Beatlie Wood

Wood, Forest in West Lothian

Scotland

Beatlie Wood

Duntarvie Castle The long slow restoration continues, with the roof making an appearance in 2015.
Duntarvie Castle Credit: Richard Webb

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Beatlie Wood Images

Images are sourced within 2km of 55.961121/-3.4550505 or Grid Reference NT0975. Thanks to Geograph Open Source API. All images are credited.

Duntarvie Castle The long slow restoration continues, with the roof making an appearance in 2015.
Duntarvie Castle
The long slow restoration continues, with the roof making an appearance in 2015.
Oilseed rape, Winchburgh The new Forth road bridge towers are making an appearance.
Oilseed rape, Winchburgh
The new Forth road bridge towers are making an appearance.
A leafy track at Priestinch This farm track crosses over Edinburgh-Glasgow Queen Street main railway  line at Priestinch before cutting through a low, but steep sided and wooded ridge  to cross the Union Canal at Bridge No.34, just visible ahead. The track is carpeted with leaf litter, predominately of the Ash, which is one of the earliest of our trees to shed its leaves.
A leafy track at Priestinch
This farm track crosses over Edinburgh-Glasgow Queen Street main railway line at Priestinch before cutting through a low, but steep sided and wooded ridge to cross the Union Canal at Bridge No.34, just visible ahead. The track is carpeted with leaf litter, predominately of the Ash, which is one of the earliest of our trees to shed its leaves.
Beech trees on a steep bank It has been a fine autumn in West Lothian with few gales and the tree colours are exceptional. These Beech overlook a deep cutting of the Edinburgh to Glasgow Queen Street railway line.
Beech trees on a steep bank
It has been a fine autumn in West Lothian with few gales and the tree colours are exceptional. These Beech overlook a deep cutting of the Edinburgh to Glasgow Queen Street railway line.
Sunset at Duntarvie One of the best sunsets I've seen in recent years. The colour is exactly as recorded by the camera.
Sunset at Duntarvie
One of the best sunsets I've seen in recent years. The colour is exactly as recorded by the camera.
Duntarvie Castle At last, there is some progress on the renovations. Compare with <a href="https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/2458403">NT0976 : Duntarvie Castle</a>.
Duntarvie Castle
At last, there is some progress on the renovations. Compare with NT0976 : Duntarvie Castle.
Auldcathie Bridge No 34 on the Union Canal
Auldcathie Bridge No 34 on the Union Canal
North along the Union Canal towards Winchburgh Following the completion and opening of the Forth and Clyde Canal in 1790, it was not long before the idea arose of a canal to link Edinburgh to the west, and in particular to the coal mining areas in the west of Scotland, to enable coal to be supplied more cheaply to the capital. Other commodities suited for canal transport included building stone and lime. 

It took another two decades, however, before a survey was undertaken of a route that would link the proposed canal to the Forth and Clyde Canal at Falkirk. The necessary Act of Parliament authorising construction was passed in 1817, and work started at the Edinburgh end, at Port Hopetoun, the following year.

The canal was designed by Hugh Baird <span class="nowrap"><a title="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Baird_%28engineer%29" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Baird_%28engineer%29">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span> and Thomas Telford <span class="nowrap"><a title="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Telford" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Telford">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span> and <a title="https://www.geograph.org.uk/discuss/?action=vthread&forum=6&topic=5666" href="https://www.geograph.org.uk/discuss/?action=vthread&forum=6&topic=5666">Link</a> on behalf of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal Company, whose 384 shareholders included the Lord Provost of Edinburgh and a number of titled persons. 

The canal was originally 32 miles in length and 5 feet deep, and it is a contour canal, that is, it follows the 241 foot (73 metre) contour, except for three river valleys where major aqueducts had to be built to carry the canal across at this height. These are the Slateford Aqueduct over the Water of Leith, the Almond Aqueduct 75 feet (23 metres) above the River Almond at Lin's Mill, and the longest of all at 810 feet (250 metres), the Avon Aqueduct, 86 feet (36 metres) above  the River Avon near Linlithgow. 

Most of the 60-odd bridges are fixed, so neither locks nor opening bridges delayed navigation most of the way, though the aqueducts were only wide enough for boats and barges to travel in one direction at a time; oncoming vessels had to wait until the way was clear. 

A tunnel 690 yards (636 metres) in length was required near Falkirk because the owner of Callendar House, William Forbes,  refused to allow the canal to pass through his land, and this undertaking contributed to the final cost being almost double the original estimate of £240,500. The final bill of over £460,000 equates to anything between £2000 million and £380,000 million at 2014 prices, depending on how it is calculated. 

The water level is maintained from a reservoir in the Pentland Hills, a three-mile channel from the River Almond, and other feeders. 

