2023 Outings:-
10 May - Burrell Collection
5 June - Abbotsford House and Melrose
6 July - Perth Races
8 August - Bo'ness & Kinneil Railway
The Panto - 14 December
2024 AGM - 9 February 2024.
This Blog is intended only for the use of Edinburgh-based Staff Pensioners of a particular company with its Head Office in Edinburgh, Scotland. Although this Blog is open to view by anyone, use of the information contained therein should be limited to those who are members of the relevant company's Pensioners' Association.
2023 Outings:-
10 May - Burrell Collection
5 June - Abbotsford House and Melrose
6 July - Perth Races
8 August - Bo'ness & Kinneil Railway
The Panto - 14 December
2024 AGM - 9 February 2024.
On what turned out to be nice crisp winter’s day, with a fresh wind to encourage us all to keep moving, 31 Strollers met in Stockbridge at Saunders Street for a guided walk with our Blue Badge Guides Karen and Helen. The things you learn on these walks are very interesting even for those that came from that area.
We started
off by peering down into the Water of Leith to look at one of the Antony
Gormley statues. There are 6 in total from the Dean Village down to Leith. From
here we crossed back to Dean Bank Lane to pass the site of the first fire
station in Edinburgh in Hamilton Place, it is now the toilets. The fire station
then moved from there to Saunders Street. The building next door, probably
better known as Lancers Restaurant, was the police station. The Dean Bank
Institute was set up in 1832 to help delinquent girls after their release from
prison. It changed its approach after a sister centre was set up at the
Boroughmuir in 1848 and moved to trying to help the girls before they got into
trouble. It was taken over by Edinburgh Council in 1913 and is now part of the
school next door. The building opposite the toilets was at one time a museum
and you can still see some of the lettering on the wall between the windows.
We then
passed through the arch to where a meat and fish market used to be. The sign
for it is on the arch in St Stephens Place. From here we went round into Circus
Lane which housed the quarters for the staff and horses or cars for the bigger
houses in Royal Circus. Times have changed as these houses now sell for upwards
of £1 million.
We stopped to look at St Stephens Church, designed and built by the architect Playfair to hide Edinburgh Academy from the view of the citizens! His backers were Royal High supporters. The tower is 160 feet high and houses the longest clock pendulum in Europe. From here we wandered into Royal Circus to pass the home of Sir Henry Littlejohn, first medical officer of Edinburgh from 1862. Working our way back to India Place we passed Stuarts Land, a house built in the late 1700s which used old stone from houses in the High Street. It was home to artist David Roberts. Going along India Place, we passed the allotments left as part of the demolition of the tenements that used to be there. The doors to the coal houses and outside toilets are still in place in the retaining walls. Moving onto the famous (or infamous) Danube Street, where at one time Dora Noyce ran a brothel. It would now cost you £1.5 million for the house.
We then finished
up in the streets designed by the artist Sir Henry Raeburn and where his house
once stood, St Bernard’s Crescent. It was designed in such a way to preserve
the elm trees that grew there.
Our many
thanks to Karen and Helen for the information overload (I’ve missed quite a bit
of the information they passed on) and not taking too long on a cold day.
Hopefully
February will be warmer for our walk round Morningside.
Here are the dates for your diaries: -
1 February - 1 George Street
1 March - Bread Street Hotel (venue for the remaining coffee mornings)
5 April
3 May
7 June
5 July
2 August
6 September
4 October
8 November
6 December
Fifty four Strollers met at the Royal Scots
Club in Abercromby Place to enjoy a chat and Christmas Lunch.
It was a bit confusing to some attendees as
there was also another group of ex-SL people there for lunch at the same time. It
sorted itself out as the Strollers headed down into the depths of the building
and the Hepburn Suite while the others made their way up to the dining room.
The room as usual was well decorated and the
seating plan was on the entrance to the room as well as on the tables. A good
idea for people who keep wandering around looking having forgotten where to go.
