Monday, October 11, 2010

Autumnal colours

EPW Autumn
R&C, Andrew & I and our friends Jonathan, Alison & Alexander (10) were at the Wood this weekend. R&C got there first on Thursday to go to a meeting at the pub, the rest of us arrived on Friday evening (or very early Saturday morning). R&C left on Saturday evening and the rest of us left on Sunday afternoon. It was all very jolly and we had the most beautiful weather.

On Saturday Andrew & Jonathan went up Gleouraich (I think they're inventing most of the vowels in that) and Spidean Mialach, the two Munros nearest to EPW on the North side. One can see the latter from the house. The rest of us enjoyed the sun from the deck, and went on gentle perambulations around the policies. On Sunday, we tidied up in the morning and then went for a walk at Kinloch Hourn (I forget how long and twiddly the road is to get there, even from EPW) with fantastic views along the loch to Ladhar Bheinn - the Other Place is just out of sight alas.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Monday, June 07, 2010

Some random meanderings

We have been here a few times without my having bothered to write anything, so this is to catch up.

I suppose I should put first the fact that we have buried some of pa's ashes in the middle of a group of trees up by the road: two well grown oaks, two birches and a rowan. There is a sort of belvedere there, with a good view down to the river over the tops of trees. As Kate was ranging around looking for stones for the cairn, she found some oak saplings, and when we looked carefully we found lots more, two or three that have been there for a few years getting bonsaied by the deer and some newer ones that look sturdy and have not yet been cropped. There are about a dozen and we will get some tree shelters for them before next winter. In the long term this will be a good spot for a touch of fencing.

I have seen an eagle twice now: once when I was just sitting in the car waiting to leave, and then this weekend when Kate and Livy were here. There was some scepticism about the second sighting but I am pretty sure it was not a buzzard. Eagles just look bigger, even if there is nothing to compare them with. They are also more oblong. The first one I watched for several minutes, and the remarkable thing about it was how it kept its wings completely still as it was circling round. It looked almost mechanical.

Otherwise, the usual birds are doing the usual things and the cuckoo has not changed her tune yet. There are swallows, but I am not sure where they are nesting. Not on the house. There are also bats and they may be roosting in the roof or under the eaves. We ought to get some bat boxes. Every little helps when it comes to controlling midges.

The bluebells are flowering amazingly down in the wood. There are thousands of them but the effect is very subtle as they are individually small and of such a dark shade.

The meconopses are also flowering in succession. There have been three out in this long weekend. The azalea has regrown from its roots, and so has the olearia, so they will presumably repay protection against the deer and the cold. As for the other alien plants: the Mourning Widow (half mourning, or rather one of her offspring) and the blue geranium whose name I forget are both flowering. The double white buttercup has flowered. The astrantias are holding on but not growing very fast. These are all growing in grass just beyond the terrace. Some rushes in that bed have succumbed to Roundup; but there are still more to be dug out. Down the slope from the south west corner of the house we have planted a yew seedling. The soil there was not too bad; and Roy heaved out several big stones with the pickaxe, which is clearly a vital garden implement here.

The rugosa roses at the top of the drive are mostly putting out leaves quite cheerfully, though some of them have been stamped on by the deer. In general, the raw earth beside the track is greening quite well, though the area around Klarg and the barrow just up the hill are still pretty barren.

Saturday, June 05, 2010

Monday, May 03, 2010

Day trip to Eilean Donan

To Eilean Donan
With Andrew, Simone and Gerardo

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

A rainy day at EPW

Wet April holiday

Cookies

Andrew had a lie in this morning so I made cookies.

Photos

Recipe

Lost men from the leccy board

We were roused from post-prandial drowse by someone coming down the track. A car! With a Land Rover lurking at the quarry. The chap who emerged from the car turned out to be a man from Scottish Hydro looking for the Forestry Commission road down to the bridge. I pointed them in the right direction ("It's the Tanglewood road") and off they went.

I thought they might be confused because of our "new" road (e.g. if someone told them it was the xth road past such-and-such, that might now be wrong), but it turns out that it was just their map that was rubbish.

The elves have been busy

Since Andrew & I were last here, the elves have been busy: they've fixed the water pump, they've painted the end wall, increased the number of working phone sockets, un-bent the gutter and lots of other things too I'm sure.

Another slate has come off the roof, though (South side, East end). And Pan has not brought leaves out on the trees yet, so it's still rather sere.

Saturday, April 24, 2010

They trundled their little machine right out here

I have been meaning to put the Google Earth Street View link here for some time, just to record it. It was a lovely sunny day for their trip.

