goodness what a racket, popping and banging away something fierce rather like the old 5 cylinder Audis did when on a trailing throttle back in the old insane, but ever so exciting, group 4 - or was it group B? - rally days. I'm sure it was engineered to sound like that but if on an everyday bodsmobile I'd say it had a major air leak somewhere after the manifold! He'd only just gone by towards the end of the Ferry Road when a fancy wheeled and "blingy" Merc went by and it did exactly the same when he lifted off. Strange thing to do to cars like this don't you think? I'd expect it more of someone with one of those 5 or 6 cylinder Golfs etc. I'm betting they were friends. By the way, If you don't know what I'm talking about when I mention Group 4 and Audi and you're interested in motor sport you really must google it - sights and sounds never to be forgotten.

I decided to return home by swinging round through the park and onto the suburban ex-railway walkway which took me away from the traffic and gave me a lovely quiet walk home. It was sunny when I set out and for most of the way home but the rain came shortly after I got in. Quite nice now sitting with my cup of cappuccino in our wee conservatory, listening to the rain pattering on the roof and reading my book (The Plague Forge - exciting!)
 
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About eight minutes later I was approaching the book shop when there was the sound of an engine pulling hard. I looked up to see one of those large VW group SUV type things being leathered away from the lights controlled pedestrian crossing, he was really pushing it. Then I noticed it had no number plates and a trade plate propped up against the inside of the windscreen. So probably some poor sod's new car being relocated from one sales outlet to another - disgraceful way to treat a new car.

Here's me replying to a post from 2 months ago :ROFLMAO:

May have just got round to reading it..

Being of the persuasion likes a walk when possible I always used to walk on my lunch break back when I worked in the office.

The office is on a business park surrounded by large car dealers and body shops.

The worst offenders tended to be the Audi dealer on Petrol runs. There is a petrol station opposite the Audi garage (most expensive petrol for miles oddly enough). It's on a dual carriageway so requires a half mile trip up the road to turn round and come back and then another trip to the next lights to u-turn again.

It was very common occurrence to see techs from this very fancy plate glass showroom racing each other in unregistered customer vehicles. Classy move when they were clearly stone cold judging by the exhaust plumes and 0 miles...

You can have a pop and bang map on pretty much any car now if I remember correctly they just retard the timing on lift off and keep the fuel coming. OEM ones generally have more finesse but the aftermarket ones tend to be always on and are the new cannon exhaust in terms of loudly telling people around you that they are about to witness some awful "performance" driving.
 
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This is an old thread I know but I thought it appropriate to revisit it for these observations as it involves a walk I've detailed on here before.

The sun was shining when I got up today so I thought I'd take a close up look at the damage the wind has done to my fence:

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Well that's pretty depressing.

I might just cheer myself up and go a walk through the park and down to the sea front and take a look at why the bottom road is closed to traffic. Actually I know why but my nose was bothering me so I wanted to go take a look see.

Setting off along the Ferry Road and it's immediately obvious somethings up because the traffic's pretty much nose to tail as far as the eye can see. Turned off to walk down the side of Victoria park, rather than staying on the pavement, and looked down this avenue for signs of any crocuses - they should be appearing soon and this avenue is like a carpet of them when they come out. At first glance it looks like it's too early:

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But walking further down you can see they are just starting to break through:

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Great, I'm feeling happier already.

It's pretty chilly though with a bit of a wind driving it in. So no surprise that there's little going on at the playpark - we spend a lot of time there with the grandchildren:

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On I go then, and ten minutes or so later I'm turning into the Starbank Park where it's very pleasing to see the volunteer gardening squad has been hard at work pruning and generally tidying things up:

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Walking on across the park and down the right side of the park keeper's house I can look out over a somewhat raw looking Firth of Forth to the Fife shore line on the north side:

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The building at the bottom left of the hill is the Starbank Inn, an establishment where I've spent time enjoying a nice pint in the past before my big tummy op put paid to my drinking days. walking down to the fence by the road here's a better shot of it and you can also see on the seaward side of the road, the white painted building with the balcony overhanging the sea?

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That's The Old Chain Pier which, back in my earlier days had a bit of a reputation but is now a high class restaurant/bar.

