Architecture

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No trip to Scotland would be complete without visiting a few castles, curried chips, haggis, scotch, bagpipes, sticky toffee pudding and stunning scenery. Lucky for me I was going to have all of these – we were on a train bound for the highlands of Scotland to attend the 2013 European Pipe Band Championships.

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The train was a great way to view the ever-changing scenery,

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as we hugged the east coast of Scotland travelling north.

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5 hours, three trains and a rather large quantity of tea and Walkers shortbread later, our train rolled into the small town of Forres on the shores of the Moray Firth, about 25 miles east of Inverness.

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We hopped a cab and in no time we were pulling up to the Knockomie Hotel http://www.knockomie.co.uk/history-g.asp on the outskirts of the town.

Forres

The grounds of the hotel were a bonus with mature perimeter conifers and lots of foxgloves,

Gardens Gardens

sages and laces and

Aruncus dioicus

stands of Goats Beard,

Aruncus dioicus

 

Forres

There were lots of flowering storybook pathways to run down

meadow

and lots of stinging nettles to avoid.

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Not familiar with the plant she knelt on a patch – where is a Docken leaf when you need one?

After this incident she always found, picked and carried some leaves with here in her pocket or bag.

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Dinner that evening (great food) was accompanied by this young drum major marching and spinning her mace, practicing for the competition tomorrow.

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After resting up, it was breakfast and straight out to Grant Park.

Forres

They found what they wanted,

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and so did I.

practice-chanters

Here are the current Grade 1 World Champions (Field Marshal Montgomery) from Ireland practicing in the bus park.

They added another European title with this exceptional performance.

Grant_Park, ForresThe day culminated with the massed bands and awards ceremony and

one or two trips to the beer tent.

Grant_Park, Forres high-st

Till the next time Forres.

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Another box of Walkers shortbread later and we were back in the borders

Carlisle

visiting castles,

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cathedrals,

Southerness

and the occasional lighthouse.

This one in Southerness is the second oldest lighthouse in Scotland. As usual the wind here was howling.

Moving Along:

To catch the bus into local towns we had a 15min walk out of Powfoot to the main road, unfortunately for us, this involved walking past a rather random yet extensive pile of excrement.

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Spending many years on farms this odor does not personally bother me, but for some with more sensitive dispositions it was much more challenging.

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Walking past the offensive hillock made him continuously gag, his face contorted into a “are you serious?” grimace.

I could not bring myself to turn around for fear of laughing at him. This shot was snapped over my shoulder to the small sounds of his retching and the occasional “its hurting my eyes!”

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My

“character building stuff, these strolls to the bus stop, right kids?”

comment was met with silence.

bus

Getting to ride in the front of the bus with no seat belts was a very liberating experience for them and made the nasal onslaught worthwhile.

We visited remote beaches,

beach

with tidal rock pools,

Rockcliff

full of life,

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and devoured some of the creamiest ice cream on the planet.

Rockcliff

Naturally her collection grew and grew.

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A fair amount of these artifacts ended up in zip-lock bags in our luggage winging their way back to Texas.

We had a final meal in our local and then it was time to say a really sad “Ach mun I got tae gaan” to Scotland,

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and much loved Grandparents.

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Her first in-flight duty-free shopping experience lifted her mood.

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She was totally thrown that you could actually shop up there!

32,000ft

18 hours later, and now adorning expressions akin to this,

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we finally made it back to Texas.

Tired but craving spicy food there was only one place for our fix…

TexMex

 

Stay Tuned for:

“Trouble with the old Strobilus”

 

Sago-Palm

All material © 2013 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

Scotland

This is a very normal expression for me after completing a transatlantic crossing.

In fact, I usually stay like this for a further three days until the memory of the journey finally works it’s way through my subconscious and I can get back on with my life again.

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The 50 year old plane with old fashioned CRT TV’s placed at strategically uncomfortable viewing angles, the cramped conditions, the never ending servings of food groups that have no right to be served at 32,000 feet,

Chicago-style deep pan pizza!

…Really?

The whole flying experience leaves a lot to be desired…everything in fact.

To relieve the monotony a welcome leg-stretching venture with my son to the aircraft’s ‘restroom’ was met, as if on cue with the “bing” of the “fasten your seat belts” sign and just enough turbulence to ensure that a wild urine dodging line-dance was randomly choreographed to the little known Johnny Cash tune “Just keep it aimed down there son, just keep it aimed down there”.

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It was a ridiculous jostling performance in the already confined space but one I thought worthy of a place on ‘Britain’s Got Talent’ for limiting collateral damage.

The psychological distress of the journey to Scotland apparently appears to be hereditary.

Manchester

Hours later and we arrived in Manchester airport and quickly headed north in our taxi.

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We flew past countless wind turbines looming over the hillsides with an eerie “War of the Worlds” stature.

Scotland

The closer we got to our destination the smaller the roads and higher the hedgerows became.

We rounded a corner and were relieved to have finally arrived at our holiday cottage in Powfoot on the Solway Firth in SW Scotland.