At Falkirk the Union Canal was 110 feet (33 metres) above the level of the Forth and Clyde Canal, and a flight of eleven locks was built to link the two canals. 

Construction took just four years, and the canal opened for traffic in 1822. Tolls were charged for the carriage of goods, and fares for passengers. There was also income from wharfage. Maximum charges were laid down in the enabling Act of Parliament. The Company was required to pay duties on goods carried to the Burgh of Linlithgow and the City of Edinburgh because the canal took trade away from the turnpike roads maintained by the respective councils.

Early trade was brisk, but unfortunately its heyday lasted only about 20 years, until the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway superseded it in 1842, and in 1849 the canal was acquired by the railway company. Its use declined steadily over the years, and in the 1930s the flight of eleven locks at Falkirk was filled in and built on. Other stretches of the canal in Edinburgh were also built on, including the Edinburgh terminus. The City Bypass cut the route west of Edinburgh, and the M8 motorway blocked it near Broxburn. The canal was officially closed in 1965, though various stretches were used recreationally, for example for rowing and angling.

Towards the end of the 20th century there was a revival of interest in canals, mainly for recreational use, and the restoration of the Forth and Clyde Canal and the Union Canal was mooted. The project was adopted as one of the major undertakings to mark the millennium, and obtained funding from the European Union and the Millennium Commission among others. A new terminus with associated new retail, residential and commercial buildings was created in Edinburgh and a new stretch of canal dug to replace the section built on at Wester Hailes. The Scott Russell Aqueduct (named after John Scott Russell, who first observed a soliton wave on the canal in 1834) now carries the canal over the City Bypass, and a diversion was built to pass beneath the M8 motorway. The final piece of the restoration was the unique Falkirk Wheel, at the end of an extension to the original canal at Falkirk, which lifts and lowers boats between the Union Canal and the Forth and Clyde Canal. 

The Millennium Link restoration cost some £84 million and the restored canal was opened in 2001. The Falkirk Wheel was opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the following year.
North along the Union Canal towards Winchburgh
Following the completion and opening of the Forth and Clyde Canal in 1790, it was not long before the idea arose of a canal to link Edinburgh to the west, and in particular to the coal mining areas in the west of Scotland, to enable coal to be supplied more cheaply to the capital. Other commodities suited for canal transport included building stone and lime. It took another two decades, however, before a survey was undertaken of a route that would link the proposed canal to the Forth and Clyde Canal at Falkirk. The necessary Act of Parliament authorising construction was passed in 1817, and work started at the Edinburgh end, at Port Hopetoun, the following year. The canal was designed by Hugh Baird LinkExternal link and Thomas Telford LinkExternal link and Link on behalf of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal Company, whose 384 shareholders included the Lord Provost of Edinburgh and a number of titled persons. The canal was originally 32 miles in length and 5 feet deep, and it is a contour canal, that is, it follows the 241 foot (73 metre) contour, except for three river valleys where major aqueducts had to be built to carry the canal across at this height. These are the Slateford Aqueduct over the Water of Leith, the Almond Aqueduct 75 feet (23 metres) above the River Almond at Lin's Mill, and the longest of all at 810 feet (250 metres), the Avon Aqueduct, 86 feet (36 metres) above the River Avon near Linlithgow. Most of the 60-odd bridges are fixed, so neither locks nor opening bridges delayed navigation most of the way, though the aqueducts were only wide enough for boats and barges to travel in one direction at a time; oncoming vessels had to wait until the way was clear. A tunnel 690 yards (636 metres) in length was required near Falkirk because the owner of Callendar House, William Forbes, refused to allow the canal to pass through his land, and this undertaking contributed to the final cost being almost double the original estimate of £240,500. The final bill of over £460,000 equates to anything between £2000 million and £380,000 million at 2014 prices, depending on how it is calculated. The water level is maintained from a reservoir in the Pentland Hills, a three-mile channel from the River Almond, and other feeders. At Falkirk the Union Canal was 110 feet (33 metres) above the level of the Forth and Clyde Canal, and a flight of eleven locks was built to link the two canals. Construction took just four years, and the canal opened for traffic in 1822. Tolls were charged for the carriage of goods, and fares for passengers. There was also income from wharfage. Maximum charges were laid down in the enabling Act of Parliament. The Company was required to pay duties on goods carried to the Burgh of Linlithgow and the City of Edinburgh because the canal took trade away from the turnpike roads maintained by the respective councils. Early trade was brisk, but unfortunately its heyday lasted only about 20 years, until the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway superseded it in 1842, and in 1849 the canal was acquired by the railway company. Its use declined steadily over the years, and in the 1930s the flight of eleven locks at Falkirk was filled in and built on. Other stretches of the canal in Edinburgh were also built on, including the Edinburgh terminus. The City Bypass cut the route west of Edinburgh, and the M8 motorway blocked it near Broxburn. The canal was officially closed in 1965, though various stretches were used recreationally, for example for rowing and angling. Towards the end of the 20th century there was a revival of interest in canals, mainly for recreational use, and the restoration of the Forth and Clyde Canal and the Union Canal was mooted. The project was adopted as one of the major undertakings to mark the millennium, and obtained funding from the European Union and the Millennium Commission among others. A new terminus with associated new retail, residential and commercial buildings was created in Edinburgh and a new stretch of canal dug to replace the section built on at Wester Hailes. The Scott Russell Aqueduct (named after John Scott Russell, who first observed a soliton wave on the canal in 1834) now carries the canal over the City Bypass, and a diversion was built to pass beneath the M8 motorway. The final piece of the restoration was the unique Falkirk Wheel, at the end of an extension to the original canal at Falkirk, which lifts and lowers boats between the Union Canal and the Forth and Clyde Canal. The Millennium Link restoration cost some £84 million and the restored canal was opened in 2001. The Falkirk Wheel was opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the following year.
Niddry Bridge No 30 Crossing the Union Canal near Niddry Castle.
Niddry Bridge No 30
Crossing the Union Canal near Niddry Castle.
Towpath along the Union Canal Near Winchburgh in West Lothian.
Towpath along the Union Canal
Near Winchburgh in West Lothian.
Niddry Castle Niddry Castle is a fourteenth-century tower house near Winchburgh, West Lothian.
Niddry Castle
Niddry Castle is a fourteenth-century tower house near Winchburgh, West Lothian.
Niddry Road Bridge No 31 Crossing the Union Canal in Winchburgh.
Niddry Road Bridge No 31
Crossing the Union Canal in Winchburgh.
Bridge No 32 crossing the Union Canal in Winchburgh
Bridge No 32 crossing the Union Canal in Winchburgh
Myre Bridge No 33 An accommodation bridge crossing the Union Canal near Winchburgh.
Myre Bridge No 33
An accommodation bridge crossing the Union Canal near Winchburgh.
Union Canal towpath north of Winchburgh Following the completion and opening of the Forth and Clyde Canal in 1790, it was not long before the idea arose of a canal to link Edinburgh to the west, and in particular to the coal mining areas in the west of Scotland, to enable coal to be supplied more cheaply to the capital. Other commodities suited for canal transport included building stone and lime. 

