The Water Tower

The Water Tower
The Water Tower at Dusk

Saturday, March 29, 2014

A Bridge To Nowhere

A Bridge To Nowhere - Ironmills Memorial Bridge

March 29th 2014.

Little more than a year since the access steps from Cemetery Road to Iromills Park were restricted for access due to land slip, it is reported that a six figure sum will be required to make good the land erosion. There’s no clear guidance whether that includes the cost of replacing the access steps and associated works.

That leaves the Memorial Footbridge built in 1913 at the bottom of the steps as a “bridge to nowhere”.

Not so very long ago I had hoped that the bridge would be cleaned up and re painted in time for its centenary in 2013. Instead it’s looking as if 2013 could mark its potential demise by lack of use. 

I’m seeking assurance that the bridge will be protected and cared for. Why? Read on. 

Why was the bridge built and what is its history?

The bridge simply connects Ironmills Park to Cemetery Road at one of the steepest part of the gorge cut by the North River Esk. It was built 4 years after the Duke of Buccleuch gifted Ironmills Park to the town on the occasion of His Grace’s Golden Wedding.
















Photo from Del Hanlon. Date of photograph 1913




Dedication of the park. Photo 2014.


The bridge was designed by Charles Greig and it was listed as grade B in March 1992 by Historic Scotland, ID 24429. Its post-code is EH22 3BL.

In 1967 there is a report of a subsidence survey to assess possible mining related damage to the bridge. Dated 12/07/1967, the existence of this survey is recorded in the Scottish Mining Museum web site. I have never seen the report.




Photo from the Mining Museum web site. Date of Photograph 1967



To see the bridge throughout time, Canmore Images is a great source of photographs. Here are 2 examples.


The bridge and the water tower


View from the West






Possible Date of Photos.
 - re your request about the photo, I did a bit digging……I reckon that the photos were, almost certainly, taken at the same time,and, probably, by the guy who wrote the 'paper' …….. winter-time, early 70's. They just don't look like early 20th century photos to me, with the combination of image 'quality' and the shape. They also have a 'snapshot' air about them (tower's leaning in the one you posted), which the early photographers couldn't afford to do with their glass plates. Image copyright also belongs to 'John Hume'.
And if I have to be pedantic, I'd say January/February 1973/74 for your photos, given the condition of the trees and how low the sun appears to be.
John.

Any Other Uses?

It is not clear if the bridge was used as a conduit for a water pipe to the Dalkeith Water Tower (built 1879). Water from a bore hole in the park was certainly pumped to the tower in 1910 and it seems reasonable to believe that the conduit used before the bridge was built, continued to be used.

What About The Bridge Nowadays?

Well the bridge is structurally sound but it is looking very tired. Ivy has taken hold and the paintwork is flaky. The council has responsibility for its maintenance but given the economic conditions it is unlikely that this would permit anything more than bare necessities.

In 2009 I hastily organized a centeneray celebration for 100 years of the gift of the park and set about trying to establish a Friends of  Ironmills Park group to assist with refurbishment of the bridge in time for its centenary. It was a good event and the council paid to have 6 trees planted to commemorate the event.




The “ Friends of…” group never established but local councilors committed to use their environmental funds for the cost of cleaning and painting the bridge. Sadly though local elections interfered with progress and then in 2013, land slip started to appear around the steep bank above the bridge.


Any opportunity to celebrate 100 years of the bridge slipped along with the land.

So What Does The Bridge Look Like Now?

Some photos from the last 10 years or so…







 













Post Land Slip – What Now?

Well the local council will assure the future safety of the bridge. At the moment Heras fencing and barbed wire signify “Do Not Enter” although that doesn’t stop everyone. The young, fit and able continue to break through the barriers and use the bridge and the overgrown, land slip affected steps above. The ground has heaved around the path and the corner steps; the hand rail has twisted and almost snapped under the pressure from below. Rust is setting in, ivy is taking hold and the plants will claim the land in due course.

