Out & About …

… on the North York Moors, or wherever I happen to be.

Category: Scotland

  • Cove Harbour

    Cove Harbour

    A quaint harbour just down the coast from Torness Nuclear Power Station. In the summer of 1984, about 200,000 tons of rock from the construction of the power station were dumped about three-quarters of mile offshore from Cove to create an artificial reef about a half-mile long and 200 yd. wide, at the time the…

  • Salisbury Crags

    Salisbury Crags

    A line of crags of igneous rock formed 342 million years ago, when lava erupted at Arthur’s Seat through the underlying sedimentary rock. The crags are famous in the world of geology because it is where James Hutton (1726 – 1797), ‘the father of modern geology‘, concluded that the magma intruding into the existing rock…

  • WW1 Gun Battery

    WW1 Gun Battery

    I came across a ghostly complex of forgotten concrete structures whilst wandering through Dalmeny Park on the coast of the Firth of Forth near Edinburgh. It turns they are part of a gun battery built during the First World War to protect the Firth with its naval shipyards. Work on this battery actually began before…

  • Loch Lubnaig

    Loch Lubnaig

    An easy morning walk up An Sidhean after yesterday’s exertions. A bit misty at the top but lovely views of Loch Lubnaig with its interesting alluvial spit where the River Balvag flows in. So perculiar is this natural levee that it has a name — Roinn Mhór. It’s actually a “prograding delta” where sediment from…

  • Stùc a’Chròin

    Stùc a’Chròin

    I’ve always fancied doing the Stùc a’Chròin Hill Race but never had the opportunity. I sort of walked the course today from Strathyre up and over the Meall Mór ridge into Glen Ample before the climb up the 184th highest Munro Wikipedia says the name Stùc a’Chròin means the peak of harm or danger, but…

  • Oratory at St Columba’s Church, Kilneuair

    Oratory at St Columba’s Church, Kilneuair

    A fairly spontaneous decision to explore the ‘Muir of Leckan‘, the hills between Loch Awe and Loch Fyne. Hidden in a bluebell-carpeted copse of trees is the old Church of St Columba at Kilneuair. Separate to the church is a square oratory, a private chapel, probably 18th century, although  it is described as a ‘folly’. The…

  • Kilmartin Glen

    Kilmartin Glen

    Overblown with pre-historic monuments — stone circles, cists, cairns, standing stones. So many to chose from, Chille Mhartainn has them in abundance. This is Nether Largie Standing Stones, five tall standing stones arranged in an X-shape, with an outlier 100 metres to the north and the stump of another one 300 metres to the west.…

  • Paps of Jura

    Paps of Jura

    Farewell to Islay. And farewell to Jura although I didn’t manage a visit this year. But the sight of the Paps of Jura reminded me of adventures past. Of the Bens of Jura Fell Races. Of persuading my dad to drive his clapped out Morris Oxford Estate to make the long journey — he hadn’t…

  • Kilslevan deserted village

    Kilslevan deserted village

    The remains of deserted houses and settlements are common throughout the whole of Scotland, Islay is no exception. Kilslevan seems to have once been a township of at least eight longhouses, and several other buildings, enclosures and two corn-drying kilns although these are hard to discern under the grass and moss. There are the ruins…

  • Eilean Nòstaig

    Eilean Nòstaig

    The windswept rolling headland of Ardnave Point is a mix of machair and sand dunes and populated by inquistive sheep. Along the Atlantic facing coast, a strange abandoned arrangement of concrete dam walls and rusty sluice gates, too small for a boat. I read that it is an abandoned lobster farm. Further information has proved…