Walking east, so with the sea to my left side, I'm now approaching Newhaven Harbour but just before I get there my attention is drawn to Mason's bakery where you can buy some of the very best Mince Pies (Scotch pies to you sassenachs) I bravely resist the temptation though and carry on to the harbour:

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Interestingly, this year they've not removed the floating pontoon pier which is used by the tenders from the biggest cruise ships which are to big to dock in any of the Firth's harbours, even Leith.:

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Walking on past the harbour I soon pass what used to be the Peacock inn, an absolutely legendary establishment which we visited regularly for it's splendid fish suppers - I don't like large "slabs" of fish but the scampi was the best I've ever tasted:

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It was managed by our next door neighbour which made our visits extra pleasant but sadly now all gone and reinvented as an upmarket eatery.

A few minutes further on and the road's closed:

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a few minutes further and the reason is revealed;

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This big tenement building may, apparently, be in danger of imminent collapse! It's reported that it's walls have developed multiple cracks and everyone has been evacuated with the building sealed off and undergoing investigation. The whole road has had to be closed but the trams are still running, which is a bit ironic because one of the current theories is that it's been the tram works, and in particular the excavation needed to level the tram lines, which may be the cause. Right enough if the block, made from solid sandstone blocks, were to collapse it would make quite a mess.

Walking on and looking back it can be seen how deeply they had to dig for the rails to run:

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Anyway, turning round and continuing towards Leith docks the Ocean Terminal shopping centre/mall with the Royal Yacht moored alongside soon comes into view:

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It's a wee bit sad to think she'll never put to sea again but the visitor experience is a very interesting one and well worth doing if you're ever up here.

Getting close to the Ocean Terminal shopping centre/mall now and here's the dedicated cruise liner terminal:

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Strange thing about it is there never seems to be much going on whenever I've walked past. The landing jetty/pontoon at Newhaven seems much more used? Maybe I'm just there at the wrong times?

Another 5 minutes and I'm inside the shopping mall;

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It's like a ghost mall. Oh, but Greggs seems to have a customer:

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I've called here to have a browse in the bookshop and take a quick look in HMV in case they've got the Guardians of the Galaxy trilogy in Blu Ray which I've promised for the two youngest grandchildren as they like watching this sort of thing on our TV with my, probably, over the top AV amp pumping out the sound effects - Actually I like it too! However the place is like something you'd see after the apocalypse. Almost noone to be seen:

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That's walking down to Waterstones, but it's no more lively on the first floor walking back along to HMV:

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In fairness to the mall staff it's not their fault. The construction of the tramway and associated work on roads and pavements made access very difficult for a long time and I think it put many people off going. Then some of the big stores shut down Debaenhams, BHS, GAP to name just 3. There's been a big notice over the front of some of the closed shops for a while:

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But so far, that's all there's been. It's such a pity and I hope they get their act together soon before I get too old to take advantage of it! Mind you I actually really quite like the restful experience that it is at present.

Unfortunately no books I fancied and the very helpful man in HMV says the Blu Ray trilogy isn't out yet. So I wandered back, Via the loos, to the entrance/exit and came across an old chap who was looking slightly tottery on his feet. Stopped to ask him if he was all right and, because I thought he might be a bit lost, offered to walk up the road with him. We spent about a quarter of an hour slowly walking back up towards the main road and he turned out to be ever such an interesting chap. Now 92 years old, he'd been a foreign correspondent for a big national newspaper and traveled widely all over the world. We talked about many places we both knew, in Italy and the east coast of the U.S in particular and before we knew it we were almost outside the supported accommodation where he lives. He tells me he likes to take a daily walk so I've promised to keep an eye out for him when I'm down that way and I hope we meet again, I can't wait to hear some more of his experiences.

So, it was on up from there to the library on Ferry road where I browsed the SF shelves without any exciting success so out back onto the street and about a 15/20 minute walk back home. Traffic on the Ferry road still nose to tail due to the, parallel, bottom road being closed. I think this traffic problem will last for some time as I doubt that building's problems will be rectified speedily - feel so sorry for the residents who are all forbidden access and are having to live with friends/relatives etc. In the meantime, because there's no break in the flow, albeit slow flow, of traffic past our road end it's proving very difficult to make a right turn out of our road. Just have to put up with it I suppose!
 
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