I've always viewed Skye as the Highlands on steroids! Everything has to be bigger and better. No such thing as a straightforward Munro, oh no not here - knotty ridges that don't want to end, vertiginous drops, plenty of hand to rock and generous hand fulls of exposure. A bay can't be a simple arc of sand it has to be an ampitheatre of mountain architecture. And the list goes on.

To illustrate the geography of Skye, I think of it as a hand - that is the middle as Portree and Broadford, where people live and work, the Cuillin hills are also in the 'hand'. But then there are five peninsulars, like fingers - respectively: Sleat, Strathair, Duirnish, Waternish and Trotternish. Each of these 'fingers' have a different personality, almost like a different island, with the 'hand of Skye' unifying the whole.

So please allow me to take you on a photographic tour around the hand ... of the Isle of Skye.


     near the Point of Sleat

     an old causeway


     isolated cottages, Aird Point, Sleat


     scattered crofting community of Aird





     Cuillins from Kirkibost, Strathaird


     unnamed lochan near Kilmarie, Strathaird


     Camasunary Bay


     Glenbrittle from Sgurr Dearg


      Sgurr MhicChoinnich - 'InPin' in the distance


                                                Allt na dusaiche - the path of poets


     Cuillin Ridge from Summit of Blabheinn


     Sligachan in the distance




     Sgurr nan Gillean


     Glen Eynort - island life


     Talisker Glen


     Dunvegan's main grocery store!


     Macleods Table towering over Duirnish peninsula


     Sheer flatness of a Macleods table plateau


     The pretty village of Dunvegan


     Neist Point


     Unish ruin on the Waternish peninsula


   The Lookout bothy, Hunish


     ruin near Totscore, Trotternish




    near Kilbride point, Totscore


     looking down on Uig Bay


                                                Caves of Gold, Kilmuir


     Trotternish ridge from Lealt river


     Trotternish ridge from Glenuachdrach


     Loch Mor, near Uig


      scattered crofts on Trotternish


     near Sgurr Laing slipway, Kilmuir



    Glamaig, Red Cuillin



      from Glamaig towards Raasay - ferry just coming in!


    looking towards Strathaird


    Glamaig summit best 360° view candidate


     on the summit ridge of Garbh Bheinn - only two Corbetts on Skye


    looking south from Garbh Bheinn summit



    a fine mountain sanctuary








                                        Bass rock waterfall


     Trotternish ridge



     the end of the road - Glenuachdarach



     River Sligachan


     Smoke on the water - muir burning near Pennachorain


     near Luib - where sheep may safely graze


    reflections in Loch Ainort


    rainbow across Loch na Caraidh


      Raasay, the capital  - Inverarish, High Street


      South Fearns


     Deserted settlement of Hallaig  - east Raasay



     interesting sign post


      and back on Skye - An Caisteil in the Fairy Glen




    and a few iconic pubs - The Old Inn at Carbost


     The Steinn Inn - oldest pub on Skye, 1749!


      The Sligachan Hotel - from the inside


   ...   and finally a personal favourite, Waternish from Loch Bay.



The Skye factor

There's jagged sprawling mountains but beaches it lacks
but you don't come to the Isle of Skye to relax
it's like the Highlands on steroids somebody once said
where wilderness and tourism meet head to head
a host of different weathers all in the same view
on a distant headland a lighthouse winks at you
to drive anywhere it's like eternity beckoned
though the landscape changes colour by the second
peninsulas radiate from a central hub
its presence tempts you back to this desirable club
where fickle weather will always scupper your plans
then stuck on single track roads behind camper vans
sometimes hard to book anywhere, you may wonder why
no matter what you do it's always harder on Skye
you lost your island status with the building of the bridge
but still blessedly unpeopled as the lonely Cuilin ridge.


tioraidh an drasta - Marky.





































Comments

  1. For a beginning, to cut it short: Wonderful!
    Did you buy some fruits and vegs at Dunvegan's main grocery store?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Un lloc espectacular.
    Quina pau, t'entren ganes de anar-hi.
    Salutacions.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Stunning photographs! I think the path of the poets is my favourite. And an interesting musical segue from Deep Purple to J. S. Bach! 😊

    ReplyDelete

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