L2L Day 94 Scaladale to Baile Ailein - 10 miles
This may have been our penultimate walking day but there was no let up on the 'bog quotient'
The weather forecast for the day suggested that it was going to be a complete change from yesterday - at least for the morning but with strengthening winds throughout the day.It being a Sunday, there were no busses on Lewis so Norman our host at the B&b offered us a lift back to Scaladale to resume our walk.
On the way, he showed us two memorials, both moving testimonies to the ordinary people of the Hebrides
- the first commemorating the Pairc Raiders, local crofters from Baile Ailein who in 1887 took on the landowners and agents who were denying them access to the their rightful lands.
- the second, commemorating the spot where Bonnie Prince Charlie landed on Lewis, 18 days after his defeat at Culloden. " to the eternal honour of all Hebrideans that regardless of their loyalties, he was not betrayed to the authorities"
Norman dropped us off close to the Harris/Lewis boundary and we walked in to the Aline woodland where in the 1970s, the Forestry Commission had planted sitka spruce that had become prey to an invasive moth and as a result had died.
The plantation is now in community ownership, looking much more healthy and efforts are being made to encourage biodiversity. Certainly, the new trees looked healthy.
At about 500ft, it was very windy on the top of Griamacleit but the views were good in every direction.
The main power cables run from Skye and then power is distributed across the island. All the posts and pylons are in the process of being upgraded and this is the kind of machine the contractors have to play with!
The route became very very boggy and our progress slowed.
And we were distracted for a while by trying the find the Golden Plover as they issue single note decoy whistles - sometimes of a slightly different pitch while scurrying through the undergrowth. They are really difficult to spot.
Bell heather
Lesser spearwort
Heath bedstraw
and Bog Asphodel (apparently sometimes known as the bastard asphotel !!)
Fortunately, unscathed, we were accompanied safely back to the main road by a couple of chatty Stonechats.
Good luck for your last day! Well done both of you!
ReplyDeleteThanks Tony and many thanks for your great company over some of the long and high bits. I trust you're both home safely from the High Seas!? Time to plan the next trip??
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