From C 2 B: Cardross to Bowling via Carman Hill Fort and Dumbarton


The route follows from the station at Cardross past the bombed out church at the bottom of the Carman Road, and up.... The road is a quiet single track moor road and is very peaceful and not too strenuous. There are several interesting things along the way, not least the old St. Peter's Seminary (Kilmahew House) which is currently being converted into pokey little flats, I believe. To the west of the train station is Geilston Gardens (kept by the National Trust) which has some enormous big redwoods amongst others. Well worth a detour if you haven't been already. 

Up at the top of the Carman Road, you will see Carman Hill and a path that leads up to it. You can wheel the bike up, the path is steep here but cyclable, or tie your metal hoss up at one of the gates and walk the kilometre or so up to the summit, and the remains of the old Roman camp. Back onto the Carman Road, we follow it down through Renton and onto the Sustrans cycle path which will either take us north to Balloch (about three miles) or south to Dumbarton (about the same) and onwards on car-free paths to Bowling. A beautiful cycle ride, no longer than 2-3 hours all in.



From C to C it might as well be, because down here, doon the watter, the river is estuarine and tidal.... You get a sense of the sea even in Govan but aside Cardross or even Bowling you get a sense of the ocean...

Sea smells, spring light, capacious body-mind....

 Staring at the sea. What an exit from the train station at Cardross!!


 Opposite, Port Glasgow, Greenock... the hills of Inverclyde.


 From atop Carman Hill, the views are amazing.... 


 Looking south-east towards Dumbarton Rock.


 Looking north-east to Alexandria and beyond.






















Back on the 'coast' here at Bowling train station for the twenty minute train ride back to Partick.

Cycling Through a Muddy Lane One Late Winter's Morning


If you can excuse my bedraggled map, the route here is the sustrans path from Paisley Canal (the cycle path flows out from the train station platform!!) towards Bridge of Weir. About a mile or so before Bridge of Weir, just past Brookfield and a few metres or so past the bridge over the Locher Water, take the ramp down to the country road and follow the orange dotted line on map towards Houston and past Crosslee. The roads here are quiet apart from the main road running through Crosslee. The little lane we want to get on is just at the bus stop after turning right at the roundabout. Take this lane which will join up with Kirk Road and lead you down to Houston. 


From Houston, follow dotted orange line past St. Peter's well (in a field) and into the eponymous muddy lane which will take us onto the main road. Turn right onto main  road and follow for a few hundred metres past the small row of houses and then take the left lane back into the Renfrewshire Leisure Lanes towards Haddockston. Just follow blue line down to Barscube Hill which you can walk over with bike in tow (and down through Langbank Golf Course) or cycle round. From here, it's all the way down to the station at Langbank.


The damp and mossy Kirk Road. Just look at the life here etched into that wall, or indeed the whorls on those old growth trees.


 Houston Kirk with tree and bicycle. 




The swagger of Houston House behind the kirk.... Again, some wonderful old trees and plenty of birds inhabiting them.



The forested top of Barochan Hill from near Barscube hill. Once the site of a Roman hillfort, it offers great views across the valley and estuary.



Tramping through a muddy lane has its upside: the yearning for that warm shower when you get home! Today, you've earned it.



 Beware of bottomless murky pools......!




From Langbank Station, the light emerges right on cue.... as we see another trawler, weighed down with cargo, heading into the city.





The Beckoning: From City to Space in a Matter of Minutes

Entities in motion transcend their own already achieved degree of actuality in being drawn into an ever intensifying being.

Philosophy, God, and Motion, Simon Oliver


...philosophy is essentially , at least at its beginning, a search for the origin, and it is in this sense that one could say that every human being is philosophizing - insofar as it is always and from the beginning unsettled about its origin.

Bernard Stiegler, Acting Out


When you go into the land as often as I do, every day practically, into the hills, the gentle peaks, the quiet lanes, the lochs and shores, you sort of realize a different universe from the one that presents itself to you in the nature-depleted city. That goes without saying I think. Yet, there is another dimension to going into the land that is not so obvious, not so much in the way (ob + viam) as the very way itself, of which 'you' are a part. This is why the wandering Jesus could say I am the Way, the Truth and the Life, and why another aborigine (are we not, at heart, all ab-origine?) Frans Hoogland, living in western Australia, can say:

…we have to walk the land… when the land start pulling you, you’re not even aware you’re walking - you’re off. You’re gone… you might follow the eagle flying… then another might grab your attention, and before you know there’s a path that’s created  that is connected to you. It belongs to you and that is the way you start to communicate with the land, through your path experiences. You become very aware about yourself. You start to tune finer and finer. Then you become aware that when you’re walking the path, it’s coming out of you - you are connected to it. See, you are that land, and the land is you. There’s no difference…

The draw and pull of the land. The lure of the local. The Way of Being.

