Generally Speaking

Outer Hebrides – 7 – Going home – and general comments on the EV experience.

Our trip: 1,700 miles driving – with four ferry crossings.

That Thursday morning we had a breakfast of muesli and kippers, checked out, and drove away, not actually ‘without a backward glance’, because I stopped for this photo.

Strangely quiet and soulless hotel – in spite of its four stars

The 20 miles back down to Stornoway only took us half an hour and as check-in at the ferry terminal was at 1pm we had lots of time.

As ever, the first thing to do before we could relax was get the car plugged into a charger. We had driven 100 miles since we topped up the day before and wanted to arrive on the mainland with a full battery ready for the drive south the next morning. So we made our way back to the same Chargepoint Scotland installation we had used before – in the big, free car park half a mile east of the town centre. We again found both the main units free, which was lucky because the middle one hadn’t worked last time, but again the other one started charging straight away. As you see from the photo, there was a white Renault Zoe on the smaller unit at the end – a car with a much smaller range which we could only think must have been a local.

The unit in the middle had failed to connect the previous day.

As we started into town Lesley had another of her clever ideas. We had a vague memory that the nice people from Hebridean Hopscotch, our tour organiser, were based somewhere near here, and sure enough, when we looked it up we found the office was only a couple of hundred yards down the road. So we called in as we went past to introduce ourselves and give them some feedback on the trip and the places we’d stayed. i.e. the two B&Bs way out in front, followed by the hotels in reverse order of star-rating. It became apparent that it was still quite unusual for someone to attempt the trip in an electric car, possibly even a first for them, and the agent, with her lovely Hebridean accent, seemed relieved that we had had no significant trouble.

We then had time to kill in the town, so we had coffee in a quirky coffee shop and watched a couple of lads busking on their bagpipes.

Stornoway buskers

Ferry loading, as ever, was straightforward and we left the car on the car deck to find comfortable seats for the crossing.

It was a modern, well-appointed ship and the observation lounge was hushed and comfortable, with just the right amount of gentle motion from the waves. Only half the length of the Oban-Castlebay crossing, the hour and forty minutes passed very easily.

Now having completed our Hebridean Hopscotch itinerary, we had booked this night via Booking.com at Harbour House, a large, modern B&B just up the road from the Ullapool ferry terminal, where we, along with a number of other car-loads off the boat, were greeted with a convivial dram of Scotch.

It was a lovely, sunny evening as we walked the half mile to the seafront for supper at the Ferry Boat Inn, We had only come a short distance south on the ferry but noticed a completely different feel to the place from Lewis, partly because of the vastly improved weather no doubt, but in spite of road works all along the seafront front it struck us as a much brighter and greener place than the greyness of Stornoway.

Cruise liner in Ullapool Bay from the window of our hotel.
The back of the hotel – leaving in the morning

It was a four hour drive from Ullapool to Glasgow, and as we bypassed Inverness and went on through Aviemore the road became gradually larger and busier.

We had thought we would break the journey and try out one of the numerous Chargepoint Scotland stations indicated in and around Perth and Stirling. But actually when we looked at the detail on the app only some them were the CCS kind we needed and those seemed to be well off the route and in places like multi-story car parks. So when the navigation system showed us that we had enough charge to get to a Tesla supercharger we took the easy way out and told it to take us there.

Which it did, automatically starting the process of conditioning the battery for supercharging (heating it, we think) when we were about twenty minutes out. Very cool.

The supercharger installation at Motherwell

The Motherwell installation, near Glasgow, turned out to be situated on land owned by the Dakota Eurocentral Hotel, a grand establishment indeed. Signs by every pump warned you to go inside and enter the car’s registration, or pay a large penalty fee. All rather odd – but obviously the deal. So in we went to the dimly-lit and rather pretentious interior and sat for a while eating expensive sandwiches with their crusts trimmed off and drinking expensive lime and soda.

Never was it more apparent that Tesla ownership gives you membership of an exclusive and privileged club, which is fine for us, but hardly a model for EV charging infrastructure in general. For us it was something of a guilty relief after negotiating public chargers, even in relatively-enlightened Scotland, to get back to the confidence-inspiring simplicity of just backing up, opening the charge-point flap, plugging in, and walking away. Leaving the car to draw its 125kW or so, instead of the 35kW or so we had become used to – but that was only one, and perhaps the least, of the advantages.