The council has surveyed the land slip; it is still moving. Ironside Farrar have been contracted to assess the reasons for the slip and suggest means of repair. It is not good news. The repair is said to be a 6 figure sum. Not the few thousand anticipated. The reasons why it has slipped have not been made public but speaking to the contractors, it is almost always due to water, probably from more rainfall than usual. Then the weight of the soil above the rock finally gave way. The contractors found Boulder Clay beneath the soil. This stuff is as good as rock. Water does not penetrate but slips along the surface, maybe finding a crack or area to penetrate. Maybe to  saturate a point area to liquefy the sand layer, allowing that layer the free movement that has taken that material into the river Esk last year. The weighty soil above the sand layer clings on thanks to tree roots and shrubs and I guess its weight. Hopefully it clings on for a long time. To safely repair the steps though would require that soil to be removed from the rock and with that the trees and all the roots. The extent of the removal might have to be well beyond the line of the land-slip crack. There’s a lot to be concerned about. A similar event occured on the opposite side of the river at Lugton Brae a couple of years ago. Some 1.9 Million £ later (and that figure could be ecomomic with the whole cost figure) the road at Lugton has been repaired and it has just been re opened to public this week.

But this article is dedicated to the bridge and its long term security and use. The bridge doesn’t seem to be at risk and maybe the public could be allowed to continue to use the bridge as a viewing point. The barrier to the steps above could be made in aesthetically pleasing materials just beyond the bridge and maybe funds could be found to at least remove the ivy and clean up the surfaces. A lick of paint surely wouldn’t go amiss. But I tell you, the last time I muted some paint on the bridge the Health and Safety police took over to make sure no flaky lead filled paint got into the river. A simple strip and paint turned into a suggestion that the railings be removed, sent for shot blasting and then painted and re instated. Consequently nothing happened at all. I'm sure we could have used an old blanket to catch the flaky paint and easily have primed and painted the rails. It wasn't to be.

As for the land slip, time will either heal the slip with the benefit of light and plant growth  (possibly with the gradual reduction of the light stealing, thirsty Sycamore trees on the slope) or funds will be found to scar the area by complete removal of all affected soil and plant life and then make good. It’s all up for discussion and opinion as to what’s the best course of action. I personally would prefer the former rather than drastic major works which might just shake the earth so much that another area of land will slip.


Meantime the bridge and the steps leading to it are starting to look very sad.








and the steps are not good.....








all caused by this.......





























Susan Goldwyre March 2014

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Scotland's Independence Debate - My Poll


I am sure that all my friends on Facebook are sick of reading posts about Independence, including my own. It does really get to you though.

I am undecided on the Question - Do you want Scotland to be an Independent Country? And the day of the vote, September 18th, is not that far away. Somehow I think I'll still be undecided on September 18th. 

You see its just not so simple. Getting sufficient information on what the impact will be from a Yes vote is hard, because no one really knows all the answers. A great deal of detail will have to be debated and agreed after the vote. For example, the use of £ Sterling. I agree we have a right to use it, despite some in the No camp saying we can't. What is more important is the fact that the currency would be tied to the Bank of England and therefore interest rates would be set by them. That's not Independence. The use of the £ is just one of many questions that cannot produce a straightforward answer. "It depends on" is the opening line each time. And why did Alex Salmond say in the past that he didn't want the £, it was a mill stone, and now its a corner stone. And yes, we all know the vote is not for Alex Salmond but.......he is the face of credibility for this campaign and therefore his views and attitude are very important in the decision making process.

I have become very engrossed in the debate points. Pensions, Border Control, Immigration, Free or not University places, Free prescriptions, Europe and the tone of the debate, especially amongst the folks who simply want to punish the bankers and the London government. You can understand it, the 2008 recession has gone on for a long time and many have suffered. Margaret Thatchers legacy of the council tax won't be forgotten in my lifetime and it is hard to shake of the angst of the past. For those that studied history more than me, it must be extremely difficult to rationalise the impact on Scotland from its bloodied past. 


