Edinburgh tourist websites and brochures will inevitably focus on Holyrood Park, with its royal palace, or the Botanics with its multitude of plant specimens, or the tree-lined Meadows in the heart of the city. But there are many other beautiful parks which, although less-known, deserve to be championed as superb examples of scenic landscapes.
Lochend Park is tucked behind the Hibernian FC football stadium, Meadowbank retail shopping centre, and the post-war housing of Lochend and Restalrig, on Edinburgh's east side. It is a wonderful place to escape into tranquil surroundings. When you enter the park from Lochend Road, you come across a small playpark, nestling beside a 16th century beehive doo'cot, dating from the time this area formed part of the lands of Lochend Castle, occupied by the Logans of Restalrig. The castle was virtually destroyed at the end of the 16th century, and eventually replaced by Lochend House a few hundred years later. One small, gruesome footnote to the history of the doo'cot, is that there is evidence of a chimney, an unusual feature for such a structure, which is thought to have indicated that the building was used as an incinerator, the likeliest explanation being that it was used to burn infected clothing during the 1645 plague.
Today's park show's no evidence of such a violent past. There is a large pond in the middle, populated by ducks, geese, swans, moorhens, coots and herons. My mother, who was brought up in nearby Craigentinny, was warned to stay away from this pond as a child local rumour stated that Lochend Loch was bottomless, and had once swallowed up an entire carriage and horses!
The truth is that it would certainly be potentially lethal to swim in the loch, but due to the abundance of weeds beneath the surface, and roots from the undergrowth on the island in the middle.
The far end of the walk takes you out behind Meadowbank Stadium. A short distance away, but a lovely retreat nonetheless. read more