After that we drove on along the motorway through lowland Scotland towards Carlisle and the border. A beautiful drive on a spacious road with widely separated carriageways, which follows the route I had several times travelled by rail. During these long stages we entertained ourselves by listening to all nine hours of Jim Broadbent reading Rachel Fry’s delightful The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, which suited us perfectly.

Driving through lowland Scotland

The M6 through the hills or northern England is one of our favourite roads and we stopped for the night near its highest point with the Lake District on the horizon, at the isolated Shap Wells hotel, again booked, this time at short notice, through Booking.com.

It was a large, elegant, traditional hotel set in beautiful countryside with its own wooded glen alive with waterfalls and red squirrels. We loved it and its friendly staff.

Stopping to top up a final time at Keele services superchargers, the next morning, we found ourselves diverted down the M5 because of an accident on the M40. And so came home by an unfamiliar but very beautiful route through the Cotswold Hills.

It had been a fabulous trip.


The EV experience.

Many chargers indicated on the islands

Our experience is that the car doesn’t go as far as it says it will. Although the nominal range is 330 miles, in practice we looked for chargers at least every 250. Our experience of the Tesla network had given us great confidence, but were much more cautious when we were using public chargers because we weren’t sure they would work

This certainly applied while we were on the Islands where we tried to keep the battery close to half full. Which meant finding a charger every other day. And there is no denying that this became a background preoccupation. I have no doubt, however, that others would be more courageous than we were.

Scotland’s national public charging network, Chargeplace Scotland, with 1,000 units and counting. This is far more advanced than the jungle of competing networks in England. It has a unified payment system (Hallelujah!) either via the app, via the website, or using a contactless card. We had sent for the card in advance of our trip and set up linking to a credit card.

So – the Chargeplace Scotland app shows what looks like an ample provision on the Islands – three, for a start, on Barra where we arrived, two of them in Castlebay itself and one of those outside the council offices, literally across the road from our hotel.

It sounded great, and we had come all the way from Abington services south of Glasgow expecting it would be easy. But as I described in the blog, I couldn’t make that unit work and had to go down to the quay and plug in to the more modern-looking one there. Which worked fine, very much to my relief.

And that turned out to be the pattern. There were two kinds of unit, a smaller one – which I never got to work – with a minimalist display and requiring your own connecting cable, and a bigger one in a blue livery with its own cables, often sited at a ferry terminal, which did work, sometimes after one or two false starts. The latter kind delivered around 35kW and topped the car up in about an hour – coffee or walk-around. Twice we found the units occupied, but we got round that by coming back later.

One point seems almost too obvious to mention, but is actually important: unlike a conventional filling station, these installations are always unmanned. And there is never anybody around who understands them. To be fair, there is an emergency help line, and if we had tried that we might feel differently.

The bottom line is that we never actually had a serious worry about charging, but it was sometimes frustrating. Even in more-enlightened Scotland we basically haven’t got it right yet if this is to be the future.

In every other respect driving the the Tesla was an absolute dream. It is incredibly comfortable, quiet and smooth. The effortless power wafted us up the steepest of slopes without the car showing the slightest sign of noticing the difference. Light years away from the changing of gears and the revving of engines.

The large central information screen constantly provided a wealth of information, including a zoomable satellite rendering of the country we were travelling through, with points of interest highlighted and labelled.

Compared with driving our old diesel Skoda – by previous standards a refined and sophisticated car – it feels like a quantum leap forward.

The Sat-nav showing our position at the Butt of Lewis Lighthouse.

Bottom line – cost…

Here is a schedule of the chrging charges we incured. Curiously, the full top-up in Castlebay, after we arrived on the islands, never appeared on the Chargeplace Scotland account at all. And the one we had at Tarbert Ferry Terminal (in the rain) wasn’t billed! We certainly had both.

Summary of charging charges for the trip

Outer Hebrides – 6 – Isle of Lewis

Tuesday 16th – Journey from the Harris Hotel up through the island to Borve House Hotel, Lewis

Annotated Google Map showing sites we visited on our way up to the Butt of Lewis Lighthouse.

We weren’t really prepared for what a large place Lewis is. Or for the fact that once you get much above the half of the island which is Harris, most of the interest in Lewis appears to be round the edges.

Although on arriving from the Southern Islands we had been immediately struck by the evidence of increased prosperity – almost none of the deserted or ruined buildings, almost none of the abandoned and rusting farm and other machinery that on the whole tourists don’t care to photograph..

