Posted in Trips, War Memorials at 12:00 on 8 December 2022
Lybster is a village on the A 99 in Caithness about 13 miles south of Wick.
Its War Memorial is a granite obelisk situated on the east side of the road. Dedicated to “the men of Lybster and Swiney who fell in the Great European War and the Great World War”:-

Reverse of Lybster War Memorial. World War 2 dedication. Upper list is of World War 2 names, the lower is for the Great War:-

Close-up on names. The obelisk is aslo inscribed with the names of Great War battle scenes, Paschendaele, Beaumont Hamel, Ostend, Festubert, Vimy, Neuve Chapelle, Somme, Zeebrugge, Cambrai, Peronne, Jutland, Marne, Mons, Ypres, Loos.


On the wall behind the memorial is a plaque commemorating the village’s founder:-

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Posted in Trips, War Memorials at 12:00 on 16 February 2021
Stonehaven War Memorial sits prominently on Black Hill to the south of the town and is also visible from Dunnottar Castle. The winding path from the castle takes you towards Stonehaven and partly up Black Hill from where you can access the Memorial grounds.
View of Memorial from path leading from Dunnittar Castle:-

Stonehaven from Stonehaven War Memorial:-

Memorial from west as seen from the road back to Dunnottar Castle:-

An information board says the memorial was deliberately designed to look like a ruin to symbolise the lives cut short by the Great War:-

Stonehaven War Memorial from north:-

The external lintels are inscribed with the names of Great War battles, here Jutland, Mons, Ypres:-

From south, Zeebrugge, Gallipoli, Jutland:-
From southwest, Marne, Zeebrugge:-

From west, Vimy, Somme, Marne:-

From northwest, Mons, Ypres:-

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Posted in Trips, War Memorials at 12:00 on 13 November 2019
A tapering stone obelisk on a square plinth, this War Memorial stands on an expanse of grass by the side of the Firth of Clyde on the south approach to the town. This east facing side of the obelisk is inscribed Maubeuge, 1918, Cambrai, Flanders 1917, Arras.

North face. Column inscribed Somme, Loos, Ypres, Marne, Mons:-

West (sea facing) aspect. Pedestal inscribed with the names of the naval actions at Zeebrugge, Jutland, Falkland, Coronel, Heligoland:-

South face. Inscribed for campaigns outside Europe: Palestine, Salonica, Mesopotamia, Gallipoli, Africa:-

Great War plaque, “The tribute of the poeple of Girvan to those of her sons who gave their lives in defence of their country’s righteous cause in the Great War, 1914 – 1919”

World War 2 plaque, “The tribute of the people of Girvan to those of her sons who gave their lives in defence of their country’s righteous cause in the World-War 1939 – 1945.” Three additional names below:-

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Posted in English Football Grounds, Modern Architecture, Trips at 21:31 on 16 May 2017
For our trip to Belgium and the Netherlands we took the ferry from Hull across to Zeebrugge.
At Hull we got onto the ship, examined the cabin, no room to have a cat never mind swing one, then went up on deck.
Hull was surprisingly green but with some industry too.
Over the dockside rooftops I spotted what I thought might be a football ground with what appeared to be the word KCom on a stand. Was it the KCom stadium, the home of Hull City AFC (and Hull FC, one of the city’s two big Rugby League clubs) I wondered? But it looked too small.
It turns out that it was KCom I had spotted but it was KCom Craven Park, the home of the other Rugby League club, Hull Kingston Rovers.


In this zoom shot the end S of “Rovers” can be seen on the far stand’s seats.

Some modern architecture in Hull:-

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Posted in Trips at 22:38 on 15 May 2017
Just got back from a fortnight away. I’m knackered.
It didn’t help that I had a disturbed sleep on the ferry (due to the folk in the cabin next door) then the public address system boomed out at 7 o’clock British time.
The ferry crew kicked us off the ship at ten past nine and then we sat on the quayside for ninety minutes twiddling our thumbs. (Okay, we both actually had books we could read so it wasn’t all wasted.)
But it was as if passport control hadn’t realised there was a ship coming in. Either that or they don’t open up till ten o’clock. Most odd.
There had been no such problem at the other end. We just rolled off the ferry at Zeebrugge, went into a queue of about four cars at most, had our passports looked at and then we were off.
I took loads of photos. Goodness knows when I’ll get round to uploading them. There is still quite a few from the trips we did last summer I haven’t posted yet as I jumped to the cruise pictures – of which Honfleur is still to come here.
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