Fire jugglers
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Shakespeare mockers
|
Headless persons
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Spare parts
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And the normal weird stuff
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...recounts the retirement travels of Mark and Vicki Sherouse since 2008...in Asia and the Pacific, New Zealand, Europe, South America, and Africa, as well as the US and Canada. Our website, with much practical information, is: https://sites.google.com/site/theroadgoeseveron/.Contact us at mark.sherouse@gmail.com or vsherouse@gmail.com.
Fire jugglers
|
Shakespeare mockers
|
Headless persons
|
Spare parts
|
And the normal weird stuff
|
Backdrop of Tattoo, Edinburgh Castle
|
Massed bagpipe bands
|
There were other bands, this one from Tonga
|
And this one from Xian, China. I wondered how many Scots and others at the
Tattoo knew of Xian, China's 4th largest city, with a population about twice that of Scotland |
The drum corps from Basel nearly stole the show
|
More massed bands at the end
|
Finale: the Lone Piper on the Battlements
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And then, of course, the Fireworks
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Royal Mile was bustling on Saturday morning
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Looking across Waverly Bridge
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More cityscape
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Tasting at a Royal Mile whiskey shop...my first Bruichladdich, an Islay, smoky,
fiery; Vicki always asks for a taste, sniffs, then hands it to me for further investigation... |
Cadenhead's is Edinburgh's oldest whiskey shop...the first to bottle scotch, way
back in 1842; introduced me to single malts in 1989 |
Cadenhead price list for bottling direct from the independent
single malt producers |
The whole book festival is held in Charlotte Square, in the Georgian New Town. Well, the book festival itself is held in temporary structures on the square. Very compact... but nice. |
Here is the authors' yurt |
And the whole thing proceeds a few blocks from the Walter Scott Memorial, one of the more impressive literary tributes around |
A Highland bovine in the Mortonhall complex; this is what a hippie longhorn
would look like |
One sees all manner of rigs; this world-traveler is from Switzerland
|
Another half hour and it is driveable |
You have been warned |
Priory ruins; originally founded by Cuthbert and associates in 7th century, destroyed by Vikings, reestablished in 11th or 12th century; Dissolved by Henry VIII in 1539; etc. Now a national heritage site. |
More priory ruins |
Statue of Cuthbert |
Castle (14th century I think) from priory |
View of village and priory from castle |
Bamburgh Castle, several miles further down the coast |
Durham Cathedral from the west |
South door knocker...for sanctuary |
Nave; first use of ribbed vaulting |
Carved pillars; non-Christian designs? |
Window treatment |
St. Cuthbert shrine; more of him later |
Venerable Bede shrine; England's first historian |
Note the almost Moorish look in this chapel |
South side view |
Cloisters, abbey adjoining |
Holy roller |