However, a scientist and pragmatist, I take the view that I can measure the worth of the change to Independence and decide if I am Yes or No. Increasingly though the political spin gets in the way. In particular the spin put on the increase in the Yes vote in recent weeks. I am not so sure it has increased but if it has, so be it. It won't influence me. However, again being a scientist I thought "I'll conduct my own experiment, take my own poll from my Facebook friends and closest contacts in the community". 

I found 70 willing souls to convey their voting intentions. Here are the results.


51 No - 73%
14 Yes - 20%
4 Undecided - 6%
1 Wont Say - 1%


Some other interesting points from the results.


  • In the Yes group there was 1 family of 5.
  • In the No group there was 1 family of 4 and 1 family of 3.
  • There were no married couples in my Yes group. 
  • There were 10 married couples in my No group.
  • In the poll group there were 5 individuals who's partner voted differently to them.

The walks of life/work places that my poll individuals came from were as follows

- Council employees 
- Financial Advisor (mine)
- Farmer
- Financier 
- Elected representative in council
- Business owners of varying company sizes from SME's to persons in companies turning over more than £1 million.
- Public Sector employees in Health Service and Civil Service
- Doctor
- Teacher
- Quantity Surveyor/Site Manager
- Retired from Science/ Public Sector / Teaching
- Corporate Financial Fund Manager
- Charity Director
- Property Services Manager
- Estate Manager
- Accountant
- Students - school and college
- Lawyer / QC
- Joiner
- House manager / Mother 
- Tree Services Manager
- Human Resources Manager

So that's it on the date of Feb 13th. If I go back to all on my poll list in a couple of months time I reckon I will have as good an indicator as anyone on the status of the voting intentions. 

This poll came from The Mirror - it is very different from my poll results.



Friday, January 31, 2014

Drilling Starts Opposite Water Tower Wood

Just a quick update on the status of the ground investigations on the land adjacent to water tower wood. Contractors acting on behalf of Midlothian Council brought in drilling equipment 2 days ago. They are coring out soil samples to attempt to establish the cause of the land slip. Early results from a drill depth of around 8 metres is that they have hit boulder clay and now a solid boulder too large to drill through (it may even be the rock level). I gather that glacial activity causes these layers of boulder clay. They are impermeable and therefore water will not percolate into the layers below. With an increase in the amount of water hitting this area, that may be the cause of the slip.

This morning the drill rig is being moved since they cannot penetrate the boulder having spent most of yesterday making little progress. As well as the move of this rig, another rig is being delivered and that is being moved into place on the footpath steps as I write.

It is tempting to post that fracking has arrived to Dalkeith since these rigs do look incredibly similar to fracking equipment.😈



Nice bunch of lads working on the coring. Couple of chatty Glaswegians and an Irish site manager with excellent customer care skills. It's a wee bit noisy with the drill going most of the day, and the wet and mud is not pleasant as the ground surface is being churned up. However, churning up the ground is a good thing if we are to have our promised wild flower meadow along the cemetery wall side of the footpath. Seeing this path opened up for access for the drill equipment makes it obvious how lovely this section of path could be. If the steps to Ironmills are too expensive to repair, let's hope that the cemetery wall path is at least improved in the future. Maybe even a new access route could be created somewhere else along the bank? That's what a lot of passers by are suggesting to me as a possible alternative.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boulder_clay


Sunday, January 5, 2014

2013 - The Year of the Parties


Well 2013 has been a year to consolidate the works of earlier years at water tower wood. Nothing spectacular happened in woodland terms apart from perhaps the reduction in the heavy limbs of the Beech trees that are the giants of this woodland. They sit atop the steep slope and are unbalanced. Limb reduction back to a growth point will help and perhaps further reduction can be done at a later stage. I understand it is a shock to the tree to cut a limb too drastically. 


Some additional woodland native planting was carried out in November, lots more holly and beech. Yew cuttings planted. Dalkeith Estate "old oak" acorns scattered and buried. The latter thanks to Cameron.

2013 was more noted for partying. Gerry having reached the ripe age of 60 this year, decided to have a series of parties rather than host one big event. So many people to invite and he wanted to cook for groups of 20 - 30 at a time, no more. I couldn't let his actual birthday party go without some element of surprise and so the birthday party in August started with 30 people and at 10pm another 30 arrived as a surprise, nay shock, to Gerry.