It took another two decades, however, before a survey was undertaken of a route that would link the proposed canal to the Forth and Clyde Canal at Falkirk. The necessary Act of Parliament authorising construction was passed in 1817, and work started at the Edinburgh end, at Port Hopetoun, the following year.

The canal was designed by Hugh Baird <span class="nowrap"><a title="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Baird_%28engineer%29" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Baird_%28engineer%29">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span> and Thomas Telford <span class="nowrap"><a title="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Telford" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Telford">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span> and <a title="https://www.geograph.org.uk/discuss/?action=vthread&forum=6&topic=5666" href="https://www.geograph.org.uk/discuss/?action=vthread&forum=6&topic=5666">Link</a> on behalf of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal Company, whose 384 shareholders included the Lord Provost of Edinburgh and a number of titled persons. 

The canal was originally 32 miles in length and 5 feet deep, and it is a contour canal, that is, it follows the 241 foot (73 metre) contour, except for three river valleys where major aqueducts had to be built to carry the canal across at this height. These are the Slateford Aqueduct over the Water of Leith, the Almond Aqueduct 75 feet (23 metres) above the River Almond at Lin's Mill, and the longest of all at 810 feet (250 metres), the Avon Aqueduct, 86 feet (36 metres) above  the River Avon near Linlithgow. 

Most of the 60-odd bridges are fixed, so neither locks nor opening bridges delayed navigation most of the way, though the aqueducts were only wide enough for boats and barges to travel in one direction at a time; oncoming vessels had to wait until the way was clear. 

A tunnel 690 yards (636 metres) in length was required near Falkirk because the owner of Callendar House, William Forbes,  refused to allow the canal to pass through his land, and this undertaking contributed to the final cost being almost double the original estimate of £240,500. The final bill of over £460,000 equates to anything between £2000 million and £380,000 million at 2014 prices, depending on how it is calculated. 

The water level is maintained from a reservoir in the Pentland Hills, a three-mile channel from the River Almond, and other feeders. 

At Falkirk the Union Canal was 110 feet (33 metres) above the level of the Forth and Clyde Canal, and a flight of eleven locks was built to link the two canals. 

