Posted in Bridges, Fife, Scenery, Weather at 12:00 on 17 August 2021
Last August I noted floods at Balbirnie Golf Course. The bridge featured in that post was sunsequently removed probably because its supports had been undermined.
In April this year I photographed the foundations of a replacement bridge.


The golf course itself was looking fine.
18th fairway and green:-

The 10th tee had some striking shadows:-

10th tee and 18th fairway:-

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Posted in Fife, Scenery at 12:00 on 11 August 2021
I have posted photos of Dysart harbour before.
The harbour from the edge of Ravenscraig Park in April 2021.
The main building is the former Harbour Master’s house. St Serf’s Tower and the red-tiled roofs of the white painted houses of Pan Ha’ lie behind.

Dysart Harbour looking over to North Berwick Law and the Bass Rock:-

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Posted in Fife, Weather at 12:00 on 9 August 2021
Balbirnie House (Balbirnie House Hotel) in winter. 28/1/21 to be precise:-

A week or so later, snow had fallen:-


Snow on Balbirnie Golf Course:-



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Posted in Events dear boy. Events, Fife at 12:00 on 5 August 2021
Our walk for the newspaper is to the nearest town/village to Son of the Rock Acres, Markinch. Fifty years ago in January Markinch lost five boys to the Ibrox Disaster.
A memorial was erected soon after.
On the 50th anniversary there was a well-attended ceremony to remember them. (The anniversary is almost as big for Markinch as Remembrance Day.) I took these photos in late January:-

Memorial, names and floral tributes:-

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Posted in Fife, Weather at 12:00 on 3 August 2021
On weekdays and Saturdays, if we’re not on an excursion or supermarket shopping, we normally walk through Balbirnie Park on our way to Markinch for the newspaper. Usually by the path which flanks Balbirnie Golf Club’s front nine holes by the road up to/down from the hotel.
We vary our Sunday walk.
Sometimes we go on what we call the loop, round the other side of the golf course from that path and past a field near the Markinch roundabout where there are usually some horses grazing, then up by the main road (safely behind the old Balbirnie Estate wall) till the path turns back onto the access road which leads to our house.
At others we go up by Balbirnie golf club’s back nine holes.
Last January not much play would have been possible. Or if possible, not easy. The flooded parts had iced up:-


Mind you the water hazard might have been a bit less so. (Not that playing off the ice would have been advisable):-

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Posted in Fife, Weather at 12:00 on 1 August 2021
In January we had a cold spell. Our walk down to Markinch to get the newspaper was made just a bit more hazardous. The short cut we had adopted during Covid times – over the path by Balbirnie Golf Club’s practice putting green – was very treacherous:-

The floods I featured earlier iced over completely.



Ice skaters/ice hockey players took advantage of the frozen pond:-


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Posted in Fife, War Memorials at 12:00 on 15 June 2021
Kelty‘s War Memorial stands beside Station Road.
A greatcoated soldier with slung rifle on a square plinth.

Dedication, “To the glorious memory of the men of Kelty who gave their lives in the Great Wars 1914-1918 and 1939-1945,” plus Second World War names:-

East aspect. Great War names:-

West aspect. Great War names:-

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Posted in Architecture, Art Deco, Fife at 12:00 on 14 June 2021
Kelty is a former mining village in Fife.
Incidentally their football team recently won promotion to the SPFL.
These photos were taken in October 2019 though.
On Main Street there’s a 1930s/Art Deco bank building. Horizontals, verticals, flat roof. The glazing looks updated but has kept the 30s style:-



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Posted in Fife, History, War Memorials at 12:00 on 13 June 2021
Lassodie is a village that no longer exists. When the pits which were its main employment – and reason for being – closed, the land was cleared of housing. A condition of the original granting of mineral rights, apparently.
Nevertheless it has a War Memorial, which lies beside the B912 between the villages of Kingseat and Kelty in Fife, near Loch Fitty.

Dedication. “Erected in grateful remembrance of the men of this village who fell in the Great War 1914-1918,” with below the “grow not old” lines from Laurence Binyon’s For the Fallen.

The Second World War dedication is inscribed on the southern side of the memorial. “To the glory of god and in memory of the men of Lassodie who fell in the 1939-1945 War.”

Situation. In fenced off square by B912 between Kingseat and Kelty:-

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Posted in Bridges, Fife, Museums at 12:00 on 2 May 2021
The reason we visited Ceres in September last year was to take a look at the Fife Folk Museum.
Entrance as seen from bridge over the Ceres Burn:-

Inside the museum there is a small section devoted to crime and punishment, including an old prison cell:-

Beside this are two notices relating to trials and punishment:-

This second one mentions jougs, a kind of stocks:-

On the outside wall at the other side of the building to the entrance is an old doorway beside which is an example of a joug:-

The carved motto above the door reads, “God bless the just.”:-

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