Iona |
We drove to
Oban and caught the ferry to Mull. I love ferries, especially little everyday
working ferries. There was a Scottish
Water van and a plumber in the queue, and I wondered whether, when they were
given their work-sheets that morning, they thought: Oh great! I’m going to
Mull! They probably did in this weather, Davy said. But in January, not.
Iona's cathedral |
We
stopped for a drink at the Argyll Hotel, which served the best scone and coffee
of the whole trip. We sat in a sunny
garden, beside a richly scented rose-bush, looking at a white beach, blue sea,
and the mountains of Mull beyond.
We stayed
the night at a B&B on Mull, where the landlord didn’t give us a key
because, ‘we never lock anything up.’
We crossed
back to the mainland from Tobermory (or ‘Tobe’ as the locals seem to call it),
and spent most of the next two days on the most beautiful beaches that could be
imagined.
Everywhere was
what Davy called ‘great lumps of scenery’.
I’m not sure exactly what constitutes a great lump of scenery, but you
won’t go far wrong if you include at least one loch, a dozen mountains, a
quantity of boulders and burns and any amount of blue sky. As a bonus, throw in a beach and a couple of
deer.
A great lump of scenery |
There was so
much beauty that, at the end of a day, I was exhausted, and longed to sit in a
dark room, stuffing my face with pot-noodle and watching ‘X-Factor’ as a
corrective. But after a night’s sleep, I was eager for more scenery lumps.
But the
roads! The signs say ‘single-track’ and they do not kid. They are so narrow
there isn’t room for a car to pass a cyclist.
Passing-places
are provided, on alternate sides. If the
nearest passing place is on your side, you pull into it, and wait for the other
car to pass. If it’s on the alternate
side, you stop opposite it, and the other car uses it to pass you.
At least,
that’s how it’s supposed to work, and with locals, it works very well. However, journeys are enlivened by foreign
tourists, who don’t understand the system, or feel more comfortable driving on
the left, and instinctively dive for it in an emergency. A motorcyclist, for instance, shot across in
front of us, into the passing-place Davy was just about to enter.
Another lump of scenery |
A huge
camper van sat in a passing-place, watching us approach, and as soon as we were
nearly level with him, pulled out, entirely blocking the road.
Another
couple made angry shooing motions at us, telling us to reverse, when the
nearest passing-place was on their side, immediately behind them. Our nearest was a considerable distance back
along a winding, hilly, narrow road with a steep drop on our side. Davy wasn’t budging, shoo as they liked, and
it was they who reversed – having caused a minor queue. Not easy on roads so
remote and quiet.
The roads were
so narrow, with so many blind hilltops, hairpin bends and deep dips that the
road often vanished like a magic trick.
You reached the top of a rise, to see the last of it whisking round a
lump of scenery, leaving nothing before you but moor.
Potholes had
crumbled the road’s edges away, and there were drops and ditches at the sides…
We had to develop a system where Davy, driving, kept his eyes on the road
immediately in front of the car, while I watched as far ahead as possible (a
glimpse of road sometimes reappeared in the distance) so I could forewarn him
of approaching vehicles.
After many miles
of this, we passed a shiny new road sign: ‘Beware: Blind Summit.’ Workmen had been despatched from some distant
depot to erect that sign. Beyond it were
miles and yet more miles of difficult, blind, narrow hairpin bends and blind
summits, where sheep, cattle, motorcyclists and camper vans lurked unseen. Why that particular blind summit deserved its
own sign, we never discovered.
But it was a great trip, and even on the morning of the day we returned, we brewed up on great slabs of rock by a waterfall, and enjoyed a coffee-break that no cafe or hotel could equal.
But it was a great trip, and even on the morning of the day we returned, we brewed up on great slabs of rock by a waterfall, and enjoyed a coffee-break that no cafe or hotel could equal.
I took many photos, but there
were some sights I missed and wish I hadn’t…
The enormous – HUGE – red, shaggy
Highland cow standing at the roadside in a lowering glen (hey, embrace the cliché), its
horizontal horns so wide that a single horn nearly spanned the narrow road.
Two small lambs asleep on a
moorside verge, their legs intertwined and wrapped around the pole of a ‘passing
place’ sign.
To distract Madwippet from a mention of a cat. |
But the lost photo I regret most
is of the sweeps of bluebells spilling down to the loch sides. So I tried to put the scene into words
instead:
Brawling
bluebells,
Vibrant, cobalt,
Run to the
lochside,
Steel-blue, cobbled;
The mountain’s
wall,
Tawny, bony:
And the sky
Lark-pierced,
Cerulean,
Still
Lonely.
8 comments:
Sounds like a really great break - feeling quite envious.
But did you really think I'd be so easily distracted by a photo? :-)
Although it's good to see that there are canines keeping the population safe from evil kitties!
WOW!! This is really very nice blog i am very impressed visit at your blog..
Thank you for post..
Thank you Garden Centre Chessington - feel welcome to drop by any time!
I love Iona too, and I've been wandering round it in shorts and barefeet and vest in great heat. A very special place, weather-wise too. And now it's raining...
Blott makes me laugh!
Will next week see Blotttt planning his escape from the Tower? :-)))) Or being chased by a pack of corgis? :-)))
Sigh! It's far too long since I've been to Mull. The trip on the ferry still sounds as though it's magical. I was half afraid that the place had been spoilt by hordes of parents with Tobermory tv nippers.
I love Iona - thanks for taking me back there!
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