But after the beautiful hills and mountains of Harris, the central area of Lewis appears to be a huge expanse of more or less uniform peat bog. Which has its own fascination, but would be an heroic trek for anyone determined to complete the Hebridean Way on foot. Bicyclists were a different matter, although for them it is tough going as well, but there were a great many of them doing the trip.

Many miles of road like this on Lewis

Ancient sites along the way spoke of the milder climate in the Hebrides many centuries ago. The.Standing Stones of Callanish are 4,000 years old – older than Stonehenge – and the visitor centre and museum at the site did a good job of telling the various theories about the significance and purpose of the site. Two avenues of stones, one long and one short, crossed at what was clearly some sort of ceremonial centre. We checked the orientation of the long axis out of curiosity and found it ran towards the SSE. The stones themselves were more of the ancient gneiss rock, naturally grained and patterned and very beautiful, especially when the sun broke through the scudding clouds.

We were told that the visitor centre has been awarded a six million pound grant for upgrading, which was a bit eyebrow-raising. Let’s hope the stones are not going to be roped off from visitors as Stonehenge has been – although of course that was for excellent reasons. Progress, and all that.

Please expand the above pictures to get a getter idea.

The second visitor attraction along the way was the Iron Age tower of Carloway Broch. A mere 2,000 years old, this is a surprisingly sophisticated structure of double-skinned dry stone walls, with staircases inside them giving access to what were once upper floors.

This site was even less regimented than the standing stones, and you could go inside through the very low entrance, through another doorway opposite into the space between the walls. and climb up the first flight of the staircase.

It had turned into a sunny afternoon and the close turf was delightful to walk on. There was a steady, spread-out stream of visitors, but I was the only one who climbed the hillside behind to see and photograph the view from above.

From there we pressed on, past what was to be our hotel for the next two nights, to the northernmost point of our journey – the Butt of Lewis lighthouse. After mile upon mile through almost uninhabited country we came to a string of relatively heavily populated habitations at the very top of Lewis: South and North Dell, Swainbost, Habost, Lional and Eoropaidh. We wondered what on earth so many people could find to do up there, but were assured by a local that employment there was good.

The Butt of Lewis is known as one of the wildest and windiest places in the British Isles, but we found it, and its lighthouse, on a beautiful day. It was a lovely place, with intricately-folded metamorphic gneiss rocks, crashing waves, and seabirds, which we recognised as fulmars, roosting on the sheer rock faces in pairs who seemed to spend much of the time billing, though not actually cooing.

Having sat and walked on the short grass and talked to the cosmopolitan visitors, we started back along the road and almost immediately stopped above a little bay to which we descended and Lesley had a paddle in the sea.

The hotel was rather strange and did not live up to its star rating for us. Although it probably ticked all the boxes for a modern building it had fire doors every few paces in narrow corridors with no pictures on the walls, and for us it seemed soulless. Certainly in comparison with the more traditional hotels we stayed at and no comparison at all to the two B&Bs further south.

Wednesday 17th

The weather was deteriorating by the next morning, and we set off to have a look at Stornoway. With a population of around 9,000 it is by far the largest town in the Outer Hebridean chain. The general feel was much more like a mainland town, and a prosperous one at that, with streets of large well-built houses.

But at the same time much of it felt quite run down, and quite grey, It may have been the weather, and another frustrating experience with a charger, but we felt quite dispirited. But we found a Guardian, and the same day’s at that, and sat reading it in the lovely public library which had a delightful young woman librarian who allowed us to use the toilets which were marked ‘staff only’. Which was a good thing because the only public toilets were closed for renovation.

With the car fully charged – yes, I’m afraid I have to admit that doing this trip with an electric car, even one with a big battery like ours, charging does form a constant background preoccupation, and I would be misleading you if I didn’t include this aspect – with the car fully charged, we made our way to the castle and its modern museum, with a film of Hebridean landscape scenes projected onto three large walls, with no narration – just the sounds of nature. The museum continued with well-curated displays of aspects of Hebridean and Gaelic culture and history. Then we had a light lunch in the excellent cafeteria.

Heading west across the moor, on 17 miles of narrow, single-track road, we came to the village of Gearrannan – where a picturesque group of old Black Houses has been conserved to illustrate the very simple conditions in which the crofters lived, often with their livestock at the downhill end – helping to heat the building. At the end of the winter they would apparently take down the end wall, clear out the manure and bedding, and spread it on the fields.

