Posts tagged ‘isle of mull’
Dervaig Stones
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Dervaig Stones
Islandscape Photography Workshop
Isle of Mull
A gray dampish morning, the clouds were low and the midges found Sam shortly.
The Dervaig Stones are located in the hills above the village of Dervaig a short walk off of the single track. Three stones in total, two standing and one fallen. A very green space: rich with lots of different hues of the one color.
Very quickly answered the question that had been waiting.
Get close and low, even if it means some discomfort and wallowing.
And always use the tripod
Clearance Clachan ~ Bruach Mhor
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Sheep fank and cleared clachan of Bruach Mhor above Laggan Bay and Lagganulva and across the bay from the Isle of Ulva.
Rained briefly on the way up, enough to stop and put the camera away.
Wondered about the weather briefly, wondered about my back briefly.
They both held up over time.
😉
Excellent Article – Ulva Ferry Past and Present
Ulva Ferry and the community’s struggle for their primary school.
More Ulva History – A Bit Thicker and Not As Accessible
Clan MacQuarrie: A History, by R. W. Munro and Alan Macquarrie
Bruach Mhor Citing
As Always Your Commentary and Critique Is Appreciated.
Kilbrennan Farm at Ulva Ferry ~ Isle of Mull
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Ulva Ferry, the Isle of Mull
Hospitality and Graciousness, Courtesy of Anna and Michael Hogan
A friendly visit three years back and a round about home swap this year brought us to Anna and Mike Hogan’s gate.
As hosts Anna and Mike have truly extended themselves, becoming friends.
Red Deer
Gaelic Place Names: Cill Becoming Kil
Loch Tuath leading to Loch na Kael and the sole munro on Mull, Ben Mor.
Broch ~ Dun nan Gall
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Isle of Mull at Ballygown
Broch ~ Dun nan Gall
“The skills employed in building … brochs is considerable: to construct a building” of some height “without the use of mortar, demands a good deal of practical engineering experience. The Iron age solution to erecting a high defensive wall was to construct it as an H-frame: the wall being built as two concentric rings, tied across all the way up with stone beams or lintels – the whole in effect, being a thick-built and strongly jointed scaffolding. Unlike scaffolding, however, the outer wall was given a slight batter or slope inwards and the platform went up inside it in a spiral.”
” … at Dun nan Gall, the gallery, at least at ground floor level would have been wide enough to walk around and there is the remains of a staircase going up within the wall.”
Dun nan Gall is built on a rocky promontory jutting out into Loch Tuath and is clearly visible from the road from Kilninian to Ulva Ferry just as the houses at Ballygown are reached.”
“… it had a scarcement or timber floor and the stones that supported the floor may be seen jutting out from the inside wall of the broch. “
“… the entrance could be barred across and there is a deep channel, square in section, on one side of the door where the bar was lodged and a shallower hole on the other side into which the bar fitted.”
Jean Whittaker, Mull Monuments and History, 2004, Brown and Whittaker, Tobermory PA75 6P
pp12 – 13
Lip na Cloiche Garden and Nursery
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Isle of Mull, Scotland
Lip na Cloiche Garden and Nursery
Lucy’s Place to the Locals
Beautiful, Calming and Serene
All the Colors of the Spectrum
Quiet But For the Sounds of Nature
Do Sit At the Top of the Climb
The Macro Work Can Be Tedious and Time Consuming
In the Land of the ‘McK’s’
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Norman’s Ruh at Torloisk on Loch Tuath above Loch na Kael, the Isle of Mull.
Norman’s Ruh, a converted crofter’s cottage, very nice. Wonderful setting.
I believe Torloisk is the name of the estate or large land holding. It appears to be a large commercialized agricultural landholding, with lots of rented properties, farm and homes alike.
Loch na Kael is Gaelic for Loch of the Kyle or Narrows.
The local telephone book on Mull is all of nine pages in length. Fully three of those pages contain surnames beginning with ‘Mc’ or ‘McK’.
This McKinney, ‘son of Kenneth MacAlpin’ (Gaelic ~ Coinneach mac Ailpein), feels at ‘home’.
Scotland : Oban-Craignure Ferry to Isle of Mull
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Two days of hard travel to the Inner Hebrides of Scotland : The Isle of Mull
Kudos to Louis at the late-night, wee-hour-of-the-morning Glasgow Airport Enterprise car rental desk.
You rock, my friend!!
Driving on the ‘wrong’ side of the car, and to make matters worse on the ‘wrong’ side of tight and windy two-way loch-lined roads from Glasgow to the ferry at Oban, was the most stressful part of the venture.
The English language off the Scottish tongue is soft and lilting to my ear.
My wife has to ask for it to be repeated more often than not. She is truly in a foreign country.
Beautiful weather on the CalMac ferry from Oban to Crignure.
Single-track roads from Salen to Norman’s Ruh at Torloisk on Mull.
We have arrived!!
😉
Link to 2012 (?) Mull Visit Images