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A stretch of the legs and acclimatisation to hill walking at the start of a week in August/September.
Staying in East Lothian, we wanted to get some fresh air, views and a scenic ruin or two seemed tempting also. I drove via Gifford and used a small carpark beside an arm of the Whiteadder reservoir.
Passed through a gate, along a track for several minutes beside some forestry. Then several minutes more before turning right and gently uphill.
- Track up towards Gamelshiel
The grassy hill track seemed not to get much traffic (apart, perhaps, from walkers) but brought us up to the ruins of the castle (a small tower house, by the looks of it, with just two opposite corners and some of their walls surviving). A lot of the stone had probably been reused, including for a circular sheepfank nearby.
- Sheepfank and Castle ... spot the difference!
Then we continued with the track - rather than following the route suggestions to head north and uphill through heather. Though, after the track petered out, we still needed to walk through some flowering heather to join a vehicle track up the back of the hill.
- Up through the heather
The summit area features a good-sized cairn and a trig point in good repair. There's also a grouse butt (probably the reason for the track) and views to an enormous windfarm covering Dunbar Common eastwards. I forget how many turbines I counted, but there were something like 140 in view from just that spot, quite probably more.
- Spartleton Edge cairn
We turned left (northwest) to make more of a circuit and follow the track down. This also offered a gentler descent; my brother had fairly early decided, or been told by his legs, that hills were too much trouble.
We passed more grouse-butts, peat turves (probably related to grouse-management) and a fence/gate. Then underneath a row of electricity pylons - large, but dwarfed by the turbines beyond. This brought us to a junction of several tracks, then a Herring Road, part of a network of old tracks that led between fishing ports on the coast and borders towns or villages inland.
- Herring Road signpost
This track led us southwest downhill, to the foot of a sheltered little glen. We could see a minor road on the opposite side of the glen, but preferred to walk in the greener surroundings, pausing partway to take some lunch.
- Grassy track back down the glen
Then some more gentle strolling brought us past the mouth of Gamelshiel Cleugh to rejoin the track from the carpark. We visited Yester Castle (the Goblin Ha') on the way back, so got to see a second, much more dramatic set of ruins to round off the day.
- View up towards Gamelshiel