The last families were moved into council accommodation as recently as the 1970s and fortunately it occurred to someone to preserve the village as a record.

The interior of one of the houses has been fully restored, with even a peat fire burning brightly in the grate,

At the other end of the building there was a demonstration of the weaving of Harris Tweed.- a traditional occupation of the villagers. This wonderful character was there six days a week patiently demonstrating to a constant stream of inquisitive visitors.

In the evening we decided to eschew the hotel restaurant, braving the rain to drive 10 minutes up island to The Cross Inn which was situated in what was little more than a scatter of houses called, unsurprisingly, Cross.

The Cross Inn

This was a warm, cheerful and bustling place and suited us fine. As elsewhere, it was a perfectly decent meal, though scarcely memorable. I finished off with a single malt, in valediction to an extraordinary trip, and Lesley drove us back to the hotel.

Completed in the next post…

The Outer Hebrides – 4 – Benbecula & North Uist

I have to tell you about the places we stay, because they are such an important part of the trip. We had been assured by both Margaret in South Uist and by the assistant in the Hebridean Jewellery Centre, when we told them where we were heading next, that we ‘would be alright with Mary’. And so indeed we were.

It later transpired that one of her two dogs had died at the vet’s the day we arrived (and the other hadn’t got out of its bed since) but she gave us the most wonderful welcome in spite of this. Another tremendous character, she had simply not missed a trick in providing facilities for our comfort and convenience, including a no-touch automatic soap-dispenser in the bathroom, if you please, and a power hub with no less than six power sockets and four USB charging points. Wi-fi, as everywhere we stay, is a given, and the password is almost the first item in every welcome.

Mary’s Borve Guest House logo was on welcome card, biros, wrappers round table napkins, and even on the disposable paper covering for the fresh butter in the pat. She told us she had burnt it onto the wooden table mats herself with a kind of soldering iron as something to do during lockdown (no photo – sorry!).

As before, we went for supper both evenings to a hotel about half a mile down the road – this one was the Dark Isles Hotel. And this time it looked a little further and we drove, offering a lift to two fellow guests the first evening, for which they were very grateful. We shared a table with them, two agreeable English ladies, who revealed knowledge of gin.

The excellent waiter was Romanian, and when we expressed surprise that he had found his way to South Uist he said he really liked it here, having tried Bath for a number of years. The dining room was a busy place and the sound of wild revelry burst through the door from the public bar every time it opened. Our waiter explained cheerfully that it was noisy music and noisy people. They were still at it when we left. And the second night was quieter.

The Dark Isles Hotel where we went for supper is in the distance.

Saturday 13th

We thought it would be wise to top up the car so, once we had had Mary’s sumptuous breakfast, we started the day by finding the charging unit marked on the Chargepoint Scotland app as being, improbably, in front of the school next to the hotel where we had eated the night before (which would obviously have been a good time to use it!) and found it already occupied. So we set off for the day up the island of Benbecula, where, as on South Uist, the mainly single track but beautifully-surfaced road wound and undulated through relatively flat land studded with innumerable lochs.

Reaching and crossed the causeway onto North Uist we made straight for the ferry port of Lochmaddy where we were directed by a workman to the charger down by the quay where upgrade works were in progress, so we were able to leave the car on it for an hour. Leaving, as it turned out, Lesley’s phone in it, so that, amongst the obvious communication difficulties, the car ‘thought’ she was still in it (Bluetooth, in case you wondered) and never locked. Not that that seemed the slightest danger in these parts.

Anyway, we repaired to a lovely little, modern, gallery, shop and museum a short distance away, where we installed ourselves while I walked a little further up the hill than I expected to the local shop in search of a newspaper (Lesley didn’t know where I’d gone, hence the aforementioned communication difficulty). Reaching the tiny general store I learned that the plane with the nationals had not yet arrived from the mainland, so I came back with a Stornoway Gazette, from which we read of chaos in the Caledonian MacBrane ferry services disrupting the tourist industry which was now to be hit by a savage hike in business rates.

From Lochmaddy, with the ring of confidence afforded by 300 miles in the battery, we continued anticlockwise around the top of the island towards another bird reserve. On the way I suddenly recognised a conspicuous tower on an island as having been next to a farm on North Uist on a recent Countryfile on BBC television, featured because it had been taken over and was being run, unaided, by an utterly-extraordinary 17 year old lad.

