Ages: Colin was 65 years and 53 days. Rosemary was 62 years and 195 days.
Weather: The day started sunny and warm, so we decided to dispense with our winter woollies. But, when it was too late, it quickly turned cold and the wind was particularly bitter. After Anstruther, we had persistent rain for the rest of the day. It was miserable!
Location: Elie, via St Monans, Pittenweem and Anstruther, to Crail.
Distance: 12 miles.
Total distance: 1365 miles.
Terrain: Some pavement-bashing and a little beach-walking, but mostly grassy paths. Undulating.
Tide: In.
Rivers: No.92, Inverie Burn at St Monans. No. 93, Dreel Burn at Anstruther.
Ferries: None.
Piers: None.
Kissing gates: No.142 near St Monans. Nos. 143 & 144 as we left Anstruther.
Pubs: The ‘Dreel Tavern’ in Anstruther where Colin drank Deuchars IPA and I had a shandy.
‘Historic Scotland’ properties: None.
Ferris wheels: None.
Diversions: None.
How we got there and back: We were staying in a holiday cottage in the village of Craigrothie. We drove to Crail (where the toilets are FREE!) and parked in the High Street. We caught a bus to Elie, and walked down to the waterfront where we had left it yesterday.
At the end, feeling very cold and soggy, we got straight into the car and drove back to our cottage in Craigrothie. Only when we had dried out did we make ourselves a cup of tea!
Today is the 16th birthday of our grand-daughter, Kelly. When she was born in 1991, her mother (our ‘rebel’ daughter) was still only 18 years old and she already had a two-year-old son! It is difficult to believe that we now have grandchildren aged 16 and 18!! Despite our daughter’s precarious position of being a teenage single Mum with no job and no qualifications,
she pulled on inner strengths and came up trumps. Kelly is an emotionally stable young lady, very personable, outstandingly good-looking and a delight to know. She has worked her socks off all through school, but she is not an academic child. She hopes to work in the media, possibly in radio, and is starting a relevant college course in September.
Weather: The day started sunny and warm, so we decided to dispense with our winter woollies. But, when it was too late, it quickly turned cold and the wind was particularly bitter. After Anstruther, we had persistent rain for the rest of the day. It was miserable!
Location: Elie, via St Monans, Pittenweem and Anstruther, to Crail.
Distance: 12 miles.
Total distance: 1365 miles.
Terrain: Some pavement-bashing and a little beach-walking, but mostly grassy paths. Undulating.
Tide: In.
Rivers: No.92, Inverie Burn at St Monans. No. 93, Dreel Burn at Anstruther.
Ferries: None.
Piers: None.
Kissing gates: No.142 near St Monans. Nos. 143 & 144 as we left Anstruther.
Pubs: The ‘Dreel Tavern’ in Anstruther where Colin drank Deuchars IPA and I had a shandy.
‘Historic Scotland’ properties: None.
Ferris wheels: None.
Diversions: None.
How we got there and back: We were staying in a holiday cottage in the village of Craigrothie. We drove to Crail (where the toilets are FREE!) and parked in the High Street. We caught a bus to Elie, and walked down to the waterfront where we had left it yesterday.
At the end, feeling very cold and soggy, we got straight into the car and drove back to our cottage in Craigrothie. Only when we had dried out did we make ourselves a cup of tea!
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But I mustn’t keep on about toilets (why not? they are
so important to those of us who are getting on a bit but still want to get out and about), we found Elie to be pretty harbour with a number of leisure boats moored in it.
Fishing doesn’t seem to feature any more.
We also explored the nearby rocky promontory on which there was a lighthouse, and further round a ruined stone building called ‘Lady’s Tower’. I looked this up on the internet at a later date, and discovered that it was built
sometime after 1750 as a summerhouse for Lady Janet Anstruther who liked to bathe naked in the sea.
Apparently she used to send her bellman round Elie to warn the villagers to keep away whenever she fancied a swim!
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We also explored the nearby rocky promontory on which there was a lighthouse, and further round a ruined stone building called ‘Lady’s Tower’. I looked this up on the internet at a later date, and discovered that it was built
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We tried to sit behind a grassy mound to eat our pasties (yes, I am still eating them!) but we weren’t very successful at getting out of the wind. So we marched on as fast as we could along the coast path hoping the exercise would warm us up. It didn’t.
