Glasgow Gallivanting: June/July 2025

There was no June Gallivanting post because we were away over the end of that month and the beginning of July, a four-centre trip which included two visits to friends topped and tailed by time in the Lake District and the Yorkshire Dales. I’ll write those visits up in due course, but for now I thought I would summarise them in a gallery of benches for Jude (locations in captions). The pièce de résistance is, of course, the header which shows me with Margaret of From Pyrenees to Pennines. We had a lovely walk together near Masham in the Dales, followed by lunch with her and her husband, Malcolm.
June
My exhibition ended in the middle of June, but I haven’t taken my Women’s History hat off yet with two walks in June (and another in July). On the Garnethill Walk I spotted the street art below – Grateful to be here is on the wall of a new gallery celebrating street art, which I must go back to visit properly. I didn’t know anything about the ceramic butterfly which was on a wall nearby but have since found out that it is part of a Sculpture Trail created by St Aloysius’ College.
Also artistic is this 1902 lampstand outside the Botanic Gardens’ main gate which has been weathered and flaking for many years, if not decades. One day I noticed it was getting a new paint job. It now looks rather splendid! It was refurbished by Jim MacDonald who was about to retire as a city council painter. I’m not sure if it was a parting gift from him or to him.
As part of Scotland’s Gardens Scheme Maggie’s at Gartnavel Hospital was open one Sunday. Named after Maggie Jencks, who came up with the concept when she was diagnosed with breast cancer for the second time in 1993, Maggie’s Centres provide support to make the experience of cancer more manageable for everyone. The Gartnavel Centre is formed as a ring shape within woodland and around a landscaped inner courtyard. I love how the leaves reflect in the mirrored tree stumps and how sometimes you can hardly tell where the garden ends and the building begins.
Before we went on holiday we went to see Santana. We had booked tickets for a concert in March 2020 and – well, you know what happened. I certainly thought that given Carlos Santana’s age our last chance to see him and his band was gone, but here he is five years down the line playing up a storm at 77.
Finally for June, some cycling highlights including, in one case, aquatic cycling.
July
July is my birthday month! We celebrated by going to Edinburgh for the day as there are loads of good exhibitions on that I wanted to see. We visited two at the City Art Centre (John Bellany and Post War Scottish Art – no photography allowed in either) and finished up at the National Library of Scotland which is celebrating its centenary. I just loved the Dear Library exhibition – on till April next year.
In the evening, we were back in Glasgow in time for dinner at Six by Nico where the six course tasting menu changes every six weeks. The current menu is the Mad Hatter’s Tea Party which came with lots of theatricals. It’s not a dining experience I would choose regularly, but for a special occasion it was fun.
John had a night in Oxford where he attended a dinner for a friend who has just been made a Fellow of the Royal Society. His B&B was very posh (Christ Church). It even had upmarket graffiti.
July’s arty bits now. On this month’s Women’s History Walk (East End) I spotted these murals across the river on tanks at the Chivas Regal Distillery. The woman is Margaret MacDonald, wife of Charles Rennie Mackintosh. The summer-themed post box is on North Gardner Street in the West End.
Here’s a more unusual set of cycling pictures from John. At a farm café near Strathaven he learned about Polly, Molly and Colin and was able to see Polly in action.
Maybe Millport is more like his usual views!
But on his last cycle of the month, it was back to aquatics and cattle.
Each to their own. Happy August!

You have been very busy in June/July. I hope you enjoyed Cumbria.
Six by Nico is on my list of restaurants to try.
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Yes, we were busy! We also enjoyed Cumbria – as you have found out by now! You are having a good catch up.
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Happy belated birthday Anabel! So much to enjoy in your post. The bench gallery and the 1902 lampstand are fantastic. I chuckled at “aquatic cycling”. Happy August to you and John!
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Thank you! The aquatic cyclists are crazy in my opinion 😉.
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Happy belated birthday from a fellow July baby! The tasting menu looks like a very fun and novel way to celebrate 🙂
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Thanks, and happy July birthday to you too!
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Thank you!
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What an enjoyable read! Happy Birthday last month and thank you for sharing the beautiful pictures and the knowledge. As always, I have a strong urge to retrace every one of your steps! I have a strong penchant for benches and love that you capture them, too. Six by Nico looks cool and fun in an over-the-top way and I’ll have to check it out if I ever make it back to Glasgow.
