Sunday 16 July 2023

Banff and Macduff, Scotland '23 Part 2

Two Small Towns Facing Each Other Across the River Deveron

A Brief Introduction


Scotland
Aberdeenshire
After driving north from Falkirk, we spent a week, as we did last year, in a borrowed cottage (thank you Jenny and Bob) in the delightful fishing village of Findochty, beside the Moray Firth. For no obvious reason Findochty is pronounced ‘Finechty.’ Our ‘outings,’ to Banff & Macduff, Pitmedden & Haddo House and Lossiemiouth & Elgin will be described in this and the two following posts. The rest of the time we pottered happily about Findochty and Buckie. Some of that pottering fed into improvements (and one enlargement) of last year's Findochty, Portknockie and Cullen post.

Findochty is a fishing village 2¾ miles from the tiny metropolis of Buckie and 120 miles north of Edinburgh

Whatever Happened to Banffshire?

We set off from Findochty, driving 30 minutes along the coast via Cullen and Portsoy (see map below) to Banff. Findochty is in Moray, but once beyond Cullen we were in Aberdeenshire.

Moray and Aberdeen
Findochty is not marked but is between Buckie and Cullen

When I was a lad, there were 33 counties in Scotland, 40 in England and 12 in Wales. A major overhaul in 1974 resulted in wholesale mergers in both Wales and Scotland. Scotland’s 33 counties became 10 districts with Fife the only remained traditional county name. The old system had too many small counties with small populations, but the re-arrangement made local government too remote.

Devolution gave Wales and Scotland control of their own local organisation and both had another go. In 1996 Scotland divided itself into 38 ‘Council Districts,’ a similar number to the old counties, but with districts better reflecting the population distribution.

Along the Moray coast pre-1974 there were Nairn, Moray, Banffshire and Aberdeenshire. Nairn was swallowed up by the Highland District and Banffshire, which sprawled along the coast from Spey Bay to Crovie was split between Moray and Aberdeenshire.

Banff

The first castle at Banff was built to deter Viking raiders, but by 1163 it was more developed and Malcolm IV was residing there. A town grew round the castle and prospered by trading with the other Northern Scottish burghs. By 1264 Banff had a sheriff and in 1372 Robert II conferred Royal Burgh status.

For a former Royal Burgh and County Town, modern Banff, tucked into the north-west corner of Banff Bay, is a modest little town with a population of some 4,000.

The Harbour

Arriving from the west it was convenient to start with the surprisingly small harbour.

Banff Harbour

Banff has no natural harbour, but a sheltered anchorage was enough in the early days. The first small constructed harbour in 1471, was enough for Banff, along with Montrose and Aberdeen, to dominate salmon exports to continental Europe. 18th and 19th century enlargements allowed the town to play a major part in the new and lucrative herring trade. The trade peaked in 1845 before dwindling away in the early 20th century. Today the sight of a working boat in the small harbour is vanishingly rare.

Low Street

With a little searching we found what looked like the town centre. Low Street has, perversely, most of the characteristics of a High Street, and briefly swells into not-quite-a-town-square. There is also a High Street which runs parallel (and a little higher up the hill) and also has shops.

Banff Townhouse

As we discovered in Edinburgh two years ago, to be a Burgh (or Royal Burgh) a town needed a Kirk, a Tolbooth and a Mercat (Market) Cross. The Parish Church is in High Street, but the Tolbooth – a combined council meeting room, courthouse and lock-up was built in Old Street in the early 15th century. 250 years later it was in poor condition and in 1757 it was replaced by a steeple. Outside Scotland, only churches have steeples, but we encountered three secular steeples (this, Falkirk and Dumfries) on this year’s Scottish travels. It was too small to fulfil the tolbooth role, so the adjacent town house was added in 1797. After being a museum and then police headquarters in the 19th century, it is now the local office of Aberdeenshire district council.

Banff Townhouse and Spire

The Mercat Cross

The original cross with a Crucifixion on one side and a Virgin and Child on the other, was lucky to survive the iconoclasm of the Scottish Reformation. It once stood outside the tolbooth but was removed in 1767 and then spent 130 years topping the Earl of Fife’s dovecote.

Mercat Cross, Banff

It was returned to the town in 1900 and since 1994 has found sanctuary in the Banff Museum. A replica mounted on a 17th century shaft sits near its original position.

