Memories...Simply Stunning Scotland
Back in April 2008, my Dad had had his driving license suspended for 12 months through illness which was like a knife through the heart as he and my Mum were away on trips every month, they liked to be out and about and although not venturing as far as I have, they are still possibly the reason for my own wanderlust.
As they were getting a bit grumpy with being stuck at home and with an eye to the future, their dutiful, eldest son offered to take them away. Not too far, perhaps Scarborough? Whitby? even Llandudno? No. It had to be North-West Scotland.
The choice of Scotland was hardly surprising as they regularly drove the 300+ miles up there as they loved it so much, my earliest memories were of summer holidays towing a tiny caravan around the highlands and islands, usually in the rain. Not much changes in that respect!
I don't know where their deep love of Scotland came from. We have no family connections and its a long way away but it is beautiful. It seems I have inherited this love and if I had to choose the perfect place to spend the rest of my life it would up there on that incredible North-West coast with its perfect, sandy beaches and ice cold, crystal clear water.
This is the general area we stayed and toured
The scenery can only be described as epic. I have been lucky enough to travel to so many places on this planet but in all honesty, there is nowhere to beat Scotland.
When my Dad died 4 years ago, I immediately ripped out the hard drive from his computer and created a copy. He was a meticulous record keeper, writer and charity worker and everything was on the hard drive. Like me, he wasn't a fan of trusting 'the cloud'. Since then, I keep going back to it and I just don't seem to have the heart to simply save the photos and wipe the rest. It's been a strange insight into so much of his private life that I never knew about and to simply delete it with a single mouse click creates some very mixed emotions.
This wasn't the last trip I took them on as his health began to become more and more of an issue and it's been nice to see the photos we took on this trip with his old Samsung camera which he constantly had pointed out of the car window (in between complaining about fast I was driving!) as well as other trips he and my mum took together.
Enjoy the scenery captured on 15 year-old technology!
This is a view down Glen Coe
Another shot looking down Glen Coe
Applecross Bay
Gairloch Harbour, Charleston
Bealach na Ba
And looking the other way from the top of Bealach ba Na
Again, same location and different location. How I wish I'd had a drone with us.
OK, just one more but seriously, it is absolutely the most perfect place for taking photographs of the incredible landscape.
Coming down from the top of Bealach na Ba
Gairloch Beach
The Gairloch Hotel
A view across Gairloch, Strathe and Smithstown
Gruinard Bay
Inverewe Gardens
In Scotland, the wildlife is often a lot more tame than the locals!
Another shot from Inverewe gardens overlooking Loch Ewe
This is Loch Maree taken from Poolewe
Looking down Loch Kishorn towards the Kyle of Lochalsh
Looking up the coast from the Gairloch hotel at the Gairloch Free Church of Scotland. Adding the word 'free' into the name of religion in Scotland guarantees a packed house every Sunday!
Heading to Applecross
Strathe More looking towards the River Broom and Ullapool
Taken at Gairloch. Despite the often overcast and leaden skies, there are often the most stunning sunsets.
Again, taken from the Gairloch hotel
Back to the grey skies and the Isle of Skye rarely lets you down. Still lots of snow to see on The Black Cullins.
As there was on the North face of Ben Nevis
Ullapool next and this rather unsurprisingly is Ullapool harbour
Loch Carron
A waterfall on Skye near Portree
Wester Ross
Finally, just for a little authenticity, that's me old Mother!
My Dad's love of Scotland was so great that as per his request, most of his ashes were dumped into the Lower Falls at the foot of Ben Nevis, with a small portion buried under the foundations of my new house.
From the shit I've had with the house, it's not difficult to know his preferred location!
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Those Scottish buildings, like the Gairloch Hotel, always look very forbidding! I had high tea at a similar place when I was visiting Fife. We stayed in a small B&B, very cosy and nice, but a modern domestic house, and I wanted something a bit more atmospheric. I was also intrigued by the concept of a high tea at 5pm. I can't remember what we had, but I think it involved kippers.
I love the water pictures, the waterfall and Loch Carron.
I didn't get my mum's hard drive, but I do have bits and pieces of writing she did, sometimes essay length, other times little rhymes she had made up for birthday cards for her grandchildren and great grandchildren, all in perfect hand-writing.
That granite facade and stoic gait makes them very forbidding although that's no doubt in part due to the use of local building materials and the weather. Definitely function over form and even this brutalist fanboy fails to see to very little that appeals to the eye.
Ahh the cards would be perfect keepsakes but the as our generation ages, the question of what to do with a digital legacy will become more of an issue I guess. At least it's easy to store.
Kippers and jellied eels for a little cultural integration :-)
Thank you so much team. Always appreciated :-)
Some truly incredible photography here. The west of Scotland is one of the most beautiful untamed places on earth. I hope to explore some of it this summer.
