Thursday 5 February 2009

A short drive around Trotternish




One of the benefits of living on Skye is that you can go for a drive and admire the scenery. Last Sunday, for instance, instead of returning home from Portree by the usual route, I took the Staffin road instead.

Trotternish is a peninsular and Staffin is on the east side with Romesdal on the west so basically this is is a circular drive. The first landmark is The Storr.

Next point of note is Lealt and then Kilt Rock and on into the township of Staffin itself.

A small road just beyond Staffin is a shortcut across the peninsular to Uig, but first you ascend a very steep section to the Quairang.

Alternatively you can drive on and pass Flodigarry with its beautiful hotel and stunning views across to the mainland and on up the Duntulm, site of another hotel and the ruins of an ancient castle on a headland.

A few miles before Duntulm, however, at a lonely Phone Box with a tiny carpark beside, is the start of a pathway which if followed will take you to an old coastguard station on the cliff edge, and a steeply descending path to the tip of Trotternish, Ruabh Hunnish. From here, in season, you can watch minke whales and basking sharks pass by on their migratory wanderings.

All the time their are stunning seascapes across to, at first, the island of Rona, then the mainland and finally at the top across across the Little Minch to the mountains of Harris. Like I said, there is a lot of scenery to admire.

The road back home via Uig is also full of wonders and places to admire.

The Trotternish Museum of Island Life is a restored township of thatched houses and gives a taste of life as it was lived here not so long ago, This is a must stop for the first time visitor. Close by in an old graveyard is the final resting place of Flora MacDonald of Bonnie Prince Charlie fame. Seems Flora got about a bit as she once lived at Flodigarry and Kingsburgh. Of course, Flora was also a world traveller and spent years in the Carolinas.

And then on to Kilmuir and sheep and cattle in small fields by the roadside, down to Totescore and on to Uig bay and the road back home.

This little drive never fails to impress and underscore the luckiness of living in such a beautiful and ever changing environment.

1 comment:

Highlands said...

a truly fantastic landscape, that would be exactly the right thing for my cattles:)