Friday, 11 July 2025

A Walk Around Loch Ardinning. Campsie Fells Overlook.

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Craigmaddie and the Campsie Fells. Above. It seems to be a habit of mine, 'out of sight out of mind' that when I go to an area, even within my current self imposed mileage limits ( The Scottish Central Belt, within 40 miles or so of Glasgow) I still tend to forget about or overlook areas that I think I know well.... then suddenly discover I've not been there for a long time. Most of that is down to money. I haven't got a lot at present and I'm attempting to save up, despite prices on everything shooting skywards year on year. It is also testament to Central Belt Scotland's immense variety of locations that I do not repeat myself very often on walks. This is the Baldernock area, above. I used to take my Mum here on day runs from the Dementia Centre in Glasgow and she enjoyed the scenery. It also suited me as it was only for an hour or so in the car to get her outdoors in the fresh air, and being just north of Glasgow it was handy to reach. Both my parents died many years ago.


 Bardowie Loch where a small sailing school exists. I was here during the recent heat wave in May, 24c to 26c for almost a month of unbroken daily sunshine. The UK is 100 percent getting drier and hotter, as is most of the rest of the world. But I was taking this network of minor back roads this time for a different reason. Yes, to bag another loch in the 'Glasgow Lake District' of modest puddles that dot the landscape hereabouts.... but also because, having just started to drive again properly in a car that could get me places ( the last one couldn't for six years) I was appalled at both the increased traffic, the speed it was travelling at, and the reckless maneuvers of some of the drivers. Partly it's getting older, partly a car I would like to keep undamaged, but also, getting further afield the amount of cars and lorries on the roads seems to have doubled or tripled in the last 10 years, as has the numerous potholes. ( this was further backed up by a recent journey through Pollok's main roundabout next to the Silverburn Centre, a crossing so densely packed with cars and lorries these days, all desperate to claim a place on the roundabout that I avoided it completely on the return and never want to do it again. It never used to be that busy and was fine. I'd imagine accidents do occur here and traffic lights on it are the solution, just like the equally busy Canniesburn Toll roundabout at Bearsden which had to put them in recently... in 2024?


Loch Ardinning is a wildlife reserve just north of Glasgow and Milngavie on the A81 just before Strathblane. There is a very pleasant walk/path along the lochside then up onto the high moorland plateau above it. Two laybys exist either side of the A 81 near the loch. A note of caution here. Keep close control on any dogs, children, teenagers or elderly if parking here as cars and lorries race past on this straight road at 60 to 70 mph. Un-handily I was on the opposite layby side from the loch and had to sprint full pace across this fast road just to make it to safety. And it was nowhere near rush hour times.


If you survive the drive and the road the rest of the walk is easy. You are already elevated at 100- 150 metres ( nearly 500 feet) so this walk is mainly flat or gently rising to its summit points with good views throughout.


This is the path at Loch Ardinning, a mixture of small trees and bushes providing some shade or shelter around the loch, depending on conditions.


It was a warm day for Scotland, 24c to 26c (78 Fahrenheit) at a guess and there was already some minor signs of wildfire damage caused by either glass bottles, BBQs, a dropped match, vape disposal, cigarette, or a campfire ( take your pick) but it could have been a lot worse. Caught just in time. In heat waves I always prey for rain after a few weeks before wildfires inevitably spring up. Given human activity the two go hand in hand.


Out of curiosity I looked up the last time I visited Loch Ardinning and was amazed to find it was in 2010. A harsh winter with temperatures below minus 5c to 10c for weeks at a time. On that occasion the loch was frozen solid and I walked down a part of it on the ice feeling like the last person alive on the planet- not a soul around and no wild life.


Contrast that with a bonspiel ( curling match) in full swing on the Lake of Menteith ( the same day) with hundreds on the ice, even a land-rover driving out to the central island in the middle of the loch. Which I think was the last time the ice was thick enough to do that here.


I took full advantage of it, along with 100s of others, by walking out to this central island, normally only reached by boat, and stayed out long past sunset and rapidly dipping temperatures, being treated to a few hardy skaters, carving giant snakes in the ice as a blood red sun dropped below the horizon. My photographic reward for waiting longer than most and a very memorable, maybe once in a lifetime, day. 


Out on the ice at sunset.


A memorable experience for all.


Starting to turn blood red in the fading light. Skaters just visible in the far distance.



This time, in very different weather I took the longer, extra path up onto the high moorland plateau, which was a first for me. A cracking extra walk that can, after sustained rain, be fairly boggy underfoot but on this occasion was bone dry and perfect.


Dumgoyne. 'The Matterhorn of the Campsies.' :o) Actually, it is quite steep and exposed near the top of the summit path.

The beauty of the Campsie Fells is well seen from this high vantage point without much real effort or ascent. Just as well as it was hot with zero breeze. Like a grass oven. Hot enough for me anyway.


Looking towards Loch Lomond and The Luss Hills.


An ant with a grub on the path.  Perfect weather for them. Felt like Australia.


The Spout of Ballagan. A hidden waterfall. Down to a mere trickle these dry days.


