New Year's Day Down at Dunbar Harbour


After supporting the annual Dunbar Dip, I decided to take a walk back via Cromwell Harbour to get some shots of the fishing boats that were moored up for the Christmas break. 

With the low tide the boats were resting on the bottom of the harbour and I was able to get down low to get some different images of the Dunbar fishing fleet.

Cromwell is the older of the two Dunbar harbours, the other being Victoria, and is named after Oliver Cromwell who used Dunbar as a base for his troops in 1650.




Also visible in the stone wall is the remains of old stairs known at the Johnny Cope Steps. 

General Cope landed his troops in Dunbar in September 1745 just prior to the Battle of Prestonpans where the Jacobite army, led by Prince Charles Edward Stuart, more commonly known as Bonnie Prince Charlie, defeated the English in the first major battle of the 1745 Rising.

Cromwell Harbour is now a very peaceful place but very much a working harbour.  However there is plenty of history in those ancient stone walls with rusted iron works and worn red sandstone masonry.

The images were taken on a Fujifilm X-T1 with either a 16-55mm f2.8 or 50-140mm f2.8 lens.  The 50-140mm had the 1.4x converter fitted for some of these shots.
















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