Construction took just four years, and the canal opened for traffic in 1822. Tolls were charged for the carriage of goods, and fares for passengers. There was also income from wharfage. Maximum charges were laid down in the enabling Act of Parliament. The Company was required to pay duties on goods carried to the Burgh of Linlithgow and the City of Edinburgh because the canal took trade away from the turnpike roads maintained by the respective councils.

Early trade was brisk, but unfortunately its heyday lasted only about 20 years, until the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway superseded it in 1842, and in 1849 the canal was acquired by the railway company. Its use declined steadily over the years, and in the 1930s the flight of eleven locks at Falkirk was filled in and built on. Other stretches of the canal in Edinburgh were also built on, including the Edinburgh terminus. The City Bypass cut the route west of Edinburgh, and the M8 motorway blocked it near Broxburn. The canal was officially closed in 1965, though various stretches were used recreationally, for example for rowing and angling.

Towards the end of the 20th century there was a revival of interest in canals, mainly for recreational use, and the restoration of the Forth and Clyde Canal and the Union Canal was mooted. The project was adopted as one of the major undertakings to mark the millennium, and obtained funding from the European Union and the Millennium Commission among others. A new terminus with associated new retail, residential and commercial buildings was created in Edinburgh and a new stretch of canal dug to replace the section built on at Wester Hailes. The Scott Russell Aqueduct (named after John Scott Russell, who first observed a soliton wave on the canal in 1834) now carries the canal over the City Bypass, and a diversion was built to pass beneath the M8 motorway. The final piece of the restoration was the unique Falkirk Wheel, at the end of an extension to the original canal at Falkirk, which lifts and lowers boats between the Union Canal and the Forth and Clyde Canal. 

The Millennium Link restoration cost some £84 million and the restored canal was opened in 2001. The Falkirk Wheel was opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the following year.
Union Canal towpath north of Winchburgh
Following the completion and opening of the Forth and Clyde Canal in 1790, it was not long before the idea arose of a canal to link Edinburgh to the west, and in particular to the coal mining areas in the west of Scotland, to enable coal to be supplied more cheaply to the capital. Other commodities suited for canal transport included building stone and lime. It took another two decades, however, before a survey was undertaken of a route that would link the proposed canal to the Forth and Clyde Canal at Falkirk. The necessary Act of Parliament authorising construction was passed in 1817, and work started at the Edinburgh end, at Port Hopetoun, the following year. The canal was designed by Hugh Baird LinkExternal link and Thomas Telford LinkExternal link and Link on behalf of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal Company, whose 384 shareholders included the Lord Provost of Edinburgh and a number of titled persons. The canal was originally 32 miles in length and 5 feet deep, and it is a contour canal, that is, it follows the 241 foot (73 metre) contour, except for three river valleys where major aqueducts had to be built to carry the canal across at this height. These are the Slateford Aqueduct over the Water of Leith, the Almond Aqueduct 75 feet (23 metres) above the River Almond at Lin's Mill, and the longest of all at 810 feet (250 metres), the Avon Aqueduct, 86 feet (36 metres) above the River Avon near Linlithgow. Most of the 60-odd bridges are fixed, so neither locks nor opening bridges delayed navigation most of the way, though the aqueducts were only wide enough for boats and barges to travel in one direction at a time; oncoming vessels had to wait until the way was clear. A tunnel 690 yards (636 metres) in length was required near Falkirk because the owner of Callendar House, William Forbes, refused to allow the canal to pass through his land, and this undertaking contributed to the final cost being almost double the original estimate of £240,500. The final bill of over £460,000 equates to anything between £2000 million and £380,000 million at 2014 prices, depending on how it is calculated. The water level is maintained from a reservoir in the Pentland Hills, a three-mile channel from the River Almond, and other feeders. At Falkirk the Union Canal was 110 feet (33 metres) above the level of the Forth and Clyde Canal, and a flight of eleven locks was built to link the two canals. Construction took just four years, and the canal opened for traffic in 1822. Tolls were charged for the carriage of goods, and fares for passengers. There was also income from wharfage. Maximum charges were laid down in the enabling Act of Parliament. The Company was required to pay duties on goods carried to the Burgh of Linlithgow and the City of Edinburgh because the canal took trade away from the turnpike roads maintained by the respective councils. Early trade was brisk, but unfortunately its heyday lasted only about 20 years, until the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway superseded it in 1842, and in 1849 the canal was acquired by the railway company. Its use declined steadily over the years, and in the 1930s the flight of eleven locks at Falkirk was filled in and built on. Other stretches of the canal in Edinburgh were also built on, including the Edinburgh terminus. The City Bypass cut the route west of Edinburgh, and the M8 motorway blocked it near Broxburn. The canal was officially closed in 1965, though various stretches were used recreationally, for example for rowing and angling. Towards the end of the 20th century there was a revival of interest in canals, mainly for recreational use, and the restoration of the Forth and Clyde Canal and the Union Canal was mooted. The project was adopted as one of the major undertakings to mark the millennium, and obtained funding from the European Union and the Millennium Commission among others. A new terminus with associated new retail, residential and commercial buildings was created in Edinburgh and a new stretch of canal dug to replace the section built on at Wester Hailes. The Scott Russell Aqueduct (named after John Scott Russell, who first observed a soliton wave on the canal in 1834) now carries the canal over the City Bypass, and a diversion was built to pass beneath the M8 motorway. The final piece of the restoration was the unique Falkirk Wheel, at the end of an extension to the original canal at Falkirk, which lifts and lowers boats between the Union Canal and the Forth and Clyde Canal. The Millennium Link restoration cost some £84 million and the restored canal was opened in 2001. The Falkirk Wheel was opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the following year.
Auldcathie Bridge No 34 on the Union Canal Following the completion and opening of the Forth and Clyde Canal in 1790, it was not long before the idea arose of a canal to link Edinburgh to the west, and in particular to the coal mining areas in the west of Scotland, to enable coal to be supplied more cheaply to the capital. Other commodities suited for canal transport included building stone and lime. 