The Swedish vagabond-writer (and Nobel Prize winner) Harry Martinson once wrote something very similar way back when he was tramping the back roads of his native Sweden, that the path was 'coming out of you'... that the path wasn't out there, that it originated within and came out of you as you moved. 

The origin is the engine in other words.

And the engine is your own locomotive-locating force.

Much of this origin, however, has now been hijacked and corrupted by modern day comfort, ease and convenience. To the point where we now think of land and human as separate, just as we 'think' that the path and the walker (or cyclist) are separate. But of course, we're not thinking, are we? We're just hanging on to second hand protocols, and dusty conventions handed down by even dustier people, which do nothing but further jeopardize the land and ourselves. Thinking emerges out of solitude and space. And one's own locomotive force. To give these 'qualities' up is akin to committing something of an existential suicide. Akin to lobotomizing oneself. Which may explain the prevalence of depression and ill-health pervading our apparently 'first-world' and 'developed' society. 

Yet, the answer is never far away. The greater Glasgow strath abounds with opportunity to 'unformat your disc' and cleanse the self of the distortion and pollution that modernity has imposed upon you. Today, it was a short cycle (no more than 8 miles or so along flat car-free paths) from Dalmuir train station to Loch Lomond (and the train back from Balloch). An hour and fifteen minutes is all it took me at a gentle pace, and it was all I needed to open up that third eye called Mind (or equally Heart). The 30 minute train journey back passing hills and estuary affords all the time required to harvest those endorphins and set the world aright again.

In brief, the beacon (Lomond, from the Scots Gaelic, Laomainn, 'Beacon'  ...) beckoned.  And I went.























 The idyllic little Bowling Harbour, a paragon of peace on a quiet March weekday morning.



With excellent views across the estuary to Barscube Hill (at 194m, one of the finest small hills in the world!), and Knocknowe plantation behind Kilmacolm.






















The black River Leven and the empty path aside it, that runs all the way from Dumbarton to Balloch without so much the smell of a car exhaust. The bird activity in the herbaceous borders was incredible, so take the bins with you if you're keen on getting closer.





















Loch Lomond. I arrived at around the back of midday and have never seen the place so quiet. Perfect! And if you're still on withdrawal from the city, there are shops and cafes, and Sea-Life...

The Birth to Presence on the 11.23 to Kilpatrick

...how in the wake of western ontologies to conceive the coming, the birth that characterizes being...

Jean Luc Nancy, The Birth to Presence


What is presence? What is birth?

Nancy states that, 'birth is not the constitution of an identity but the endless departure of an identity from, and from within, its other or others. Its coming is not desire but jouissance, the joy of averring oneself to be continually in the state of being born, a rejoicing of birth, a birth of rejoicing'.

As for presence, we should conceive of presence as 'presence to someone, including to presence itself'.

A coming as an arriving....

Arrival as presence, as awakeness to truth...

Poetry as the presentation of presence, but of course presence cannot be re-presented without first diluting it and then destroying it.

So, how to conceive of presence?

Take the train,with the bicycle in tow, to the foot of the hills.... and then use the foot to tow being into presence itself.















































































15 Million Merits

I'm very careful about watching television. After all, I have read Jerry Mander's seminal Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television, and Neil Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death. I've also lived without a television set for the most part of my adult(erated) life. I actually resent the fact that not having a television I am not only in the tiny minority (which doesn't bother me) but that I am considered suspicious for doing so. This comes in the form of the threatening letter (with bold capitalized words in red ink!!) that the TV Licensing folk send out every two years to make sure you still do not have a television set. I resent the insinuations that I am somehow considered abnormal and thus defective for doing so. Alas! the palaver mindful and considerate human beings have to put up with.

At any rate, last night I did watch a TV program (at a friend's house in case the good folk at TV Licensing are watching) called Black Mirror, and specifically an episode called 15 Million Merits. I had come across it by accident as I was looking at an actor's resume on the Internet movie database site. The actor was Daniel Kaluuya who was in the news for his performance in the film Get Out. I was kind of wondering why he had been nominated for a best actor oscar since his performance here was not all that wonderful. So I searched out what else he had done and found this episode here, set in the near future where the hoi polloi cycle on treadmills in windowless gyms (hamsters in a lab) to earn enough credits to set themselves free. 

A wonderful piece of television, though I haven't seen any of the other episodes... which illustrated the gulf of difference not only between 'wild-cycling' outdoors and cycling in a gym in front of a television, but which offered an insight into the state of modern day affairs, and its talent-laden trajectory. 

So, forget about merit and talent.... and focus on genius.... 

As the latter day saint Simone Weil once wrote, genius is 'the supernatural virtue of humility in the domain of thought', whereas talent is marked by a pride that exalts personal achievement and never reaches 'the impersonal good'.