The Sea at Kirkcaldy Esplanade in Fife

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This is what we saw when we got to the esplanade in Kirkcaldy a couple of days ago, so we decided not to brave the actual esplanade, just in case we got wheeched into the sea by a particularly big wave. We opted for walking along by the inner wall next to the road instead.

As you can see the sea wall is badly in need of repair and in fact there is work ongoing at the moment, it’s going to take about two years to complete it I think. This is the Firth of Forth, just as it turns into the North Sea, straight ahead is Denmark I think.

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The sea wall was built between 1922 and 24 and the work was done to give employment to men who were unemployed after the First World War, it’s quite depressing to think that we have the same problems with unemployment now. I think that the only time there has been full employment here was in those glory days of the 1960s.

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The actual sea was almost a flat calm until about 10 feet out from the sea wall, when the waves all started to fight with each other, then exploded onto the wall.
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Well you get the idea of what the sea was like but you can never capture it in a photo, for one thing you don’t have the accompanying noise, or the salty spray in your face. I must figure out how to work the video bit of my camera, reading the instructions would probably help!

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Kirkcaldy Esplanade

Splash

We went for a walk along the esplanade in Kirkcaldy today and as you can see it was high tide – in fact very high tide. The sea was coming right over the sea-wall, which is in desperate need of being renewed or at least patched up.

Whoever decided to pave the esplanade with brick paviors must be in need of a new brain. They are all being ripped up by the heavy waves and it makes it very dodgy underfoot.

Debris

We had to jump out of the way of the sea water and managed to miss being absolutely soaked, which is just as well because you really don’t want bits of the North Sea coming down on your head, thankfully the worst bit of debris which came in our direction was a plastic container which must have been tied to a boat at one point as the rope was still attached.

Saturation time

At the moment the weather is really calm with no high winds so the rough sea isn’t weather related, I think it’s something to do with the phase of the moon.