It took another two decades, however, before a survey was undertaken of a route that would link the proposed canal to the Forth and Clyde Canal at Falkirk. The necessary Act of Parliament authorising construction was passed in 1817, and work started at the Edinburgh end, at Port Hopetoun, the following year.

The canal was designed by Hugh Baird <span class="nowrap"><a title="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Baird_%28engineer%29" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hugh_Baird_%28engineer%29">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span> and Thomas Telford <span class="nowrap"><a title="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Telford" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Telford">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span> and <a title="https://www.geograph.org.uk/discuss/?action=vthread&forum=6&topic=5666" href="https://www.geograph.org.uk/discuss/?action=vthread&forum=6&topic=5666">Link</a> on behalf of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal Company, whose 384 shareholders included the Lord Provost of Edinburgh and a number of titled persons. 

The canal was originally 32 miles in length and 5 feet deep, and it is a contour canal, that is, it follows the 241 foot (73 metre) contour, except for three river valleys where major aqueducts had to be built to carry the canal across at this height. These are the Slateford Aqueduct over the Water of Leith, the Almond Aqueduct 75 feet (23 metres) above the River Almond at Lin's Mill, and the longest of all at 810 feet (250 metres), the Avon Aqueduct, 86 feet (36 metres) above  the River Avon near Linlithgow. 

Most of the 60-odd bridges are fixed, so neither locks nor opening bridges delayed navigation most of the way, though the aqueducts were only wide enough for boats and barges to travel in one direction at a time; oncoming vessels had to wait until the way was clear. 

A tunnel 690 yards (636 metres) in length was required near Falkirk because the owner of Callendar House, William Forbes,  refused to allow the canal to pass through his land, and this undertaking contributed to the final cost being almost double the original estimate of £240,500. The final bill of over £460,000 equates to anything between £2000 million and £380,000 million at 2014 prices, depending on how it is calculated. 

The water level is maintained from a reservoir in the Pentland Hills, a three-mile channel from the River Almond, and other feeders. 

At Falkirk the Union Canal was 110 feet (33 metres) above the level of the Forth and Clyde Canal, and a flight of eleven locks was built to link the two canals. 

Construction took just four years, and the canal opened for traffic in 1822. Tolls were charged for the carriage of goods, and fares for passengers. There was also income from wharfage. Maximum charges were laid down in the enabling Act of Parliament. The Company was required to pay duties on goods carried to the Burgh of Linlithgow and the City of Edinburgh because the canal took trade away from the turnpike roads maintained by the respective councils.

Early trade was brisk, but unfortunately its heyday lasted only about 20 years, until the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway superseded it in 1842, and in 1849 the canal was acquired by the railway company. Its use declined steadily over the years, and in the 1930s the flight of eleven locks at Falkirk was filled in and built on. Other stretches of the canal in Edinburgh were also built on, including the Edinburgh terminus. The City Bypass cut the route west of Edinburgh, and the M8 motorway blocked it near Broxburn. The canal was officially closed in 1965, though various stretches were used recreationally, for example for rowing and angling.