It’s also a good job the organiser takes a copy of the food orders so that
people can find out what they ordered. Everything with the meal appeared to go
okay and the food and the service was good.
After the meal the attendees then sang Happy
Birthday to Ronnie who had turned 80 the day before.
There was then time for a quiz and it was
pure coincidence that the organiser’s table won!
All too soon it was time to go home and book
for next year.
Have a Good Christmas and a Happy New Year
and look forward to seeing you on walks in 2023.
Eighteen Strollers met at Haymarket Station
to follow the old railway line from Roseburn to Canonmills and finish at the
Scotland Street Tunnel. A nineteenth Stroller caught up with as we walked. The
weather cleared and it was a fine day for the walk.
It could be described as a historical walk as
we walked past sites of buildings and factories no longer there. Haymarket
station used to be the terminus of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway before the
tunnel was built extending the line to the Waverley in 1846.
Starting off following the tram tracks and
passing the site of the Haymarket Ice Rink which closed in 1978, we joined the
footpath of the old railway line at Roseburn to follow it Trinity and then
Canonmills. The line used to run from Princes Street to Leith with a split at
Craigleith to Barnton.
Craigleith used to be a quarry but is now a
shopping centre. From here we followed the path down past Crewe Toll where
Ferranti used to have a huge presence but the site is a lot smaller and is now
BAE/GEC. The site of the Village Hotel is where Livingston FC started life as
Ferranti FC. For a while it was also the site of Telford College which is now
at Granton. We then passed the site of the McTaggart Mickel builders’ depot
which is now flats, followed by City Park which had been home to
Edinburgh City, Ferranti and Spartans before
being sold for flats. We passed the Parsons Peebles site which was destroyed by
fire and is now also flats.
At Trinity we then followed the Edinburgh, Leith and Newhaven Railway line through the Rodney Street Tunnel which had been opened as a footpath in 2009 to finish at the entrance to the Scotland Street Tunnel. This tunnel went all the way from here into Waverley Station. As the train had to go up a steep incline it was attached to a rope to help haul it up. It is now blocked but had been use for growing mushrooms and as car storage depot.
Our thanks to Drew for the walk.
Ten Strollers met at the entrance to Kilspindie Golf Course in Aberlady to head to the Gosford House Estate, with three more Strollers joining us at the car park there.
Aberlady used to be the ‘port’ for Haddington
with the site of the golf clubhouse being the customs’ house. We walked past
the ruins of Kilspindie Castle with the stones having been recycled to build the wall
along the road. This area was the site of the largest Anglo-Saxon find of
silver in Scotland along with Bronze Age relics as well.
From here, we walked up ‘Coffin Lane’ and
along to the Gosford Pleasure Gardens and Policies, which are in the grounds of
Gosford House.
The estate belongs to the Earl of Wemyss and
of March, two separate titles. The estate was laid out in the 18th and early
19th century with the house being designed by Robert Adam and the gardens by
James Ramsay. We wandered past the Pyramid styled mausoleum and down to admire
the house, before going round the ponds. The ponds were used for boating,
fishing and curling. The ponds attract swans, ducks and heron which we saw on
the day and also geese over the winter. We circled round the pounds past the
curling and boathouse through the ‘policies’ or trees to look at the lily pond
and the ice-house before making our way back to the car park and shop.
Our thanks to Drew for
arranging the walk and also for arranging a nice warm sunny day. A black mark
though for not discovering that the food places in Aberlady didn’t open till
later in the day contrary to their internet sites.
Twelve Strollers met at Bonnyrigg for the
walk to Roslin partly on the old railway line and partly through Roslin Glen
Country Park.
It was a dull day to begin with and not too
hot for walking though the temperature was raised a bit when it was discovered
that the public toilets had all been closed due to vandalism.
The railway line had been opened in 1872 as a
branch line of the Edinburgh to Carlisle route in order to serve the paper
mills between Dalkeith and Penicuik. There were lots of signs that it was used
by horses so we had to tread carefully as we walked. Like others it was closed
down in the 1960s but we saw the platforms of the old stations at Rosewell and
Roslyn as we walked along.
