Friday, 30 August 2019

August 2019 photo treasure hunt



Another month, another list of words.  This month we have been to Alloa in Scotland to stay with our family  there.  I thought I would try and get most of my pictures from our Scottish break. So here goes.



Mark - down


Our son and his wife have been 'adopted' by a neighbour who loves to go to the  local supermarket  just down the road and get the end of day bargains. He does not like the fruit and vegetables on offer so always takes them for our family.  You cannot believe the mark downs.  Things we regard as treats like mangoes and avocados are just a few pence each.  That pile of vegetables below (organic potatoes - 10p; Mango - 5p;  2 packs of avocados - 9p each and a pawpaw (papaya) - 5p) that we were given to bring home cost just 38p.  That would not buy one item!!



Straw


One evening, on our way to give the dogs a swim in the nearby Black Devon River we parked by this field of straw coloured wheat just waiting to be harvested.  We did see a lot of straw bales waiting to be collected in fields as we drove along but never in places where we could stop for me to take a photograph.




Arm


One of the highlights of our visit was going to see the Falkirk Wheel.  For those who do not know about this amazing structure this boat lift was built to link two canals to save the barges using 11 locks as they had done previously and connect the Forth and Clyde Canal with the Union Canal and  was part of the Millennium Link project.  Today it is a tourist attraction. People sit in the red gondolas and then the large arms slowly rotate till the gondola is up at the top and then the gondola is able to move along the upper canal.  Amazing.  The whole operation takes 4 minutes.  

The Falkirk Wheel is the only rotating boat lift of its kind in the world . (Details thanks to Google).

An excellent YouTube video explaining the whole fascinating operation can been seen HERE.

 




Ducks



While in the Visitors Centre at the Wheel I was busy taking photographs such as this beautifully made wolf out of wire.  I completely forgot about needing a picture of ducks.  It was only when I got home I remembered and kicking myself I realised I had seen some in a yellow bath.  Then when looking at my photographs, there in the corner of the 'wolf picture' was the bath full of ducks.  The bath represents  the moment when Archimedes is supposed to have realised his body displaced water in the bath and leapt out shouting 'Eureka'.  (Not sure why the ducks are silver).






Window 

Below is a rather faded picture of Town House in the main street of  Hailsham, an East Sussex town where my mother lived for many years.  It was a lovely old house with a Granary, large garden with an orchard and a lawn tennis court.   Sadly it now has  been converted to offices, and the tennis court has been replaced by a modern dental surgery. 

What fascinated me when I first visited my mother's friends there were the bricked up windows.  I was told it was to do with the Window Tax, something I remembered from history lessons many years ago.  On looking it up I see it was done during the 18th and 19th centuries. To avoid the tax some houses from that period can been seen to have bricked up window spaces. 

I have just looked on Google Maps and see the windows have  been replaced and the whole house has been very sympathetically done up.  Looking at it again brought back memories of coffee and cake round the huge kitchen table and lovely meals in the dining room. 





My Own Choice



During am earlier visit to Scotland we went to see The Helix, a large water park honouring the horses as the power houses of the early industrial revolution, pulling the barges along the Forth and Clyde canal.

The Kelpies were modelled on two one and a half tonne Clydesdale horses that Andy Scott, the artist, chose as his models. Their names were Duke and Baron.  I mentioned them in my photo hunt post at the end of August 2018.




While at the  Visitor's Centre at the Wheel we discovered that no animals  had been hurt in the making of the Kelpies!! I was so relieved to find that out.  



This picture was on tea towels and coasters for sale in the shop!!! 

Now off to see what everyone else has done with the list of words. 



13 comments:

  1. What a lovely selection! Hard to pick a favourite; will it be the Falkirk Wheel, the Kelpies, the ducks, the marked down fruit? I would like to visit the Wheel and Kelpies but it is too far for a day trip so lucky you. I'll think about my favourite and tell you later!

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    1. Thank you. You would love the Wheel, it is very mechanical and technical and very you. I hope you had a chance to check the link to its workings.

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    2. Your link works; also we've seen it working on YouTube. One day we might get there...

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  2. I remember being fascinated by Town House, I visited probably on my 3rd or 5th day here in the UK and was amazed how different homes were!
    lovely selection of photos and stories :)

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  3. I'd love to see the Kelpies and the Falkirk wheel in action. A good selection of photos, my favourite is the field of wheat - that shot is just making me want to go there :)

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    1. I too loved that field of wheat. It's heads were all ripe for the picking by a modern harvester no doubt. I like to think of men with scythes and women picking up the shocks and building hay stacks. (Even before my time I might add!!)

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  4. What a lovely post, some really interesting places that I have never heard of. They sound like great places to visit. What bargins, I must be shopping in the wrong place!

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    1. I think the knack of getting those bargains is timing. Their friend goes late evenings. It all costs so little that our family keep a tally and when it adds up to about £5 they pay him then rather than a few pence each time.

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  5. What a great set of photos. Love the sharing of veg. Was reading about the Falkirk wheel a few days ago & wishing we had more time to see it & those horses are surreal. Thanks for sharing & take care.

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    1. There is always next trip to the UK from Oz. It would be a new place to visit. xx

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  6. Oh wow, what great pics! What a sweet neighbour, how generous. Your "arm" is so interesting, thanks for sharing the info. I love how the ducks snuck in!

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    1. Yes, I was very grateful for those sneaky ducks. The picture is not so good as they are just something that I unintentionally included in the picture of the wire wolf I was taking to show Kate.

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  7. The part of the Black Devon near Alloa is quiet and meandering through tree lined banks. Very pretty and the dogs love it. This time it was flowing so fast the younger labrador was swimming like mad but getting nowhere. It was funny to see but could easily have been tragic. Sadly the river is also a dumping place for shopping trolleys. People from the nearby housing estate wheel their shopping home from the local supermarkets then dump them. Some people!!

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