Towards the end of the 20th century there was a revival of interest in canals, mainly for recreational use, and the restoration of the Forth and Clyde Canal and the Union Canal was mooted. The project was adopted as one of the major undertakings to mark the millennium, and obtained funding from the European Union and the Millennium Commission among others. A new terminus with associated new retail, residential and commercial buildings was created in Edinburgh and a new stretch of canal dug to replace the section built on at Wester Hailes. The Scott Russell Aqueduct (named after John Scott Russell, who first observed a soliton wave on the canal in 1834) now carries the canal over the City Bypass, and a diversion was built to pass beneath the M8 motorway. The final piece of the restoration was the unique Falkirk Wheel, at the end of an extension to the original canal at Falkirk, which lifts and lowers boats between the Union Canal and the Forth and Clyde Canal. 

The Millennium Link restoration cost some £84 million and the restored canal was opened in 2001. The Falkirk Wheel was opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the following year.
Auldcathie Bridge No 34 on the Union Canal
Following the completion and opening of the Forth and Clyde Canal in 1790, it was not long before the idea arose of a canal to link Edinburgh to the west, and in particular to the coal mining areas in the west of Scotland, to enable coal to be supplied more cheaply to the capital. Other commodities suited for canal transport included building stone and lime. It took another two decades, however, before a survey was undertaken of a route that would link the proposed canal to the Forth and Clyde Canal at Falkirk. The necessary Act of Parliament authorising construction was passed in 1817, and work started at the Edinburgh end, at Port Hopetoun, the following year. The canal was designed by Hugh Baird LinkExternal link and Thomas Telford LinkExternal link and Link on behalf of the Edinburgh and Glasgow Union Canal Company, whose 384 shareholders included the Lord Provost of Edinburgh and a number of titled persons. The canal was originally 32 miles in length and 5 feet deep, and it is a contour canal, that is, it follows the 241 foot (73 metre) contour, except for three river valleys where major aqueducts had to be built to carry the canal across at this height. These are the Slateford Aqueduct over the Water of Leith, the Almond Aqueduct 75 feet (23 metres) above the River Almond at Lin's Mill, and the longest of all at 810 feet (250 metres), the Avon Aqueduct, 86 feet (36 metres) above the River Avon near Linlithgow. Most of the 60-odd bridges are fixed, so neither locks nor opening bridges delayed navigation most of the way, though the aqueducts were only wide enough for boats and barges to travel in one direction at a time; oncoming vessels had to wait until the way was clear. A tunnel 690 yards (636 metres) in length was required near Falkirk because the owner of Callendar House, William Forbes, refused to allow the canal to pass through his land, and this undertaking contributed to the final cost being almost double the original estimate of £240,500. The final bill of over £460,000 equates to anything between £2000 million and £380,000 million at 2014 prices, depending on how it is calculated. The water level is maintained from a reservoir in the Pentland Hills, a three-mile channel from the River Almond, and other feeders. At Falkirk the Union Canal was 110 feet (33 metres) above the level of the Forth and Clyde Canal, and a flight of eleven locks was built to link the two canals. Construction took just four years, and the canal opened for traffic in 1822. Tolls were charged for the carriage of goods, and fares for passengers. There was also income from wharfage. Maximum charges were laid down in the enabling Act of Parliament. The Company was required to pay duties on goods carried to the Burgh of Linlithgow and the City of Edinburgh because the canal took trade away from the turnpike roads maintained by the respective councils. Early trade was brisk, but unfortunately its heyday lasted only about 20 years, until the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway superseded it in 1842, and in 1849 the canal was acquired by the railway company. Its use declined steadily over the years, and in the 1930s the flight of eleven locks at Falkirk was filled in and built on. Other stretches of the canal in Edinburgh were also built on, including the Edinburgh terminus. The City Bypass cut the route west of Edinburgh, and the M8 motorway blocked it near Broxburn. The canal was officially closed in 1965, though various stretches were used recreationally, for example for rowing and angling. Towards the end of the 20th century there was a revival of interest in canals, mainly for recreational use, and the restoration of the Forth and Clyde Canal and the Union Canal was mooted. The project was adopted as one of the major undertakings to mark the millennium, and obtained funding from the European Union and the Millennium Commission among others. A new terminus with associated new retail, residential and commercial buildings was created in Edinburgh and a new stretch of canal dug to replace the section built on at Wester Hailes. The Scott Russell Aqueduct (named after John Scott Russell, who first observed a soliton wave on the canal in 1834) now carries the canal over the City Bypass, and a diversion was built to pass beneath the M8 motorway. The final piece of the restoration was the unique Falkirk Wheel, at the end of an extension to the original canal at Falkirk, which lifts and lowers boats between the Union Canal and the Forth and Clyde Canal. The Millennium Link restoration cost some £84 million and the restored canal was opened in 2001. The Falkirk Wheel was opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the following year.
Burn Craigs woodland A shallow silted pool among Beech trees.
Burn Craigs woodland
A shallow silted pool among Beech trees.
Winchburgh New Town Centre This field will soon have houses and retail outlets and the Beech tree in the foreground is one of several to be felled before the heavy machinery arrives. The field regularly attracted wintering flocks of Golden Plovers until the adjacent field to the west became a housing estate. The Queensferry Crossing bridge is just visible in the distance above the early morning mist.
Winchburgh New Town Centre
This field will soon have houses and retail outlets and the Beech tree in the foreground is one of several to be felled before the heavy machinery arrives. The field regularly attracted wintering flocks of Golden Plovers until the adjacent field to the west became a housing estate. The Queensferry Crossing bridge is just visible in the distance above the early morning mist.
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Beatlie Wood is located at Grid Ref: NT0975 (Lat: 55.961121, Lng: -3.4550505)