Ignoring the noise from the dog kennels, we
passed the back of St Matthew’s RC Church built in 1926 and stopped for a break
at the entrance to Roslin Glen Park. At this point, we were close to Hawthornden
House which dates from the 15th century but is now a retreat for artists and
writers set up by the Heinz family in the 1980s. Amazing what beans can do for
you! Passing Rosslyn Station, we turned down into the path that led down to the
site of the gunpowder factory. Built in 1801, it closed after the 2nd World
War. It used a water wheel to provide power to the site via a lade that had come
from the weir which has now been dismantled as well. Only the bare ruins of the
site remain.
From here we crossed over the road and into
the site of the carpet factory, long gone as well, and crossed the river by the
bridge and climbed up the steps to pass Rosslyn Castle, which is now holiday
lets. Winding our way up the hill, we came to the old Rosslyn Inn which has had
famous visitors from the Wordsworths, Walter Scott, Burns, Samuel Johnson and
even to royalty. It sits next to Rosslyn Chapel made famous by the Da Vinci
Code.
We finished in Roslin. The spelling is
different as Rosslyn is the name of the baronetcy that was granted the land but
the village was always spelt differently.
Our thanks to Colm for bring along the book
with all the old pictures of the area, very interesting and thanks to Drew for
organising the walk.
Hope to see you on the next walk.
A very select band of ten Strollers met at the Ferrymuir Shopping centre in South Queensferry for a walk round the grounds of Dundas Castle.
The walk started slightly later than billed
as the coordinator got an extra tour of South Queensferry on the bus due to
road closures. Other Strollers got caught out by the one way system down by the
front and others just got lost! A good start to the walk.
Leaving the Tesco car park we made our way up
to the entrance to Dundas Castle crossing over the noisy motorway.
Such a difference as soon as we went into the
grounds, just the noise of birds and the occasional golf shot and the sun came
out as well. One of our Strollers decided it was so nice that they stayed at
the gate to the main house and sunbathed till we came round for them again.
The house and Castle are now used as a
conference and wedding venue and the current castle really dates from the 1800s.
It has been in the hands of the Stewart-Clarks from the late 1800s and a huge
renovation of it was carried out by the current owner from the mid-1990s. Following
the path with its views of Edinburgh and the Pentlands, we made our way down to
the small loch with its own little boathouse which is now a small self catering
cottage. We sat there and had lunch and a chat with one of the estate rangers.
It was with some difficulty that we continued the walk as everyone had settled
down in the sunshine watching the ducks and swans etc. on the loch.
Walking down through the woods we passed the
fields with horses and the old dovecot before making our way back to meet up
with our other, now suntanned, Stroller. Making our way back to Tesco for the
buses and cars we had a lovely view of the new bridge.
Our thanks to Drew for organising the walk
and the weather.
The next walk will be Bonnyrigg to Penicuik.
Fifteen Strollers met at Innerleithen to walk
to Walkerburn using the tarmac path and then back on the other side of the
Tweed through the fields and over the old railway bridge.
It was a nice day for a walk, dull but not
too cold and it got a lot warmer on the way back. Innerleithen is home to the
Robert Smail print works and St Ronan’s Well but is more famous now as a
cycling centre with its access to Glentress and Cardrona as well as for walking
and fishing.
Leaving the Hall Street car park, we made our
way down Traquair Road to join the cycle route past the houses and then along
the side of the caravan park. We then followed the path to Walkerburn. A nice
quiet walk was only disturbed by the sound of the baby ducks on the river.
Reaching Walkerburn, we stopped for some lunch, with some of the Strollers
getting a room to themselves in the Caberston Cafe. I’m not sure whether that
was good luck or whether they were sent there! The rest of the Strollers sat
outside and had their sandwiches and drinks al fresco.