Loch Ardinning and The Campsie Fells. Just looking at this body of blue water refreshed me... in spirit at least.


But this was the real refreshment. Tree shade and a pool, dropping the temperature by a few degrees instantly. God Bless trees. Nature's real miracle. Free of charge.


On the OS map a much smaller pool is marked south east of Loch Ardinning next to a wooded area. This is where the circular path leads, raised across a boggy area, (seen here), on the walk back to the car and layby. Around a two to three hour romp depending on pace. An enjoyable day out. Most walks for me nowadays are 2 to 3 hours, especially on hot days. ( hot for Scotland anyway.) That way I can avoid early starts, and avoid rush hour traffic. Normal traffic is bad enough. If I wait another 15 years to do this walk I'll be either dead or down to a Zimmer frame and 15 minute walk intervals.

Friday, 4 July 2025

Milngavie and Bearsden. The Magic Portals in Life.

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Bearsden and neighbouring Milngavie are two upmarket suburbs just north of the Glasgow City Boundary. They are a fairly close drive from my house but even if they were located further away I'd still make the effort to get to them as they have a lot of scenic walking potential and a few surprising oddities. This is one. Kilmardinny Loch, situated beside Kilmardinny  Avenue, just off the A81 Milngavie Road. A small car park for around five cars is located on Kilmardinny Avenue not far from Kilmardinny House, an arts centre that used to be the main house for this former landscaped grand estate. There is a good path around the loch, a green oasis in the middle of posh suburbia, and also further short green ribbon walks from this loch in both directions out eastwards to the Burnbrae Pub situated 10 mins walk away on Milngavie Road and north up to Seafield Avenue. This green ribbon is called The Wedge and although it only takes an hour or so to explore it all it is a scenic gem that's long been a favourite of mine. 


The woodland walk around this small circular loch also has surprises... like this great carving of owls. 


Or this ornate bench... I'd imagine local small children love this.

Inspired, I'd imagine, by the world of fantasy books. Harry Potter, The Hobbit, Winnie the Pooh maybe.


Further round the loch you have another bench....

Which has more to do with the natural world around you... Fantasy and nature....both are portals.


It's a pleasant spot.....on a hot afternoon.


Red Fox.


A lucky escape from a toppled tree here for some squirrels and a baby fox.


I then motored a short distance to St Germains Loch, still in Bearsden, on Rubislaw Drive, although for this one I stayed in the car as it's private property.


Next up was another short 5 min drive and another pond right next to Milngavie Library and community centre, this one boasting a fountain. And you can walk around this one. I discovered all these ponds decades ago on bike rides and still get pleasure from them now. Both Bearsden and Milngavie have a plethora of ponds but the only way to see them easily is by bike, car, or a long trek on foot from Milngavie or Bearsden train stations. Take your pick. And that's not even mentioning  the other 30 or so ponds, dams and reservoirs in this wider area situated between Glasgow and the Campsie Fells. Some of them Kettle Lochs, formed by stranded football stadium sized blocks of ice left behind in hollows by retreating glaciers... the immense weight and the slowly melting blocks of ice leaving a dent in the landscape to the present day. In a miniature sense this is Glasgow's Lake District.

 


Same pond. Milngavie Library and Community Centre. Before the internet age, from around five years old up until the present day books, films, art and nature, have always been a portal for me. Both science fiction and fantasy books specialize in portals, gateways to other worlds/ realms that you can step or fall into... and from an early age I did just that. A lifelong constant source of pleasure. Which is a great gift.... along with imagination. Just as well as I've never had the money to travel the world to far flung exotic places and little inclination to do so but I've no regrets at all on that score as I've had a good life/ work balance over the last four decades that has allowed me plenty of free time to explore.

 Pollok had/has a great library filled with young adult books and amazing authors from Andre Norton to Isaac Asimov; Philip Jose Farmer to Frank Herbert; Jack Vance to Robert E. Howard: Robert Heinlein to John Norman;  Desmond Bagley to JRR Tolkien; Arthur C Clarke to Emily Diamand ; John Wyndham to Charlie Higson's The Enemy and Michael Grant's Gone series.... I've enjoyed them all. And their best books are still incredible today. They easily stand the test of time. And as a 1960s child, watching my parents generation (and them) work practically from cradle to grave with not much free time and little to show for it all at the end,  in financial terms, I've also made sure to have plenty of opportunities away from work to do rock climbing, kayaking, hill walking, caving, cycling, island hopping and back packing home and abroad....in reality..... but it all started with fantasy, imagination and a portal somewhere... In Nitshill and Pollok growing up I was very lucky in that I lived on the outer edge of a large city yet five minutes walk from my front door I entered a portal to another, far more pastoral, countryside realm..... of farms, fields, cows, horses, woods, streams, ponds and meadows. ' 'The Shire.' My shire...... and having read both the Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings by my early teens a shire landscape both in literal truth written on modern maps ( Renfrewshire, ten steps across Parkhouse Road, not Glasgow City any longer once across that beautiful portal)....and into bookish fantasy.


