St Andrews – 26 February 2025

A wet day. Cold again with the wind blowing sheets of rain in from the east.

We walked in to the town after a late breakfast and were just in time to catch the number 99 bus from Dundee bus station to St Andrews bus station. It was a short run over to St Andrews that was made longer with the number of roadworks in progress. It’s the same every year. The councils have to spend their money by the end of March and this was almost the end of February, so much spending was evident.

We waked down the main street and you could tell the affluence of the town by the number of expensive shops and the wide streets. There were a few sales offers in evidence that brought some prices down to what I might have been happy to pay, except there were no camera shops as far as I could see.

We found a ruined castle beside the sea and Scamp discovered it was Historic Scotland, so we got in free with our HS cards. The ruin turned out to be St Andrews Castle, strangely enough! It would have been an interesting way to spend an hour if it hadn’t been for the almost constant drizzle. We did get a chance to watch a couple of Eurofighter Typhoons making noisy circuits around the bay, but we were both getting cold, so we found a Costa where we had what must have been the worst coffee in any Costa I’ve been in, and I’ve been in a few. The place was crammed, but not as crammed as one independent coffee shop we passed where William and Kate (whoever they are) had had their first coffee together, allegedly.

We walked back to the bus garage and got another number 99 bus that took us back to Dundee where we had a wander around the inside of V&A and found a complete rebuild of Mrs Cranston’s Tea Room. Apparently the original tea room was taken down piece by numbered piece from the Glasgow shop and rebuilt inside the V&A. Scamp was responsible for finding this online. An amazing construction. Very dark and very low ceilings. In another part of the V&A I found a scale drawing, hand drawn in ink, of part of the rail bridge which still carries trains across the Tay from Dundee to Wormit in Fife. The drawings looked almost exactly the same as drawings I’d done in the 1960s and nothing like the Autocad drawings produced nowadays.

We had a plate each of watered down soup in the V&A and watched the arial ballet performed by computer designed lights that looked like little ballet dancers.

It was a cold walk back to the hotel and we couldn’t decide where to go for food. On the way I went to Braithwaite’s and bought some decaf tea and some coffee beans. Then on our way back Scamp got a message from Shona to ask if everything was ok, because she’d heard about an explosion in Dundee city centre. After a bit of checking we discovered an electrical substation had indeed exploded and demolished a wall. This was in the morning and we knew nothing about it. Nobody was injured, thankfully.

Nearly 60 photos taken today and PoD went to a photo from the top deck of the V&A of somebody walking along the esplanade beside the Tay estuary.

Tomorrow we need to be packed and off home.