Walkerburn, like Innerleithen, is now more a
cycling and walking centre. The mills have gone as has the railway. The mills
used hydro power generated by pumping the water from the River Tweed up to a
reservoir and then letting it back down to drive a turbine. They even built a
funicular railway to haul the necessary building materials to the reservoir.
Setting off back down to the Tweed, we passed
houses built for the mill workers that looked as if they were shoring each
other up with joists, both stone and steel. We crossed the bridge and went into
the fields to follow the path along the Tweed back to Innerleithen, taking
great care to avoid the nice fertiliser left by the sheep, cows and horses we
met on the way back. There was even a strange siting of a cyclist going
paddling. He lasted about 2 seconds!
Some of the Strollers finished off the walk with a nice ice-cream from Caldwell’s in Innerleithen.
Thanks to Drew for arranging the walk and
hope for the same kind of weather next time.
Forty three of us met on Waterloo Place for our outing to Scone Palace. We collected another two of our number at Inverkeithing then headed (or so we thought) to Dobbie's at Dunfermline for our coffee stop and to pick up our final member.
Unfortunately the driver hadn't been told that we were going to Dobbie's and drove on past the turn. Two of the committee kept him right and despite Dobbie's not having knowledge of our booking (they'd put it in their diary for 9 July!) we safely collected Bob and had our coffee.
After that, we headed to Scone and everything was fine, including the weather. We all went into the palace and were given a talk about two of the rooms. Everyone then went off on their separate ways. I'm told that four folk went into the maze and got a bit lost. They included our cheque book holder!
The meal at the Royal George was good and apparently the meringues were amazing.
On a breezy but bright day 23 Strollers met
at the Water of Leith Centre at the foot of the Lanark Road to walk to the Colinton
Tunnel via the canal and the Water of Leith.
Some Strollers took advantage of the meeting
place for a coffee or tea and to use the facilities.
The Water of Leith Conservation Trust was formed
in 1988 and organises over 240 clean ups of the river each year with an aim of
protecting the river and its environs as well as running education sessions
and liaising with Edinburgh Council.
A few of us declined the invitation to climb
the 90 steps up to the aqueduct and followed the road up the pedestrian bridge
crossing the Lanark Road where we met the others who had braved the heights of
the aqueduct and followed the Union Canal for a short distance.
From here we followed the path along the
route of what was once the Balerno Branch railway. It was opened to passenger
and freight traffic in 1874, but was aimed mainly at serving the many mills
that used to be on the river. At its peak 20 trains a day ran in both directions
and passenger traffic grew with the expansion of the town and also day trippers
at the weekend. Passenger traffic was stopped in 1943 and freight in in 1967. A
proposal was made to make the old route a footpath and cycleway but it took
till 1980 for it to happen. This involved reopening the Colinton Tunnel which
had been bricked up and putting in lighting.
As we approached the tunnel, we were
serenaded by a musician who seemed to be using the acoustics of the tunnel to
practice his saxophone playing. The art work in the tunnel is based on Robert
Louis Stevenson’s poem ‘From a Railway Carriage’. With the words of the poem on
one side of the tunnel being linked by artwork to murals on the other wall
depicting the lines of the poem. The artwork has been created by various groups
from professional artists to school and community groups.
Go to the Project’s website at www.colintontunnel.org.uk and view some of the YouTube videos from the links on the
Tunnel’s Home page, for example the STV News Broadcast from October 2020.
We then stopped in Spylaw Park for a nice
relaxing lunch, where the house that used to be home to James Gillespie still stands,
but is now flats. He built his fortune on snuff and tobacco and when he died he
bequeathed his money to build a hospital and school for the poor.
After lunch we then headed back through the tunnel and then down to the path by the Water of Leith to follow it back to our starting place.
Our thanks to Alistair B for arranging the
walk and for such good weather to go with it. Hopefully June will be as nice.
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There were 34 of us in our
first group visit to Glasgow (plus one who met us there.). All of us very well
prepared for the rainy day. Our driver was Isla who is brilliant at coping with
the huge bus.