The Biggar Fountain

That original position has been occupied since 1878 by an ornate Victorian Gothic drinking fountain. It commemorates Walter Biggar, one of the founders of the Baltic herring trade which brought prosperity to Banff in the 19th century. It also commemorates his wife, Mrs Anne Duff, which takes us on to the next section.

Biggar Fountain, Banff

But before we go, the most remarkable feature of central Banff is not the small cluster of monuments, but the people, or rather lack of them. Apart from one man photographed walking behind the fountain, and another who sat on the steps outside the Townhouse until a bus took him away, there was nobody there! On a warm, sunny, summer Sunday morning, all 4,000 inhabitants were apparently in church, in bed or in hiding.

Duff House

Duff House is a Georgian mansion on the southern edge of Banff. Built between 1735 and 1740 for William Duff, it was designed by William Adam. William Adam may have been outshone by his sons, John, Robert and James, but he had a busy practice building large houses for the Scottish aristocracy.

Duff House is well signed, but strangely difficult to find. Turning off the main road by the Duff House Royal Golf Club the road passes a car park beside a rugby pitch. Having no better idea, we parked there and followed a footpath around the woods. After 100m we rounded a slight bend and Duff House suddenly appeared right in front of us. How it had remained hidden is a mystery, but having found it, we joined the guided tour.

Duff House, Banff

William Duff’s father made his pile as a merchant and William inherited in 1722 aged 25. He became Member of Parliament for Banffshire after standing unopposed in the 1727 general election. George I rarely attended cabinet meetings after 1717 and Robert Walpole became the de facto prime minister in 1721. Political parties were yet to form and the franchise was limited to ‘property owning men.’

Duff opposed the government on several occasions and was persuaded to step down in 1734 in favour of his more biddable brother-in-law. As a reward he was created Lord Braco of Kilbryde and was able to start building his big house. The principals of British politics have changed little in 300 years.

Entrance Hall, Duff House

Duff dominated the political scene in Banffshire (not a huge fish, but a small pond), and had joined the aristocracy but with not quite the title he craved.

Minerva and her right hand man guarding the ceramics, Duff House

In Shakespeare’s ‘Macbeth,’ Macduff is the loyal and noble counterpoint to the treacherous title character. How grand, William Duff thought, to be a descendant of Macduff.

This stuff might be important in the History of Furniture, but I have rather forgotten what it is, Duff House

The accepted (if partly mythological) list of Scottish Kings includes a King Duff who ruled Alba – the chunk of Scotland between the Moray Firth and the Firth of Forth - from 962 until 967. The system of succession then used in Scotland meant sons did not automatically succeed fathers. Duff’s son became not king but Mormaer (or Thane or Earl) of Fife, the rank of Shakespeare’s Macduff. The Clan MacDuff was the most important family in Fife for several centuries.

Weapons and a chandelier, Duff House

Sorting fact from legend in the early MacDuff story is impossible, but William Duff found records of a David Duff in Aberdeenshire who received a charter from Robert III in 1404. William then proved to his own satisfaction that he was descended from David Duff, who was obviously related the Fife MacDuffs, hence he, William. was related to Shakespeare’s great, if largely fictional, Macduff.

Dining at Duff House

As he was rich and influential everybody acknowledged, at least in public, that William Duff was the real deal. The way was almost clear for him to have his heart’s desire.

Menu for Wednesday 14-Nov-1873

Unfortunately, in 1745 Charles Edward Stuart, Bonnie Prince Charlie, made the last desperate attempt to restore the Stuarts to the thrones of Scotland and England. Most of the Scots who stood with Bonnie Prince Charlie at his last stand at Culloden (See Culloden and Cawdor for details) were recruited in and around Aberdeenshire, and that put a question mark against William Duff’s loyalty to the government.

The stairs, Duff House

That question mark was not fully erased until 1759 when his wish came true and he was created Earl Fife and Viscount MacDuff. With nothing more to prove, he died in 1763.

Duff House after William Duff

Six Earls Fife lived in Duff House, the last donating it to the Burgh of Banff in 1903. Used as a hotel and sanatorium until 1928, the house lay empty until the second world war, when it became an internment camp and then housed prisoners of war.

In the mid-19th century David Bryce had been commissioned to build a three-story pavilion and corridor block. It is unclear why a German bomber was flying along the Moray coast on the morning of the 22nd of July 1940. Maybe it was lost, but it dumped four bombs, effectively destroying Bryce’s extension.

