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  • Pictured :  Dominic Raab, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs    speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Dominic Raab, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs    speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Dominic Raab, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs    speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Michael Gove     speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Dominic Raab, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs    speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Dominic Raab, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs    speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Dominic Raab, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs    speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Dominic Raab, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs    speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Dominic Raab, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs    speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Dominic Raab, First Secretary of State and Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs    speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Michael Gove     speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Michael Gove     speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Michael Gove     speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Leader of the House of Commons, Jacob Rees-Mogg  speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured :  Liz Truss, Secretary of State for International Trade   speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured:  Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Michael Gove     speaks  to delegates   on the first day at the Conservative Party Conference<br />
<br />
<br />
Giannis Alexopoulos | EEm 29/09/2019
    SCT_EEm_Tory_party_conference_Manche...JPG
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Pictured is Emma Knight raising funds for Project Trust by selling hot drinks and cakes to the Loony Dookers. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • Pictured: Loony Dook. People brave the cold water of West Bay in the Firth of Forth on New Year's Day, in a modern tradition known as the Loony Dook. The first event in 1986 was a joke suggestion for a New Year's Day hangover cure by three locals in South Queensferry which has since grown into a fee paying organised event to raise money for charities, and now repeated in coastal towns around the Firth of Forth. Sally Anderson / Edinburgh Elite media
    Loony_Dook_North_Berwick_SA010120190...jpg
  • A fisherman on the beach at North Berwick looks on as two sea kayakers pass by with Craigleith Island in the distance on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_lockdown_restrictions_eased_in_S...JPG
  • A fisherman on the beach at North Berwick looks on as two sea kayakers pass by with Craigleith Island in the distance on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_lockdown_restrictions_eased_in_S...JPG
  • Golfers took to the tees at Winterfield Golf Course in Dunbar in the shadow of the Bass Rock on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_golf_resumes_in_Scotland_on_day_...JPG
  • Golfers took to the tees at Winterfield Golf Course in Dunbar in the shadow of the Bass Rock on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_golf_resumes_in_Scotland_on_day_...JPG
  • Golfers took to the tees at Winterfield Golf Course in Dunbar in the shadow of the Bass Rock on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_golf_resumes_in_Scotland_on_day_...JPG
  • Golfers took to the tees at Winterfield Golf Course in Dunbar in the shadow of the Bass Rock on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_golf_resumes_in_Scotland_on_day_...JPG
  • Golfers took to the tees at Winterfield Golf Course in Dunbar in the shadow of the Bass Rock on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_golf_resumes_in_Scotland_on_day_...JPG
  • Golfers took to the tees at Winterfield Golf Course in Dunbar in the shadow of the Bass Rock on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_golf_resumes_in_Scotland_on_day_...JPG
  • Golfers took to the tees at Winterfield Golf Course in Dunbar in the shadow of the Bass Rock on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_golf_resumes_in_Scotland_on_day_...JPG
  • Golfers took to the tees at Winterfield Golf Course in Dunbar in the shadow of the Bass Rock on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_golf_resumes_in_Scotland_on_day_...JPG
  • Golfers took to the tees at Winterfield Golf Course in Dunbar in the shadow of the Bass Rock on the first day of phase 1 of the reduction in Covid lockdown in Scotland.<br />
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© Dave Johnston / EEm
    EEm_golf_resumes_in_Scotland_on_day_...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actor in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actors in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke and Adam Williams.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society arriving at Waverley Station in Edinburgh.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actor in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actor in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actor in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actors in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke and Adam Williams.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actors in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke and Adam Williams.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actors in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke and Adam Williams.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actors in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke and Adam Williams.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actors in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke and Adam Williams.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actors in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke and Adam Williams.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actors in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke and Adam Williams.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society arriving at Waverley Station in Edinburgh.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society, along with fellow actors in WW1 costume Ailsa Clarke and Adam Williams.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society arriving at Waverley Station in Edinburgh.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society arriving at Waverley Station in Edinburgh.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society arriving at Waverley Station in Edinburgh.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society arriving at Waverley Station in Edinburgh.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Pictured is Wilfred Owen, played by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Living History Society arriving at Waverley Station in Edinburgh.<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Wilfred Owen, portrayed by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Historical Society chats with the real Wilfred Owen's nephew Peter Owen upon his arrival at Edinburgh Waverley station.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
  • 100 years to the day from when the celebrated Great War poet Wilfred Owen arrived for treatment in Edinburgh the ocassion was marked with a re-enactment of that arrival and the historic walk he made along Princes Street. Wilfred Owen, portrayed by David Clarke of the Scots in the Great War Historical Society chats with the real Wilfred Owen's nephew Peter Owen upon his arrival at Edinburgh Waverley station.<br />
<br />
© Dave Johnston/ EEm
    SCT_EEm_Wilfred_Owen_Arrival_Edinbur...JPG
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