.jump-link{ display:none }

Saturday, 21 June 2025

"We Must Go down to the Wood Today" - Sepia Saturday

This week's Sepia Saturday prompt features a vintage car in the distance against a scenic backdrop of trees and mountain.  
I focussed o.n the trees -  We have no shortage of trees  and woods in the Scottish Borders where I live - so enjoy these  calming scenes of nature at its best, whatever the season. 
 

 
  SPRING
 
 
 Woodland lane with the Black Hill in the background.
 
 
 
 Not a woodland, but one of my favourite Tree photographs.  On an April walk around Earlston looking east across to the Lammermuir Hills.
 
 
SUMMER
 
Having fun at Wolfcleuchhead Waterfall in Craik Forest, near Hawick. 
 
 
Looking across to the wooded White Hill, Earlston 
 
 
Trees over the Leader Water, Earlston 
  
 
 

  
 Two views of sunlight in Cowdenknowes Wood,  close to where I live and a regular favourite walk. 
 
 
AUTUMN
 
An array of Autumn colours 
 
 

 A carpet of Autumn leaves, 
with the Leader Water a streak of blue below.

Little  granddaughter enjoying a walk through the woods at Earlston. 
 
 Looking up at the colours of Autumn gold. 
 
 
Late Autumn in Millbank Woods, Earlston 
 
 
A woodland gateway in late autumn 
 
 
Autumn colours at Dawyk Gardens, near Peebles.   
 

 
 
 WINTER 

 2012 - my husband lending a touch of colour  to the winter woodland scene.


2012 - Little granddaughter trudging home in the snow, 
with the trees on the appropriately named  White  Hill ahead.  
 
 
 A winter wonderland by the Leader Water, Earlston 

 
                    
Daughter on the hill above our homer in Hawick. 
 

 

We are so lucky to live in such a beautiful  part of the country 
the Scottish  Borders  
 
Copyright © 2025  Susan Donaldson.  All Rights Reserved 

 

*********
 
And finally  - not  forgetting  the prompt picture  with that vintage car , here is a misty photograph from my cousin's collection 
 
 
 
 My cousin's first ever car - a 1932 Morris Mino. 
 
The photograph was taken near Inverary in the west of Scotland on the "Rest and Be Thankful Road"  It gets its name as it was once a place where people  would stop, rest and be thankful that they have reached the top of their climb through the hilly pass between two glens (valleys).    
 
It's a very popular viewpoint which follows the line of the old military road built in 1753 by General Wade and his soldiers after the unsuccessful  1745 Jacobite Rebellion to put Bonnie Prince Charlie on the throne.   Now notorious for landslips, heavy snowfalls in winter   and road closure  warnings, involving a long detour to get to the coast and the ferries to the islands.  
 
 
************

Sepia Saturday give bloggers an opportunity to share 
their family history and memories through photographs.



Click  HERE to see how cars, trees and mountains  this week have inspired  other bloggers

***************

3 comments:

  1. I definitely love seeing your many trees, at all times and seasons. Sweet to have a few relatives included as well! Thanks for posting for SS!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Beautiful. If my husband and I had one more international trip in us, I think we would go to Scotland. We were there for a short time a few decades ago, but we didn’t have enough time to soak it all in.

    ReplyDelete
  3. What a peaceful joy to go walking along all those beautiful wooded paths! So soothing and soul regenerating. :)

    ReplyDelete

Thank you for your comment which will appear on screen after moderation.