Dumfriesshire

This was the remarkable view looking out from our front window.

She wasted no time with her collection habits now in overdrive.

Solway

A few shells here, some weathered glass there, she had an impressive collection labeled and segregated in no time at all.

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The salt marsh coastline was blanketed in the blooms of sea thrift which is one of Britain’s most prolific coastal plants. Thrift belongs to the sea-lavender family (Plumbaginaceae) and it is quite talented at surviving very harsh and salty conditions.

merse

Salt marsh is found where the sea floods low lying land. The land is drained by channels eroded in the mud and flushed by the tidal waters. At this stage the saltmarsh can be used as pasture and in the Solway it is known as a merse. Many of the flowers found on the merse have leaf adaptations which help to reduce the loss of fresh water by evaporation. This carpet of grassy merse attracts geese and swans as well as other wildfowl over the winter months.

High-Tide Birds

The Solway coast is also one of the most important places for migrating waterfowl on the eastern Atlantic seaboard. On a rather brisk (to say the least) walk up the coastline I disturbed this large flock of oystercatchers,

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and found some of their eggs on the shoreline, naturally these went into the “collection”.

I found another ‘oyster’ on the side of a local tree,

this time in the form of an oyster mushroom,

Pleurotus ostreatus

 

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I also came across this Birch Polypore,

Piptoporus betulinus

 

also known as Razor-strop fungus as the velvety surface of the fungus was traditionally used as a strop for finishing the finest of edges on cut-throat razors.

Moving Along:

Further inland I took my children deep into the forests where I spent the best part of my childhood.

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some of the trails were still worn,

though most had been reclaimed by the passage of time and lots and lots of ferns and foliage.

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We could have easily lost the little folk in here.

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The heart of the forest is a magical place,

populated by towering Ents gripping the forest floor,

and shy sphagnum moss sprites

that dance lightly on the hummocky mounds.

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These mossy areas will quickly fill up an unacquainted visitor’s boots as the surface covering of mosses can be very thin, hiding a treacherous ooze below.

A few more twists and turns and I found what I was looking for,

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Kirkconnel church and graveyard.

Having a propensity for all things Gothic this secluded and melancholic place sparked my imagination as a child as it still does today.

Shrouded by the forest, remote and completely overgrown, the angled gravestones are straight out of a Harry Potter scene.

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The history of this little churchyard with its ruined medieval church and its Latin cross is clouded by myth and the absence of documentary records during the troubled centuries between the departure of the Romans in the fourth century and the peace that followed.
Kirkconnel church first comes on record in 1191.

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The gravestones in the churchyard are in the tradition of the days when reading and writing was virtually unknown.

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Many simply show skull and bones whilst others show a carved hour glass indicating that for someone the sands of time now stand still.

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After a brief pause for some corned beef sandwiches and ploughman’s pickle we left the little graveyard behind and continued through the forest.

Rhododendron ponticum

We walked past a lot of these invasive wild rhododendrons

Rhododendron ponticum

 

that were peaking during our stay.

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Root suckering, together with its abundant seed production has put this shrub on the invasive list.

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“Rhodie-bashing” or Rhododendron control, is a key element in nature conservation in the worst infected areas where it is crowding out the native flora.

Here is another one weaving its way through the lower canopy of a Laburnum,

the hanging yellow flowers on the tree are responsible for the old poetic name ‘golden chain tree’,

Laburnum Arch, Bodnant Garden, Gwynedd, Wales

when trained it can provide some very dramatic effects.

Running alongside the woods were meadows full of wild flowers.

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Dog daisies,

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dandelions, a few Scottish thistles, and lots and lots of

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spit!

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These frothy areas on foliage are a protection for the froghopper nymph.

Carefully remove the bubbles and you can find him.

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“I’m all exposed, I’m all exposed!”

And here is what it matures into:

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The common meadow froghopper,

Philaenus spumarius

 

It has recently been discovered that this froghopper is a world class jumper (up to 70 cm into the air) beating the the flea. What makes this even more impressive is that the froghopper is much much heavier. The back legs are so well-developed that the initial stages of the jump a G-force of over 400 gravities is generated.

Along with the spit there were the slugs,

but I cannot bring myself to write about those.

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On exiting the forest we passed some very impressive copper beach trees,

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and were met by a herd of inquisitive cows who enjoyed licking the chip-salt from our lunch fingers.

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Back in civilization the fragrance on this roadside clematis

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filled up the surrounding area.

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We walked past dry stone walls that are a common feature in the area.

Many of them had pockets of small succulents emerging from between the stones.

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Finally:

cottages

All this rambling around the countryside had generated quite a thirst so before retuning to our cottage we dropped into the only watering hole for miles around…

…for some of the best ‘Best’,

…and a basket of

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Then it was back to the cottage to play our latest obsession:

boardgame

Stay Tuned for:

“Journey to the Highlands”

 

All material © 2013 for eastsidepatch. Unauthorized
intergalactic reproduction strictly prohibited, and
punishable by late (and extremely unpleasant)
14th century planet Earth techniques.

 

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