The site and remains of the Bryce extension

Worse, eight people were killed, six German prisoners of war and two of their guards. In 2019 a memorial was erected bearing their names.

Memorial to those who died in the Duff House air raid

In 1956 the house was passed to what would become ‘Historic Environment for Scotland’ and in 1995 also became part of the National Galleries of Scotland. Pictures on display include paintings by Henry Raeburn, Joshua Reynolds…

Lady Dorothea Sinclair, wife of the 2nd Earl, by Sir Joshua Reynolds

...and El Greco/

Saint Jerome in Penitence by El Greco

There is an almost identical, though slightly smaller painting called St Jerome as a Penitent, also painted by El Greco around 1600. It is in the collection of The Hispanic Society of America.

Developing Macduff

The other Earl Fife who made a major local contribution was the 2nd Earl, William’s son James. The problem with Banff is that even after the 18th century improvements, the harbour remained inadequate. Noticing there was more scope for development on the other side of Deveron Bay, James Duff developed the small settlement of Doune, built a harbour and in 1783, changed its name to Macduff.

While the harbour at Banff is used by pleasure boats, Macduff still has an important working harbour

To Macduff

We left Duff House around lunchtime, a tine for a sandwich and a cup of tea. According to the internet several establishments in Banff would normally cater for our needs, but this was Sunday so Banff, as we had already observed, was closed.

Macduff, with a similar population, was little better, but one café proudly claimed to be open, even on the Sabbath. To get there we had to cross the River Deveron.

The river flows 60 miles (97km) from the Ladder Hills in the Cairngorms before squeezing between Banff and the Hill of Doune and thence to the sea. On a fine summer’s day, it looks a pleasant stream, and if you cannot actually see the Atlantic salmon and brown trout, you can be sure they are there. But the river has other moods. Crossings were by what has been described as ‘an uncertain ferry,’ until a bridge was built in 1765. Unfortunately, it was swept away three years later. The ferry resumed, but sank in 1773. A sturdier bridge was completed in 1799.

Macduff and The Sea World Centre

Crossing the bridge without incident, we drove round the hill and found ourselves in the town, which seemed as animated as Banff. Being very much a working port, it looked more industrial, but on Sunday no one was being industrious.

We parked at the Sea World Centre aquarium and walked the 50m or so to the allegedly open café. It did not look promising as we approached and was indeed closed. A handwritten sign on the door apologised, explaining that they had a case of covid in the family and thought it responsible to close for a day or two. They were probably right, though it meant we had no lunch.

There was nothing for it, but to return to the aquarium, buy our tickets and watch some fish,

Fish at Macduff Sea World Centre

The aquarium is a circular building with a circular tank to circumambulate and several smaller tanks on the outside of the circus.

It is not large but it has an interesting variety of sea fish. They could have made identification easier, but I know the fish below with its somewhat startled look, is Cyclopterus lumpus, the lumpsucker or lumpfish (or sometimes Seahen.)

Cyclopterus Iumpus

I read that despite being a fish, it does not swim well (a piscine prerequisite, I had always thought) but bobs around at the bottom o the beautiful briny sea, or at least the continental shelf. Its redeeming virtue is its roe which is sometime sold as ‘lumpfish caviar’ - though it is not in the same class as real caviar (smaller, grainier, less flavourful).

The one in my cupboard calls itself  'Lumpfish Caviar'

Nevertheless, a handful of Ritz crackers, each liberally smeared with lumpfish roe and topped with half a boiled quail’s egg, make a excellent starter for 2 or 4 (depending on the size of your hand.)

The afternoon’s main excitement is the diver who enters the main tank to feed whatever turns up to be fed, manly cod (light grey, cedilla under chin) and coley (darker grey, no cedilla).

Diver feeds fish, Sea World Centre, Macduff

That just about exhausted the delights of Macduff and Banff, so we drove back ‘home’ in Findochty.

Scotland 2023 (so far)

Part 1 Falkirk
Part 2 Banff and Macduff
Part 5 A Rainy Day in Dumfries (1) Robert Burns

Thursday 13 July 2023

Falkirk, Scotland '23 Part 1

A Big House, Two Kelpies and a Remarkable Wheel


Scotland
Falkirk District Council
We paused in Falkirk two years ago en route from Forres to Lanark. This year we returned, because we felt there was more to see. Wikipedia tells me that a 2011 STV poll voted Falkirk Scotland's most beautiful town, but the tourist route from Edinburgh still crosses the Forth Bridge and heads directly for the scenic charms of the Highlands, heedlessly by-passing Falkirk. With limited time, I might do the same, but with a less hurried itinerary…

Forres, Falkirk and Lanark are marked in red
Thanks to Lonely Planet for lending me their map

12-July-2023

Falkirk

Central Scotland sometimes feels like a vast agglomeration of small towns all running one into another until eventually they reach either Glasgow or Edinburgh. That is, of course, an exaggeration, aerial photos show extensive green space in Central Scotland - but they can be harder to find on the ground.

