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#1
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Chevington Burn
Can anyone shed any light on why the mouth of the burn was called the "mooth"(pronounced like "smooth" without the S at the front). ?was it simply our northumberland accent,or,east chevington slang?
I remember fishing there in the mid/late 70s with my mates from Hadston,we would catch small flatfish, eels and once a sea trout on a hand line!! On google maps the burn looks nothing like it used to back then;the open cast road and bridge seem gone and the actual course of the burn has changed as it meets the sea. |
#2
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Mooth = Just the local accent I think.
here it is back in 1864, Chibburn rather than Chevington Burn back then? (or have I got the wrong place?: |
#3
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Thanks for that,the shape of the burn as it meets the sea was similiar to how it was in the 70s i think,plus the fact it was called Chibburn Mouth on the old map may explain the nick name "mooth".
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#4
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It still is the moothe,although there is very little left of what you will remember.
It was altered when the opencast was working and a huge concrete culvert was built,although I don't know why. In my opinion the burn should have been reinstated back to its original course once the opencast had finished but that's unlikely now. We would spend hours there as kids fishing for flatties and Eels with hand lines and lighting fires with the diesel that stood in drums along the coal road. |
#5
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Its a shame really,but happy memories,i also remember catching the biggest eels of my life at the first large lake they dug at druridge bay park next to hadston!
They were huge about 4ft long!(although im prone to exaggeration being a fisherman) |
#6
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You've got me thinking about fish. Or lack of fish! As a kid hanging around the Amble piers (or south jetty if you like) in the 70s, fish were very visible compared to today. Where have they all gone? Sprats - massive shoals swimming around the pier timbers; we used to catch loads for something to do. 'Poddlers', again visible swimming in and out of the timbers, these were large fish, not sure what the correct name is? coalfish? again easy to catch - never seen one for years. In the 'little shore' when the tide was in and looking over from the pier you could always see large flatties cruising about on the sandy bottom. Not a sausage there now.
Ragworms - we used to dig directly under the pier - thick black glutinous mud. Sewer pipe pumping out all sorts just a few metres away. The worms were as thick as your finger with a vicious pair of black mandibles that could give you one hell of a bite! Sand eel shoals. Where have they gone? Used to get great boiling masses of them in the harbour and the 'triangle' being chased about by mackerel. Not seen any of that for years either. |
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