thought for a minute it was bruce's cave in kirkpatrick fleming in dumfries. ironic that both the bruce and wallace both ended up hiding in a cave with the river flowing below.
Marcè secondo me devi fare un piccolo investimento e comprarti una camera con la stabilizzazione, o un cellulare... Vedi te, così che i video non ti tremano
Lived at Fife Ness as a kid back in the 80's, me and my brothers used to play in and around this pillbox :) Thanks for posting a video, brought back some memories!
Hello McDagos. I enjoyed your beautiful photography. I would have enjoyed your narration or more comments of what I was seeing in the Museo archeologico di Atina. Comunque... complimenti e graze. Buon lavoro.
Ok- you’ve arrived at Carnoustie rail station that sits on the main East Coast rail line between Aberdeen and London. Right beside the Station is the Station Hotel which serves the best steak pie in the County. The beach scenes are set between low and high tide and right to left as the camera looks at it takes you from the edge of the golf links towards the old fishing village of Westhaven. The sands get progressively rockier as you move west to east. The beach walk is around 1 and a half miles but you can actually head beyond Westhaven and go towards Panbride and Easthaven villages and the town of Arbroath if you fancy a longer walk of up to 6 miles. It is only a 1/4 mile from the shore up the main street in the town. Don’t expect designer shopping but there are one or two useful specialist shops and if you need essentials you will be reasonably well served. There are a small number of cafes and snack shops along the high street. Franco’s cafe is particularly good just a short walk up from the Station Hotel. A few of the grander buildings featured are old bank buildings converted into domestic property. If you enjoy golf the three courses there will suit different levels of ability but the Championship Course is tough even on the best of days and expensive to play at around £300 a round. Burnside is probably best value at £75. Panbride Church , which was also featured, has now closed. Enjoy the visit.
My great great great grandfather was John lowson, a jute manufacturer in Forfar. I believe the church is in memorial to him, also another great great great grandfather also from Forfar called David Jolly is thought to have created a pasty called the Forfar bridie but another story also lays claim. I hope one day to visit Forfar. Thanks for video 👍
When I lived in Rosyth between the ages of 12 and 16 I fished this strange little loch, and never failed to catch - perch. That was in the early-mid1960s. Caught only perch, which are by nature great colonisers of water unconnected to other places in the approximate vicinity. Never of any size, just the usual 8-inch perch to be found in almost any open water in central scotland…. Pike too seem able to colonise even very small places like field ponds, but no pike showed up here. Now it gets 100% choked up annually so it’s like a bowl of veggie soup each summer. I’d not bet on the perch having disappeared from there, as they’re remarkably tolerant of conditions. The one thing that might have done for them is deoxygenisation of the water through annual scores(hundreds?) of tons of water weed dying back in winter, and rotting. Over-low oxygen levels might have killed off much fish and invertebrate life. Published info on the place is very out of date. A few fishing trials might be worthwhile just to investigate?
At AAaCiao a tutti i paesani di Castelgrande Grazie per il Bello pensiero di Mandare il fimato del nostro poessello che ci ricorda La nostra infanzia c’era pochi ma felici ???? Un Abraccio Atutti nostri compaesani ciao ce sempre LA nostalgia dove sei NAta ilTUO poese vi Ringrazie pe il LAVORO FATTO per noi A L’estero 🇨🇦💖💐🌺🌹✨💫🕓
That's just unbelievable seeing a random stone observatory parked on a hill. The whole areas looks beautiful. Thanks for showing us this footage. This is another one on my check list when I tour Scotland.