As seen on Countryfile

As I stood by the car to take the above picture a woman with a stout walking pole and tweed headband came striding up the hill and I couldn’t resist sharing my discovery. She was delighted: “Oh, you mean Archie!”. It turned out she was a local and it was obvious they were proud of him.

When we got to the bird reserve we happened to be comparing notes about the birds with another local, and when I mentioned that we had seen the famous farm back down the road he said that the woman running the campsite at the reserve was Archie’s Mum. Small world. Lovely people.

Anyway, we had a superb walk around a complicated shoreline in very strong wind. Here we did see a lot of birds, a shag and a number of eider ducks on rocks, and lapwings, greylag geese, arctic terns and great flocks of dunlin which we tried not to disturb on the grassy slopes. And turnstones on the shore.

It was quite a tough walk for us and we got back to the car glowing from the wind.

Sunday 14th

Saying goodbye to Borve Guest House we drove back up through Benbecula, anticlockwise around North Uist past Lockmaddy and right at the top across yet another causeway onto the small island of Berneray where there was another ferry terminal from which we were going to cross the Sound of Harris in the early afternoon.

Wich left us plenty of time, on yet another sunny day, for another coastal walk.

Joining the ferry queue early I passed the time chatting to group of bikers about the practicalities of EV motoring, agreeing that it, or something like it, had to be the future, but they hadn’t got it entirely sorted yet,

According to my friend Alec, who skippered our four cruises in the past, the Sound of Harris. with its profusion of obstacles, involves probably the most intricate pilotage on the entire Western coast. The ferry, he told me, has to make 25 changes of course in the crossing, which was very apparent as we watched from high above the car deck (still having to cancel the car alarm with the app!)

Rocks dead ahead – time for another change of course

We were third car off the ferry (that’s the front of our car in the picture – next to the bikes) and drove up the mountainous and incredibly beautiful west coast, stopping with others to look down on the beaches of Seilebost and Luskentyre.

to Tarbert where we checked in to the Harris Hotel.

Continues in the next post…

The Outer Hebrides – 2 – The Isle of Barra

After a full cooked breakfast at the hotel I went out to put the car on a charger. The Chargeplace Scotland app showed two in Castlebay, one, just across the road outside the Council Offices, looked pretty tatty and although it recognised my card the instructions just took me round and round in circles. I may have been doing something wrong but a member of staff arriving for work said that people did seem to have trouble with it, so I went down to the more modern-looking one at the ferry terminal and that started charging fine. It said it would take 50 minutes to full, so I left it going and walked up the hill to pick up Lesley from the hotel.

She had selected the Vatersay Beaches Circuit for us from the superb walkhighlands.co.uk website – this is the actual walk but you may have to create an account, which is free, to go that deep in the site.

Vatersay is a causeway-linked island at the Southern extremity of Barra only a few miles from Castlebay. It is the starting point for the Hebridean Way footpath which extends the length of the entire Island chain, 156 miles, 10 islands, 6 causeways, and the two ferry crossings we are doing – the only point of similarity between our journeys!

Getting there gave us our first experience of the wonderful, winding and undulating, largely single-track roads with which we were to become so familiar (I’m writing this a week behind – from Harris as it happens, think tweed). With passing places at frequent intervals drivers tended to be courteous and cooperative in giving way as appropriate, with the discreet gestures of appreciation threatening an overuse syndrome in the waver’s wrist. A refinement was to give way promptly to a local vehicles coming up behind, sometimes earning a horn-toot acknowledgement. And, of course, these roads are stunningly beautiful.

Approaching the causeway to Vatersay

Contrary to advance-reports of endless horizontal rain (which we were determined to enjoy anyway) the day became beautifully sunny, so we parked at the Community Centre as instructed, donned our boots and set forth along the beach. It was a long time since we had done anything like this and we were unsure how well we would stand up to it, but in the end we had a brilliant walk, seeing Lapwings (Peewits), lots of gulls and lots of sheep, and returning after a couple of hours to the cafe for ice-creams.

Pics will enlarge if you tap them

After the walk we drove right round the island back to Castlebay, which took about an hour. Then we rested, had another meal at the hotel, and settled down for the night. Not tough at all.

Wednesday 10th

The pattern for our trip was to have two nights in each of five places, all the way up to the top of Lewis. So the second day in Barra was the one in which we were to move on – but we had until 4pm when the ferry left for South Uist from the top of the island.

