Berry-picking, said Allie. It seemed like a good idea to me even although I had only the vaguest idea what it meant. At fourteen most things to do with happenings outside the boundaries of Inverclyde seemed to me wonderfully exotic. A weekend camping trip to Dunoon was an adventure and a summer camp to Torquay seemed like a trip to another continent.
My mum didn't have much but she always did her best to get together enough money for us to go to the summer camp. It wasn't going to happen this year; the hard times were even harder and in that year of 1963 Allie and I were not going to be part of the expedition to England's south coast. We would miss it; the adventure of the long train journey, getting off the train at Torquay in our kilts and, rucsacs on back, canteens clanking, marching in step from the train station to the bus station to catch the bus to Watcombe. And the campsite, on a hillside just above Watcombe Beach was perfect. A paradise, with beautiful girls on the beach and a general store where we could buy John Players Tipped without having to worry about no-smoking laws for under-sixteens.
But in fairness to our widowed mothers Allie and I decided we couldn't afford, or we couldn't ask our mothers to afford, to fork out for the cost of the fortnight in Torquay; we would strike out on our own, maybe just hang around the local Scout camp, which was free and only cost the fare on the bus to Inverkip. And then we had a stroke of luck. One weekend we were mooching around the local camp headquarters hut and for some reason we were allowed into the back storage area unsupervised. Scrabbling on to the roof of the lockers we came across a tent, a nice condition Black's Good Companions two man job. Without a moment's anxiety we had it out of the hut and pitched on our site as if we'd owned it for years.
In those days of canvas tents you had to waterproof them, so that's what we did and now being owners of a tent we could go somewhere. Which is when Allie suggested berry-picking. It seemed to make eminent sense. We could earn as much as a pound a day! At least that was what Allie said and he seemed to know all about it, having been told about it by someone who knew someone who had been there a couple of years ago, maybe. Actually I didn't hesitate; Allie was about a year older than me, and generally took the lead in whatever scheme we were involved in. So we set to making plans on how we were going to get to Blairgowrie, the epicentre of berry-picking; fortunes awaited us.....
Sunday, February 11, 2007
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2 comments:
Hi West Coast
Have just stumbled onto and enjoyed your blogs. Our lives have parallels in that I too started in the Clyde shipyards and later did my OU courses. I was born into the proddy camp but always thought the whole religious divide was a nonsense - which meant I didn't fit in. I continue not to fit in and would be content to have that on my tomb stone. Here lies wee Davie - he never fitted in.
Hi there to you Anon. Nice of you to drop by and also nice to meet a fellow traveller. I wouldn't worry about not fitting in to the culture of the dinosaurs who roamed the west of Scotland twenty, thirty, forty years ago. They're irrelevent; they always were but the just weren't aware of it.
Best regds.
West Coaster
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