We also enjoyed trips out on pleasure craft such as this boat, on which we spent a day at the Treshnish Islands off western Mull, the highlight, for me, being the puffins.
Friday, January 17, 2025
Boats - 5
We also enjoyed trips out on pleasure craft such as this boat, on which we spent a day at the Treshnish Islands off western Mull, the highlight, for me, being the puffins.
Thursday, January 16, 2025
The Loch Lunndaidh Track
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
Sunset & Sunrise
For sheer exuberant beauty there is nothing to beat an African sunset. It isn't just the colours in the sky, it's the sudden silence, as if the inhabitants of the daytime are standing down while the denizens of the night aren't yet fully active. It's also the most dangerous time, when the predators exploit the failing light. It's a breathless time, a time of anticipation of a long and watchful night.
Along the African east coast it's a time when the sun silhouettes the palms, a time to relax, to wander the beach as silence descends, silence broken only by the gentle wash of the waves.There's nothing to beat an African sunset but, over the past few days, Golspie's sunrises have been providing some strong competition. This was sunrise this morning, looking out across the Dornoch and Moray Firths to the lighthouse at Tarbet Ness.Tuesday, January 14, 2025
Redwings
We encountered a flock of redwings some twenty to thirty strong in the hedgerow near Rives Farm this morning, mixed in with several chaffinches and a couple of great tits. This is the first flock we've seen this winter, though we have seen several individuals.
Saturday, January 11, 2025
Hoar Frost
You know that Winter is getting serious when the day's only sighting of the sun is a brief one, a peep from behind a fine curtain of mist; when....
....there's not a breath of wind and the air temperature, instead of showing some increase with the day, continues to drop allowing........the mist to solidify as filigree crystals of ice on exposed surfaces.With the temperature in the garden not rising above -2.5C all day, it's a miserable existence for the small birds. At the front of the house there were as many as ten chaffinches feeding on the mixed seed, while in the back garden........several variations on what looked a first glance like blackbirds were joined by........the first starlings we've seen for a very long time, a species which, given the chance........would quickly empty all the feeders.So we chased the starlings away and put out plenty of food for the other birds, which included chaffinches, goldfinches, blackbirds, wood pigeons and coal tits, such a feast that our resident robin, usually a trencherman for his food, found himself quite outfaced by it.Thursday, January 9, 2025
Boats - 4
When I was born in 1945 my parents hadn't been 'on leave' to the UK since before the war so, like almost everyone in their position, they were anxious to get 'home' to see their relatives. They finally succeeded in 1946, when I had my first experience of travelling on an ocean-going ship. We sailed 'home' aboard the Collegian and returned on the BI boat Malda, above.
Three years later we travelled to the UK again, this time on the Llanstephan Castle. But something had changed. For the first time prices had fallen enough for us to return to East Africa by air, in a BOAC Solent flying boat. The journey from London to Dar-es-Salaam took three days.
I remember little of the three ocean voyages, all via the Red Sea, but I do recall events on my fourth voyage, in 1952, when we travelled to the UK on....
....the Durban Castle - this time the 'long way' via the Cape. The itinerary was Mombasa, Dar-es-Salaam, Beira, Durban, East London, Port Elizabeth, Cape Town, St Helena, Ascension, the Canary Islands and Southampton.
So as a small boy I was already quite accustomed to travelling in 'big ships', and this continued as soon as I left school, when in January 1963 I sailed from Tilbury to Cape Town aboard the Harrison Line's Arbitrator, on my way to a volunteer teaching job in what was then Southern Rhodesia. The difference in this trip was that I had to earn my passage, so I learned what life was really like on a cargo ship, experiencing enough - and being bored enough - to persuade me that, after all, I didn't want to go to sea as a career.
I returned from Rhodesia via Mombasa, where I joined the the BI passenger ship Uganda for a voyage to the UK via the Red Sea and Mediterranean, a journey in the company of several other young people of my age all, like me, heading for university. The ship is seen here in Barcelona, where we had time enough ashore to 'enjoy' a bullfight.My next experience of travel in 'big ships' was when Mrs MW, our eldest daughter, then three, and I travelled out to Jamaica in 1973 aboard a Dutch ship, the Amersfoort, one of many cargo ships in those days which carried up to twelve passengers. Picture shows our ship tied up alongside in St Thomas, US Virgin Islands.
Since then, Mrs MW and I have had to content ourselves with cruise ships. We never set out to travel by cruise ship for the sake of the cruise, our first journey, from Dover to New York on the Norwegian Jewel, being a way getting across the Atlantic without having to fly. Since then we've had four more cruises, all for the sake of the cruise, and enjoyed them partly because we always find ways of doing things when everyone else isn't doing them.
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
Old Age Walking
So, with this very much in mind, we teetered out but when we passed the entrance to the coniferous plantation we noticed that....
Places like Roe Corner were transformed by the snow and, living up to its name, it had plenty of....
....we'd named Speckled Wood, not for its dappled sunlight but for the speckled wood butterflies which flourished here last summer.
The forested areas were almost devoid of bird life - this bird, which I can't identify, being one of the exceptions - except along the sections of the path which backed on to gardens with feeders; and there was no sign of any squirrels.