So we had another walk, this time on the South West coast of Barra, out to the remains of a two thousand year old iron-age fort, Dún Bán. We were feeling desperately intrepid, stepping across the sodden, resilient machair peatland with its outcrops of ancient gneiss – the oldest rock in Europe – especially as there had been a short rain squall soon after we set off. But we felt secure in our waterproofs, hats, and the boots which were proving to be both waterproof and completely secure against the slightest slipping.

But as we gazed down on the waves and the grassy fort, with its rings of long-ruined walls, thinking ourselves entirely alone in the landscape, we suddenly noticed we had been joined by a party of young people, some of whom were in shorts and T-shirts, and all of whom were carrying full packs. It turned out they were final year St Andrews students who were celebrating their graduation by camping up the Hebridean Way. Respect! Extremely nice young people.

Coming down we agreed that it was the best coastal walk we could remember.

Back in the car we went up to the top of the island, had a look at the vast flat beach used as the Barra Airport, put the car in the ferry queue and walked a little way along looking, unsuccessfully, for otters. But sitting peacefully on a rock we saw a lot of seals (lying peacefully on rocks).

Eriskay

The relatively short ferry journey across the Sound of Barra takes you to the tiny island of Eriskay – site of the wrecking of The Parliamentarian, loaded with Scotch and immortalised in the film Whiskey Galore, and more evocatively, home of the Eriskay Love Lilt, of which Sir Hugh Roberton said, in this recording by his Glasgow Orpheous Choir made at least two generations ago, “There is no lovelier tune anywhere”:

And from Eriskay a causeway takes you to the island of South Uist, our next stopping point.

Continues…

Outer Hebrides May 2023 – 1 – Getting there

We broke the journey up twice, staying with my brother’s family near Chester for the day of the Coronation, then a night with friends near Glasgow.

Our route up from Alton to Oban

We used Tesla superchargers all the way. topping up at Keele, and the glorious Tebay services on the M6, then finally at Abington services just short of Glasgow. We could easily have managed without one of these, but we like to keep a reserve of well over 100 miles range in the battery, and it makes the stops shorter. So each charge took under an hour and fitted in well with refreshments and leg-stretching.

Bonny bonny banks

We started early on the Monday morning for the final leg to the Oban ferry terminal from Glasgow. We didn’t see much of Loch Lomond’s bonny bonny banks, or anything else for that matter, as it was raining and misty all the way, but what the hell, we were on holiday.

That stage of the journey took a little over two hours and we arrived at the terminal with two hours in hand before departure. Part of that time we spent drinking coffee, finding a paper and exchanging the vouchers provided by Hebridean Hopscotch (our excellent Lewis-based travel agent) for the tickets and boarding cards we would need for the four ferry crossings on the journey ahead.

Four ferry crossings in prospect

It had been my intention to try out the ChargePlace Scotland charger at the terminal and see if the contactless card I had been sent worked, but when the check-in man in his control box raised a barrier to let us get to it, the unit recognised my card all right and asked me to connect, but it turned out that another car was using the CCS connector that we needed.

When the owner of the car came back he showed me that there was actually an auxiliary outlet on the side of the unit that I could have used with the connector cable the Tesla carries in its frunk (i.e. front trunk), but by then, as we had almost 200 miles left in the battery from the Abington top-up, I decided to leave charging until the islands, graciously yielded my place to couple in an electric Jaguar whose need seemed more urgent (thus contributing to the camaraderie of EV drivers) and moved the car straight into the ferry queue.

I should mention that a background theme for this whole trip was to share with my wife something of the four Hebridean sailing trips out of Oban’s Dunstaffnage marina I had with medical-writing colleagues from Glasgow – in days gone by when I used to fold more neatly.

That made it a deeply nostalgic experience sailing through the Sound of Mull and out past the Ardnamurchan Point lighthouse which I once spent what seemed like most of a day battling past into the teeth of a westerly gale. People who shared that trip laugh to this day at the memory of me standing at the wheel steering into the huge seas and saying how odd it was that we were allowed to do that sort of thing when we weren’t allowed to buy more than a dozen paracetamol.

Sadly on the present occasion, the iconic profile of ‘Eigg on the starboard bow’ (as in Speed bonny boat, etc.) was completely hidden in the mist. Similarly Muck and Rhum, names to conjure with, but not, this time, sights to be shared. So Lesley and I settled down to reading, buying things from the bar and occasionally leaping up to gaze in directions people said they saw dolphins.

