The centre of town thronged with middle aged couples accompanied by slightly embarrassed looking teens. It's the first of the fact finding weekends for youngsters ( and accompanying parents ) thinking of coming to study here in September. The hotel restaurants are full of mothers showing a dutiful interest in course requirements while fathers sip G&T's and quietly calculate just how many weekends a year they could spend here playing golf dutifully visiting the apple of their eye. Some will love the place. Others will wonder how anyone could live somewhere so small and remote. There's an air of new beginnings and new adventures. You don't think of laughter filling the streets of a small Presbyterian town like this but sometimes it does.
Out here at The Last Wee House Before Denmark there's a glorious sunrise. Another warm day is in forecast before the skies turn grey on Tuesday. Our walk along the path to the shore disturbs hundreds of crows who take to the air in one huge flock. They craw in irritation. Crows are what the Scots would call ' gan canny' creatures.
What colour remains in the farmers garden looks muted but is in its own way as memorable as it was in high summer.
With all the bright eyed youngsters in town this seemed an apt view on life :https://substack.com/home/post/p-175837497
Some Lou Reed I'd never heard before :https://www.getthemelt.com/p/lou-reeds-beautiful-halloween-dirge
Nietszche and the boredom of English Sabbaths :https://www.edwest.co.uk/p/bleak-sabbath
Tacit knowledge :https://www.econlib.org/library/columns/y2025/klingbreakneck.html
The video for new students ( you have to click on the explore tab and then the video link ) has a very 'drone on acid ' feel to it :https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/study/explore/#section-thetown
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