And now, a slightly delayed post about what I did on Friday.
I've been meaning to walk along the Fife coastal path for a while, and good weather on Friday combined with a day off got me started. Recording my progress here may make me more likely to finish it too.
The starting point is one of Scotland's iconic objects. 55, 000 tons of steel sculpture with trains running over the top of it.
There's a lot of industrial and post-industrial stuff going on at the start of the walk, with disused quarries, and this jetty near Inverkeithing made of old Bailey bridge components.
It's quite a varied landscape though, and a few hours later found me looking at St Bridget's church, near Dalgety Bay. One of the inscriptions on the gravestones reads "1787 James Scott Two Breids".
I neglected to take a picture, but just outside Burntisland is a monument on the spot where Alexander III's horse stumbled and killed him, precipitating the wars of Independence. You know, Bruce, Wallace and all that. Somebody has left some cacti in pots next to the monument. I don't know why.
I can't say I enjoyed this section very much, as you are forced to walk along the road, past lots of identical mobile homes that are arranged in straight rows across the fields. A truly depressing sight. If I'd been Martin Parr, I'd have taken pictures. I guess it pays better than farming the land.
Things improved a bit at Kinghorn though. Some people were attempting to surf in the tiny bay in front of the town.
I considered walking further, but it would be getting dark soon, and I could see more caravans in the distance, so for the sake of my sanity I got the train home.
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
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3 comments:
Excellent, glad to read about this. I went with Katherine last March from Dundee to the Forth Bridge - only got as far as Dalgety Bay before we gave up. I would like to spend a couple of days walking from Dalgety Bay to Dunbar.
The section from Kinghorn to Buckhaven is good, especially Ravenscraig Castle and the Wemyss caves, then it's rubbish going through Buckhaven and Methil, but after that it just gets better and better!
Nice to know, thanks!
We walked this way today and took a photo of the headstone you mention at St Bridget's Kirk: https://www.flickr.com/photos/susanmcnaughton/27419524675/in/dateposted/
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