Monday 6 May 2013

Wild Scotland

The organisation called Scottish Natural Heritage has recently produced a map showing areas of the country which have been given the designation of 'Wild'. On Skye, there are two such areas. One, not surprisingly, is the Cuillin. The other, I was delighted to see, is Duirinish.

The 'Wild' status adds no special protection to the land, in the way of a Conservation Area or National Park, but at least the special nature of the land has been noted by a respected national organisation, which might be of help should someone come along with the idea of building a windfarm on it, or using the land in some other damaging way.

Duirinish is the name of the north western peninsula of Skye, and here at Roskhill, we live at the eastern 'neck' of the peninsula, where it joins the rest of Skye. Our view from The Barn windows is of the Duirinish hills and eastern coast. The highest point in Duirinish is Healabhal Bheag, but the peninsula consists of many, many acres of hilly wilderness moorland largely surrounded by high, sheer sea cliffs, with those facing the south west rising to over 1000 feet in places and stretching for some 15 miles.



(Click the - button to zoom out)

The eastern border of the peninsula - between Loch Dunvegan and Loch Bracadale (where we live) is thinly populated today, and in years gone by, attempts were made by man to inhabit and farm the more sheltered parts of the coastal fringe. But virtually no roads have ever been built on the peninsula, and with access by sea being hampered by those cliffs, man has never made much impact on the land.

The whole of Duirinish is accessible on foot however, though few enough people ever visit to have created paths in more than one or two places. Duirinish became my favourite place on Skye back in 2009, when I first started exploring its beinns, braes and bealachs. The coastline is spectacular, but the inland moors are vast, open and empty windswept areas of grasses, heather and moss. The sea is visible from almost everywhere, and trickling burns flow down the hillsides, though there are few freshwater lochs. Trees are absent too - the westerly aspect being too frequently blasted by gales and storms for anything to grow to any height. Walking for a day in Duirinish, one will probably see a number of Red Deer, a couple of Golden Eagles, a scattering of other moorland birds, but no people.

In our bustling and overcrowded little United Kingdom, it is a total joy to experience a natural wilderness of such awesome beauty. To have it on our doorstep is quite simply our little bit of Heaven on Earth. I am hopeful that the 'Wild' designation will help to preserve the land in its 'wild' state for evermore.

Below are just a few of the dozens of photographs I have taken in Duirinish... (click on any picture to view larger, as a gallery)

The SW coast looking towards MacLeod's Maidens sea stacks

Lorgill - one of the few beaches in Duirinish, and the location of a former settlement, which was largely deserted in the 1860s

Stacks and arches on the east coast

Valley of the Osdale River - Healabhal Bheag on the left

Looking towards Loch Bracadale and the distant Cuillin mountains, from one of the hilltops

Grassy moorland on the west of Duirinish, overlooking The Minch. That's South Uist on the horizon.

Deer on the run - I was not quiet enough arriving on this hilltop!

1 comment:

Jill said...

Beautiful photos! Include a picture of local sheep and it would be wild and wooly Scotland. ;)