Aberlady Bay
Aberlady Bay in East Lothian, Scotland lies between Aberlady and Gullane.
In 1952, Aberlady Bay became the UK's first Local Nature Reserve (LNR) and is served by the East Lothian Council Rangers.
The Scottish Ornithologists' Club has Waterston House as its headquarters at Aberlady, with panoramic views of the bay.
Aberlady Bay is part of the John Muir Way, a long distance footpath from Fisherrow (Musselburgh) to Dunglass. It is also the East Lothian Section of the transnational North Sea Trail, a path network connecting seven countries and 26 areas.
Wrecks
The wrecks of eight historic (19th or early 20th century) fishing vessels at Kilspindie have been designated as maritime scheduled ancient monuments.
Two wrecks of XT-craft, training versions of the X craft, can be seen. In 1946, the craft were towed to the bay, then moored to a concrete block and used for target practice by aircraft of the Royal Air Force. The wrecks of the submarines lie much closer to the low-water mark than the high-water mark, and tides in the bay rise very quickly.
Gallery
- Images of Aberlady Bay
- Wreck of an XT-Craft
- The same XT-Craft wreck with a person showing scale
- The remains of a cart in 2007
- The wreck of a ship in 2006
- Looking over the Forth
- Aberlady Bay footbridge
- Footbridge towards the local nature reserve
- Footbridge to Luffness
- A close up view of the well known footbridge that crosses the Peffer Burn. Footbridge to Luffness
- Aberlady Bay in April
- Aberlady Bay in December
- Aberlady Bay, from Kilspindie golf course
- Aberlady Point
See also
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Aberlady Bay. |
- Maritime and Coastguard Agency website information on protected wrecks
- Tides for Fidra, an island off the coast of North Berwick - these give a rough indication of tides in Aberlady Bay