Falkirk’s earliest recorded name was the Brythonic Egglesbreth meaning ‘speckled church.’ Other names, An Eaglais Bhreac (Scottish Gaelic) Varia Capella (Latin), La Veire Chapelle (Normans) and Fawkirk, later Falkirk (Scots) have the same meaning. The relevant church was probably built in the 7th century

Now best known for having a not particularly successful football team, Falkirk is a small town with around 35,000 inhabitants. It is the administrative centre of Falkirk District Council which covers the town and a dozen or more smaller communities, including the port and petrochemicals centre of Grangemouth, and Stenhousemuir, home of an even less successful professional football team. Falkirk District has a population of 160,000.

In the course of this post we will visit Falkirk town centre, The Pineapple House to the north, Helix Park to the east and the Falkirk Wheel to the west

Falkirk Centre

We arrived in late afternoon and checked into the Park Hotel. Built in the later years of the last century, it would win no architectural awards, the kindest word I can say for it is functional. The receptionist, though, was cheerful and welcoming and we booked dinner – we have learned in Scotland that no booking can result in a frustrating search.

Our room overlooked Dollar Park, a pleasant aspect.

Dollar Park (across the lovely expanse of the hotel car park!)

Needing a pharmacy (nothing major) we walked the five minutes into Falkirk's almost pedestrianised town centre. The outskirts of the town had mixed industrial, commercial and domestic properties, but the hotel was surrounded by larger more prosperous homes. We passed a row of smaller, nicely kept bungalows, the gardens of three adjacent houses so spectacular they must enjoy their rivalry.

The town centre looks rather less prosperous with too many shops closed and some of the survivors looking down at heal. A loose cluster of three shops, Whimsic Alley…

Whimsic Alley, Falkirk

…The Lonely Broomstick, and Shining Light, ‘Scotland's centre for tarot reading,’ made us wonder if we had walked into some Poundshop Glastonpotter.

The Lonely Broomstick, Falkirk

We are twice tapped for money, once by an elderly busker, who stopped playing to ensure be got paid, and by a somewhat confused woman who was not as old as she first appeared and apparently wanted us to fund her drug habit. These accusations are easy to throw about, but I know nothing of her life and what led her to approaching strangers for money on the street. It cannot be easy for her, and I should be less judgmental. We gave her a pound, 'for food.'

The High Street widens into the Market Square, overlooked by the Falkirk Steeple. In England a steeple is always part of a church, in Scotland a free-standing steeple sometimes houses the tolbooth (formerly the Town Hall/Gaol) (see Dumfries for another example). The first steeple on this site was constructed in 1697 and demolished because of subsidence in 1803. The current steeple was built in 1814 to house the town clock and bells and also contains two cells (unused since 1860).

Falkirk Steeple

A plaque on the steeple wall drew our attention to the nearby Cross Well, a cylinder of stones surmounted by a barely recognisable lion. In 1817 the Earl of Callendar drew the first clean water available in the town centre and, according to the plaque, addressed his remarks to the ‘wives and bairns of Falkirk.’ The people of Falkirk have called themselves ‘the bairns’ ever since. Alternatively, the name comes from the town’s old motto Touch Ane, Touch A' - Better Meddle Wi' the Deil then the Bairns o' Falkirk. I do not know which came first, but they sound aggressive.

Cross Well, Falkirk

Having located the pharmacy, we continued through the town centre past the mandatory ‘House where Robert Burns slept’…

Burns slept in many place
It is surprising how many 18th century buildings survive

… to the end of pedestrianised zone where we were rewarded with a view of the next section of the town. We have seen tower blocks like these before (and there are more than this picture shows) but only in Eastern Europe, left over from the days before the collapse of the Soviet Union.

A view of Falkirk's 'Stalinist Quarter'

13-July-2023

Dollar Park

Filling in time before Callendar House opened we strolled across the road to Dollar Park, named after lumber baron and shipping magnate Robert Dollar who donated it to his home town.

