Friday, 8 April 2022

SPRINGTIME IN THE SCOTTISH BORDERS - AND BEYOND

There could be only one theme for this time of year - Spring
 
 

Craigsford Bridge, built c.1737 over the Leader Water at Earlston


EARLY SPRING
I love photographing trees in all seasons 

Above Earlston looking east to the Lammermuir Hills.


A country  lane near Dryburgh


Another lane near my home in Earlston. 
 
 
 

A misty day on the driveway into Floors Castle at Kelso 
 
 

 Woodland Glade in Cowdenknowes Wood, Earlston
 
The River Teviot at Hawick 
 
 
 
SPRING IN BLOOM 
 

  Cowdenknowes Wood, Earlston
 
 
 

 Mill Bank Woods, Earlston
 

A tunnel of trees outside Earlston

 
SPRING FLOWERS IN THE GARDEN


 Irises
 

Camelia 
 


 Rhododendrons in Stow Churchyard
 
 
 SPRING FLOWERS IN THE WOODLANDS
 
Rhododendrons in Cowdenknowes Wood 


Primroses in Cowdenknowes Wood, Earlston

Wood Anemones in Cowdenknowes Wood, Earlston 

 
FINALLY - CLASSIC IMAGES OF SPRINGTIME 
DAFFODILS  & RABBITS 
 
 

The Temple of the Winds at Castle Howard, Yorkshire
 

At Thorp Perrow Arboretum, Yorkshire
 
 
At Thorp Perrow Arboretum, Yorkshire 

At Castle Howard, Yorkshire



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Friday, 18 March 2022

FAMOUS MEN & WOMEN COMMEMORATED IN STONE

 

Statues, monuments and plaques are a natural focus for  my camera. So take a look here at  men and women commemorated for posterity in stone.

 

 This statue of the DUKE OF WELLINGTON, victor against Napoleon at the Battle of Waterloo in 1815,   shows him on his favourite horse Copenhagen. The statue was erected in 1852, outside the building that houses  the National Records of  Scotland, a "must visit" destination if you are researching  Scottish family history.

 

WILLIAM WALLACE was the Scottish Patriot during the Wars of Independence when he  defeated an English army at the Battle of Stirling Bridge and became  Guardian of Scotland until his defeat at the Battle of Falkirk  in 1298. He was captured  In 1305, handed over to Edward I of England  who had him summarily hanged, drawn and quartered for high treason.

 

Wallace's  statue near Dryburgh Abbey in the Scottish Borders looks across to the distant Eildon Hills.  Commissioned by the Earl of Buchan, it was the first monument to be raised to Wallace in Scotland.  In red sandstone and 21.5 feet high, it was placed on its pedestal  in 1814.

 

This statue of ABRAHAM LINCOLN is  thought to be the only monument to the American Civil War outside the USA.  It   was erected in the Old Carlton Burial Ground. Edinburgh in 1898 in memory of the Scottish soldiers who fought  in the American Civil War on the side of the Union.   It features a freed slave and   one of Lincoln’s famous quotations "To preserve the jewel of liberty in the framework of freedom". A bronze shield bears the old US flag, and is wreathed in thistles to the left, and cotton to the right to signify the two countries.

Calton Cemetery  just off Princes Street,   was opened in 1718 as a non-denominational burial ground and is the resting place of prominent merchants and other notable worthies of the city.  

 

U.S. PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT maternal ancestors are  remembered in this plaque at the Murray Aisle in the Old Kirkyard, Selkirk in the Scottish Borders.  Roosevelt's mother was a Murray with Border connections.  

The plaque also pays tribute to Scottish patriot William Wallace. 

 

SIR WALTER SCOTT (1771-1832) was born in Edinburgh, but grew up in the Scottish Borders and later made his home at Abbotsford on the banks of the River Tweed, near Melrose. He was internationally  renowned as a historical novelist, poet,  playwright and historian. The Scott Monument (below)  is a prominent feature in Princes Street Gardens,  Edinburgh and believed to be the second largest monument to a writer in the world.

 

WILLIAM CHAMBERS (1800-1883)  was born in Peebles in the Scottish Borders and moved to Edinburgh  in 1814 to work in the book-selling trade.  He soon branched out into publishing,  founding in 1832 with his brother Robert  the firm of W. & R. Chambers.   He was a keen advocate of popular education,  and the firm became known in particular for its dictionaries.

The business  prospered,   and William was made Lord Provost of the capital city. He was responsible for many city developments including the restoration of St. Giles Cathedral. His  statue is in in street that bears his name, by Edinburgh University and The National Museum of Scotland.  He also
gifted to his native town of Peebles  the Chambers Museum and Library. 

CATHERINE SPENCE was born in Melrose in the Scottish Borders, the fifth child of a family of eight - daughter  of lawyer David Spence, who,  faced with bankruptcy and financial ruin, emigrated with his family to Australia in 1839.  David Spence became  Adelaide's first town clerk. 
 
Catherine was the first woman in Australia to stand as a political candidate, the first woman journalist and novelist, a battler for women's  suffrage  and social reform, and a lifelong campaigner for proportional representation.  She played a a key role  in settingp a children's court system. wrote the first legal studies textbook to be published in in Australia and helped to transform South Australia into a respected, progressive colony.  She is commemorated in Adelaide by the Spence Archive of her papers and writings and by a statue.  The 5$ baknote celebrating the centenary of the federation of Australia features her image.
 

