TITLE: Weekend walk on the Southern Upland Way and John Muir Link
DATE: 2019-01-13
AUTHOR: John L. Godlee
====================================================================


At the weekend, we made up a walk that took in some of the end of 
the Southern Upland Way and some of the old John Muir Way, now 
known as the John Muir Link.

  [Southern Upland Way]: 
https://www.walkhighlands.co.uk/borders/longformacus-cocksburnpath.s
html
  [John Muir Link]: 
https://www.walkhighlands.co.uk/lothian/dunbar-dunglass.shtml

We set off from Abbey St. Bathans and over the Gurkha bridge, along 
the river Whiteadder then up into the Lammermuir Hills towards the 
coast. The first part of the walk was mainly through upland fields, 
with a mix of little bits of plantation woodland and small roads 
and tracks. Then as we descended towards the A1 and over the other 
side (which required actually walking over the A1!) we entered 
Pease Dean, which is a nice bit of woodland and pine plantation 
where we spent the night.

  ![Gorse 
bushes](/img/suw/gorse.png)](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/suw/gor
se.jpg)

  ![Path through 
plantation](/img/suw/pease.png)](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/suw
/pease.jpg)

We both took bivvy bags and I set up a tarp over the top of us, to 
guard against the rain but also to bring a sense of coziness. We 
brought potatoes and broccoli which we fried in my trangia with 
some leftover bacon grease, then in the morning we had some coffee 
using the kettle. Leftover film canisters are my new preferred 
method of taking small pots of grease, spices, coffee, etc. out on 
hikes.

  ![Tarp](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/suw/tarp.jpg)

  ![Trangia 
cooking](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/suw/trangia.jpg)

The next day we walked to Cockburnspath in the morning and stocked 
up on food at the village shop, which was open at 10:00 on a 
Sunday. On the cliffs behind Pease Bay we spent a good while 
watching the surfers trying to beat out through the breaking waves. 
After Cockburnspath the path is nice and varied through some 
woodland and down to the coast, then it's a mix of cliffs and beach 
to Torness Nuclear Power Station. The power station is a weird 
feature of the walk. There is a substantial concrete walkway all 
around the seaward perimeter of the site and that is where the rout 
directs you. It's pretty brutalist in its appearance and it's fun 
to get so close to the power station, which I see from the train a 
lot.

  ![Tree on cliff](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/suw/tree.jpg)

  ![Bay and power 
station](https://johngodlee.xyz/img_full/suw/cliffs.jpg)

Trekking the last bit of the route is a bit boring. The golf course 
at Dunbar goes right up to the coast and walkers are forced to 
skirt around the edge of it. But then it's an easy walk into town 
towards the train station.

Here is a shapefile of our route