Kilpatrick to Milngavie via Duncolm






















Kilpatrick train station is our starting point bottom left, with Milngavie train station our end point mid right. The route is the black line (dotted across the grassy path part) trying to ignore all the other lines while we're at it... Left Kilpatrick at 10.35am, arriving at a leisurely pace with plenty of stops en route, at Milngavie at 1.50pm. 























 From the top of Duncolm



 




















Looking down from Duncolm to Lily Loch and Burncrooks Reservoir (in the distance)


  




















The idyllic Lily Loch


 




















Looking back at Duncolm 























Having a rest at Burncrooks Reservoir






Around the Great Cape: Darnycaip and Back

Breakout: Getting Out of the Comfort Zone

It never fails to amaze me just how close we are to the peripheral hills. Even without the slingshot of the train, it is no great feat to cycle all the way into the back of beyond from the city centre. I often think that it is the complete opposite with some cities, that to get out of the city is almost impossible, like breaking out of a high security prison. 

This 'high security' has a lot to do with it I imagine, for as soon as you leave your comfort zone - those places that you are familiar with and feel safe in - things can take on a whole different feel. One's 'bearings' are thrown off, and one's familiarity too is gone. In comes strangeness and uncertainty. Yet this is when your brain and body really starts to work, when it finds itself in unfamiliar territory. In the comfort zone, people operate on 'safe mode' which is why they can stare into their little phones whilst negotiating the landscape. But to be in an unfamiliar setting is to be on high alert, naturally. One's wits and werwithal prick up like antenae trying to get some feel for where you are and where you might be going. These 'antenae' have been corrupted if not entirely corroded by the imposition of (false) technology (that is not Nature herself). We have lost the ability to tune in to the land, to attune to the elements, to listen to the animals, precisely because we have spent too much time in the comfort zone. And yet, this comfort zone is actually some kind of prison that satiates you, that fills you full of nonsense so that you cannot feel any more. You become submissive, obedient, and needy, just like your dogs. It is thus that the human becomes a pet, and a domesticated (and thus dominated) being. This domination extends itself to the domination not just of the human but of nature herself, so that now, the only antenae that exist are the corporate ones that fill our heads so full of nonsense. Nature becomes threatening under the corporate mandate, good enough reason to cut it down and replace it with the reassuring safety of concrete and iron.

And yet, to enter a place where one has left the beaten track, where one does not know what lies around the corner is a real thrilling experience. In fact, that's exactly what it is: experience. We are experiencing...! Maybe for the first time in many years, maybe even for the first time ever. Experience can only ever occur when we leave the prison of our own accord.

Life itself, at least that life that man has made for himself, is all about the tunnelling out of, for the life that man has actually made for himself is not life itself but a kind of slow-coming dark. When you finally break out, after crawling through a kilometre of sewage, you will see the prison behind you, and Nature will consume you. The feeling will be one of deep joy, and release, a release that will soon inculcate a real ease with who and where you are, wherever that may be.

Freedom is nothing after all, becoming free heavenly....



Tambowie & Tomibeg: Around Carneddans Wood





Sounds like a pop duo, Tam Bowie and Tommy Beg: and maybe it was at some point, but here, it's definitely not pop, but elemental rain-washed music...

Going into places like this feels like you're entering a domain where no man has ever stepped. It's a profound aboriginal feeling that reunites yourself with your Self. It helped today that there was a mist rolling over these hills and a light drizzle coming down. It all helped to create a primordial landscape that ruptures the carved out man and evokes your real animal self. Just walking across this spongy quick-moss, sinking in as you go, returns to you a sense of wildness, primitiveness (and primacy). It is this primacy that galvanizes Being and Mind.

We are so fortunate in Glasgow in having this halo of hills around us, into which we can insert ourselves and emerge as more understanding human beings. The thinking (a function of spacing) that occurs in these places is like a diamond. It cuts right through the claptrap, and reveals the core of Being.

It is this core that confronts the man-made nonsense of tamedness, the word 'tame' deriving from the Proto-Indo-European root meaning to subdue, or to break (as in to break a horse in). Man is thus fashioned with bridles and saddles so that others may ride and profit from him. But not up here. Up here, one shakes off the domesticated spirit and emerges into wildness if only for a couple of hours. But this wildness is all-powerful and ignites the system like a match lighting tinder. And if you've got enough 'spunk' (the word spunk comes from the Old Irish 'sponcc' meaning spark), you have yourself a bona fide bonfire that lights up Being...

























The Odyssey: Cadder - Blairskaith - Dougalston



What an absolute joy these backroads are around Torrance, Blairskaith, Baldernock etc. I fell upon them almost by accident, cutting off from the canal towpath and heading through Torrance. It is a remarkably lightly populated area, with more space per capita it would appear than any other area in the greater Glasgow valley. No wonder then that the Mastermind himself, Magnus Magnusson, chose to live here (at Blairskaith House pictured below). Incidentally, he is buried in the small new cemetery at Baldernock which we pass on our way to Dougalston and the train back from Milngavie.





























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.