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Tag Archives: Burntisland
Into the Void – A Field Trip
It is often the shortest journey, undertaken with least expectation, that offers up an excess of possibility beyond what we expect to see. It’s always worth exploring the other side of the barbed wire fence. Never keep to the path. … Continue reading
Posted in Field Trip, Psychogeography
Tagged abandoned house, abandoned jetty, abandoned pier, Aragon, Burntisland, cubist, Cup and Ring, Dalgety Bay, Fife, Fife Coastal Path, fly tipping, Inverkeithing, Letham Hill, Paris Peasant, Prestonhill, psychogeography, Quarry, Richard Serra, rock giant, Spinner, The Binn, The Void, The Zone, wildness
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Levitate the Crags!
One of the most direct ways to immerse yourself in Fife’s liminal energies is to walk the Coastal Path. Out on the edge at the intersection of land and sea is always a receptive place to be. However, for the … Continue reading
Posted in Field Trip, Happenstance, Poetry, Psychogeography, Sounds of Spaces and Places
Tagged Arthur's Seat, Ballardian, Burntisland, Daniel Defoe, Deep Time, Edinburgh, Edinburgh Riviera, ExxonMobil, Fife, Heartland Institute, Inverkeithing, James Hutton, Kinghorn, Liminal, Lochgelly, Lynchian, Naomi Oreskes, Pettycur Bay, psychogeography, Rimbaud, Salisbury Crags, Theory of the Earth
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Cup and Ring on The Binn – Burntisland
In a previous post, I wrote of being haunted by the cup and ring symbol. In this wired, digital world, these cross-cultural, cross-geographic ciphers are all around us. Infiltrating our consciousness and yet remaining elusive and enigmatic. Tune in and … Continue reading
Posted in Field Trip, Psychogeography, Symbol
Tagged Binn Hill, Burntisland, Cup and Ring, Mary Somerville, Patrick Geddes, Thomas Chalmers
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