Unitary Authority: West Lothian

Police Authority: The Lothians and Scottish Borders

What 3 Words

///debut.bunks.erupts. Near Winchburgh, West Lothian

Nearby Locations

Beatlie Wood

Related Wikis

Winchburgh railway station

Winchburgh railway station served the village of Winchburgh, West Lothian, Scotland from 1842 to 1930 on the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway. == History... ==

Winchburgh

Winchburgh is a village in the council area of West Lothian, Scotland. It is located approximately 10 miles (16 km) west of the city-centre of Edinburgh...

Niddry Castle

Niddry Castle is a sixteenth-century tower house near Winchburgh, West Lothian, Scotland. It is situated near the Union Canal, and between two large oil...

Duntarvie Castle

Duntarvie Castle is a ruined Scots Renaissance house in West Lothian, Scotland. It is located 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) north of Winchburgh and 9 kilometres...

Nearby Amenities

Located within 500m of 55.961121,-3.4550505
Crossing
Crossing: traffic_signals
Lat/Long: 55.961392/-3.45169
Turning Circle
Lat/Long: 55.9631941/-3.4600419
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9631179/-3.4485053
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9624227/-3.448466
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9581572/-3.4517035
Man Made: tower
Lat/Long: 55.9627545/-3.4477204
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.958007/-3.4529561
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9589199/-3.4501397
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9613177/-3.4487101
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9594965/-3.449791
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9617546/-3.4484714
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9583223/-3.4505018
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9572112/-3.4532618
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9608433/-3.4489864
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9601706/-3.4493968
Crossing
Button Operated: yes
Crossing: traffic_signals
Crossing Ref: pelican
Lat/Long: 55.9597008/-3.4596025
Country Fayre
Addr City: Winchburgh
Addr Housenumber: 50a
Addr Postcode: EH52 6RT
Addr Street: Main Street
Fhrs Id: 605108
Shop: bakery
Lat/Long: 55.9595857/-3.458796
Dog's Galore
Shop: pet
Lat/Long: 55.9596711/-3.456776
Addr City: Winchburgh
Addr Housenumber: 44
Addr Postcode: EH52 6RT
Addr Street: Main Street
Lat/Long: 55.9596532/-3.4588867
Addr Housename: Main Street
Addr Housenumber: 94
Addr Street: Winchburgh
Lat/Long: 55.9599827/-3.4544246
Addr Housenumber: 90A
Addr Street: Winchburgh
Lat/Long: 55.9595314/-3.4556073
Addr Housenumber: 92
Addr Street: Winchburgh
Lat/Long: 55.9596091/-3.4552038
John Lawson
Addr City: Winchburgh
Addr Housenumber: 8
Addr Postcode: EH52 6RT
Addr Street: Main Street
Fhrs Id: 587578
Shop: butcher
Lat/Long: 55.9595899/-3.4607059
Addr City: Winchburgh
Addr Housenumber: 2
Addr Postcode: EH52 6RT
Addr Street: Main Street
Lat/Long: 55.9595751/-3.4610238
Fast Food
Royal Dynasty
Addr City: Winchburgh
Addr Housenumber: 10
Addr Postcode: EH52 6RT
Addr Street: Main Street
Cuisine: chinese
Fhrs Id: 588534
Lat/Long: 55.9595911/-3.460611
Scotmid
Addr City: Winchburgh
Addr Housenumber: 34-36
Addr Postcode: EH52 6RT
Addr Street: Main Street
Brand: Scotmid
Brand Wikidata: Q7435719
Brand Wikipedia: en:Scotmid
Fhrs Id: 588573
Shop: convenience
Website: https://scotmid.coop/store/winchburgh/
Lat/Long: 55.9596155/-3.45933
Susan John
Shop: hairdresser
Lat/Long: 55.9596972/-3.4579948
Barrier: bollard
Lat/Long: 55.9595111/-3.4568538
Bus Stop
School