It's the same here in Milngavie and Bearsden. Like Alice... like Bilbo Baggins.....or Winnie the Pooh and Piglet.... a simple walk down a suburban lane can lead straight into Wonderland.... or in this particular case 'The 100 Aker Wood. '


  This is a portal. ( In reality it is a back entrance path to the large and varied  Mugdock Country Park but only locals know about it so I was absolutely delighted to stumble across it many decades ago and it still seems magical today. Milngavie and to a lesser extent Bearsden hold many such quirks and oddities... suburban paths that lead somewhere unexpected and interesting. Like finding fossil fish next to the local shopping street...  or a Roman bathhouse.... or the foundational remains of the mighty 2000 years old Antonine Wall.


At times it can feel like being in a fairy tale.... but just like the Lake District wealth has shaped this particular kingdom so it is a privilege to be allowed to enter it at all. And having recently watched a programme about the golden age of fantasy novels, from Lewis Carroll to Tolkien ( 1860s to 1950s) most of the authors came from well heeled districts and houses similar to this one as they had the free time, education, and most importantly the right social group and connections to get their works published and talked about by people of influence. And that holds true, even today.


Clematis on a stone wall.

A colour splurge in May 2025.


Swan Family comes to see me.


Hans Christian Andersen's ugly ducking. Pretty cute in fact. It's the later pre adult brown juvenile swan stage he was alluding to. Another of his tales, The Snow Queen, first published mid 1840s, became the Disney hit film  Frozen in 2013, (after a few modern alterations to the original story.) The Little Mermaid is also one of his.


A large poppy. A dream flower in folk tales and fantasy.


Pleasant suburbia. Surprisingly, this area has a great deal in common with where I grew up. And I know where all the rabbit holes are in both.


And every kingdom needs a fairy tale castle.


Friday, 27 June 2025

Snorkeling Day Port Glasgow. Greenock Waterfront. Gryfe Valley.

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This is a mix of three different trips in one go. A snorkeling day at Port Glasgow: an off grid weekend in The Gryfe Valley: and a Greenock Waterfront day. All three done with Alan.


We already knew about a quiet slipway beside Newark Castle in Port Glasgow so this is where we went during the extended May heat wave weather.


I've not been swimming or snorkeling for over ten years but Alan has.... and was keen... me less so.


But I've had all the gear for a long time so might as well give it a go. In my fertile imagination before this trip I swam across the sea like an Olympic champion or at least a graceful basking shark.... in painful reality I swam more like a house brick, which admittedly might be useful for scuba diving.... but not so good for surface gasping every few seconds due to persistent cold shock.... which did not really go away. Although in a city swimming pool I was fairly good and fast at breast stroke ( my local pool closed down decades ago) my above water distance swimming this time was disappointingly pathetic. Trying hard but getting nowhere fast. Almost stationary despite much thrashing to at least stay afloat. I can see why flippers are a good idea when snorkeling.


The water was flat calm. A perfect day.


The only waves produced by occasional passing ships in the Firth of Clyde Estuary.


The main drawback for me is that it's hard to snorkel and take photos at the same time. This is Alan. Being May the water was very cold so even with a wet suit on ( a basic thin one) I was completely breathless most of the time so only surface swimming with no diving at all was the plan. Although I used to swim the full length of the large local swimming pool underwater no problem and could even do two completely underwater circuits on occasion, after practice, I was really bad here. Snorkeling is unexpectedly isolating for a first timer. You can see the small area of seabed immediately below you but nothing in front, to the sides, or above so that anything might be happening there and you'd be totally unaware of it. That and struggling to stay afloat after such a long absence...the cold gasping, panic inducing water and the knowledge that big things certainly do share this water ( killer whales, dolphins, and seals have all been spotted here and filmed in past years so no doubt other big fish with no need to surface are here as well.... like Porbeagle and Mako sharks,..... (30 species of shark inhabit UK waters in fact), some well over ten feet in length. And I already have a very vivid imagination. Not so useful here! Safe to say, although I enjoyed the novelty... I was well out of my comfort zone. Like everything else in life it takes some getting used to.


It was a beautiful day though in an exceptional month of dry sunny weather.


The River Clyde Estuary in May.


Also in May we had an off grid weekend in the nearby Gryfe Valley and Corlick Hill district, seen here. Above and below.


A quiet and less visited area but it felt like a mini Sweden on this occasion. All lake and forest views. ( Gryfe Reservoir view here)


Also part of a circular cycle route we've both done in past years.


Sunset view.


Next up a walk along the sculpture trail at Greenock waterfront.


Metal Jelly fish.


Custom House Waterfront area.


Greenock Waterfront walk.


Beacon Arts and community Centre. Greenock Docks area.



Shipping Sculpture. Greenock.


Bird Lands. My coastal angels greet me...


The gift of flight. Apparently it was watching seabirds, gulls in particular, that inspired modern airplane design. And anyone who has watched gulls fly effortlessly in 80 mile an hour winds down the storm battered coastline in winter cannot fail to be impressed by their sheer ability in the air. 


Outstanding acrobats.

Pests to some eyes though... but always my sweet angels.