The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Make tracks from village to village

Meigle and Ardler Loop, Perth and Kinross

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The villages of Meigle and Ardler sit in the broad and fertile Vale of Strathmore. Separated by just a few miles, their histories are very different. While Meigle grew organicall­y from ancient Christian roots and was an important Pictish settlement, Ardler was planned from the outset and was originally named Washington, after the American president.

It owed its existence to the coming of the railways in the 19th Century and, while the local lines have long since been dismantled, my walk linking the pair makes some use of the abandoned trackbed left behind.

Setting out from the Kinloch Memorial Hall, my first encounter with the old railway came as I forked off Dundee Road and wandered along a quiet country lane towards Meigle Country House, formerly a cottage hospital and now a care home.

Lurking beneath a band of leafy deciduous trees, the line here – once the branch to Alyth – is overgrown and not particular­ly enticing to walkers. Happily, however, a farm track runs parallel down through neighbouri­ng fields, the view of Kinpurney Hill to the south, with its landmark tower, a bonus.

The railway curving west, I stayed off-line, content to track its course from a distance as I followed a minor road through a break in the embankment and on towards the busier B954.

Across the carriagewa­y, beyond a gateway in a wall and a band of woodland, a farm track led me west, through arable fields bordering Belmont Woods to the north. By farm cottages at East Camno, I turned south, tramping tarmac down to Camno Crossing where I finally got on track, joining the line that linked Meigle with Ardler.

A pleasant trail flanked by silver birches occupies the permanent way, once part of the Scottish Midland Junction Railway which ran from Perth to Forfar and opened in August 1848.

A spur north to Alyth, with a station at Meigle, was added in 1861 and a derelict brick hut marks the site of Ardler Junction, where the line from Newtyle, to the south, converged. From here it is a straight run to Ardler.

Establishe­d in 1835 by landowner George Kinloch to capitalise on early railway developmen­ts in Strathmore, Washington quickly lost its march as new lines were laid. Skirting the eastern edge of the village (renamed Ardler in the 1880s), a woodland path rises towards 18th century Arthurston­e House, its redevelope­d steadings and walled garden, sandstone tower and dovecot, and, above, the A84.

Roads led me back towards Meigle, but I concluded my hike amongst the giant firs and pink rhododendr­ons of Belmont Woods, entering the estate at a white-washed gate lodge adjacent to Macbeth’s Stone, a sturdy megalith linked to the 11th Century king of Scotland through lore and legend.

Once the home of jute baron Sir James Caird, the 43-acre estate was gifted to Dundee Corporatio­n in 1918 and, still in the council’s ownership, hosts Belmont Camp, an outdoor education centre, Belmont Castle and parkland which holds happy memories for generation­s of Dundonians who enjoyed school or club trips here. ROUTE

1. Walk 300m south on B954 to Auld Kirk. Go left along lane, crossing former railway.

2. Turn right and descend track to road. Turn right and walk 800m southwest along road to B954.

3. Cross and follow track south-west to East Camno. Turn left and descend road to Camno Crossing.

4. Turn right (signed Ardler Path) and follow path 1.7km west.

5. At sign pointing back to Newtyle, branch right on to woodland path and follow it 1km north-west, crossing minor road.

6. Turn right and walk 300m along track. Cross bridge on left and ascend path then surfaced track to A94.

7. Turn right and follow A94 footpath for 1.2km.

8. Turn right (signed Camno) and walk 1km south on road to crossroads. Go left for 300m.

9. Go right along driveway into Belmont Woods. Approachin­g Belmont Centre, branch left along path to triangular junction. Go left to meet surfaced track then continue along edge of playing fields (signed Meigle).

 ??  ?? Ancient and industrial history meet in the captivatin­g environmen­t with, above, silver birches flanking the former rail route; Macbeth’s Stone, right, linked to the 11th Century king; and an old railway hut at Ardler Junction, below.
Ancient and industrial history meet in the captivatin­g environmen­t with, above, silver birches flanking the former rail route; Macbeth’s Stone, right, linked to the 11th Century king; and an old railway hut at Ardler Junction, below.
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