Carsaig Arches
Posted: Tuesday, 11 September 2007 |
Comments
Wonderful photos again, MM, thank you. The arches ones are magnificent, especially given that you need a very specific window of time and conditions to take them. p.s. your rucksack is a very poor substitute for your children :-) (but easier to carry, no doubt). Great stuff, thanks again.
Jill from EK
Hi MM - stunning photos - keeping nagging him indoors about a new camera as I have standards to keep up! Went to Ulva on Monday with the Ranger - great hike and a geoligist's dream methinks!!
Wild Freckle from Mull
yet another fantastic blog mm, great pics and good lesson in geology,thanks
carol from wishing i was in scotland
What great photos. I.B. has really made me want to see more of my own country, so I really appreciate all the photos and info on I.B.
Tartanqueen from Scotland
p.s. to my earlier comment (which has not yet appeared): I regret to say that if I had come across that rock with the cavities, I would have been sorely tempted to take it home...
Jill from EK
Brilliant! Hope my sister is lookin at this blog.
Ruthodanort from Unst
The boring bit, says he! Gorgeous pics again. The first time I drove up the road you describe, through the forest, I came out the other side and had to stop the car because the view across Inchkenneth to the islands was breathtaking. The gruesome story? Is it the honeymooners? I'm not clever at all, I heard the story on a recent television prog, and a friend who lives on Mull gave me the location when I asked him about it. I love the Saltire sills, and the quartz lined cavities.
Mrs Trellis from NE Wales
I can't find any boring bits here. Will keep looking...
Flying Cat from between a rock and a hard place
Now there is a place I must sail to. Thanks for the ongoing master class. Offshore
Offshore View from Libya at work
Offshore, yes sailing to Carsaig arches would be neat - I expect that the view from the sea would be good, esp of the first arch. Do you work in the oil industry then? Used to be offshore myself - mainly North Sea - worked on a variety of semis and platforms. Great times!
Mountainman from Mull
Mrs Trellis, the gruesome story? I only have the sketchiest of details and I cant find the article, but it involved someone called Goiridh being punished by castration. In revenge he grabbed the infant son of the Maclaine chief and jumped off the cliffwith the child in his arms, hence the name "Gorrie's Leap" or Binnein Ghoiridh in Gaelic. as I said, I dont have all the details but if anyone can fill in the blanks, that woudl be great! The story of the honeymooners relates to the Tragedy Boulder or "Clach na Lanain" over at Gribun - Huge stone fell down the cliff and flattened the house with them in it. There are still a lot of rock falls and landslips to this day. In my earlier blog about the Ring Dyke I mentioned a landslip in Glen Forsa. Not as dramatic as a huge rockfall, but shows that the landscape can change rapidly.
MM from Mull