I love that you saw Santana – Oye como va! 😎
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Thanks Kim! Fellow blogger Jude got me into benches – they can really add to a view. Six by Nico started in Glasgow but he now has restaurants in several UK cities so you have a good chance of finding one on your travels. Santana was a blast!
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A belated Happy Birthday Anabel, I hope you enjoyed your day 🍰 Some lovely benches here, I like the Watermillock view and the refurbished lampstand looks good. I’m surprised Santana is still going – he was really good looking back in the day and Samba Pa Ti was one of my favourites at the time. The Mad Hatter’s Tea Party sounds like fun too.
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Thanks Eunice! I had a good birthday. The benches mostly had lovely views. Hard not to, the places we went! I was surprised Santana toured again, his playing was as good as ever though.
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Happy Birthday! So much to read and enjoy in your post! Love the selection of benches and the Maggie’s Centre Garden….what a great idea to have those mirrors! ( Didn’t comment earlier…electricity off until yesterday ! Hope you were OK during storm)
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Oh, so sorry you had a problem! We were fine – strong winds but no damage. Glasgow was south of the main storm I think.
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Good to know you were OK.
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👍🏻
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Happy belated birthday! And how lucky to see Santana!
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Thanks Ann! I was so pleased Santana played here eventually.
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You did find some gorgeous benches! July is my birthday month too. I hope you had a nice birthday. 🙂
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Happy belated birthday – mine was good, hope yours was too.
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It was, thank you. 😊
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Happy Belated Birthday and wishing you many more, Anabel. My sort of birthday treat wandering around a city packed with exhibitions worth viewing. A lovely photo of you and Margaret.
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Thanks Suzanne! A good time to visit Edinburgh just before the festivals. Then avoid till they are over 😀.
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A belated Happy Birthday and a great couple of months you have had. Have another Yorkshire Dale’s wknd planned myself and hope to get back up to Cumbria at the end of the month. X
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Thanks Sharon! Both lovely parts of the world.
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Those mirrored tree stumps are great, I’d like to see them in their place.
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Yes, they are quite other-worldly – and peaceful.
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How is this for a bit upwomanship? I gave a homily Christchurch one Lent, and have preached in most of the other college chapels too! (In my religious days, before I went astray!)
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Ha ha, definitely a bit more impressive than having b&b!
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what a fabulous 2 months. I loved all the benches. Can’t go past them now without a photo can we! And loved all the art. That birthday menu intrigued me. Burnt tomatoes and egg yolk jam??? It’s lovely to meet other bloggers and so nice to put a face to a name. And those robots 🫢 I enlarged them to see what they were, but unfortunately the writing was blurred. So can only guess at them. Have a great August, how the year is flying by
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It’s impossible to pass a bench! The menu was very weird and it wasn’t always possible to pick out bits to match the description, the dishes were so intricate. I’m glad I’ve been to try it, but probably don’t need to go back for a while. Polly the Pusher is in the main cow picture, she pushes in the feed. Then there’s Molly the Milker and Colin the (poo) Collector. Different!
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Gosh things have changed since I was milking cows
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😄🐄
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Quite a varied collection of benches—the curvy ones are special. Sounds like you had a great birthday celebration. Happy belated birthday!
Libraries absolutely deserve every accolade.
The Gartnavel Centre is beautiful. I can see it being a soothing place in hard times.
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Thank you! Looking out for benches is fun and libraries are, indeed, deserving of support even if certain politicians don’t agree.
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You are both so busy that I feel quite guilty about the sedate pace of my life. The cyclist certainly racks up the miles in a most impressive manner and still has the energy to stop and take good pictures.
I enjoy coming on your tours as you always find much of interest along the way.
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As I’ve said to one or two others, I think summarising a month at a time, or in this case two months, makes us seem busier than we really are.
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I can appreciate that as a man who leaves a lot of dull bits out of my daily accounts, but you still seem to get about a lot.
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The bench collection is fun. Sometimes I do miss Edinburgh and Glasgow with all the exhibitions and history. The dinner looks like a lot of fun.
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I love Jude’s bench idea, it is fun looking out for them. It’s never hard to find stuff to do in Glasgow or Edinburgh (although I’m avoiding the latter at the moment until the festivals are over).
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You are so busy you make me dizzy! What a fabulous 2 months of gallivanting. And of course I love the bevy of benches. The spiral one in Harlow Carr is my favourite, after the one with you and Margaret of course.
