Tour Scotland Winter Travel Video High Tide Coast Pittenweem East Neuk Of Fife



Tour Scotland Winter travel video of high tide at the harbour by the coastal walking path on ancestry visit to Pittenweem, East Neuk of Fife, Scotland. Fresh weather warnings have been issued just over a fortnight after the country was put on red alert. Pittenweem was a fishing village around a probably early Christian religious settlement, it grew along the shoreline from the west where the sheltered beaches were safe places for fishermen to draw their boats up out of the water. Later a breakwater was built, extending out from one of the rocky skerries that jut out south-west into the Firth of Forth like fingers. This allowed boats to rest at anchor rather than being beached, enabling larger vessels to use the port. A new breakwater further to the east was developed over the years into a deep, safe harbour with a covered fish market. As the herring disappeared from local waters and the fishing fleet shrank, this harbour and its attendant facilities became the main harbour for the fishermen of the East Neuk of Fife. The Fife Coastal Path runs from the Forth Estuary in the south, to the Tay Estuary in the north and stretches for 117 miles. This is the area where I was raised in Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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