Saturday, 19 July 2025

Saltcoats to Ardrossan Beach Walk.

                                                   ALL PHOTOS CLICK FULL SCREEN.



Saltcoats is a place with a lot of character and history I always like visiting. Like many UK seaside towns it has seen better times. From the late Victorian era up until the late 1960s a day, weekend, or two week vacation down the coast was a yearly ritual for many workers in towns, cities and villages during the industrial and heavy industry heyday. Then cheap air flights abroad happened and the bubble burst for coastal b&bs, guest houses and local shops and restaurants. Funnily enough I never went to Saltcoats much as a child, my parents preferring Rothesay on Bute, Millport on Great Cumbrae, Largs, Helensburgh, or Troon as they were hopefully quieter or perceived to be more exotic/ refined than 'kiss me quick' downmarket  Saltcoats. A bit like preferring sedate Lytham St Annes to the bigger, rowdier near neighbour Blackpool in England.


As a walker though what I like about Saltcoats in recent times ( the last 30 years) is its sizable (and up until now) free car park near the sea front. it's basic but still free toilets beside the car park, and its walking potential. In one direction you can walk or cycle to Stevenston and Ardeer along the low tide beaches, enjoyable winter or summer....


This is obviously during a  big winter storm a few years back.


Very impressive although they have tamed this esplanade section down a lot, thanks to loads of rocks dumped into the sea and a new concrete barrier. Shame. They have also closed off access to inland Ardeer with new fencing. Double shame. 


Ironically photographers and passing walkers get soaked far more in this new version as the old, admittedly badly broken, but immensely charismatic old esplanade produced wonderfully high vertical fountains that rarely troubled folk walking past. Now its like 300 enthusiastic large plastic bucket throwers all determined to get you one after another all the way along this section. And it still hits the overhead power lines of the nearby coastal railway track.


In the other direction you have the South Bay, a horseshoe stretch of sand between Saltcoats and Ardrossan which is the route Alan and I were walking today. Seen above.


But first, from the rock tower in the first photograph, we had to negotiate the boundary edge of the old swimming pools. Up until the 1960s this was a big draw for Saltcoats, a sea filled collection of open air pools, replenished by the tide that was very popular with gala days, swimming competitions, model yacht clubs, even mass baptisms. Nothing remains of the pavilion, changing rooms, lifeguard stations, the 7 foot deep diving section... only this white retaining wall and a long sweep of grand steps leading into the shallow end. I am glad I walked this stretch though. Not only was it a mini challenge as my balance is not as good as it used to be...


  ...but it gave me a better appreciation when I watched a short video I found later of Saltcoats in its prime. Hard to believe they used to hold diving competitions here in the seven foot deep section when now it's only around two feet in places, gradually in filled by winter storms, gravel, and boulders. 


After the swimming pool came the low tide walk across South Bay beach to Ardrossan. The town of Saltcoats here seen in the distance.


Our destination was one we had explored before, around six years ago pre covid. This low hilltop holding the ruins of Ardrossan castle, a swing park for children,  and a monument. 


Nearby was this elegant church. Barony St Johns, which unfortunately appeared closed and empty although the smaller building next to it on the left here was being used by the community. 

A view of the island of Arran from Ardrossan Harbour. On top of this low hill we met a middle aged man walking his dogs and this is something Alan and I have both observed many times on walks that I should have mentioned far earlier in this blog. The generosity of spirit of people from working class backgrounds/ districts. It's something we've both noticed over many decades and it happened again here. Finding out we were visitors to Ardrossan this local immediately took us under his wing pointing out all the places of interest we might like to visit from the summit. It's not our imagination or any rose tinted view it is just a fact. Some of the most open, friendly, helpful people come from poorer areas. UK charity walkers raising funds on long distance hikes say the same. They always get better than expected donations from the communities least able to afford it. I'm also reminded of a book I read years ago of a religious hub worker in the 1930s Gorbals district, a notorious Glasgow slum. He said " despite the crippling levels of deprivation and lack of opportunity in this area he was astonished at how honest and resiliently stoic the majority of the residents were. " Given the unrelenting poverty over generations there should be far more crime in this area and far less optimism. They ask for very little and receive even less." he summed up.  


Any time I've been in Ardrossan in past decades the reason has always been trips over to Arran for rock climbing or hill-walking weekends. If coming by car a good safe fenced off car park right beside the ferry terminal is available for a modest fee which gets you parked without any hassle then it was straight onto the ferry and over to the island. The entire town was geared up for this vital connection and it's prosperity largely depends on it. Now seemingly, apart from a temporary brief month long interval, the new ferries have to sail to and from Troon, bypassing Ardrossan altogether. You would think before they built the new ferries they might have planned for that. Not the town itself but the people that commissioned the ferries as apparently the harbour at Ardrossan is unsuitable now. Apart from being massively over budget and many years late I did read somewhere that in the past few years alone, since covid, around 10,000 missed, cancelled, or interrupted ferry connections have occurred throughout the Scottish island fleet... one of the main reasons I've not been back to any of the Firth of Clyde islands for the last five years. Didn't want to risk any disappointment or sudden changes. Public services in general throughout the UK, not just transport related, are a poor shadow of what they were even two decades ago. It's got so bad with aging ferries and breakdowns Scottish island groups are looking at the Faroe Islands and their connected undersea tunnel network with great envy. Mind you Scotland is the only country that had vast oil reserves that didn't really benefit from it in any meaningful way. Unlike Norway no sovereign wealth fund for us...any profits went to private companies.  


