To reach Charles Hill in Aberdour one has to go a bit off the beaten track and also endure the horror of having to walk through part of a golf course. However, apart from that the walk is quite enjoyable with some spectacular views over the Forth to Inchcolm Island. So, on a busy summer’s day I set off from Aberdour Railway Station and off along the High Street on a pavement so narrow that it became a bit of a game of dodging other pedestrians and the cars that were whizzing by. Luckily, I made it without any misfortune befalling me, and turned down onto Beech Avenue. I followed this down to a narrow path that led through a field of cows who were being guarded by a very large black bull. Thankfully, there were a couple of fences between us, as I wouldn’t have fancied my chances if he’d taken a dislike to me. I then followed a path that ran around the fence of Braefoot Terminal and led to the staff car park there. At the back of that was another path that led into the far end of Aberdour Golf Course and down to a gate with a large sign on it stating – Lambs and Ewes, Keep Out. I assume the sign was for any passing sheep and a warning for them to keep out, as the land behind is quite obviously not used or suitable for pasture or farming. So, I climbed the gate and wandered on in.
Following
an overgrown path, I walked round to the concrete shells of various WWII
buildings. These were all long abandoned
and appeared to have gained a new use as drinking dens, given the amount of
beer bottles and spirit bottles lying around.
Inside some of the buildings the concrete floors were carpeted in broken
glass that crunched underfoot. Beer cans
lay scattered around along with empty cigarette packets and sandwich containers,
that were crushed and mouldering in the damp.
There was very little left in the buildings from their time of use other
than a few rusting iron bars on the walls.
Outside, on the rocky beach below lay various metal objects, their
identity and use hidden under decades of rust.
After
wandering around these buildings, I got back onto the path and made my way
round to the Monk’s Cave. The path takes
you so that you come out on top of what appears to be the cliff edge, with a
view over to Inchcolm Island in front of you and Braefoot Terminal to the
side. However, you are actually standing
on top of the Monk’s Cave in an area where there was once a building that would
have housed the travellers waiting to go over to the abbey on Inchcolm
Island. There is a steep path at the
side that then takes you down and to the entrance of the Monk’s Cave.
The
Monk’s Cave is not actually a cave at all, but rather it is the lower storey of
a building which was probably a shelter for those crossing to Inchcolm and also
a warehouse for goods being transported to the monastery on the island. The building was built into the side of the
cliff on which it stands, with part of the cliff being excavated for its
construction. The walls and entrance to
the remains of this building are believed to date from the late 15th
Century.
Inside
the cave it was damp, and the earthen floor was pitted with regular circles
from what I assume must be the dripping of water from above when it rains. So, its not much of a shelter anymore. The old stone walls are damp to the touch and
ferns grow out from the cracks and pits.
As I wandered around, clouds of midges rose from the damp ground, these
were not however the vicious Highland midges that can drive a man to madness
from the pain and itch of their gnawing and biting at his flesh, but rather
little Lowland midges that annoy and irritate, that get up your nose and into
your mouth as you breathe. So, given the
damp and the clouds of annoying insects, I can’t really imagine that any weary
traveller would want to spend the night here now.
I
left the Skulferatu that accompanied me on today’s walk in a gap in the walls
of the Monk’s Cave.
The
coordinates for the location of the Skulferatu are –
Latitude 56.038981
Longitude
-3.307354
I used the following sources for information on the Monk’s Cave –
The Royal Commission on
Ancient and Historical Monuments & Constructions of Scotland, Eleventh
Report with Inventory of Monuments and Constructions in the Counties of Fife,
Kinross, and Clackmannan (p99-100)
EDINBURGH
1933 (Reprinted 1935)
Canmore
Canmore
- Charles Hill, Monks' Cave
Article
and photographs are copyright of © Kevin Nosferatu, unless otherwise specified.