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This walk
begins and ends in the ancient Fife village of Ceres ,
population around 1,000, and home to the oldest Highland
Games in Scotland which are held annually on the Bow
Butts. Ceres also hosts the Fife Folk Museum , many
interesting old buildings, and one or two good 'watering
holes' as well, all of which are well worth a visit at
the end of the walk. There was once a brewery in 'Kirklands',
the old manse, which was worked by the monks and
survived for quite a long time after the last monk had
disappeared.
As well as satisfying agriculture demands, the route of
this walk follows that used by monks and pilgrims. The
monks mined coal in the surrounding area - most likely
opencast rather than deep shaft. Under certain weather
conditions, many of the freshly ploughed fields along
the way exhibit black tracts that contain trace elements
of coal, even today. One of the low ridges is known as
the Pilgrims' Way and was once an important route from
Dunfermline Abbey to St Andrews Cathedral.
From the car park head out over Auld Brig over the burn,
taking care if underfoot conditions are wet - the
cobbles will be slippery - and turn left along High
Street, the oldest part of the village. At the last
cottage on the right, turn right and then left again at
the end of a fenced, children's play area. Cross the
road, carefully, and walk along School Hill past the
primary school and ‘Old School House’ to a gate in the
right hand corner of the cul-de-sac, where a sign
indicates the 'Footpath to Callange'.
The path follows the field edge to a wider track leading
left, up a slight gradient, left through a small stand
of trees to a gate. On the right hand edge of a small
stand of trees, there is a small stile leading over to
where a fingerpost indicates the footpath back to Ceres.
Continue from here until reaching the B940 road.
On the right, at the junction, is a plaque fixed to a
boulder recording the first hydrogen balloon flight in
Scotland in 1785 - 46 miles from Edinburgh and landing
near this spot - by an Italian, Vincenzo Lunardi. Turn
right and walk carefully up the road to two bungalows,
between which lies a wide driveway leading past Lower
Baldinne to Burnsquare.
On reaching Burnsquare, bear right onto a grassy track,
pass through a rickety wooden gate, descend to and cross
over a small burn and continue up to another wide drive
through an avenue of massive old beech trees out through
Wilkieston Farm to the Strathkinness to Peat Inn road.
Turn left here and walk up the road for three quarters
of a mile to a junction*, on the left, signposted to
Drumcarro (sic) Farm.
*An alternative is available here. On the left side of
the road, a short distance before the junction, a
roughly painted yellow sign and arrow indicates a
‘Footpath’. Cross the stile to the left of the gate and,
in the absence of a clear path, keep to the left-hand
side of the wall with a fence-line above it. The
occasional fence-post is clearly painted yellow at its
top to indicate the route. On reaching the road, the
decision can be made to turn right and follow the route
up to Drumcarrow Craig (see the next paragraph), or turn
left and cut the route short by approximately half a
mile.
A few steps along this road is a farm track leading up
through two gates to give access to Drumcarrow Craig -
home to a rather unsightly telecommunications mast - but
worth a detour for some of the finest views of the
surrounding area, both near and far, the opportunity to
see the hut circles and to have some shelter, if it's
required, for a lunch-break. Walk west along the ridge,
down through a gate then on, following the line of the
power cable posts, before bearing left through the gorse
bushes onto a farm track that leads out, left, between
two cottages, to Drumcarro Farm.
Turn right here and continue along another stretch of
road to a sharp, right angle bend, just past Ladeddie
Farm, ahead of which is another wide farm track leading
over Kinninmonth Hill. There is evidence here of this
track having been an ancient coach road with its now
crumbling dykes on either side. From where this tracks
starts its descent to Kinninmonth Farm, note the change
in the type of stone used in the construction of a
section of the wall on the right. Regular, mostly
pentagonal or hexagonal pieces of basalt columns take
the place of the more irregular granite and sandstone
more commonly used in other walls along the route.
Descend through the farm to the B940, turn left over the
road bridge and almost immediately right again onto a
wide track that was a continuation of the coach road
leading over to the one-time County Market Town of Cupar.
This track crosses an interesting triple arched bridge
over the Ceres Burn - built in the late 18th Century -
and out to join the B939. Turn left and walk along the
roadside back to the Ceres.
On reaching bridge, and before crossing it, there is a
wide stretch of the field on the left that is
uncultivated with a double track leading through it.
Follow this and if any of the fields are planted out,
please keep to the very edge so as not to damage the
crop and follow the line of the burn to join up with
another wide track, over a small rise, to a derelict
cottage at Newbigging of Ceres Farm. Turn left here, up
the slight incline, then right at the junction onto the
(inward) track that leads back to School Hill and the
village. |
WALK FACTS
Distance
9 miles/14.4km – slightly shorter if following the
diversion.
Map
OS Landranger sheet 59.
Start/parking
Off South Croftdyke, Ceres, on the south side of the
B939 - signposted as the Car Park for the Fife Folk
Museum . GR: NO 400 114
Grading
Mostly on good tracks with some road walking. Much of
the route passes through farms and agricultural land
therefore dogs MUST be kept on a lead and under strict
control. |