Dysart, Fife, Scotland

Every now and again we take a wander along to Dysart which is an old Royal Burgh just a couple of miles north, along the coast from Kirkcaldy. The schoolkids have made a new sign for it apparently. I have no idea how they made it but it looks quite snazzy I think.

Dysart  Primary school art

This is a photo of Pan Ha’ and St. Serf’s Tower, the buildings are of traditional east coast design, with the red pan tiles on the roofs coming originally from Holland as ballast in ships. Dysart was a very busy port at one time.

aPan Ha'

The town tolbooth, the ground floor of which would have been used as a prison. I imagine it would have been quite well used as there would have been plenty of sailors around, getting drunk and having fights.

Dysart tollbooth

We walked alongh the coastal path for quite a while but bits of it have been roped off as the cliffs are in a dangerous state at the moment. It’s that ever present coastal erosion, the island of Britain is shrinking all the time it seems, and the sea is coming to get us. Do we ever gain any land I wonder?

You can see the old winching gear of Frances Colliery which closed down years ago, when Maggie Thatcher killed the coal mining industry of Britain, along with a lot of communities.

panorama from Dysart

If you’re interested you can see an older Dysart post of mine here.

Yesterday further north along the coast, some 15 or 20 miles or so, between Pittenweem and Anstruther it was ‘all go’ as a pod of whales beached themselves for some reason. It was early in the morning and by the time rescuers reached them 10 had already died. After huge efforts 16 whales were encouraged back to deeper water but unfortunately since then one has died at Leith and it’s feared that the others will come to grief too as they are just swimming around near the Forth Bridges. They’re pilot whales and shouldn’t be anywhere near this coast, but this happens every now and again for some unknown reason. It’s such a shame.

Edinburgh Botanics to Leith

Yesterday was probably about the best day of summer so far and we decided to drive to the Edinburgh Botanic Gardens and walk from there to Leith, Edinburgh’s port. Neither of us had ever been to Leith before, like most port areas it had a pretty sleazy reputation but in recent years it has been gentrified and I suppose ‘untarted’ would be the best description, rather than tarted up. We walked along the part of the Water of Leith which leads there and it was quite a bit longer than I thought it was going to be. It was a sweltering 21 C which is about 70 F and I was sans sun-hat, luckily there was a nice breeze now and again. This is an inscription on the path to Leith. I thought it was quite pithy.

Inscription

On reaching Leith we decided to walk on to the shopping centre Ocean Terminal because that is where the Royal Yacht Britannia is permanently berthed and as it’s now a museum the idea was to have a look around it but by the time we got there we were too tired to take the tour, bearing in mind that we had a long walk back to the car ahead of us, so next time we’ll drive there. This is a photograph of the stern of the yacht with a hideous modern cruise ship in the background. I thought it was a block of flats at first, these modern ships are ugly big lumps compared with the beautiful elegant lines of the old ships.

Royal Yacht Britannia

Ocean Terminal is supposed to be a wonderful shopping experience. It isn’t. It’s the usual shops in a soulless atmosphere. So we wasted no time there and started on the long trudge back to the car. Thirst got the better of us and we stopped off at a pub in Leith, we really needed a rest too. I think the pub we were in is just beyond the building with the tower. I was quite surprised how continental the buildings on Leith waterfront look. It must have been the Dutch influence I think, they used Dutch pan-tiles as ballast for ships in the past which is why the old cottages on the east coast of Scotland tend to have pan-tiled roofs.

Leith

So a good day out was finished off with ice-cream from the stall across from the botanics, very tasty. I had maple and walnut and sticky toffee fudge. What with that and the cider I don’t think I’ll have lost any weight despite the very long walk!