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As
we left St Monans we passed a seawater bathing pool cemented into the rocks at the top of the beach. But there was a notice above on the low cliffs which read, “THIS POOL IS NO LONGER MAINTAINED BY DISTRICT COUNCIL BATHERS USE IT AT OWN RISK”. What they really mean is that in these days of litigation, they are no longer going to risk being sued by someone who slips over and bumps his noddle — it’s always got to be someone else’s fault so he can make a quick buck. As I’ve said before, if we didn’t take any risks in this life we’d never get out of bed, but our freedoms are being thwarted by these inimical lawsuits.
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In 1771 Sir John Anstruther and Robert Fall established the Newark Coal and Salt Works Company. Nine saltpans, probably a windmill pump, a settling tank and channel were built. A wagonway transported the coal to the pans, and took salt and coal for export to Pittenween Harbour.
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All we were interested in was getting out of the wind. We skulked in the deepest ‘panhouse’ dimple to sit on wet grass and eat our sandwiches, but it was still perishing so we didn’t skulk for long. We soon moved on, passing some interesting twisted and eroded rocks — if only I could remember more from my OU days!
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We
passed a group of kids who looked at Colin quizzically and asked, “Why are you wearing that cape?” I can’t remember his answer, but I must admit he did look odd in his long green cape with bare legs poking out underneath because he was wearing shorts which they couldn’t see. As far as they were concerned, he could have been naked underneath! I gave up on him years ago, and totally ignore what he wears or doesn’t wear. It doesn’t bother me that he looks a wally!
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When we left we discovered it was raining — really hard and set in. We still had four miles to go to get to our car in Crail. We were tempted to look for a taxi or a bus, but then we said “No!” we would ‘power-walk’ it in an effort to stay warm.
Colin protected my camera while I photographed a shell-covered house which I couldn’t resist. Then we set off at as fast a pace as we could, looking to neither right nor left on our way. It should have been a lovely Walk between the sea and the low cliffs which we would have enjoyed if we hadn’t been so wet and cold!
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We walked as carefully as we could, looking at nothing because we were only interested in getting back to the car.
With a sigh of relief we arrived in Crail at last.
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That ended Walk no.163, we shall pick up Walk no.164 next time on the main road in the village of Crail. It was ten past six, so the Walk had taken us a little under eight hours. Most of that time we had been cold, and for the last two and a half hours we had also been wet. The rain was still coming down in stair-rods and I had started shivering again, so neither of us were interested in pouring tea from a flask. We got in the car and drove straight back to our cottage in Craigrothie. There we both had to change all of our clothes because we were so wet. I had a long soak in a hot bath to ward off hypothermia. It was only when we were dry and warm (yes, we had to put the heating on again — on the last day of June!) that we treated ourselves to tea and biscuits.
Scotland’s Secret Bunker
A few miles inland from Crail, and deep underground, lies Scotland’s Secret Bunker — which is a secret no more! We visited it the next day, on one of our ‘rest’ days.
But the government couldn’t afford to be so flippant. They set up a chain of secret bunkers along the east coast, and the one near Crail is one of the largest. The locations of many of them are still a secret, though why, in this more open day and age, is anybody’s guess. We knew about the one in the cliffs at Dover when we passed there in 2001 as ‘English Heritage’, who now own the site, were hoping to open it up to the public. But this will never happen because it was lined with asbestos. The atmosphere in those tunnels is now so lethal you can only enter if you are wearing breathing apparatus — so those ‘bigwigs’ hiding away trying to save their own skins would have died a much more painful and lingering death anyway!
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I remember when the film “On the Beach” came out there was mass panic as people realised what the aftermath of a nuclear war might mean. My mother wouldn’t let me go and see it because she didn’t want me to be upset as many other teenagers were. (Teenagers obeyed their parents in those days!) In fact, I don’t think I have ever seen the film, but I read the book in later years — creepy!
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We enjoyed our tour, but the history with which we were bombarded as we walked round was much too wordy for us. Believe me, what you read above is a short summary! Personally, I can’t get over the arrogance of the bigwigs of the time who were going to save themselves in the event of a nuclear war, and to hell with the rest of us! They would probably have died of suffocation anyway. Even though it is supposedly now all out in the open, there are still certain areas of the bunker where it is strictly forbidden to wander and certain secrets are still kept.
Intriguing!