It is a pleasant little park containing the town’s war memorial,…

Falkirk war memorial

…some venerable trees…

Old tree, Dollar Park, Falkirk

… and a flower clock (with correct time) in memory of Falkirk born botanist and plant hunter George Forrest

George Forrest flower clock, Dollar Park, Falkirk

Callendar House

In the dip behind the unlovely tower blocks, is a very different type of building.

Callendar House, Falkirk

Callendar House, now owned by Falkirk Council and run as a museum, is surrounded by Callendar Park. Although modified in the 19th century to resemble a French Renaissance Chateau, the core of the building is a 14th century tower house.

Callendar House, Falkirk

By the start of late middle-ages the diverse inhabitants of the area were blending together. The Old Welsh speaking Brythonic people who had been here since before the Romans had been joined by the Scots, a Gaelic speaking tribe who arrived from Ireland in the 9th century. Then came Saxons, pushed north by the invading Normans, and later by Normans invited by King David I (ruled 1124-53) because he admired Norman civilization. The King himself was a descendant of the Pictish ruling family from further north who started styling themselves Rex Scottorum in the 12th century.

Local rulers were the Thanes of Callendar, the remains of their Thane House lie just east of the current building. The 5th Thane, Sir Patrick Callendar backed one of the many losers in the Scottish Wars 1296-1328, and David II (the son of the winner, Robert the Bruce – descended from the Norman de Brus family) gave the Callendar lands to Sir William Livingstone (descended from the Saxon Leving family) in 1345.

They built the Tower House at the heart of the modern building and by the 17th century had developed it considerably.

Callendar House in the 17th century

Like the Callendars before them, the Livingstons lost the house when James Livingston, 5th Earl of Linlithgow backed the wrong side, in his case the Jacobites in 1715. The estates were forfeited and sold to the York Buildings Company who immediately leased it back to the earl’s daughter Lady Anne Livingston. She and her husband made the same mistake in 1745, he was executed, but she was allowed to stay in the house and so was her son until his death in 1778.

The house was put up for auction and William Forbes, an Aberdeen coppersmith who made his pile from Royal Navy contracts, outbid Lord Errol. Times were changing,

Callendar house during the Forbes times (Public Domain, borrowed from Wikipedia)

Forbes built the house as it is today, and his descendants kept it for 200 years, but nothing lasts forever. In 1963 it was sold to Falkirk Burgh and in 2011 transferred to the Falkirk Community Trust. It is now part stately home, part museum and part art gallery.

The stately home includes the restored Georgian kitchen….

Georgian kitchen, Callendar House

…and the grand staircase…

Staircase, Callendar House

…which is even better looking up.

Staircase ceiling, Callendar House

The museum deals with the history of the house and the effects of the industrial revolution. William Forbes and men like him ensured Falkirk was a centre of the Scottish industry.

The town was home to several ironworks, producing domestic and industrial products. The three-legged cauldron was typical of Falkirk.

Falkirk ironware, Callendar House

Some produced items so exquisite they could only be given to important retirees and whose only real use is to adorn a museum.

Beautiful but unusable tee service, Callendar House

Less threatening to the environment than the ironworks were clockmakers. Peter Keir worked in the High Street from 1806-34. William Dobbie founded a clockmaker’s that prospered for three generations and John Russell became watchmaker to the Prince Regent.

Falkirk Clocks

The gallery during our visit displayed the works of Falkirk born Barbara Rae who specialises in rather impressive industrial scenes…

Barbara Rae industrial scene

…and equally fine landscapes and seascapes.

Barbara Rae seascape

It is a house well worth a visit, and not all the attractions are inside…

The Antonine Wall

Everyone knows about Hadrian’s Wall. Completed in 122CE, it stretches some 73 miles (117km) across northern England from the Solway Firth to the North Sea.

The Antonine Wall is less well known. Built 20 years later an 70 miles further north it crosses the thinnest part of Scotland - 37 miles (59 km) between the Firth of Clyde and Forth. Built of turf on a stone foundation it had mile forts like Hadrian's Wall, though everything was to a smaller scale.

Altar from an Antonine Wall mile fort, Callendar House
Inscription reads (P)ro se et svis - I discharged this vow on behalf of myself and my family)

Antoninus’ rule was marked by peace throughout the empire, except in Scotland, where his little adventure started well, but the Caledonians proved recalcitrant and after 20 years of trying the Romans retreated to Hadrian’s wall. There is not a great deal left of the Antonine Wall, but enough for its line to be easily traced. It crosses the land of Callendar House, and if this it not the most spectacular section, it is the only part I have photographed.

