Thursday, 18 September 2014

Personal

A split decision

yes-no.jpgEmma: Yes
Paul: No

It seems we're as split as the nation. We'll be fascinated to see what the result is tomorrow morning.

One thing seems clear: which ever way the vote goes, there's an opportunity to build something new in Scotland, be it an independent country or a part of a refreshed federated union of nations. We're glad to be here north of the border for the week. We'd love to remain for longer and participate in helping the nation move forwards.

Posted by pab at 22:00 | Comments will be back one day. Please email me instead!

Coastwalk

Cockburnspath → Tyninghame

st-george-flag.jpg Distance: 16.50 miles
Ascent: 186 metres
Duration: 5 hours 3 minutes

Familiar, forthcoming foreign?
« Eyemouth | Aberlady »

Just north of Cockburnspath the beautiful dell of the Dunglass Burn marks the boundary between the Scottish Borders and East Lothian. The Berwickshire Coastal Path ends here and is replaced by the John Muir Link, a relatively new waymarked path that links two coast-to-coast routes: the Southern Upland Way whose eastern terminus is Cockburnspath and the John Muir Way which ends in Dunbar. It'll be many years before we reach their western termini at Portpatrick and Helensburgh respectively.

torness-power-station.jpgOnce again the mist obscured the worst of man's sins on this stretch: Torness nuclear power station and Thorntonloch caravan park. (Here we saw a St George's Cross being flown high above a static van. It seemed dangerously out of place.)

hedderwick-sands.jpgThe high cliffs that we've been walking on for two days have ended, replaced with dunes and heathland reminiscent of East Anglia. It seems I'm not the only one to have made this connection: the sands of Belhaven Bay stood in for Suffolk in the BBC's recent film Castles in the Sky that recounted the development of radar.

polling-place.jpgBeing Referendum Day I was delighted that we ended outside a Polling Place, in the village of Tyninghame. By the time we start tomorrow we'll know whether in a couple of years' time we'll be walking in a foreign country.

Posted by pab at 19:15 | Comments will be back one day. Please email me instead!