Here it is: LINK

If you can be bothered to do all the clicking, you can take a virtual trip to Kinlochhourn or to the shops in Fort Augustus.

Friday, April 09, 2010

Flowers and a tree

These are the daffodils that were fortunately disdained by the deer. They are much smaller than they seem in this picture, and the patch of them is rather larger than this shows.

Over the past week, we have been taking apart a fallen tree that offends our view to the south. It has been reduced to a large pile of fairly useless twiggy bits, a pile of useful logs (not yet short enough to get into the stove), a fairly massive trunk about four feet high, which is rotten and will therefore be fairly easy to manage, and some rather nice horizontal branches and smaller bits of trunk, which are nice to sit on.

Some colour in a sere landscape

We saw a pair of most exciting-looking birds when two friends came to lunch last week. We are pretty sure they were crossbills of one sort or another: rosy red all over flashing between the trees just outside the window and then going off down the slope.

There are lots of chaffinches and generally twittery things; and the woodpecker is hammering away in various places. I saw something that may have been a sort of warbler when I was cutting wood a couple of days ago; but I didn't have my monocular and merely have an impression of quite a lot of black and white in horizontal stripes on the head, blackish swept back wings, and a slightly rosy rear underbelly. It had an unusual rapid call, definitely not a chaffinch.

I really need a series of tutorials on bird recognition.

Thursday, April 01, 2010

Monday, March 29, 2010

Things are growing

The miniature daffodils and irises that I planted in the green are coming up; and some of the daffodils even have buds. There are also meconopses (but not as many as I planted) and erythroniums. The daffodils I put in by the entrance are also coming up green, though I can't see any buds on them yet; and I am not sure that there are the full hundred. The rugosa rose slips that we weeded out of the front garden at St Andrews and planted across a deer path are sending out buds, where they haven't been trampled flat. The deer will get a nasty surprise when they really get going.

Bulbs and a sunset

Monday, March 22, 2010

Water water everywhere...

I was at EPW for a long weekend with Andrew and some friends (let's call them Jonathan, Alison and their son Alexander) and we had an entertaining weekend.

On Friday when we arrived everything was fine - late supper, chat, bed. On Saturday morning I discovered that the control box for the pump was making a nasty clicking sound and showing no sign of giving the signal to pump water even when turned off and on again, or sworn at politely. So we then had to work out a strategy to get 5 people through a weekend without running water. There were several resources available to us:
- a boat full of rainwater near the front door - perfect for supplying loo-flushing water by the bucketload (and it kindly rained a couple of times over the weekend, to keep it topped up)
- two black buckets that we could carry water from the nearest burn, that could be boiled for drinking and washing
- a jam pan (see Mother Making Marmalade) for heating of quantities of water
- a small saucepan suitable for scooping of water into pans or over heads for washing.
- 4 people with up-beat and positive personalities and can-do attitudes (and one small person who was jumped on if he complained too much - but since the lack of water also meant a (slight) reduction in hygiene standards he wasn't too bothered except when being held down and forcibly bathed in cold water)

Sunday, March 21, 2010

The People Zoo - Nature Notes

We have become objects of interest to the indigenous life forms. A deer came by in the evening and spent some time looking in through the sitting room window watching us knit, read, dispute and listen to Mozart.

The greater somethinged woodpecker has been flaunting itself tearing bits off trees in full view.

And now Livy and Andrew, and their guests Alison, Jonathan and Alexander, have been ogled by the pine marten as they were at table.

Meeting People is Nice

There are irritating things happening to the fabric of the house, and spring is slow in arriving; but there is still Human Interest, though I have been a bit slack writing it up.

The time before last when we were there, Peter Thomas, the free lance ghillie, fish and stalking expert, visited to ask if he could come to an arrangement with one of our boats, as he had just discovered from one of the other glen people (a Norwegian whom we have not yet met) that we had bought Ruurd and Meike's boat. We are delighted for him to use any of our boats; and as what he needs one for is taking people on to the inland lochs, as he already has a boat on Loch Hourn, he is going to use the red boat whenever he needs it. He is going to bring us some larch logs in return. It is very nice, being part of a barter economy.

Then last time we were there Ian Lothian came over the ford from Poulary to visit. I have never met him before, as his times there have not coincided with ours so far. He is a retired oil man, from Cupar originally but now living in Toddington. Very genial. He has had lots of pipe freezing problems and is thinking of replacing all of his with plastic.

