Scottish words: Chittering/Chittery-bite.

Frozen fountain in Beveridge Park

As you can see from this photograph it has been so cold here that everything has frozen up. It has been colder than Norway, Finland and the South Pole.

So we have all been chittering, which is the Scottish word for shivering. You might think it strange when I say that my worst attacks of chittering have always been in the summertime. The reason for this is that when you are wee, you seem to have a thing for paddling in water, and before you know it, you’re up to your neck in it. I’ve noticed that this happens to dogs too.

There’s no sense to it whatsoever because you know that you are either in the North Sea or a loch full of snow melt from the mountains. So it can’t be anything other than freezing and you’re going to end up chittering within about 10 seconds of hitting the water.

Luckily your mum will have come prepared with a chittery-bite. This is something nice for you to eat – a sandwich or a cake or maybe chocolate. Anything for you to get your teeth wrapped around and before long, you will have stopped chittering and your mum has saved you from hypothermia – again.

Pipes and Drums in Beveridge Park

Pipe band practicing

Pipe band practicing

I went for a walk round Beveridge Park in Kirkcaldy the other evening. Well, it’s one way of getting rid of the extra flab around the tum due to the tablet scoffing.

I had a lovely stroll around the park, and the icing on the cake was the pipe and drum band which was having a good old practice session in the rose garden. I don’t know if this is a frequent event, they have to practice somewhere I suppose.

Anyway, I thought that they were really good, but unfortunately I don’t have a clue who they were. I couldn’t see anything with a name on it. Just out of sheer nosiness I would love to know who they were. They even played a tune which I had never heard before, it was so nice to hear something completely different from the usual pipe band repertoire.