Thursday, 27 August 2009

its a dogs life

this is sam, a year old hungarian vizsla i was dogsitting at the weekend for my friend...

he is full of beans being a year old and being already used to running alongside a bike i looked forward to a weekend on the beaches giving him a good workout!,i never knew it was the highest/lowest tides of the year until i heard the shipping forcast friday,a quick check read low tide mid morning satuardy-perfect,before to many visitors arrive on the beaches,
i took him down my local closest beach friday evening and he was loving it..

it was hightide but could still get along the beach between the dunes and sea ok
i filmed more than took pics and made a film...



satuarday i was up at 5am for work and forgot my camera and missed getting on film a clear sky sunrise out to sea,sam ran about while i mowed greens and once home after some breakfast,i put the pugsley on the car and drove down to north berwick,parked and cycled along the john muir trail into yellow craig...


across the field the trail is a bit sandy then onto grassy paths..

into the woods and past the amazing old twisted and salt air weather beaten scots pines,they are fenced off now to help protect them,we climbed them as kids..

onto the links,created by sand blown over the bedrock and covered with fine fescue and bents grasses,kept short by rabbits,this is what alot of our natural coastline would have looked like before the creation of the links golf courses which used the natural topography and just had added the tee`s and greens,there is an amazing flora on areas like this,lots of micro plant species amongst the grasses...

over the dunes and onto the beach..

to ride west into what was a quickly strenghting westerly wind..

sam was loving it and happy trotting alongside me as we rode into the wind passing fidra island and its lighthouse,there is a narrow gauge railway from the lighthouse built in 1885 down to the landing pier,the lighthouse is of course unmanned now since 1970 as they all are but it must have been strange being a keeper on fidra so close to shore and seeing people on the beach 1/4 mile away,remmember the beaches would have been busier in victorian times than they are now,im sure im not the first to cycle these beaches,knowing victorian exploration and love of bicycles but they would have been off pushing alot!

the lighthouse was inspiration for robert lewis stevensons noval`treasure island`and the yellowcraig hill was reputed to be `spyglass hill` RLS visited nearby north berwick and walked here often,

riding on west along the coast the wind was getting really strong,i have never seen the tide so low here before and was riding on sand around rocky headlands i usually ride over..


riding up over a headland which was still into the sea a sandy narrow trail between seabuckthorn bush`s...

it passes an old WW2 lookout post,slowly getting swallowed up by the encroaching seabuckthorn,these artifacts should be preserved and kept from being lost from site and enevitably broken up by the undergrowth..

down back on the beach and its a slimey slippy rocky trials fest to get back onto the sand again,it took a while to learn riding over all this but it can be done..

past a massive beam stranded on the rocks,about a foot square and around 18foot long,this must be from a pier somewhere,i know its about a months firewood for me if i could get down here with a car!

the tide was so low i could ride out onto longskelly rocks,mostly an island..

amongst the rocks of the island above the tideline is built lots of small shelters with driftwood and rubbish and flat stones,i think these must be for nesting seabirds,need to find out about what birds would use them..


looking west from the island we ride back to the coastline..


theres always something new to find on the tideline,a life ring washed up;


backdown on the low tideline is was diffrent views of the coast being so far out,headwind was near gale force as we rounded a point into freshwaterhaven




after a hard cycle into the wind across the bay i decided to cut up through pinewoods and shelterd paths to get out the wind,i would ride back on the shoreline with the tailwind,cracking view of freshwaterhaven beach...

and passed the old ruins marked on the map as St patricks chapel but i think proberly an old herds cottage by the looks of it (fireplace,door frame)

along sandy trails through pine woods,half of which have unfortuantly been felled...

theres some good bits over exposed roots..

through the woods and along a sandy trail through seabuckthorn,some good downhills only enjoyable if you own a fatbike though!

over the fence on my left is muirfield golf course,where the open is held,im having more fun though than playing golf for sure!,when i get my helmet cameras i won i will make a film riding this trail on the pugsley,it flies on this soft well walked sand..


onto a firm track and we ride up above the car park and beach of gullane..



soaking up the view..

the trail heads downhill amongs rounded rocks above gullane cliffs,knowen as `maggies loup`loup is scottish for leap or in this case jump-maggies was a local woman who took her life on the cliff way back years ago,the story may be a fabel its that old,you will recognise this if you seen the film i did here a couple of months ago...



further round some of the WW2 anti tank blocks are dissapearing into the buckthorn,we used to run along the top of these when we were kids

but this is real wierd..,this area was the football pitch for the home gaurd during the war,the goalpost stumps can be seen in winter..

who manned the coastal defences here and either it was sprayed with some strong chemical or tramped solid from 5 years football but the buckthoern has never encroched the pitch,hows that?,a sand quarry nearby has dissapeared that i dug sand out of as an apprentice greenkeeper 20 years ago and as mentioned the anti tank blocks are slowly being coverd by this furiously fast growing plant,i think its some dodgy army chemical!!
time to get back down to the beach..

along a grassy old track..

which leads through the nature reserve onto the beach through a grassy lagoon that used to be the tideline,see all the driftwood left..


back onto the beach and its down onto the granny ring into a gale to ride out across the bay to the WW2 midgit submarines

nearing the old sub wrecks i see the funniest thing,a police no parking cone just sitting there-3-4 miles from a road

we ride out near to the estuary mouth but the sand is quite rippeld,sometimes its real smooth,depends on tidal currants..




heading back with a galeforce tailwind we were flying along but the rippled sand made filming quite hard,i mostly filmed going back across aberlady bay to make another film...



i will make another film sometime going the other way along the tideline showing the amount of drifrwood,sam certainly enjoyed himself..

he was knackerd after 5 miles each way and was out for the count satuarday night!..

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