A quick decision was made to avoid Corstorphine as
we headed to Dobbies at Livingston for the ‘Coffee Stop’. I heard positive
comments about that and recommend the flat white.
The staff at The Tall Ship are friendly and
helpful. Vera came in her boiler suit to welcome us, warn us about the wet ship
and then we were free to view it as we wished. She went back to rubbing teak
oil into an old box. There was lots of information about its past and ongoing
restoration.
Our rainwear was needed for the walk from the
coach to the Cathedral. It was my first time there and it is magnificent. Most
of the stained glass windows were replaced in the 50s and 60s. They are beautiful
and compliment the ancient building. My neck got sore with all the ‘looking
up’. If it had been dry I’d have walked round the gardens. Some found a pub
round the corner (recommended by the shop girls) so had coffee (so they told
me!).
We arrived at the Leapark Hotel in Grangemouth in
plenty time for drinks to be bought before our meal was served. Compliments all
round for service and delicious, generous food.
A very good day.
Liz Staples
Your Chairman has just realised that we hadn't let you know anything about the September outing.
Nineteen members and guests met at Waterloo place for the trip. Our first stop was at the Carfraemill Hotel for our mid morning hot drink.
From there, we headed to the improved Jim Clark Museum in Duns. Before we even entered the museum we were treated to seeing three rather smart sports cars sitting outside. Inside the museum we saw lots of exhibits relating to the wonderful Jim Clark including cars, trophies and videos.
We then headed off to Melrose for some free time before our high tea in Galashiels.
Although we were a small number, it was a very enjoyable trip.
Fourteen Strollers met at the Commonwealth Pool under clear blue skies to walk down the Innocent Railway path and the Braid and Brunstane Burn paths to Musselburgh. Our number went up to eighteen as we were joined by Ronnie and co as we crossed the road to go through the well-lit tunnel at the start of the walk where the Innocent Railway used to finish.
It’s now a popular cycle path as we
discovered as we walked along the path towards Duddingston, passing
Prestonfield golf course. The area used to be called Priestfield as there was a
monastery there and the lie of the fairways reflects the use of the fields for
drying flax. A certain Stroller even managed to collect an errant golf ball as
a trophy.
Crossing over Duddingston Road and walking
along the boundary of Duddingston Golf course, we reflected on the fact that at
one time there had been 7 breweries sited here. They have all gone now to be
replaced mostly by housing. Passing along Bingham we came to the Jewel, which
is named after the quality of the seam of coal that was mined here. The Magdalene
estate, named after the burn that flowed here, was once used as salt pans by
the monks from Kelso Abbey and was the site of a cemetery of Bronze Age people.
From here we walked down the path at the side
of the burn, now call the Brunstane Burn, which ran parallel with the road
called Daiches Brae. This is thought to be the only road in the UK named after
a Rabbi. Salis Daiches was an Edinburgh Rabbi from 1918 to 1945. His son David
was famous as a diplomat to the US. He was involved in the setting up of UNESCO
and writing books about various subjects including authors such as Stevenson,
Burns and Milton as well as histories of Edinburgh and Glasgow and whisky.
Following the path we passed another golf
course, Milton Glen, which was built by the owner of Archerfield golf courses.
It is just a small course for the use of the residents of the houses that back
on to it.
Finally we passed the shoe tree where people for some obscure reason tie odd shoes to the tree, and came to the end of the walk between Joppa and Musselburgh.
Our Thanks to Drew for the walk and we look
forward to the May walk.
On a somewhat dreich day, 18 Strollers gathered at the Mound for an historic walk about Sir Walter Scott and other tit-bits of information. (Moira T caught up later which might have been earlier had the organiser been texting the correct Moira!)
The guides told us how the Nor Loch was
created as an extra defence for the Castle before eventually being drained and
turned into the gardens. The minister at St Cuthbert's was granted the only
licence to fish in the loch.
