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More of the V&A Dundee
Posted in Architecture, Bridges, Dundee at 20:00 on 13 February 2020
Previously I have posted about the (relatively) new V&A building in Dundee here and, in the background, here.
V&A logo by entrance:-
Exterior curve:-
View to Tay Bridge through “tunnel”:-
Apparently the wind can sweep through the tunnel quite severely. View to city through tunnel:-
Overhanging River Tay:-
Exterior planting:-
Interior:-
View of Tay Bridge through slit window:-
Bridges, Bakewell
Posted in Bridges, Trips, Wild Life at 20:00 on 6 February 2020
I have featured Bakewell, Derbyshire before here and here. We passed through it again in September 2018, had a nice walk around and along the River Wye plus a good lunch in one of the cafés.
One footbridge and weir over River Wye:-
A second footbridge:-
Weir and old bridge:-
Old bridge:-
Fish and Duck:-
Cowden Japanese Garden, Clackmannanshire
Posted in Bridges, Curiosities, Scenery at 12:00 on 23 January 2020
The good lady is a keen gardener and when she heard that the Japanese Garden, at Cowden, Clackmannanshire was reopening after being a long time overgrown, we had to visit. The garden was first opened in 1908, but was closed to the public in 1955 and left to go to ruin. Thankfully the recent restoration is returning the garden to its former glory.
Japanese gardens are very elegant. Despite the refurbishment still going on Cowden certainly is. There is an air of peace and harmony about the place. Japanese bridges are especially elegant. The first bridge below is by the path near the garden’s entrance. The second spans the garden’s large pond:-
Pagoda and bridge:-
Zen garden:-
Bench:-
The burn which feeds the pond:-
Path to bridge:-
Stones and ornament with bridge in background:-
Dunkeld
Posted in Bridges, War Memorials at 12:00 on 31 December 2019
Dunkeld is a village/town on the River Tay ten or so miles north of Perth. The bridge there which links Dunkeld to Birnam was built by Thomas Telford.
River Tay looking south from Telford’s bridge:-
This is a view of Telford’s bridge from the Birnam side of the river:-
And from the grounds of the town’s historic cathedral:-
The Cathedral was for a time closed to visitors but in 2018 we had a peek inside. Cathedral altar and stained glass windows:-
Just to the left in the photo above lies a memorial to the officers, non-commissioned officers and men of the Scottish Horse who gave their lives in the two Great Wars. “1914 -1918, Gallipoli, Egypt, Macedonia, France. 1939 – 1945, North Africa, Sicily, Italy, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany.”
Below that are the words, “The souls of the righteous are in the hands of god. There shall…” the rest is obscured by the Roll of Honour. A barrier prevented me from getting any closer:-
In the square in Dunkeld itself is a memorial to the men of the Scottish Horse who died in the Boer War. I have previously mentioned it here.
Threave Garden
Posted in Architecture, Bridges, Trips at 12:00 on 9 October 2019
Threave Garden lies just to the west of Castle Douglas in Dumfries and Galloway and are in the care of the National Trust for Scotland.
The gardens are lovely, well worth a visit.
Pond and Japanese bridge:-
Japanese bridge (Threave House behind):-
Japanese Bridge from approaches:-
Cascade:-
I took a video of the cascade to get the full efefct:-
Threave House. I believe this is used as administration offices, now:-
Fuller view:-
Bridges at Inverbervie
Posted in Bridges at 12:00 on 7 July 2019
Inverbervie, in Aberdeenshire, has two bridges spanning the River Bervie.
New bridge and old bridge. Old bridge to right and below:-
New bridge from start of old bridge:-
Panorama of new bridge from old bridge. The stitch doesn’t quite show the bridge’s bend:-
Old bridge from road. New bridge behind to left:-
Old bridge from new bridge:-
Burn and Bridge, Maspin Glen, Falkland, Fife
Posted in Bridges at 20:00 on 30 June 2019
Son of the Rock Acres backs on to a former estate whose ‘big house’ has been turned into a hotel. There are extensive woodland walks round the place even though most of it has long since been converted into a golf course. A burn, the Back Burn, flows through it and on through the town of Markinch before eventually joining the river Leven.
I’ve just realised I’ve not really posted any pictures from the estate mainly because the good lady tends to use them.
Anyway, not far away – about three miles – at the edge of the village of Falkland, lies another estate through which runs another burn, which possibly itself feeds into the Back Burn. A signpost at the bottom of the path points to Maspin Glen.
This is that burn:-
And this is a bridge over it carrying one of the estate’s paths:-
Kessock Bridge, Inverness
Posted in Bridges, Trips at 20:00 on 24 June 2019
The Kessock Bridge carries the A9 over the Beauly Firth at Inverness.
I took the photos when we were up north in April last year. They were maybe taken from too close as the cable stay towers, if not the cables themselves, show up better on the photo in the link.
From east:-
From west. Slight distortion to photo as it’s a stitch of two:-
Copenhagen Waterfront
Posted in Baltic Cruise, Bridges, Trips at 12:00 on 3 June 2019
























