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Glad you like the benches! Chosen specially for you. And as I said to Bob below, over 2 months this doesn’t amount to all that much. Plenty of time for contemplation too!
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So much to love about this post:
Blogger meet-up! Santana! Dear Library! Mad Hatter’s Tea Party! And, a summer-themed post box! What a fabulous June and July.
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Thanks, Janis, it was! And we even had some summer weather (back to a storm today).
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Hi, Anabel – Richard and I were supposed to see Santana live in 2020 (or early 2021) and like you, that never happened. So glad that you got to see him this time!
Wishing you a happy belated birthday! ❤
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Thanks Donna. Hope Santana comes back your way sometime – it was a great concert. I didn’t hold out much hope for us because it wasn’t even postponed in 2020, as many events were, just cancelled outright, so we felt very lucky.
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What a great recap, so many wonderful things you got up to. Love that you had a walk with another blogger (did you meet thru your blogs or IRL?). Hard to pick a favourite bench as there were so many awesome ones. I’ve done some aquatic cycling and once it didn’t end well! Happy belated birthday.
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Hi Bernie, I think Margaret and I first connected through Becky’s blog. We visited her together last year, so this was our second meeting. Thanks for the belated birthday wishes.
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I honestly do not know how you fit it all in Anabel, especially the write ups , given that I’m only going out on walks a couple of days a week at present yet still have a large backlog of posts to get through with the sizing of photos, labeling and stamping them, then writing out each new post. Other days are spent either shopping for food, paying essential bills, house maintenance, gardening etc… yet it still seems a full active life… where I rarely have any time to get bored….
Then I look at John and your own activities…. :o)
I couldn’t do it. I like my indoors time and my downtime/ me time far too much to give it up for perpetual motion.
Bob. BSS.
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I don’t think we’re so different, Bob! Remember this post covers two months and, other than the 12 days we were away which were busy, there was lots of time sitting reading or doing the boring life admin tasks. I still have my 2023/4 backlog which I will write up soon – maybe!
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This is a fascinating post – I enjoy seeing the different benches as well as the art.
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Thanks Anne! The benches were fun to find, and they all had great views.
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I’ve not written your Bday date in my diary – so sorry. Belated Happy Birthday – but what a fabulous combined month you had. Jealous I didn’t get to join you and Margaret for lunch!
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Thanks for the belated birthday wishes – no reason why you should have known! Yes, I think you would have enjoyed lunch and we would have enjoyed you being there. Another time when you’ve stopped sailing back and forward over the Atlantic 😉.
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if only the ship went via Glasgow, although maybe not when you have a storm!
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And what, pray, is Egg Yolk Jam?? Thanks for our five minutes of pictorial fame! A fun morning and lunchtime I thought. You’ve definitely put Glasgow back in the frame with this post. Well, it’s always there in truth. It’s just that life is … complicated.
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Your guess is as good as mine! I had no idea what i was eating half the time but it tasted good and looked pretty. Life is definitely complicated – here too.
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Love the mirror stumps. My Uni canteen looked a little different to Christ Church. All very Hogwarts. 🙂
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So did mine! More Formica benches than wood panelling.
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Another busy month and I truly liked the various benches; they were all very originals. John is quite adventurous on his bike…(Suzanne)
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I enjoyed finding all the different benches. As for adventurous – more like foolhardy if you ask me!
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What a terrific couple of months you two had! Loved benches galore and especially the one with your happy companion. Never letting the dust settle for long, Anabel. Have an equally uplifting August xx
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Thanks Jo. We had a lovely time with Margaret and Malcolm.
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Hi Anabel – I loved the benches … and then the others … great cover-art of many of your comings and goings during June and July. Happy birthday too … I’ve stayed at John’s B&B … a few days in Oxford about ten years ago with a friend from SA, who was besotted with Morse … helped that I’d been at school there for 10 years. But I’d have loved to visited many of those places you’ve shown us – just not the puddles though! Good for the cyclists … and their additional add ons – cheers Hilary
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Thanks for the good wishes Hilary, and glad you found much to like in the post – I don’t think anyone will envy the puddles!
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It’s great that you got to see Carlos Santana. He’s an awesome guitar player. He’s a road warrior too.
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He was excellent! I’m so glad he made it back to Glasgow.
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Marvellous! What a fantastic couple of months….
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Thanks Sue! We packed a lot in.
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And i’m very envious of your abilities !
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