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squiz
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Member#: 6644 Location: Registered: 27-05-2007 Diary Entries: 3072
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1st July 2017
Hiking - Walking: Duddo Stone Circle and Berwick pier Wind Direction: Wind Stength: Surf / Sea State: Air Temperature: Sea Temperature: Weather: sunny periods but windy. Max Speed: Distance Covered:
Friday 30th June – travel then Walk **** Around Berwick – upon –
Tweed – cloud and drizzle :(
Our second night in Wylam was good and woke again to cloudy drizzle, now
getting fed up of the wet! Left after breakfast and headed to find Ovingham
castle then Hadrians wall spotting neither, not bothered either as the
further we drove north the lower the cloud came down:( Had a job getting on
the A1, topped up with diesel before turning left up the A697 just skirting
the Northumberland National Park, not tempted to stop until we saw a sign
for Chillingham Castle so head there but found an uninviting drive into
parkland so gave it a miss. Then just up the road came across a Wild Cattle
Park up a very steep wet track with a nice wooded carpark surrounded by
lovely pines and foxgloves, a top place for our sandwich. Then we tried to
find the cattle not sure if you had to pay or not? Met a couple who managed
to see them without paying so headed across a very wet field in the middle
of nowhere with the cloud now very low and on reaching the gate saw a man
in a hut and no cattle in sight so chickened out and returned to the van.
We stopped and talked to a nice couple on holiday from Lancashire who said
it was £8 to get in, so we are glad we gave that a miss and the only thing
we gained were very wet feet!
We are very close to the Scottish border now and the houses are large
imposing dark stone as we reach our destination, Berwic –upon–Tweed. We
cross a big bridge into the town with the brown Tweed gushing out to sea!
Through the narrow streets, under the town wall to a harbour carpark, the
first good news, it is free but no sleeping overnight:( I turn on the
laptop hoping to find some free wi-fi but the computer plays up so switch
it off! Then we look for a place to park, squeezing under a low arch in
what turns out to be Elizabethan (Elizabeth I) walls towards the long pier.
There are nice cottages one side and a drop into the sea the other with no
fence. We found a small carpark that leads to the beach, but I spoke to a
local lady, who was dressed up for winter for a walk, and I asked what we
should see here and she recommended walking on the town walls, also she
said we could park on the road in. We moved back to the harbour wall which
offered fantastic views of the pier with its lighthouse, rolling surf on
the far beach and in the distance Holy Island and Bamburgh Castle but they
were difficult to make out in the gloom!
Hearing on the radio that it is National Cream Tea Day we decided to take
part and use up the last of our clotted cream, the scones were delicious:)
The weather was still rubbish with fine drizzle so read, then at about five
it stopped so put on hat and coats and went for a walk. First out to the
end of the dog leg pier seeing the first of many noticeboards depicting
pictures by Lowry who loved the area. It was a good afternoon for wildlife
as we saw several seals, some Eider Ducks in the waves, herons, curlews,
swans and for the first time in this country Goosanders:)
We had left our van mat in the beach carpark so went to retrieve that then
up the hill to the golf course behind the cottages and back to the van as
the tide was reaching the wall. We decided to take a look at the town wall
so walked the short way there and did the River Tweed section back towards
the main town bridges. We read how first Elizabethan soldiers defended the
town and then later in the 17th,18 and 19th century defences to protect
against the Scots, Napoléon etc! We walked across the original low stone
bridge, up onto the newer road bridge and back to town with the high train
via duct an impressive sight up river! We soon found the second section of
town wall up a hill with several places where artillery was placed. The
highlight was seeing two young Swallows sitting on an electric wire waiting
to be fed by their parents:) We completed the second section of wall and
back along the harbour road with the tide now in and the many swans making
a move looking for supper! We were starving as it was nearly eight but Mag
soon knocked up filled pasta. I then tried to turn on the laptop - it
refused to start, but computer whizz Mag with the help of information from
her mobile phone managed to reset it to a week ago and fingers crossed it
is working fine:) The only drawback is that after sorting out todays pics
and diary its now 12.30, way past our bed time, the plus being it’s
pretty with the lights from the far bank reflecting on the water. The last
time we checked the weather the rain is moving away and we might even see
the sun again, its been a while!
Photo Gallery
here
Saturday 1st July – Sightsee travel + walks ***** Duddo Stone Circle and
Berwick pier - sunny periods but windy.