Another women pioneer in her field  MARIA SKLODOWSKA CURIE (1867-1934)

 Marie was born in Warsaw, and  left to study in Paris.  She became a co-founder of  a new branch of science - radioactivity - with her husband Pierre Curie.    She discovered two new elements - radium and polonium (named after her home country).  In 1903 she became the first woman to receive the Nobel Prize for Physics and in 1911 for chemistry.   This plaque is outside her home in Warsaw  which now features a museum on her life and achievements.


To end on a lighter note, remembering two of the world's most popular composers - first   waltz king JOHANN STRAUSS (1825-1899) who spent his summers in the spa town of Bad Ischl in Austria.

 
 
and the statue of WOLFGANG AMADEUS MOZART (1756-1791) in Vienna.
 
 
 
 
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Copyright © 2022 · Susan Donaldson.  All Rights Reserved 
 
 

 

Saturday, 5 February 2022

COWS ON PARADE

 February is a bit of a dismal month here, with storms, high winds, icy rain, if not snow. So I thought I would present a post on a lighter note with a parade of Cows in Scotland, and further afield.  

"I'm Showing Off my Horns"


 

 "I'm Hungry"

 
We were staying in a self catering cottage at Fionnphort on the far west  of the Isle of Mull, just across from Iona, and the highland cattle roamed freely  around the small village - one shop, one pub, one seafood cabin and the ferry office.  Here one hungry cow decided to take a nibble from the garden of our cottage, so I dashed out to take a photograph.


"I've walked far enough - I'm having a rest."


 
 
I'm Little and Lonely!"
 
 

This young cow stood motionless at the side of the road, very happy to pose for the visitors walking down to the ferry across to Iona.

And if you don't come across the  real thing, look out for a shop sign. 

 

 

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Cows on the Alpine Meadows in the Austrian Tyrol  - Looking So Gentle



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CowParade is the largest and most successful public art event in the world.  staged in 80+ worldwide since 1999.  The painted cows are displayed in  city centres  to attract tourists and shoppers.  We came across them when on a short break in Warsaw and Prague. 



To end on a colourful note to brighten these grey days: 

T.

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Copyright © 2022 · Susan Donaldson.  All Rights Reserved

Friday, 7 January 2022

SEE AMID THE WINTER SNOW - BEAUTY - FUN - FRUSTRATION

Certain years go down in recollections as particularity bad winters.  1947 was legendary in the UK coming amidst  postwar austerity.  I remember my mother saying how worried she had been at keeping my baby brother warm, in a house where the only heating was a coal fire in the living room. Onto 1963 another bad year, when my father,  returning from a business trip to  London,  was stuck overnight on a train in the Border hills - and no means in those day, pre mobile phones,  to let us know why he had not come home that evening. 

Here I feature family photographs mainly from 2001, 2011 and 2018, all taken in the Scottish Borders where I live - along with some occasional snowy quotes.

BEAUTY IN SNOW

 A country road out of Earlston - this same view was the lead view in my recent Autumn post.  

 

 The Leader Water at Earlston

 

Trees on the A68  - the main road from Edinburgh through Earlston 




 
The snow capped Black Hill at Earlston
 
On a winter's walk on the hills around Lauder 
 
A lonesome sheep on the Border hills.
  
 
FUN IN SNOW 

"Jan-u-ary brings the snow; Makes our feet and fingers glow" (Sara Coleridge)

Granddaughter exploring this new world of snow for the first time, 2010

















 

"When it snows, you have two choices - shovel or make snow angels" (Unknown) 


 Somebody' s idea of fun!  Playing at snow angels, 2018.

 

FRUSTRATION IN SNOW

2011 was a blip in all the talk of global warming, when we had some of  the worst snow for years, and Hawick where we then lived  was cut off for three days.  I could not get to work, with no buses running outside the town.  I

 We lived at the top of a hill, and no way was I venturing downhill to the shops. People, were were being resourceful going down to the supermarket  with  backpacks and toboggans to bring goods home.

 Our house on the right

 

 

 "Winter, winter, cold and ice! A mug of hot chocolate would be nice" 

 (Nicolette Lennert)

 

 The joys of having a dog in winter weather - though not too sure about the owners 

The postman  in Earlston trudging along in the snow



.I have now reached the stage of rather favouring winter hibernation! to escape snows, unlike this heron - a familiar site on the River Slitrig in Hawick. 

 

Snow when it first falls can be a wonderful magical experience transforming the landscape. But when it changes to an icy, slippery danger, I prefer not to venture outside, and when it ends up as grey, messy, slush on pavements, it is a depressing, wet task trying to negotiate pavements and cross roads.

So let's end on a positive note with more of my favourite snow pictures.

 

"Earth stood hard as iron, water like a stone" (Christina Rossetti) 

 

 The frozen River Teviot at Hawick  

 


 Cowdenknowes Wood, Earlston

 


 

12th century Melrose Abbey, five miles from my home. 2018

 

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Copyright © 2022 · Susan Donaldson.  All Rights Reserved

 

 

BRIDGES OVER RIVERS AND CENTURIES

Here I am taking you on  a journey over bridges, spanning over two centuries  in the Scottish Borders   - from the 18th century to the pres...