East Linton 15miler Saturday 9th
Feb.
Today's theme was signs. Plenty of
them, along the riverside John Muir trails on which we jogged for 7.5
out and 7.5 back. Some good, some bad. We had planned on the Gullane
10, maybe 12 if it was panning out well, but the van decided we were
going to East Linton. We were on the A1 chatting about this and that
and drove right past the Haddington turn off. Next stop Dunbar. So
after nipping back to East Linton, parked near the co-op and set off
towards Sunny Dunny along the JM paths.
This is traditional Winter Fling
training ground so possibly a sub-conscious effort on someone's
behalf, though we were both surprised to find ourselves there. I
didn't like to mention how hungry I was as the co-op was the only
decent shop we would pass 15 miles later. (I once mistakenly tried to
get something to eat in Dunbar – went into a garage shop and
accidentally bought a Pepperami. Lordy, you wouldn't make that
mistake twice.) I knew the pace would be “relaxed” because when
Mary increased the speed over rough ground it felt like she was being
stabbed in the pulled muscles in her ribs.
Preston Mill
Sign of Spring
Sign of Farmer
Sprouts anyone?
I love this run as you come to the
estuary. Up till then its on muddy trails skirting round fields and
farmers tracks. Then all of a sudden the Tyne Sands open out and if
the tide is out the place is hoaching with sea birds and there is a
handsome long view to the pine woods and sea beyond. The tide was in
– all the better that we were here, rather than Gullane.
The next
part, on twisty single track and undulating paths round gorse bushes
and WWII concrete cubes is testing and I hung back taking photos and
messing around, sensing the gathering storm of Mary. I would have
been tempted to stick with the coast, crossing the bridge and going
left on the sandy trails between the sea and trees. Mary took the
straightest line which follows the fenced edge of the Kids' Farm
place. Difficult to find info on this I presume it to be EastLinks Farm though I have never approached it from the front. Only ever coming
from this angle and the delightful surprise of the perimeter fence of
the llamas, goats and donkeys. The llamas are indifferent to runners
but I once saw one go bat-shit (technical term) when an inquisitive
large dog went close by, presumably triggering the wolf-alarm
response. 4 goats were far more interactive and only needed the bribe
of a handful of grass to come galloping over for a chat.
Belhaven Bay marks the end of the nice
stuff in this direction for a while. I have run here lots, last time
with Willie J and Richard D as the warm down after the Multi-Terrain
10 miler, and often I feel spirits fall going round the golf course
perimeter and subsequent cliff top run. I suppose the threat of being
winged by a golf ball isn't terribly relaxing, but also the view
changes from pretty, sandy bays to jaggy red rock and stony beaches
that even when the sun is out you'd be hard pushed to call scenic. We
had a mile of this which took us most of the way to the Swimming Pool
before turning around at 7.5 miles and retracing our route. I was
wondering if I was being a bit harsh about Dunbar but as soon as we
got back to the bridge to nowhere and the JM Trail I felt the
gloom lift and enjoyed the sandy paths back through the woods. I
stopped and coaxed the goats from the other end of the field. They
came running with an evident enthusiasm and we had quite a chat and
photo session before I felt I should press on and catch up with Mary.
Bridge to Nowhere
If I had endless time I'd change the message to Dangerous Breakdancing
but I don't so you'll have to imagine it.
My Garmin said 7.5 here so I waited till Mary's said 7.5 about 50 yards later then turned around.
I spent the remainder of the run trying
not to wish it was over and that I was buying armfuls of produce in
the co-op. I had forgotten to make a note of the closing times and
was concerned it might be shut. I also spent some time trying to work
out the difference or indeed the similarity between East Linton and
West Linton. I found it hard to keep both in my head at the same
time. No doubt because West Linton (originally Lyntoun Roderyck)
(Llyn being a lake or pool) is in the Tweeddale committee area
(formerly Peebleshire) of the Scottish Borders and East Linton (from
Linn a waterfall) is in East Lothian. Bet you wished you never asked.
The last bridge crossing before exiting
the John Muir riverside path into East Linton has a couple of gravity
utilising gates whereby a weight on a chain closes the gate behind
you. It has a nicely balanced movement of good yet simple engineering
and the feel it will last till gravity itself fails. I would have
taken a photo except I was holding it open for
she-who-must-be-obeyed.
It wasn't quite dark when we ran down
the hill to the co-op. I had been thinking about rolls filled with
Hoola Hoops for the last 4 miles and was delighted to buy four
low-end cheese baps and scoff them almost without stopping for breath
between handfuls of Hula Hoops. You do have to scrub your hands for
20 minutes in the shower afterwards to get the toxins and e numbers
off but its worth it.
The van was fired up and pointed
towards home but once more it chose a remarkably convoluted route to
get there. Since we had nothing better to do than chat and listen to
classic fm (till it became unbearable and I put on an mp3 player,) it
all worked out pretty well.
You could have stopped by coastkid HQ for hot food... well except i was probably out somewhere on the coast!
ReplyDeleteSmeaton Mill is an amazing place. It suffers floods that would require a modern building to be demolished, yet after 400 years it can/or could if asked still grind grain to flour...
Nice one! Lauderdale Cafe is a nice old rustic place in the old bowling green at Lauderdale, Dunbar - all home made stuff and really nice - recommended if you need some calories mid or end of run.
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