Hi All 👋 My entry for Debbie’s OWS — Home.
This is a place that my wife and I visited earlier in the year, and it felt like home — Arbroath.











Hi All 👋 My entry for Debbie’s OWS — Home.
This is a place that my wife and I visited earlier in the year, and it felt like home — Arbroath.











Hi All 👋 Feel free to join in this weekly challenge whenever you find yourself thinking “I’m a Fan of…” (see below for how to join the fun).
This week’s Fan Of… is Charles Rennie Mackintosh in 1901 as a competition entry for the German interior design magazine “Zeitschrift fuer Innendekoration”.
Hi All 👋 Feel free to join in whenever you have a water picture to post (any type of water will do). See below for how to join the fun

How To Join In
Hae a guid week 😁



Hi All 👋 A nice easy one today, dug (dog).
Other names for mans best friend are dowg & hund. In the NE they’re known as bowf(er).
Whilst on the subject of dugs, there are a lot of names for barking; as a verb — bouch, wow, youwf, yaff, youch. From a large dog, bowf. A surpressed bark, wowff. To bark rapidly is to yabbleAs a noun — bouch, yamph, wow, yowf, bowf. Low pitched is wowff and a sharp supressed bark is a whink.






All the Scots words for these posts are taken from The Concise English-Scots Dictionary, by the Scottish National Dictionary Association. The words chosen will be the generally accepted term, but as in all languages there are regional variations, as well as sub-species variations. For example, an owl is generally known as a hoolet in Scots, but an ool in Shetland & the NE. A barn owl is a white hoolet & a long eared owl, a hornnie hoolet.
Hae a guid day

Hi All 👋 Tina this week is keeping it seasonal with the challenge of Cold.

Hi All 👋 This is a 2fer; my entry for Xingfumama’s Pull Up a Seat Week 46 and Mind Over Memory’s Sculpture Saturday.