After a couple on months riding the CBF250 it was good to
get my SV650 out for a short run in (almost) spring-like weather.
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I always enjoy this view near the village of Carmichael. |
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Local flooding |
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Lunch al fresco in Biggar |
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This stone marks the source of the River Tweed |
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This boggy field is where the mighty river starts |
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A simple cairn at the roadside marks a tragedy |
The text was hard to photograph but it's a short version of
this:
From the Gazetteer for Scotland
A modest memorial sitting beside the Cross Burn and next to
the A701 road 5½ miles (9 km) north of Moffat,
the Mail Coach Monument (or Postie Stone) was erected in 1931 to commemorate
James McGeorge and John Goodfellow, respectively the guard and driver of the
mail coach bound from Dumfries to Edinburgh, who died from exposure in a fierce
snow-storm on the 1st February 1831. The pair had been forced to abandon their
coach, yet fought onwards through the snow with the mail bags before succumbing
close to the head of the Cross Burn. They had taken the coach-horses, who
survived and managed to reach a local farm, thereby raising the alarm. The men
were buried in the Old Churchyard in Moffat
and fondly remembered by the towns-folk for their dedication to their duty.
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Moffat |
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Muirkirk totem pole |
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