Sailing was not my favourite method of transport. Years ago I would feel queasy on my father’s
cabin cruiser, moored at the side of Lancaster Canal, especially when a passing
boat sent ripples through the water. The
memory has never left me, but as my desire to visit the Outer Hebrides grew,
and the only practical way to do it was to take the car, it was ‘let’s go for it,
I’ll cope’. And cope I did, but there wasn’t a problem. The first time we went,
we pre-booked our crossings with Caledonian MacBrayne on a Hopscotch ticket and
sailed from the mainland to Skye, then Skye to Benbecula, North Uist to the
Isle of Harris and the Isle of Lewis back to the mainland. We crossed different
waters and they were short journeys. I was very happy to be sailing
comfortably. We stayed in some amazing places and tried to pack as much
sight-seeing in as possible. We drove south as far as Eriskay, a tiny island
reached by a causeway from the end of South Uist. Unfortunately we missed out
the Isle of Barra. We couldn’t schedule it in, but it was a perfect reason to
return the following year.
I couldn’t wait to get back to the wonder of the Outer
Hebrides. It’s like being in another world, even another planet; it’s so
different from anywhere. We were only going to the Isle of Barra, not touring
like before, but we needed the car and our dog would be with us so we chose the
most direct route. We would sail from Oban to Castlebay, Barra. It was a
journey of over five hours, but I had confidence from the last time. It would be
fine. We arranged an overnight stop near Glasgow before a long drive to Oban
for a lunch-time ferry. It was mid-May, warm and sunny, the beginning of last
summer’s glorious weather. I looked forward to boat trips around the small
islands close to Barra.
After the many crossings we did the year before, we had
ferry travel off to a fine art and chose our seats by the windows in a
dog-friendly area close to a café. We settled down for the long trip. The beginning of the voyage was slow and
gentle through the Sound of Mull. I hoped to get photographs of Tobermory as we
passed the Isle of Mull before sailing into open water. Being out at sea, away
from the shelter of the Inner Hebrides, was very unpleasant for me. The water
was choppy, the ferry rose and fell like a slow roller-coaster. I couldn’t
stand up, I would surely fall. Our poor spaniel whimpered and sat on my husband’s
knee like Scooby-Doo. I spent hours bent forward, staring at the floor, feeling
unwell. I was so glad to reach
Castlebay.
The experience of that crossing put me off any idea of
island boat trips. We were halfway through our stay before I felt better, then I
began to worry about the ferry back to the Scottish mainland.
Sailing back to Oban was fine, I needn’t have worried, but I’m
back to square one. Sailing is not my favourite method of transport.
I think I’ll manage the Orkneys, but Shetland will have to
be a flight and a hire car.
I've chosen Robert Louis Stevenson's version,
Over the Sea to Skye
Sing
me a song of a lad that is gone,
Say, could that lad be I?
Merry of soul, he sailed on a day
Over the sea to Skye
Say, could that lad be I?
Merry of soul, he sailed on a day
Over the sea to Skye
Mull was astern, Rum was on port,
Eigg on the starboard bow.
Glory of youth glowed in his soul,
Where is that glory now?
Eigg on the starboard bow.
Glory of youth glowed in his soul,
Where is that glory now?
Give me again all that was there,
Give me the sun that shone.
Give me the eyes, give me the soul,
Give me the lad that's gone.
Give me the sun that shone.
Give me the eyes, give me the soul,
Give me the lad that's gone.
Billow and breeze, islands and
seas,
Mountains of rain and sun;
All that was good, all that was fair,
All that was me is gone.
Mountains of rain and sun;
All that was good, all that was fair,
All that was me is gone.
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850 - 1894)
Thanks for reading, Pam x
3 comments:
That's interesting. Did he also write "Speed bonny boat like a bird on the wing, Over the sea to Skye" which I remember from my childhood?
The original version was written by Sir Harold Boulton, 2nd Baronet around 1870, (info from Wikipedia). That's the song as I know it, too.
Poor Pam. Frustrating for you that you never grew your 'sea-legs'. I'm supposing that something as simple as Elastoplast stuck behind the ears wouldn't help? (I know it works as a cure for car-sickness.) That's a good choice of poem, Stevenson's elegy for his lost youth.
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