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Time for tea

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By Fiona Reid
Front

A STRANGE way of consuming tea was reported in Lockerbie in the early 1800s.

It is described by G Carruthers Kirk in his pamphlet, Dryfesdale Various Pen Sketches’. Farm workers were treated to the substance in return for harvesting flax locally. The author notes that in the early 1800s it was a common sight to see dozens of shearers at the work in the local lint fields. He goes on: “It was the custom of the cottagers in the harvest season to assist the farmers in shearing the lint for a certain return in kind: for a three days’ assistance they received six square yards, or a fa’, of lint. “One one occasion, no fewer than 105 workers sat down to dinner in the open air in connection with the lint shearing at a farm in the parish. “It chanced that the mistress of the house had received a gift of a lb of tea; it was the first she had ever seen, and was anxious that the shearers should share the taste of it. She accordingly prepared it for them; but it was after an original method. After having boiled the tea leaves, she strained off the juice, gave it a plentiful admixture of butter and served it out in spoonfuls on their plates, with the opinion – “I dinna ken what ye’ll think of it. For my pairt, I think it a gey dry concern.”

Front, Lockerbie and Lochmaben

09th Jan

Behind the scenes on new Lockerbie drama

By Fiona Reid | DNG24

Behind the scenes on new Lockerbie drama

A NEW series based on parts of the Lockerbie Disaster is now showing on Sky this week. Featuring Colin Firth and Catherine McCormack, ‘A Search for Truth’ was inspired by the memoirs of Dr Jim Swire, who lost his daughter Flora in the 1988 tragedy. Filming took place in Scotland and Morocco in early 2024 and Annandale Herald editor Fiona Reid went on the set to meet the cast and crew and find out more about it.

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