Thursday, December 4, 2025

A Tropical Adventure - 2

We took the two grandmothers to as many interesting places as we could, and this included a visit to our favourite escape, a small hotel at the eastern end of Jamaica. Bea, my mother-in-law, may have been in Jamaica a fortnight but her pleasure at what she saw around her hadn't diminished. This is another entry in the diary she kept:

Saturday 30th March

6.45am - morning tea

8am - breakfast

Packed up for the trip to Long Bay.

10am. Journey along the coast to Long Bay - on to Boston Bay for picnic lunch. Gill bought 25 bananas for 50c.

Boston Bay is a lovely bay with shade. I found a few shells and drift wood. Gill, Jon, Elizabeth, Helen all swam - I found it better to just paddle along the beach as I still found the strong sunlight on the water a little upsetting. The colour of the water is unbelievably blue and so warm. Had to sit in the shade after a while - at noon sun is almost overhead. 

About 3.30pm we went back to Long Bay to the guest house - ‘Ports of Call’ - run by a Canadian and his wife. It is right on the coast - walk out from the terrace onto the sea shore. We had a welcome cup of tea sitting at tables just by the sand.

Very attractive bedrooms. All furniture made of bamboo with beautifully coloured bedspreads. Walked along the shore.

8pm. Dinner. We all had shrimps cooked in butter, with sweet corn.

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

A Morning

We watched from our breakfast table as, well before sunrise, a thousand and more pink-footed geese filled the sky as skein after skein - some better organised than others - flew north to their daylight feeding grounds, more....

....and more of them in bigger or smaller groups as the light grew and....

....the sun finally broke the horizon.

After breakfast I walked up the track that climbs into the forestry, carefully because....

....the night's clear sky had brought a sharp frost and there were places where the going underfoot was treacherous; and as I walked so the birds gave me more joy, first as....

....more geese passed over, lower than the earlier ones, then as....

,,,,three buzzards wheeled above the fields which, in summer, had supported the glut of rabbits which has now given way to famine.


I walked for about half-an-hour uphill, far enough to be able to see the warmth of the sun light the Silver Rock, seen here with Loch Fleet away in the distance.

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

A Tropical Adventure - 1

When we set off on our two-year contract in Jamaica we asked both sets of parents to come out and visit us - confident that my well-travelled parents would take up the offer, and equally certain that Mrs MW's parents wouldn't - her father refused to fly so the furthest they had been was Italy.

To our surprise and disappointment my father refused to come, even though he could have done the journey by ship, so my mother asked Gill's mother, Bea, if she would accompany her - and, to everyone's surprise, she jumped at the chance.

While in Jamaica Bea kept a diary. This is the first of two entries from it, from the day she arrived in the country after a thirteen hour flight from the UK.



March 17th 1974 - Sunday

Disturbed night with barking of dogs and crowing of cocks. Awake at 4.30am. New bird songs and a beautiful humming bird in the garden - so tiny. I find the colour here fascinating - garden full of lovely tropical flowers - hibiscus (red, pink-yellow, etc), pride of Barbados (lovely flame-coloured flowers), cactus (in bud), banana trees, etc. I did a few arrangements for Gill but found the hibiscus did not last - seemed to last only one day after being picked.

Spent an easy day - in the afternoon went across to the school. Can well understand Jonathan getting depressed about things - broken windows, general air of neglect - although an enormous expansion is planned (1000 pupils during the day but evening classes as well). School starts at 7.30am finishes at 2.30pm.

Very tired in the evening - had to go to bed before the others.

Monday, December 1, 2025

The Daily Challenge

A little excitement each day - not too  much, for I'm an old man - is what keeps me going, particularly in winter when, despite the miles we walk, there's relatively little to be seen in the natural world. So, a photograph combining the recent red sunrises with the daily commute of pink-footed geese northwards in the early morning, seemed a challenge worth attempting, and this is the result, taken yesterday morning from our bedroom window.

Another challenge, which happens quite frequently as we walk along Squirrel Alley on our way down to the village, is to get a picture of one of the red squirrels which come to the squirrel feeders put out by the people in the houses that back onto the woods.

Again, yesterday, Fortune smiled, for no fewer than three red squirrels were running around in the trees, of which only this one paused for long enough for me to take its portrait.

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Cold Walking

This morning we walked the ancient trackway that runs along the coast to the northeast of Golspie and was once the main highway to Wick and the Orkney Islands, a walk we used to follow often when we lived at the other end of the village. Sadly, the weather was miserable, grey clouds which occasionally produced a thin, sleety rain, ice underfoot from last night's frost, a light but biting northerly wind, and....

....only the very occasional, very watery sunny interval.

There was little wildlife visible to cheer us. Even the gulls seemed to have moved elsewhere, and there was no sign of the rock doves which usually over-winter along this shore. However, we did see this patient grey heron....

....the usual cormorants, a curlew, a redshank, and a handful of oystercatchers.

The only thing perhaps worthy of attention was this plant, growing just above the storm line at the top of the beach, a plant we haven't seen before. Could it be a sedum, an escapee from a nearby garden?

Friday, November 28, 2025

Stanley's Kopje

I spend more and more time now looking back through the hundreds of photographs I have on my laptop, remembering people, landscapes, sounds, smells, animals.... remembering so much and, with those memories, wishing I could turn the clock back and visit the places I have loved, just one more time.

I know I won't, can't. If I could, I would go to places like Stanley's Kopje, seeing it as we did in 2011. It's a lodge in Mikumi National Park, Tanzania, typical of the sort we stayed in during our three trips to Tanzania. The large building houses the communal rooms - lounge, dining room, bar - while the guests each have a tent-based 'bedroom', all with wide views across the surrounding countryside. 

Makumi is the national park nearest to Dar-es-Salaam so isn't considered one of the best but we thoroughly enjoyed it. For those who must see the 'big five' it is a bit disappointing. We saw elephant and lion but the elephant were in small groups and lacked good tusks, a reflection of the years of poaching.

I'm far more interested in the less important animals, such as the Maasai giraffe which, like all the larger animals, spent much of their time in the shade, for Mikumi was very hot and dry when we visited; and....

....the zebra, which always look fat and healthy whatever the weather.

We enjoyed Stanley's Skopje for many reasons but an experience I particularly enjoyed was their early morning drive which included breakfast in the bush.

So, farewell Stanley's Kopje, Mikumi and its animals, including this rather fine marsh mongoose. I hope that, long into the future, others visit and enjoy you as much as I did.

Thursday, November 27, 2025

An Unwelcome Visitor

This is the central business district of our small bird feeding operation, where fat, sunflower kernels, peanuts, niger, and mixed seeds are available to customers from a variety of dispensers - free - twenty-four hours a day, but yesterday afternoon it was suddenly deserted.

The cause is sitting to the left of the above picture, a....

....very smart sparrowhawk, visiting what it considered to be the centre of its feeding operation, and was in no hurry to move on.

The lack of small birds didn't seem to worry it. It sat for about twenty minutes, enjoying the sunshine and waiting for lunch to make a mistake,

None of the small birds did make a mistake so the sparrowhawk seemed suddenly to give up, and moved to another spot which is particularly popular with some of our small birds, the chaffinches and house sparrows - the bird bath. By this time....

....the very unwelcome visitor was being carefully watched, from a safe distance, so it moved....

....back to the feeding area, finally giving up and flying off round the side of the house.