External view of the Pillars of Hercules

Pillars of Hercules

Legend has it that the Pillars of Hercules are supposed to hold the sky away from the earth. Supposedly so that Atlas could escape damnation. Sadly, today we have to report that if Atlas was here in this part of Scotland he would be very damned. The pillars aren’t working! Storm Babet has come raging in from the North Sea like a woman scorned and the sky seems to have collapsed directly onto the earth. Her rage is affecting the whole of the UK but red, ‘Danger to Life’ notices have been issued. Fortunately we are on the southern fringes of the worst affected areas in Aberdeenshire. Nevertheless, when driving it seems as if Babet is just outside the car chucking buckets of water directly at the windscreen. And we could swear we could hear her laughing hysterically! Our valiant little wipers, however, were struggling to cope.

Surprise

Imagine our surprise then when, through all this biblical rain, we could just about make out a large sign saying “this way to the Pillars of Hercules“. Really? Maybe we could help with some maintenance work?  Care was needed, however, because Plato allegedly said that the island of Atlantis lay beyond the Pillars of Hercules and the pillars bore a warning ne plus ultra “nothing further beyond“. Logo of the Pillars of Hercules, FalklandWe needn’t have worried, it turned out that the Pillars of Hercules is a 25 acre organic farm. It has a shop selling their produce and a cafe. We were able to park very close to the door and make a dash for the shelter within..

External view of the Pillars of Hercules
Not cold but definitely not a day for sitting out
Organic

As well as selling their own stuff the  large shop sells loads of other stuff, all organic or vegan in nature. Fruit and veg at the Pillars of Hercules

What’s in a name?

It’s an unusual place named in honour of keen neo-classicist Onesiphorus Tyndall Bruce who we last came across when we reviewed the Covenanter Hotel in the nearby village of Falkland.  He was the son of slave traders who married into money and ended up owning the whole village in the 1850s. He became keeper of Falkland Palace. Onesiphorus was educated at Eton, where else would he get away with a name like that? We seem to remember him as a bit of a spoiled brat so not sure,150 years later, why he should be commemorated like this! Never mind, the big question was would the cafe have scones?Food counter at the Pillars of Hercules

Fiddly

Yes they did … fruit or cheese! Unfortunately the girl behind the counter may have been called Babet … a face like thunder. She may have just got out of bed on the wrong side but we have seldom experienced such miserable service. A scone at the Pillars of HerculesNot ‘bad’ service, just miserable. Strange because the service in the shop had been the exact opposite. Never mind, our scone arrived and it was rather good. It had a very crusty crust and the inside was nice and soft with plenty of fruit. The combination of hard crust and soft innards , however, meant it just broke into little bits when we tried to cut it. Picking up the pieces and buttering and jamming them individually was a  bit fiddly. If there had been cream and service with just a vague hint of a smile it might even have made a topscone. But there wasn’t so it didn’t.Internal view of the Pillars of Hercules

Eventually we had to leave our cozy little sanctuary with its wood burning stove and face Babet again. Thankfully it had stopped raining but the wind was still blowing a hoolie. Going over the Queensferry Crossing bridge was interesting, Pat never once looked up from her phone.

Winning?

Labour has won two important by-elections at Tamworth and Mid Bedfordshire with a massive swing to them from the Conservatives. They are hailing it as a massive breakthrough destined to send Keir Starmer into Downing Street. Perhaps they should bear in mind, however, that if the ballot paper only had two names on it … ‘Conservative’ or ‘Anyone else’, the Conservatives would still have lost.

According to the forecast the pillars holding the sky up aren’t going to be fixed for another couple of days. We’ll just stay home.

KY15 7AD         tel: 01337 857749          Pillars of Hercules
 
///polo.forecast.calendars

7 thoughts on “Pillars of Hercules”

  1. This makes very interesting reading but when the sky is falling on the earth ( I love the metaphor) I would prefer you both to be at home in front of a cosy fire.

  2. Loved this historical post spattered with gems about your government woes, still pales in light of ours ! I was traveling through the Hilary hurricane in the states in August and found that being in a plane was no better than on the ground in a car!!
    Miss you two!
    Christine
    P.s. still waiting for the Sheds of Scotland book😉

    1. Fantastic to hear from you Christine and hope you and Steve are okay in Lebanon 😀. We know that our storms are just paltry little things compared to your hurricanes but hey, they’re exciting for us!
      Nag, nag, nag … Sheds of Scotland is maturing nicely and will eventually take the book world by storm … just a storm not a hurricane!

  3. Interesting as always Billy. I was there a few weeks ago and there was not a lot of warmth radiating from the staff. The soup was excellent though. Next time try Campbell’s close to the palace which is probably a better option.
    I thought the reference to the pillars comes from the two Lomond Hills which dominate Falkland. Could be wrong.

    The Laird

    1. Perhaps you’re right and I’m wrong … but that seems very unlikely 😀. Got my DVD player working again and watched the St Kilda adventure … brought it all back.
      Off to a wedding next Saturday.

  4. This place is different and there is plenty in the shop, but like all these places that sell organic stuff it’s pricey. Shame about the girl who served us in the cafe.
    Yes it’s quite a storm and I didn’t fancy crossing the Forth so I just kept my head down and looked at my phone. We made it home though in one piece.

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