We are still a little distrait as the pump system is still not mended and water has to be pumped up in 100 litre gulps; and there are still holes in the plasterboard where the pipes had to be replaced at New Year. The paint on the west wall has almost all become detached from the harl - most provoking; and a slate has come down. The track needs a hefty application of gravel in the upper parts; and the rhone on the north side looks as if the weight of snow may have slightly bent it. Still, no signs of moth or rutht yet.

I have plans for persecuting Alasdair the builder and his brother Donald, in the friendliest possible way, for the house works, and a fencer for fence works, when we are at the house for two weeks over Easter. Anyone wanting to come and visit then will be extremely welcome, particularly if he or she is prepared to dig, carry stones, destroy rushes and saw up trees.

Monday, February 08, 2010

Livy's photos from this weekend's visit

There were several deer lurking around during our visit. They probably thought: "oh look, there are those nice people who feed us fresh new plants, let's hang around and see what they've brought us this time".
Deer

Mother Made Marmalade on Saturday
Mother Making Marmalade

Some pictures indoors - seeing how my new camera copes with lower lighting conditions (No Flash Was Used In The Making Of This Album)
Indoors in February


My Saturday morning walk around the policies:
A Walk Round the Policies

Note a couple of pairs of photos of the East Burn where I was experimenting with "Sport" (i.e. fast shutter speed) and "Landscape" (i.e. slower shutter speed) settings on my camera.

On Saturday afternoon Andrew & I went to explore the other side of the river to see what the paths were like (soggy) and take photos of the Full East Poulary Wood Estate.
An Explore of the South side


Planting seeds in the test-road to the previous house site, and Cecilia playing with my camera.
Planting Hyacinthoides Nonscripta seeds
Lots of photos from Ursula too HERE.

Monday, January 04, 2010

Snow Better Place to Be

We drove back to Fife yesterday on roads that were on the whole very good, with only a few snowy patches. The glen road was gritted but not yet completely mashed to slush. The Fife roads were noticeably less clear; and the BBC News website today says that Fife has been running out of rock salt. We used our chains as far as the main road, and had to pull over three times for unchained 4x4s.

We stopped at the Tomdoun to wish Mike a good new year. and in ten minutes saw more people than we had for a week. He had more bursts than us: eighteen; but I suppose if you work it out on a bursts to bedrooms ratio we were worse off. Still, it is interesting that even in a fully occupied and heated building the pipes go.

On the bend in the road between the isolated cottage and where the corrugated iron estate houses used to be just after Pattack we saw about two dozen birds on the road. I think they were blackgame and Roy thinks they were merely grouse. Anyway, there were lots of them, all running madly about.

There was deep snow everywhere all the way. On the road to Spean Bridge we had an amazing view of the Loch Arkaig hills deep in snow and pink in the sunlight. And then when the sun was going down as we were leaving the House of Bruar all the hills behind Blair Atholl were apricot-coloured. Most of the trees were no longer snow-covered; but there were stretches where they were still very picturesque. Invergarry seems to be a snow-pocket, in particular.

Saturday, January 02, 2010

Out in the snow again

Here are some pictures of Roy working in the snow and a walk we took through the policies.

More snow pictures

I loaded these pictures myself (dragging Livy from her writing to advise). That explains why they are a bit random in the way they are positioned.

Another walk in snow


There is much less snow now than there was, but it is still pretty deep. I was rather feeble and didn't feel up to a scramble down to look at the burn, still audible but completely invisible under ice and snow. The deer hadn't been in the wood in large numbers, if one can believe the tracks; but there were several places where they had scraped the snow away. There were some audible birds; but I don't know what they were and couldn't see them.

We think that some of the horizontal trees are ones that were not that way last time we looked; but we can't be quite sure. At some stage, we will find a friend with a chainsaw, or hire someone with one, to cut up logs (and help us carry them up the hill - a worse job). At present, though, the collection beside the house is serving us very well and the heap seems not to get any smaller. There certainly seems to be enough wood for this winter, at the sadly low rate of occupancy we have managed so far.

We hope to be back later in January, for a weekend.

Friday, January 01, 2010

Notes for Those Interested in Dress

In ideal situations, there is a perfect correspondence between what one wants to wear and what the circumstances and convention determine that one should wear. My ideal place, as any fule kno, is one where one can wear night clothes all day long. And here, as well as at Another Place, this is possible.

So here is a list of the necessities: Tshirt nightdress or respectable pyjamas; sweater; long johns; and socks (but these are not really needed indoors when the floor is doing its thing). To go out, one adds wellingtons; and maybe some or all of the following: hat; coat; gloves; and scarf. Joy.