You can't take a bad photo up there, its simply one huge picture postcard. AS soon as you leave Glasgow and head up the side of Loch Lomond you're transported into your perfect fantasy of what the planet should look like.....and then the midges come out and give you a bite of reality!
Hope you have a great trip and thanks for dropping by fella :-)
Such a lovingly post @nathen007 🥰
It’s must be a great memory that you could have taken them on an epic trip when he couldn’t anymore.
And now the hard drive… yes, I understand how you feel. One can not just delete the files. My dad had it all on paper, not even a pc.
Beautiful photographs it show so much beauty even when they were taken on old equipment. Scotland is stunning. Never been so far.
Thanks for sharing this with us. 😊
You have disappointed me! I was expecting you to say you'd lived there and Gaelic was your 6th language lol ;-)
There are an unlimited number of beautiful places on this planet. Sadly, our time and money are not unlimited so we do what we can!
I hope you get there one day, as an artist I'm sure you'd find so much inspiration.
Thanks as always for dropping by, it's genuinely appreciated :-)
Good morning to you 👋🏻
No haven’t lived in the UK. My husband is from there though. So I married a Brit. 😉
There are sooo many places, I would like to visit all but won’t probably in this lifetime hahaha for just those reasons and some more.
Yes, as an artist everything around me inspires me @nathen007 😎 to much sometimes. I have 3 projects on the go and need to finish one day before I start a new one hahaha 🤣
You are so welcome 😁 happy to ☺️
Have a great day!
He was a man of great taste then!
Great pics and you are right, in some parts its hard to take a bad one. Ujnless one of them pesky locals mugs you for your camera that is :OD
I have a wee soft spot for Ullapool. Had some great nights up there.
Here's to Dad's!
Not usually, he once bought an Austin Maxi!
Stevie Wonder could take perfect pictures up that part of the world!
My own favourite place is Fort William as there is no box it doesn't tick for me. The sea (or close enough), canals, trains, mountains and I can still get a nasty MacDonalds and a decent breakfast in Morrisons.
My life here is complete!
To Dad's indeed :-)
Aye, fort William is great actually and I had completely forgotten about it. I must take the family up there. Can even get them up Ben Nevis, the easy route that is!
I live in the North-East of England so luckily I'm not too far from this kind of place. My most frequent place to visit is the Buddhist monastery 'Samye Ling' at Eskdale Muir as my grandfather is a Buddhist and the views up there are incredible! Got a lot of love for Scotland and the similarities/influences that cross over to those of us living near the border. Great content man!
I love connections so I feel it necessary to bore you with an anecdote. Sorry.
I'm from Pontefract and many, many years ago was walking through town one morning and a guy with a skinhead came up to me with and said, with a Scottish accent,
"Good morning, sorry to bother you but I'm a Buddhist monk from Scotland and I wonder if you'd like a book?"
I was so intrigued, I actually stopped and we chatted for an age and he told all about the Scottish monastery and the fabulous charity work they do. He was actually on an outreach program where they travel around the UK just talking to people about Buddhism and handing out the free books with amazing art work. Eventually we parted company but it was a lovely hour spent and something that stuck with me all these years.
The kicker was that a few weeks I was in Leeds and a different guy with a skinhead came towards me smiling and before he had time to say anything, I simply said,
"Good morning, let me guess, you're a Buddhist Monk from Scotland!"
He laughed and we chatted. Another genuinely nice fella.
It's a big old world but these little, coincidental connections we make are simply magic!
Thanks for dropping by and an even bigger thanks for the memory trigger! Best wishes to your grandad and all the guys up there :-)
That's awesome and not boring at all! I'm not that surprised as I'm pretty sure that it's the largest Buddhist centre in Europe. The people up there are the happiest and friendliest people I've ever had the pleasure of encountering.
No worries at all, thank you for the story. I'll mention it to my grandad and it'll no doubt bring a smile to his face!
amazing post. The impressive landscapes but also the emotions from the narration for the story of yours, really the perfect combination!
What a lovely thing to say. I'm touched. Thank you very much indeed mate.
What AMAZING places. These landscapes that make you feel tiny are the most exciting. And the photos are too good to be from so long ago, it's good that you kept them. Good memory of the trip with your parents ❣️
THE skies are endless up there but I guess as you come from an incredible part of the world yourself, you have the whole of Patagonia to lose yourself in!
Less of the 'SO LONG AGO' please, it was only 14 years which to an old man like me is just a small amount of time lol!
Thank you for dropping by and nice to meet you! Hope you're having a great week :-)
Hiya, @ybanezkim26 here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Top 3 in Daily Travel Digest #1574.
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Amazing nature and story. Cherish those moments!