Greetings All,
I just have to do this blog of our experience today. It is too funny not to share with you. It is a great day to walk, sunny but with a good wind off the River Mersey.
Our walk covers 4 1/4 miles in total. There is a sign that indicates x number of Kilometers to Sitting Bull Sculpture. Well as you all know my Native Heritage I am very curious as to why Liverpool would have a statue to a American Indian Chief. We are trying to walk every day or at least every other day when the weather co-operates and on each walk we go a little further. So today is the walk to check out Sitting Bull and his relationship to Liverpool. So another lesson is learned today The British are very literal. When they say a statue of sitting bull they mean just that!! The statue was of a Red Bull Sitting, not Sitting Bull the Indian Chief. LOL Fred and I sure had a good laugh over this one.
I thought now that you have recovered from you laughter I would give you a bit of info on the River Mersey. The river was a ancient divide between what is now Lancashire and Cheshire. The river is 70 miles long starting at Stockport/Manchester and ending in Liverpool Bay, Merseyside. It has the second highest tidal range in Britain. It was made famous by the song "Ferry Cross the Mersey " by Gerry and the Pacemakers, as well it is known for the Mersey-beat by the Beatles and Stone Rose. The first dock on Liverpool was built in 1715. The Industrial revolution that followed was very responsible for the pollution of the river. With today's cleanup of the river it once again is home to several specie of fish. Salmon, trout, lamprey and dace. The estuary is now home to grey seals, porpoises and octopus. The river is even considered sacred by British Hindus as sacred as the River Ganges. Go figure that one.
Well that is all for now.
Cheers all,
Sandy & Fred