The photos tell all and I have chosen just a few from the 1,700! photos. Those that will show the woodland in and around the house and not to impose on peoples identity without their permission.




Getting ready for the big party. 




                         
                                               




  The photographer is a professional. Neat photo. 
                                                   







The woodland side, all set up and waiting to go.



















Gerry's sister with Harris. Never mind the guests, what about those stag horn ferns.












As dusk fell the house lights, garden lights and candles take over.




Then the party lights. Subtle but magical, and the dancing starts.




                                       Heels and a woodland floor are not a great combination. 


There were party lights in the trees from Ian Hunter (aka The Singing Butcher) which added the most amazing effect to the surrounds and on peoples faces. 



So all in all a magical event which we are all still talking about. But what of the rest of the year. 




Well a major land slip has been a hot topic in our area. It is interesting that land slip and stabilisation of land has been levied against our activities in recent years when the opposite was the plan. When land slip then happens on a significant scale on council land next door to us, the irony is not lost on us. Lets hope 2014 see's the repair of that land and the re opening of the steps to ironmills. 

This is a map showing the land slip area. Our land is the bit marked "private" so its pretty close to our land but not on our land. 






Investigation of possible causes of the land slip was carried out by the council in March/April 2013. The shared septic tank (Midlothian Council, Bankfoot Cottage and Us) and its inputs and its outlet to the river was checked via a camera and in the process 2 rodding eyes were inserted at key points along the length of the pipe (to make it easier to check this outlet in the future). The council have responsibility for the drain pipe from the outlet because that pipe carries the street drains.

I remember when we first bought the water tower 25 years ago, the septic tank used to smell every summer. Gerry tracked the problem to the continual blockage of the septic tank because the road drains were emptying INTO the tank! carrying with the road drainage all the leaves and silt from the road. The septic tank clearly didn't operate as a septic tank at all at that time. The conditions in a septic tank have to be right for anaerobic digestion of biological material and I doubt that can be achieved with road drain effluent in the mix.

Some years of wrangling ensued with various departments. Eventually the use of blue dye proved Gerry's case and the council agreed to take away the road drain from the septic tank. However, with no where else for the road drains to go, they simply diverted the road drain to the OUTLET of the tank and so the road water flushes the outlet pipe and keeps it running clear. Gerry then put the septic tank maintenance onto a shared programme between the council, us and our neighbour in Bankfoot. So the checks this year were welcome but we didn't anticipate any issues arising from the good management of the septic tank and we knew all our drains were fit for purpose. The only blockage found was that from the council buildings that sit in the Cemetery. There's a loo there and I guess some sinks. Not sure what else. The blockage though was so old that a section of the pipe had completely disintegrated. I guess this effluent wasn't going into the septic tank at all. Most likely it was seeping into the ground. Yeuch. I took a photo at the time.








Ironmills meanwhile continues to blossom, literally, with a wild flower meadow this year and new paths cut through the park. I think it is beautiful.
                                                    





But what about the hens? Well we have 2 new "Blues" and as I write they are each still laying an egg a day.




I would post more pictures but would rather keep this blog to woodland activities. If anyone would particularly like to read and see anything specific in the woodland, let me know and I can photograph and update accordingly. Otherwise it's a woodland, it tends to take care of itself and the tree planting on the slope will probably be the most significant change to see in years to come. There are lots of Cherry and all are doing well, apart from one which keeled over and died. The ash do exceptionally well and I gather ash die-back is no longer the threat it was thought to be. Beech of all sizes continue to be the year round stars with their autumn colour and leaves held over winter. The mature hornbeam was particularly beautiful this autumn, oh and the sweet chestnut. The twisty tree.

Goodbye 2013, it has been a great year.


Susan 
Jan 5th 2014

From Cameron via Facebook

spring has sprung ,the crocus croaks
And in ma ain wee windae box
the crocus hings its little heid 
is it greetin,naw its deid