This was disappointing but the other wildflowers made up for it, in particular....
....the brilliant purples of the wild thyme which, along with the bright yellows of the eggs-and-bacon plants, seemed to be enjoying a good year.Saturday, May 30, 2026
Purple & Yellow
Friday, May 29, 2026
Tsuro
Imagine then our distress when, on Tuesday afternoon, we found....
....a small body laid out on our garden terrace.We're not 100% certain that it was Tsuro, nor could we work out how the rabbit died, as there was no sign of wounds or of disease. We have had myxomatosis in the area before but rabbits which die from that horrible disease tend to have weepy eyes, and this little corpse look remarkably healthy.
We gave him a decent burial in a place where his nutrients will, in due course, benefit the garden which he so much enjoyed; and, while we're hoping that this wasn't Tsuro and that he'll suddenly reappear, we're also on the lookout for a small rabbit to take his place.Thursday, May 28, 2026
Braeroy
The track along the River Roy which we followed on Saturday passes through this stand of trees which hides the main buildings of the Braeroy Estate which, these days, offers hunting, shooting and fishing in this....
forbidding landscape.On three sides it has no windows or doors and on the fourth, which faces southeast, there are two small skylights, a window and a door. Within....
....the building is these days used for storage.
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
First Orchids
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Lochaber
Empty of humans the Roy glen may be, yet it has an international reputation. I had heard of the Roy long before I felt any great attachment to Scotland as it features in many physical geography and geology text books for....
....its 'parallel roads', lines running along the sides of the glen, seen in this picture along the hill face to the left. These are fossil beaches, left by a loch formed when the glen was dammed and then flooded during one of the last glacial periods.So when I was a geology undergraduate I learned about the parallel roads from this tome, 'Principles of Physical Geology' by the great Arthur Holmes. It was such a special book that I asked my parents if they would purchase me a copy, which they did. Sadly, at some point in one of our many moves, I was separated from it.Friday, May 22, 2026
Butterflies
So, for example, on Wednesday when I went out at about nine in the morning the sun was out and the air temperature a balmy 17C....
....and a variety of butterflies were on the wing, including a tortoiseshell, a small copper, several whites, and........a male orange tip; but by lunchtime the air temperature had dropped suddenly, to a mere 13C, and there wasn't a butterfly to be seen.Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Ships in the Firth
It isn't often that we see a cruise ship making its way in or out of Invergordon, not because there aren't now plenty calling at that port but because the ships are too far away. However, last Wednesday we had a good view of the Norwegian Star leaving port - not because she was any closer than other ships but because she was beautifully picked out by the low, setting sun.
Over the last couple of weeks we've seen an unusually large number of working - as opposed to passenger - ships anchoring in the firth, not because they were seeking shelter from poor weather but because they seemed not to have any work. This is the Esvagt Alba a work/repair vessel which services the Moray East wind farm just to the south of us.Delivered in 2021 to Danish owners, it's not the first time we've seen her.
This is the Maursund, a Norway-registered landing craft built in 1972, while........this is the Monika with a cargo we're noticing more and more - towers and blades for wind farms. She's described as a general cargo ship but her long, open cargo deck is ideal for delivering the bulky parts of wind turbines. She's Dutch-owned but registered in Madeira.Carrying a similar cargo, this is he Aramis, described as a general cargo ship, registered in Lithuania.One of the joys of our time living in Kilchoan was that we could watch, from our house, the many ships of many varieties moving up and down the Sound of Mull, often passing very close to us.