A colourful mural in Ardrossan.


Part of Ardrossan Marina. A place new to Alan and I helpfully pointed out by our new local friend. We have also noticed, passing briefly through upmarket suburbs elsewhere on walks, a definite suspicion and guarded wariness in anyone we come across there, as if the only reason we could possibly be there at all is to steal the family silver or get up to mischief of some kind. It is a very noticeable difference between the two areas. Working class or affluent. On a recent trip to Bearsden in a car park there an old guy stared at us rudely for ages as we arrived through our respective car windscreens until we burst out laughing. He still stared at us unsmiling then shook his head, not for anything we had done, just that presumably 'we were not the right social class to share a car park with.'  It's usually more subtle than that, better disguised, but it's still apparent it's there in many cases. None of that with our new friend... and no hidden agenda from him either. Just simple generosity of spirit towards strangers. Something I have seen myself countless times. Thousands in fact. Mind you, that is a perception formed over the last 50 years of living, working, and exploring a wide variety of different districts in various towns and cities... as a white working class Scottish male. It may well be different for other nationalities, folk from different backgrounds, or teenagers, or females.


Ardrossan Marina walk.


Big balls sculpture at Ardrossan.
 

Flower Display in Ardrossan.


Sense Community Garden in Ardrossan. 


HMS Dasher memorial Garden.
 

Poppies and cross on return walk along the coastal pavement.
 

Great close up details on this cross.


Horses galloping on the sand. 


Saltcoats seagulls, All three murals by artist Tragic O Hara.


Including this one.


A natural sheltered rock garden in Ardrossan on the cliffs, covered in rockery specialists.


Including Moss Campion, seen here. Normally a tundra plant that prefers bare exposed ground and rock, growing on old lava fields, true arctic wilderness areas, sea cliffs, and Scottish Cairngorm plateau summits. Yet here as well.


The Arran Ferry leaving Ardrossan in happier times.  Seasickness tablets are available :o)

And a very good photo collection and short video of Saltcoats town and swimming baths from the 1900s to the 1960s. The change in the place is unbelievable. This link is well worth watching and so different  from today but Saltcoats is still popular with day trippers. Especially for a cheap and cheerful outing. Plenty of modern families enjoying the beach, the sand, the sun, and the fairground rides when we were there. Make Scotland Great Again? Never happen unless airlines disappear.
Look at the period photos in here though of a different world entirely.
 


7 comments:

Kay G. said...

Such a shame that Saltcoats was demolished! The history of it was very interesting to me. Really do wish that it could have been saved.

Carol said...

We've got moss campion and wild violas on my most local, small grassy fell. Oh, an harebells (which you call bluebells).

Like the 300 people with buckets analogy - doesn't it cause problems when the waves hit the railway power lines? Isn't it dangerous to be between the 2 in those conditions? you know, arcing and all that?

We notice each time we go to a small working class town pub in Scotland that the locals are very friendly and make sure they chat to you. Our local next-door village has a pub like that too. How awful about the bloke glaring through your windscreens though - you did right to laugh openly at him!

Anabel Marsh said...

i can’t think I;ve been to Saltcoats or Ardrossan more than once, though John was there on a cycling trip recently.

blueskyscotland said...

Hi Kay, It's just the swimming pools, pavilion, and changing rooms that are gone. The Town of Saltcoats is still there. Wonderful period photographs though.

blueskyscotland said...

Hi Carol, I did think about electricity voltage when I was there during storms but either they cut the power off temporarily or its discontinued altogether as waves hitting those lines are a fairly common occurrence in winter. The guy staring at us did it so long it was comical and bizarre as if we were two aliens in a spaceship. Normally if you stare back, not threatening, just bemused by his behaviour they look away but he didn't even after getting out and putting his boots on... as if we had to be watched constantly.
Reminds me of an invite we got decades ago to a really posh club, Fettes college and Gordonstoun types and we knew immediately it wasn't for us but someone we vaguely knew recommended it so we pretended to be interested in joining. A Margo Leadbetter type who was the membership secretary was horrified and told us in front of everyone she would rip up our membership joining forms if we sent them in as we were ' not the right sort of people at all.' My friend John, who was posh, English, professional background, university educated, well spoken etc.. told me afterwards he had to arrive in Glasgow to be looked down or and patronized from such a lofty height for the first time in his life.

blueskyscotland said...

Hi Anabel, the south bay beach walk at low tide is a good one but you have a much bigger range of better destinations to choose from so it's no surprise you have not been back. On the positive side it's quick and easy to reach in a car. Under an hour. Good cycling district inland with loads of minor country roads.

Carol said...

That membership secretary's comments horrify me - who on earth does she think she is (and they are)? Cheeky b*tch. What makes her think she's better than everyone else?