As we walked through the West gardens we saw
the Elephant of Remembrance and the rock which came as a present from Norway to
remember the aid given to them in the 2nd World War. We stopped at the statue
of the Polish army bear, Wojtek, and looked at the Scottish American Memorial
which depicts workers marching to become soldiers in World War 1.
We also admired the Ross fountain, sculpted by artist Jean-Baptiste Jules Klagmann, and brought from the
Great Exhibition of 1862 in London to Edinburgh in 1869 by Daniel Ross a local
gun maker.
As we stood looking up at the castle we heard
how Sir Walter Scott choreographed the visit of George IV in 1822 and found the
Crown Jewels hidden in the castle.
We then stopped at St Johns church to visit
the grave of Sir Walter’s mother and to see the grave of Malvina Wells which is
the only recorded grave in Edinburgh of someone who was born enslaved. She came
as a teenager from Grenada with the Macrae family, in whose plot she is buried,
though she seems to have worked in various households until her death at the
age of 84.
We then moved on to the corner at what some
of still call Binns, but which is now the Johnnie Walker Centre, to watch the
pipers on the restored clock march round playing Scotland the Brave. They also
play Caller Herrin’ and for some reason they march at 7 and 37 minutes past the
hour.
We also heard about the Sinclair fountain
which used to stand here until 1926, paid for by Catherine Sinclair, for horses
to get some water as they pulled the carts round Edinburgh. She was a writer
and philanthropist and the “Eleanor Cross” at the end of North Charlotte Street
and St Colme Street was built by public subscription to commemorate her.
On Castle Street we saw the house once owned
by Sir Walter Scott. It was from here that he was evicted when he was declared
bankrupt though he was allowed to keep the contents of his wine cellar as no
‘gentleman’ should be left without his wine! Now split into flats the basement
which had been the kitchen area was sold for over £500,000. He kept writing in
order to pay off all his debts.
We finished at the Scott Monument back in
Princes Street, designed by George Meikle Kemp, started in 1840 and completed
in 1846. The statue of Scott is in Carrara marble and took 6 years for the
sculptor John Steell to sculpt from one piece of stone weighing 30 tons.
The many smaller figures on the monument depict characters from his novels and
poems.
Our Thanks to guides Karen and Helen for all
the information on the walk and keeping us going in the rain.
On a dull day in Edinburgh 33 Strollers met at the Museum of Scotland in Chambers Street for a walk to St Giles guided by our Blue Badge Guides, Karen and Helen.
The basis of the walk was to celebrate
Edinburgh’s link with writers and its status as the first Unesco City of
Literature granted in 2004.
Chambers Street immediately gave a link to Chambers
the publisher and past Lord Provost. From here we moved to behind the Bedlam
Theatre to hear about the Bedlam Hospital and the poet Robert Ferguson who
after a fall and head knock was sent to the hospital which was designated for
the ‘mad’ people of Edinburgh. He died there at the age of 24 and his treatment
there caused one of the doctors, Andrew Duncan, to petition parliament for
money to start a hospital to properly care for these patients. The hospital he
started is still going in Morningside. Burns was also a great fan of Ferguson
and cited him as an influence in his poetry.
It was then off to Greyfriars Kirkyard to
remember the story of Greyfriars Bobby and the inspiration that JK Rowling got
from the cemetery for her writing. We also remembered not to rub the statue for
good luck!
From here we moved via the balcony on
Victoria Street to James Court behind Gladstones Land to hear about David Hume
and James Boswell who both lived in the square. We then went on to Lady Stairs
Close to hear her story and to hear about the Writers Museum which is a museum
in her old house.
From there we moved over to St Giles to
remember other writers like Sir Walter Scott, Ian Rankin, Muriel Sparks, Eric
Linklater and his son Magnus and Dorothy Dunnet.
We finished at the City Chambers where there
is now a walk of fame where famous people linked with Edinburgh, like Alexander
McCall Smith, set their handprints in concrete. Just like Hollywood!