Considering we didn’t get to bed until 12.45 Mag was still up bright and
early, leaving me in bed with a fantastic view over Berwick harbour. She
went for a walk on the beach at 8.30. I read some more ‘Vera’ which is
based in these parts while Mag had a long chat to a local dog walker who
told her of some good places to visit:) Breakfast at 10.20 then move off
with the intension of going just down the coast to Holy Island. Over the
stone bridge we turned left to check out the carpark opposite us by the
surf beach where the campervans parked last night. It was lovely looking
back across at Berwick old town from the carpark which boasted a large sign
saying no overnight sleeping with a £70 fine but they were taking no
notice!
We did a circuit of the beach which is covered in kelp and trees washed out
of the Tweed and everything looks so much better with the sun out:) Mag
said there were standing stones at Duddo, a little way inland towards the
National Park so headed there next. We actually spotted the sign to the
Stone Circle straight away parking at the farmers fence with the stones a
15-minute walk away. It was a very pretty, first with loads of daisies and
then through a couple of ‘Rapeseed’ fields that had gone to seed, it
would have been stunning a few weeks ago as we would have been walking in a
sea of yellow! Still this was lovely too with the circle now visible on a
small hill ahead surrounded by big skies:) The rape was so tall and the
path so narrow that you nearly disappeared at times and we met a nice
couple who had been enjoying the peace and quiet of The North’s answer to
Stone Henge. I set up the tripod for a shot and we had a bit of fun hiding
behind the impressive fluted stones that are supposed to sing when the wind
blows.
Back at the van our run of things going wrong continues when the control
panel for the interior van electrics had gone into error mode and was
beeping. Mag read the Bilbo manual to try and find the fuses, even ringing
their office for help. The four fuses were, we thought, on the electric box
panel but no, there are 4 ‘main’ fuses in another box somewhere! We
narrowed it down to probably being in the boot, where the leisure batteries
are so, of course, that entailed taking the bikes off to open the boot
door!! We were horrified to discover our second leisure battery was in the
way of the door where we thought they must be. I was just going to try and
disconnect it when Mag had an idea – to check her bedside small book
cupboard and there it was, a tiny box tucked in the corner right at the
back on an inner wall, a really crap place to put them! Invisible and
virtually unreachable without a torch and a mirror!!! I removed the fuses
and left them out for ten minutes while we oiled the bike chains - going
rusty in the wet. I replaced the fuses which sorted out the control panel
:) we couldn’t believe we had fixed it. So, we were off again, finding
some nice tourist things at Etal, Heatherslaw and Ford including a castle
– a fiver a head so we passed but managed to fill our water bottles up at
their outside tap – then down to the fast-flowing River Till, in full
flood with the place where the road crosses the ford like a torrent!
Watched another bit of village cricket – past a watermill and huge house
before heading to the hills of the National Park.
At Wooler there had been what looked like some fell running and we found
another Co-op to stock up on mainly cake, we must make more effort to eat
something healthy soon but with all these things going wrong we only want
comfort food!! On our OS map, there is a long dead-end road leading high
into the wilds by the Harthorpe burn which we managed to find. It was an
amazing narrow tarmac road leading nowhere! It followed the burn for miles
in a valley surrounded by big hills, over cattle grids to a large parking
area full of Northumberland Mountain rescue having an exercise but although
there were some fantastic places to park, overnight parking was not
allowed:( We found a nice place to park by the burn for another cream tea
and our run of bad luck continues! This time when Mag tried to fill the
kettle the pump didn’t work, she checked and the leisure batteries were
completely dead which was odd as they were full this morning? Used the van
battery to fill the kettle and were worried that with only the van battery
to power us we would have to go to a garage or even head for home:(
With nowhere to park in the hills we drove back to our spot at Berwick and
rang our friend Neil Hurrell to ask his advice but he was out so decided to
check the fuses I had played with earlier. This time, knowing where the
bloomin box was we accessed the cupboard by putting the bed down. Mag soon
discovered that because they were so hard to reach the fuses hadn’t gone
into the allocated slots but slipped down the side so after a lot of
fiddling around with torch and mirror she had everything up and running
again :) What a star she is – last night the computer and today the van
electrics!!! We could relax again.
To celebrate we ate nearly our whole box of crackers and cheese as
couldn’t be bothered to cook anything – what a terrible day for eating
this has been!!! With the tide coming in we had all the usual suspects in
front of us, huge seals, Goosanders, Eider Ducks, Curlews and Herons but
then I spotted hundreds of diving Gannets in the bay so we went for a walk
along the beach ending up at the lighthouse at the end of the pier watching
the amazing great Gannets franticly diving for fish as the sun was setting
behind Berwick. It was very windy offshore but I don’t think there is
anywhere suitable to windsurf here so will head to Holy Island
tomorrow:)
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