Here I am again . . . tagging along with my wife on her golf tournament. I dropped her off at Duff House Royal Golf Club and set off for a little photographic expedition to the coastal villeges nearby: Banff and MacDuff. This is the village center of Banff.
Banff is a very old village. It had its first castle in 1163, build to repel the invading Vikings.
Banff is a more prosperous village. It was a trading center until the 1770s, when a port was constructed.
Banff is built up the side of a rather steel hill that rises up from a broad bay. There are still narrow walking paths that give the only access to quaint cottages.
A typical 17th century house in Banff.
Banff is a lovely village. It is just big enough to offer all the amenities, but small enough to still feel like a village. I could see living in this house (it's for sale) on street off the bay.
There are a couple of scaled-down 'supermarkets' in Banff, but the downtown is still vibrant, owing to the fact that the nearest mall is 50 miles away.
There are several quaint old hotels in town.
I couldn't resist snooping around the fascinating old cemetery . . . right in the middle of the village.
I come from a very wet place (Western Oregon in the USA), so I understand this kind of moss.
There were several extraordinary crypts and carved grave covers.
Just so your survivors wouldn't have to wonder what happened to you . . . you put a skull and bones on your grave marker. [Note to self: do not have horizontal grave stone in rainy environment.]
I decided to walk back through old town Banff toward the sea and the jetty. These are the oldest continuously inhabited buildings in Banff, dating from the mid-14th century.
Being such a very old village, there were, of course, a few buildings that were in full deterioration. My favorite photo subject!
House number 30.
I love the story of time and weather written on these old, unattended, doors.
House number 32. Nobody home.
The sea wall at high tide. I followed the wall out to the jetty next to a raging North Sea.
Crabbing and shrimping pots lined the old stone jetty.
I studied these for a few minutes, imagining myself as a crab, but I couldn't work out how these thing worked.
View from the jetty: A broad bay separates Banff from the even smaller village of MacDuff, seen on the horizon. This is where the River Deveron estuary ends in the North Sea.
Ther is a small light at the end of the jetty. At high tide the waves occasionally break over sea wall.
I was getting hungry, so I took a different street back to my car. I passed this relic of days gone bye.
I often ask myself, what is it about old doors that compel me to take a photograph? Something about mortality, I believe.
I made my way back to the village center and then on up the steep hill to a nice cafe and had a bowl of Cullen Skink, a scone, and a cup of coffee.
After lunch I decided to find the castle whose sign I saw driving in. My GPS said there was a castle only four miles away. I ended up on this gravel road through a beautiful wood.
I knew I was getting close to a castle when I started to see the old outbuildings.
I love these old abandoned stone houses. I have a fantasy each time of fixing it up and living in it.
Now I knew I was getting close . . . a castle gate house . . . and occupied too.
AH! There it is. A castle through the trees. I was not sure if this particular castle was occupied by the laird, or was open to the public. I was a little concerned someone would run our and yell at me that I was trespassing.
I stayed back in the trees, just in case . . .
Magnificent and stately Craigston Castle, built in 1604. As it turns out, you can stay in this castle as a "luxury self-catering vacation home." No kidding. You can make a booking here.
I left the castle for a short drive to the harbour village of MacDuff. We stayed in this village right after we moved to Scotland. In fact, it was the first over night stay we made.
MacDuff has a proper shipyard for refitting fishing boats.
Shipyards are visually intereting places. What in the world are these sharpened steel 'blades' used for? I have no idea.
The rust was thick, but the pattern and color was captivating.
Nice clean and newly painted fishing boats. I got lucky as the sun finally came out in the afternoon.
I could have stayed all day in the MacDuff shipyards, but my wife called to say her round was over. Great idea to affix these benches inside the seawall.
We drove on the A947 back to Aberdeen. We passed a sign for Fyvie Castle . . . and I couldn't resist going in. My wife hadn't been before.
Fyvie castle is a proper castle. Built in 1211, Fyvie was the site of an open-air court held by Robert the Bruce, and Charles I lived there as a child.
Fyvie Castle was closed, but the vast grounds and gardens were opened. I will post more from the fabulous gardens soon.