Our thanks to our Guides and we look forward
to February and hope the weather stays as dry and mild as it did yesterday.
Fifty four Strollers met up at the Royal
Scots Club for Christmas Lunch. Tying in with Covid restrictions, we had fewer
people at a table and because of the smaller number attending the tables were
further apart.
There was no piping in this year, which is
just as well as our piper had decided to try his forward roll technique while
going out his back door. Unfortunately he failed to pull it off and damaged his
hand so he couldn’t play. Hopefully he won’t try it again and be fit for next
year.
There was also no entertainment by the
Strolling Players but we had a quiz instead which led to a tie on 36 out of 40
points, so the prize was shared between 3 tables. The booby prize team were
just a little behind, well maybe not so little, but enjoyed their prize.
The food and service was very good, with a
minor quibble over when to clear tables, our Chairperson is willing to offer
lessons!
Overall it was a very good day and a good
opportunity for so many people who hadn’t met up for a while to catch up.
Hopefully by next year we may be in a better
position re Covid.
Looking forward to walks in 2022 starting
with the historical walks in January and February, Covid rules allowing.
On a bright sunny almost warm November day
eighteen Strollers met up at Musselburgh Harbour for a stroll along the
promenade to Levenhall and the Race Track.
Everyone had come dressed for the cold wind
off the sea and so were feeling overdressed before going very far and jackets
were being taken off. You just can’t predict Scottish weather.
Passing two newly sculpted figures which are
supposed to represent fishermen working on their nets, we walked along the
promenade to the River Esk. We followed this a short way back up to cross at
the pedestrian bridge which is next to the electric bridge. It’s called that
because it was built to carry the turbines being taken to Cockenzie Power
Station.
From here we headed back down to the Forth
and walked along the line of the Levenhall Lagoons. These were created to take
the waste ash from the power station but part of it has been altered to create
wildlife habitats. Work is ongoing to extend the extent of the reserve and we
stopped off for a quick look at the wildlife on the lagoons after having had a
break for a snack and to enjoy the sunshine.
We then walked along the side of Musselburgh
Race Track which has been on the go since the early 1800s. It also has the Old
Musselburgh golf course in the middle of it where the many of the first golf
Opens were held and where the size of the hole was accepted as standard. Some
of the notable golf clubs and courses around Edinburgh like Muirfield,
Bruntsfield and Royal Burgess all played here at one time.
From here we made our way back to the harbour
and the end of the walk.
Our thanks to Drew for arranging the walk and
the weather.
On a warm sunny day thirteen Strollers met at
the entrance to Oriam in Riccarton Campus for a walk round the grounds of
Heriot Watt University.
Oriam is Scotland's
national performance centre for sport. Opened in 2016, it is used by the Scottish Rugby Union, the Scottish Football Association
as well as Heart of Midlothian F.C. for
first team training and to run their academy. It has also been used by several
English Premiership clubs. The indoor pitch is the same size as the football
pitch at Hampden and is open to other sports teams as well as students and
members of the public.
The walk took us round the forest track past
Lovers Loan on the way to the Millennium Garden, which was created using reclaimed
project construction spoil.
From there, the walk continued on past the
research area and looped back to the old gardens of Riccarton House. The front
lawn, where the Henry Prais building now, stands, was used for croquet and once
echoed to the cries of strutting peacocks. The present lawn was known as the
Flower Garden, with flower beds designed and planted by the mid-18th century.
It was extensively modelled during the 19th century by the Gibson-Craigs to include
a summer house. The Velvet Walk is a garden terrace leading to the private
burial ground of the Gibson-Craig family who owned the estate before it passed
into the hands of the University.
The fire pond was constructed as a convenient
source of water for use in the event of fire in the mansion-house, whilst the
ornamental loch supported wildfowl and fish for use in the house kitchens.
From the gardens the walk continued back to Oriam
and the end of the walk.
Our thanks to Alistair for arranging a very
accessible and enjoyable walk.
Let’s hope the weather hold out for the November walk.