At least the journey was reasonably smooth and it didn’t seem long before land was in sight and we were coming into Castlebay on the Isle of Barra. Past, you may not be surprised to hear, the castle in the bay. Then it was down to the car deck, wait for the ramps to be lowered, and then out onto the jetty.

The Castlebay Hotel we were staying at overlooks the harbour and was ridiculously easy to find. So we parked in front, carried bags up the steep steps, checked in and were shown into our room, with a view from our window of the boat we had arrived on.

Continues in next post…

To Reykjavik for the Nordic Congress of General Practice

Back home now after a week in Iceland. Primarily for The 20th Nordic Congress of General Practice, a huge event with 1,500 delegates in the magnificent new Harpa Conference Centre and Concert Hall for which I and four fellow GPs ran a workshop on the subject ‘Doctors as Social Activists’. Link to my presentation

Views of the astonishing Harpa conference centre

I was describing my efforts since retirement to challenge organised climate change denial. Link to my presentation

1,500 Nordic GPs coming out for coffee break from one of the plenary sessions in the main hall

This was the very opposite of a freebie because we paid all our own expenses and discovered, having dutifully followed the advice to book flights and accommodation well in advance, that all five of us would have to pay the £700 registration fee for the conference.

This was on top of Reykjavik being, with Tokyo, currently the most expensive capital city in the world, even without the devalued pound, so that everything – food, trips, entrance to exhibitions, goods in shops – was more than twice as expensive as at home. Nonetheless, Lesley and I gritted our teeth, tightened our belts (I lost 3½ lbs on the trip) and took the opportunity to see something of this fascinating country and its admirable people.


Apart from the conference we were lucky to be in Reykjavik for Iceland’s National Independence Day (from Denmark : 1944). In spite of a cold wind and intermittent downpours, the atmosphere was festive and friendly. We felt it a real privilege to be there. We heard the President give a speech and then an actress gave a beautiful recital of a poem in Icelandic. Then there was a parade to the fair-ground around the lake, where there were circus acts and the world’s oldest strong-man competition.


The houses and buildings in Reykjavik were extraordinarily varied, often brightly painted, and quite a few had large murals painted on them.


The famous Hallgrimskirkja cathedral dominated from the top of the city, It was striking outside, although the concrete was currently under repair – testifying to the extreme harshness of the climate. The inside was serenely beautiful, with the most magnificent modern organ I have ever seen, being played while we were there.


We were unlucky with the weather, but we shared a car for a day out to the Snaefellsjoekull National Park north of the city, and took a coach trip around the ‘Golden Circle’ on our last day – our only really sunny day.

The Golden Circle is very much a tourist route but you see the junction between the American and the Eurasian tectonic plates (separating at about a centimetre a year) at the Þingvellir National Park, the magnificent Gullfoss Falls, and the geysers at the Haukadalur Geothermal Area.

Everywhere you see beautiful blue lupins, apparently a recent, deliberate introduction to stabilise and enrich the soil (lupins of course being nitrogen-fixers) which are proliferating at an incredible rate and seem to be broadly welcomed.  You can see them in the foreground and in the hills in the picture bottom right above. We were told that the country was 85% covered by trees when the Vikings arrived, but they cut them all down for fuel, housing and ships.

 

One thing which surprised us was the sheer size of the country – more than 300 miles East to West and 200 North to South. So we only saw a small part close to Reykjavik.

And this yellow door was the entry to our little room, with its blind to make it dark when it ought to have been night.

By Eurostar to Marseilles direct

Enjoying three days in Marseilles before joining the Alton Town Twinning Association visit to Pertuis. We are looking forward to staying with the couple we hosted last October.

Unlike the main party who will be arriving by plane tomorrow evening, we came all the way by high speed rail – Eurostar. 1,200km in just over six hours, arriving in the very heart of Marseilles and little more than five minutes walk from our lovely B&B. Smooth and quiet and incredibly free of hassle, the journey has left us feeling subtly but completely different from traveling by air. Premium tickets with good food and extra comfort cost us £180 down and going back standard will only be £60.

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With three day bus/metro/tram passes we are finding getting about here very straight forward. Thus, today we visited the Calanque coast to the East by Metro, two buses, and a two and a half mile walk each way. No problem. No charge. Especially as the isolated beach cafe at the end is closed as it is a Wednesday in September – the owner’s message said he hoped we’d understand! So we made up with an extraordinary Haagen Das ice cream extravaganza down by the harbour when we got back.

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