Category: Outer Hebrides

  • Dùn Èistean

    Dùn Èistean

    The site of a medieval fort on a small island the size of half a football pitch surrounded by steep crags off the coast just east of the Butt of Lewis overlooking the shipping routes of The Minch. The island probably supported a permanent community and is said to be the traditional stronghold of the…

  • Mo Buidhe

    Mo Buidhe

    An ascent of An Cliseam, at 799 metres the highest mountain on Harris and a Corbett to boot, a short ridge to the slightly lower Mulla Bho Dheas. Cloud base was at 600m so not much to see. Dropping out of the cloud on the descent down Mo Bruidhe ridge into brilliant sunshine, Bunavoneader on…

  • Lazy beds at Losgaintir

    Lazy beds at Losgaintir

    Lazy beds or feannagan in Gaelic are an ancient method of cultivation. Similar to ridge and furrow except lazy beds were dug by hand usually on the steepest slopes. The peat sods were cut into blocks and piled up in ridges inter-layered with seaweed fertiliser. Potatoes were the staple crop until the potato blight of the…

  • Bheàrnaraigh

    Bheàrnaraigh

    Fantastic rock strata on an un-named beach on the north coast of Berneray. Gneiss I understand, a metamorphic rock 542 to 4000 million years old. I thought geologists could be more precise than that. Berneray, Gaelic Bheàrnaraigh, is said to come from the Norse bjarnar and ey meaning island of the bear. Whether bears survived here is hard to…

  • North Uist Sunset

    North Uist Sunset

    An unexpected sunset after a day of winds and passing squalls. From a rocky headland called Raicinis on the northern end of Traigh Stir near the township of Hosta.

  • View from Sheabhal

    View from Sheabhal

    Castlebay, Barra

  • Bàgh a'Deas

    Bàgh a'Deas

    The south beach, one of three on Vatersay, clean, white and sandy; and the least frequented.

  • Sheabhal

    Sheabhal

    Sheabhal, the highest hill on Barraigh.