Posted in Scenery at 12:00 on 18 April 2021
Despite it being relatively near we had never been up Kinnoull Hill near Perth till one fine day in August last year.
It’s a lovely wooded walk up to the top.
Path to summit:-


We could see the town of Scone (pronounced Scoon) through a gap in the trees:-

At the top there’s a good view of the “silvery” River Tay as it meanders eastwards:-

This is a stitch of three photos showing the river as it flows from Perth (on the right) under the Friarton Bridge then on towards Dundee.

This is another stitch showing Perth itself:-

This one is looking north towards Dunkeld and Birnam:-

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Posted in War Graves at 12:00 on 23 March 2021
Errol is a small town in the Carse of Gowrie, and lies about halfway between Dundee and Perth.
One of our sons lives there and while walking round one day last July (in that short time frame when such a thing was within Covid rules) I came across two Commonwealth War Graves in Errol cemetery.
Private W Soutar, The Black Watch, 17/1/1921:-

Corporal C Anderson, 2nd Life Guards, 12/31919, aged 41:-

Another grave bore this commemoration; Alfred Bramhill Doe, killed in action near Arras, 23/4/1917 aged 25:-

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Posted in Dundee, Events dear boy. Events, Football at 20:30 on 26 December 2020
I’ve just seen a report of the death of Jim McLean, the man who led Dundee United to the greatest successes in their history (bar a Scottish Cup win.)
Following two earlier League Cup wins (themselves the club’s first major trophies,) in 1983 his stewardship found them winning the League and becoming champions of Scotland. With hindsight that seems even more remarkable than it did at the time. As I recall (but don’t quote me) they achieved that using no more than 15 players in total over the whole season.
The next season saw an even more incredible achievement, a European Cup semi-final (matching the effort of their city rivals, Dundee, from 1963.) Then there was a UEFA Cup final appearance (thereby eclipsing their neighbours) in 1987. The most astonishing statistic of the club’s European games under McLean’s leadership is their two wins against Barcelona (OK, they were not the force at the that time they were to become but it was still a huge scalp) in that EUFA Cup run. Curiously the club had also beaten Barcelona home and away in the equivalent competition, the Inter Cities Fairs Cup, in 1966.
Some controversy surrounded McLena’s treatment of players, especially as regards the details of their contracts, but he nurtured many who went on to forge big careers in the game. His relationships with members of the press were not always rosy though. He was a personality, no doubt.
As a pure manager, though, his record is nothing short of amazing.
James Yuille (Jim) McLean: 2/12/1937 – 26/12/2020. So it goes.
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Posted in Architecture, Art Deco, Baltic Cruise, Dundee, Trips at 20:00 on 4 April 2020
The Verdant Works Dundee is a museum of the city’s heritage of jute production, housed in a former jute mill. It’s somewhere we had meant to visit for a while but when we’re in Dundee we’re usually busy doing something else or going on somewhere else. The cruise ship docking there gave us the opportunity to pop in for a look.
The guide was a former jute worker who operated all the machinery for us. The noise of each one was very loud. Considering that the machines are only third-size it made you realise what a cacophony the real environment with twenty or more carding, rolling, spinning etc machines on the go must have been. Many people went deaf.
Jute bales:-

Interior from upper floor:-

Verdant Works ceiling:-

Upper floor and ceiling. The wood is lovely:-

Beam engine which used to power the machines:-

Photo in the Verdant Works of the Art Deco Taybank Jute Works, Dundee, Spinning Department, opened 1949. I have photographed this building myself in 2009.

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Posted in Baltic Cruise, Bridges, Dundee, Trips at 12:00 on 4 April 2020
The first stop on the cruise we took last year was … Dundee! It’s only about twenty-five miles or so away from Son of the Rock Acres but it cost £200 less, each, for us to board at Newcastle rather than embark a day later at Dundee. No brainer.
The ship’s docking point in Scotland’s fourth city did give me a view of the Tay Bridge I hadn’t had before, though.

To the extreme right of the above photo is the new V&A Dundee, better seen in the photo below with RSS Discovery and Discovery Point beyond V&A:-

Wandering round the city centre I came across these stone penguins having a wee daunder:-

Nearby was this plaque commemorating the 70th anniversary of the end of the Great War. “Dedicated to the glory of god and to those men and women who in all corners of the world gave their lives in service of our beloved country. We Will Remember Them, 11th November 1989.”

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Posted in Art, Dundee, Glasgow at 12:00 on 18 February 2020
This Oak Room was designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh for Miss Cranston’s Tea Rooms, Ingram Street, Glasgow.
After those tea rooms closed for business the room was for many years stored by Glasgow Corporation and then Glasgow Museums.
The construction of the V&A Dundee provided a space for the rooms to be on show to the public once more.






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Posted in Art, Dundee at 12:00 on 17 February 2020
Since Falkland is only about four miles from Son of the Rock Acres I was interested in this picture of Falkland Palace as it looked in mediæval times:-

Eduardo Paolozzi designed case for storing catalogues for Nairn Floors Ltd:-

Turkey Red Designs:-

Geometric brooches:-

“Butterfly” Tiara:-


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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:-

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Posted in Architecture, Art Deco, Dundee at 20:00 on 15 January 2020
Again, I’ve passed this countless times on my way to and from Brechin but only stopped to photograph it in August last year.
From road – complete with skip:-

From access road – skip again:-

The entrance doors are decoish too:-

Side view:-

Rear:-

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Posted in War Memorials at 20:00 on 14 January 2020
Monikie is on the B961 road between Dundee and Brechin.
On the way back from the game at Brechin on 25/8/18 I stopped to photograph its Memorial Hall.

There is an inscribed Memorial in the grounds of the Hall but it is of relatively recent construction, perhaps for the 100th anniversary of the Great War:-

Names and dedication, “The Great War 1914 -1918.”

Western aspect. Inscribed, “In Flanders Fields the Poppies Blow.”

Eastern aspect. Inscribed, “Between the Crosses Row on Row.”

On the Hall’s external wall is a Great War 100th anniversary memorial plaque:-

I photographed two of the names of the fallen attached to trees in the small park area within which Monikie’s War Memorial stands.
L/Cpl James Spalding, Black Watch, killed in action, France, 16/6/1915, aged 22:-

Pte John Irons, Royal Scots Fusiliers, killed in action France, 12/8/1916, aged 24:-

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