Bench: yes
Bus: yes
Departures Board: timetable
Public Transport: platform
Shelter: yes
Lat/Long: 55.9595453/-3.4568212
Bicycle Parking
Bicycle Parking: stands
Capacity: 2
Check Date Capacity: 2022-09-24
Covered: no
Lat/Long: 55.959623/-3.4608034
Best-one
Addr City: Winchburgh
Addr Housenumber: 40
Addr Postcode: EH52 6RT
Addr Street: Main Street
Brand: Best-one
Brand Wikidata: Q4896532
Brand Wikipedia: en:Best-one
Fhrs Id: 588555
Shop: convenience
Source Address: FHRS
Lat/Long: 55.95963/-3.4590123
Bus Stop
Station Road
Bench: yes
Bin: yes
Bus: yes
Check Date Shelter: 2022-09-24
Naptan AtcoCode: 6290WB04
Naptan NaptanCode: 95625724
Public Transport: platform
Shelter: yes
Lat/Long: 55.9596361/-3.46062
Atm
Lat/Long: 55.9596501/-3.4592147
Bus Stop
Station Road
Bench: yes
Bus: yes
Check Date Shelter: 2022-09-24
Naptan AtcoCode: 6290WB03
Naptan NaptanCode: 95625698
Public Transport: platform
Shelter: yes
Lat/Long: 55.9597236/-3.4584337
Bicycle Parking
Bicycle Parking: stands
Capacity: 2
Check Date Capacity: 2022-09-24
Covered: no
Lat/Long: 55.9597434/-3.4596737
Telephone
Booth: KX100
Covered: booth
Operator: British Telecom
Payment Coins: yes
Lat/Long: 55.9595052/-3.458263
Post Box
Collection Times: Mo-Fr 16:30; Sa 10:45
Note: postbox is inside Scotmid Supermarket
Operator: Royal Mail
Post Box Type: pillar
Ref: EH52 17
Lat/Long: 55.9596436/-3.4592485
Traffic Signals
Lat/Long: 55.9648228/-3.4566685
Traffic Signals
Traffic Signals: traffic_lights
Traffic Signals Direction: both
Lat/Long: 55.9619327/-3.4494674
Winchburgh
Proposed: station
Railway: proposed
Lat/Long: 55.9636779/-3.4607261
Man Made: mast
Tower Type: communication
Lat/Long: 55.9603885/-3.4587622
Man Made: mast
Tower Type: communication
Lat/Long: 55.9606477/-3.4588485
Defibrillator
Defibrillator Location: On outside wall of Scotmid Co-op, facing Main Street
Emergency: defibrillator
Indoor: no
Mapillary: 1066901694719855
Survey Date: 2023-09-03
Lat/Long: 55.9596484/-3.4593124
Crossing
Crossing: traffic_signals
Lat/Long: 55.9655408/-3.4563903
Bicycle Parking
Access: yes
Bicycle Parking: front_wheel
Capacity: 5
Covered: no
Lat/Long: 55.9595597/-3.4582167
Give Way
Direction: backward
Lat/Long: 55.9597413/-3.4597723
Winchburgh
Historic Railway: station
Railway: site
Wikidata: Q97304182
Wikipedia: en:Winchburgh railway station
Lat/Long: 55.9629757/-3.4601286
Material: wood
Lat/Long: 55.9603326/-3.4579143
Material: wood
Lat/Long: 55.960297/-3.4584033
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9628689/-3.4546063
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9624184/-3.4544284
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9619507/-3.4542092
Power: pole
Lat/Long: 55.9615243/-3.454008
Historic: memorial
Memorial: war_memorial
Lat/Long: 55.9595394/-3.461726
Bench
Backrest: yes
Lat/Long: 55.9595401/-3.4614055
Bench
Backrest: yes
Lat/Long: 55.9594936/-3.4616328
Bench
Backrest: yes
Lat/Long: 55.9595672/-3.4616449
Bench
Backrest: yes
Lat/Long: 55.959569/-3.4615678
Bus Stop
School
Bus: yes
Departures Board: timetable
Public Transport: platform
Shelter: yes
Lat/Long: 55.959648/-3.456127
Crossing
Crossing: traffic_signals
Lat/Long: 55.9620111/-3.4495479
Crossing
Crossing: unmarked
Crossing Markings: no
Lat/Long: 55.961363/-3.4508678
Crossing
Crossing: unmarked
Crossing Markings: no
Lat/Long: 55.9616746/-3.4491371
Crossing
Crossing: traffic_signals
Lat/Long: 55.9616332/-3.4485524
Crossing
Crossing: unmarked
Crossing Markings: no
Lat/Long: 55.9600505/-3.4548581
The data included in this document is from www.openstreetmap.org. The data is made available under ODbL.

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