Arran from Barassie beach |
I walked along the beach towards the Ballast bank and as you can see from the picture the clouds were full of colour, but it did bring back the rhyme, 'red sky in the morning, shepherds warning', was there to be snow around?
The starting point is the Ballast Bank, a famous landmark in Troon, and even the short gain in height improves the views. From here you have a superb 360 degree panoramic view and if you have picked a good clear air day you will enjoy this spot. If it is the end of your walk, which it will be for most people, remember the Wee Hurrie at the harbour for great fish & chips.
Wee Hurrie |
It all depends on the weather but the Pow burn is more than likely to be running too high and deep to cross without getting your feet wet so follow the track up into the dunes and walk along and skirt the caravan park.
Pow Burn |
Troon bay |
At the end of the promenade you can walk round the point, weather dependant, but the tide today means I am cutting in slightly and walking along the edge of another golf course, Prestwick St Nicholas. There is a well defined path so you cannot get lost. Do take care here as you are very close to a landing area for drives. Despite the cold weather plenty of golfers are on the course, good for them, I prefer playing in warmer weather, wimp that I am.
After this you drop down onto a large, rundown, promenade and realise you are moving into an industrial area (Newton) on the fringes of Ayr.
Looking towards the industrial port of Ayr |
You have now reached the Citadel leisure complex. This area was originally a walled fortress built by Cromwell, with a full on military barracks, hence the name. There are some ruins of the fortress left. The route takes you through the new apartments that have swallowed up the area, some look good but some are looking a bit tatty already.
My walk is just about finished, the new boots are starting to rub a bit so enough for today, I go along the promenade and cut back in to the town passing the Courthouse and the following plaque which gives some very interesting historical info about the areas of the low & high green which we are standing at.
If you go back to the High Street you can follow signs to the Auld Kirk and its graveyard with some very old gravestones from the Covenanter era. Follow the river and you can cross the Auld Brig, immortalised by Rabbie Burns, the end of this stretch of the coastal path for me.
All in all a very enjoyable walk and with that low sun in my face for most of it I really should have put some lotion on, my face feels a bit skelpt!! The app drains my battery but tells me that the total from house to finish a shade over 14 miles.
In the above photo that is looking back to Troon from the beach near the Marine Hotel, you can see the black streaks in the sand, a legacy of the coal mining within this area.
The last photo shows the sea just off the ballast bank looking towards the Carrick Hills, at that point, the grey sky hinted off a poor day ahead but it was just a storm passing over. what a contrast to the top picture in this blog taken just a few minutes earlier.
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