A part of the Antonine Wall

The Dunmore Pineapple

Some 8 miles (11 km) north of Falkirk centre, just beyond the village of Airth, tucked away in the countryside and surrounded by trees is what some claim to be the strangest building in Scotland. It is easy enough to find, if you have faith that the track your sat nav has chosen will not peter out in a forest.

Lynne and the Dunmore Pineapple

It is hard to imagine the excitement caused in the 17th century by the arrival of the pineapple on our damp, misty island. Pineapples were exotic and difficult to obtain and thus very desirable and very expensive. The rich and fashionable would hire one for a dinner party. It would adorn the fruit-bowl, but remain untouched, so it could be hired out gain for the next society event.

A closer view of the Dunmore Pineapple

The next stage was to grow pineapples, and gardeners in stately homes soon found themselves labouring in pineries. The first Scottish grown pineapple appeared in 1728. In the days before cheap imports, growing your own seemed reasonable, building your own was downright eccentric, but that is what the Earl of Dunmore did in 1761. He built it as a summer house where he could sit and admire his estate.

A close-up of the Dunmore Pineapple

The estate is now gone, Dunmore House is a ruin, but the National Trust saved the Pineapple. They use it as a holiday home, so all we could do was stare at it and take photographs.

We next drove back south to Helix Park where we had lunch and revisited the Kelpies, but we shall join the 2021 narrative for that

11-July-2021

Helix Park and The Kelpies

In 2003 the Falkirk Greenscape Initiative formed a plan to transform 350ha of land between Falkirk and Grangemouth into an ecopark and the centre of a network of footpaths connecting 16 local communities.

A major lottery grant enabled the park to open in 2013 and the Queen Elizabeth extension to the Forth and Clyde canal arrived a year later. In the 18th century the Forth and Clyde allowed sea-going vessels to cross the narrowest part of Scotland, saving long and dangerous voyages around the north. Over time its use declined, it fell into disrepair and closed in 1963. Rediscovered in the 1990s it was refurbished and reopened in 1999 as a leisure facility. The extension to Helix Park gave it a new starting point - the Kelpies Hub.

The Kelpies, Helix Park, Falkirk

The Kelpies, the work of sculptor Andy Scott, had been commissioned for this spot and they were installed in 2014. In Scottish folklore, kelpies are shape-shifting spirits inhabiting lakes or rivers. Usually horse-like creatures they are able to adopt human form, though often retaining their hooves.

One of the Kelpies, Helix Park, Falkirk

Scott’s 30m high kelpies are undoubtedly water spirits, but they also commemorate the horses that pulled the barges on the canals. Full of life and vigour, The Kelpies have been a popular and critical success. The park was crowded with locals on a Sunday afternoon and we were not the only visitors who had come just to see the kelpies.

The Falkirk Wheel

The best way to get from the Kelpies to the Falkirk wheel is by canal, but our time was limited so we drove the 8km from from Grangemouth to half way between Falkirk and Bonnybridge (without ever leaving the built-up area).

The Union Canal, running from Edinburgh to Falkirk, closed two years after the Forth and Clyde and was similarly restored in the 1990s. The reconnection of the two canals was a millennium project.

The Union Canal is much higher than the Forth and Clyde, a problem the original builders solved with a flight of 11 locks. Unfortunately, it took the best part of a day to make the ascent/descent which washed 3,500 tonnes of water from the Union Canal. A better solution, the restorers decided, was a boat lift, and the result is the Falkirk wheel.

The Union Canal is carried to the wheel on a new aqueduct.

A narrow boat approaches the wheel, though there is still a final lock to go through

At the wheel the boat enters a caisson which can carry up to 4 canal boats, the gates are closed...

Boats are loaded top and bottom and the wheel is ready to turn.

The wheel rotates. Boat(s) can be carried up at the same time as they are brought down. The whole process takes ten minutes and there is no net water transfer between the canals.

The Falkirk Wheel turns

If it were possible for something to be grossly over-engineered, yet elegant and simple, this would be it. It was designed to last 120 years – I hope enough boats will pass through to make building it a worthwhile investment.

Scotland 2023 (so far)

Part 1 Falkirk
Part 2 Banff and Macduff
Part 5 A Rainy Day in Dumfries (1) Robert Burns