Tag: photography

  • Rubbish

    Getting rubbish off the island, especially when doing renovations, is a time‑consuming business. There are decades’ worth of things that ‘could come in handy’ on Erraid. The purge we are undertaking is for those things that obviously haven’t come in handy for at least 20 years: old fishing tackle, knackered creels, rope, ripped life jackets, rugs, underlay and bathroom tiles. To get rid of it all, we have to wait for a low spring tide, load everything onto a tractor, and drive it across to the other side of the estuary, where the minibus waits to be stuffed to the gills. Last time we needed a lot of stuff taken to the tip, we paid someone to do it. Today, we are experimenting with the economy of doing it ourselves.

    It’s 8.30am. We boat over to the bus. The sea is choppy and we risk enduring the whole trip with wet trousers. We shuffle to the back of the boat, which gives us just enough lift at the front to ride the waves.

    It’s a one hour and fifty minute trip up to the Tobermory recycling centre. Armed with Archie, Marianne and a Bluetooth speaker, I set off, stopping at Miek and Rutger’s place so they can load a sink and toilet into the back and save themselves a trip. Inside, the minibus smells of foetid undergrowth where aerobic respiration has clearly faltered, so despite the biting cold, the windows are open. I remember that, despite my best efforts, the two outer rear tyres are looking flattish, so we stop at Robin’s garage to see if he can put some air in them and to fill up with fuel. As an old local once said to me, you should treat a half‑full tank as empty around here.

    Robin has a compressor, but only a front‑on nozzle attachment. I need a 90‑degree nozzle, so Archie is tasked with putting five minutes’ work in with the foot pump. Neither of us is convinced it’s making any difference. Robin then uses a customer’s car to power our very short‑cabled mini‑compressor, but stops after a few minutes as he doesn’t want to blow a fuse on a car that’s there for something entirely unrelated. We nod and see his point. I’m sanguine about completing our task anyway, as there are dual tyres on the back. I still stop at the garage in Craignure to see if they can take a look. They tell me to come back in the afternoon, once we’re done up north.

    The Mull Chocolate Shop is open—a rare treat. I’ve been wanting one of their millionaire shortbreads for four months and six days, but they are always shut. Too often with such confections, the caramel is right and the chocolate has a satisfying bite, but it all sits on a terrible bed of floury, dry shortbread that collapses onto the floor after the first nibble. Not this stuff. It has a real snap to it, is slightly bronzed, and you can feel the butter that holds it all together gently melting as it goes down.

    We pop into the Craignure charity shop, which always has cheerful older staff waiting with a smile. They are stocked mostly by people dropping off things they no longer need at the end of their holiday, just before getting on the Oban ferry, which you can see pulling in through the glass front door. The good thing about this shop is that they don’t look things up online to see if they’re ‘designer’. Nor do they check labels to see what material an item is made from. This means that a jumper—any jumper—is five quid. A T‑shirt is three, and books are one. This reintroduces the possibility of finding a genuine bargain, a pleasure sadly gone from the charity shops of the Cotswolds, where everything is picked over before display and priced so that, if you do find something decent, it is deflatingly expensive.

    The latest hits

    Our next stop is the commercial timber pier at Fishnish. I’ve been tipped off that a client has failed to collect a stack of logs and that they might be available. The chap I spoke to said they’ve been sitting there a while, so I want to check whether I’m about to buy 100 tonnes of rotten wood or beautifully seasoned fuel. There’s nobody around to ask which particular stack it is, so I wander about under the large cranes and make an educated guess based on colour. Timber, like most things, has doubled in price over the last few years, but it’s still much cheaper than relying solely on mains electricity. We use a mixture of both.

    We finally make it to the tip. We have all sorts of stuff and want to put the right things in the right skips. I tap on the window of the office cabin and disturb what appears to be the only member of staff. With his cerebral palsy slur and strong accent, he’s very difficult to understand. ‘So it all goes in that one?’ I ask, with some surprise. ‘Aye,’ he replies, already on his way back to his station. We try to be more discerning anyway, separating wood and metal.

    A chap pulls up in an estate car and two energetic Labradors bolt out. The somewhat obvious, but nonetheless enjoyable, conversation ensues about whether he’s come to leave the dogs at the tip. ‘It won’t be long if they keep eating the lounge and shitting on the shag‑pile rugs!’

    Fortunately, the reward for doing the tip run is the Mull Cheese Farm, a quarter of a mile down the road. Unfortunately, like many things on the island, most of it is mothballed for the winter and only a small selection is available in the already modest shop. Still, it’s a beautiful place, and one we’ll return to when the tourist season is in full swing.

    Tobermory offers a similar experience. Most shops are shut. The obligatory beach sauna stands frigid at the back of the car park. The gaily coloured frontages of the high street don’t quite compensate for the fact that we can’t get a bag of chips for lunch. The pub is open, however, and the Slovenian barman pours pints and takes food orders while a scattering of patrons either sit pensively toying with beer mats or passively engage with a tennis tournament from a former Soviet republic playing on the large TV screen.

    We pop into Browns, which is a real treat. Remember those hardware stores that used to sell everything, before being taken over by such hideous things as Wilko and Home Bargains? Browns sells, in no particular order, hard liquor, ballcocks, tea strainers, referees’ whistles, dog jackets, laminators, binoculars, snooker cue chalk and ham. Sadly, it doesn’t stock fuel‑hose connectors for small outboard motors, which is what I went in for.

    The return journey is punctuated by a one‑and‑a‑half‑hour stop in Craignure to get the tyres fixed. It’s hard to fill this kind of time, as everything apart from the Spar is shut. We do several circuits of the aisles and buy unnecessary food items purely to pass the time.

    Back on the road, we do a quick calculation and realise we’ll get back to Knockvologan at exactly high tide. Having parked up and done up every available button on our coats against the wind, we guide ourselves by the dim light of our phone torches down to the narrows. We take off our boots, socks and trousers and wade into the dark sea. It reaches halfway up my underwear before I make land on the other side. No worries, though. Within twenty minutes we’re home, lighting fires and getting dry and warm again.

    • Ducks

      Ducks. Ducks. I’m happy just saying the word several times to myself when no one’s around. It’s a matter-of-fact–sounding word that reflects well on the animals themselves. I wonder if canard has the same feeling for French people, or Ente for Germans. Perhaps the most satisfyingly onomatopoeic is pata (feminine) and pato (masculine), although the association with pâté is a bit too close.

      The ducks arrived in a cardboard box from the mainland. Someone was just giving them away. Some members of the community were displeased that they were made to sit through a yoga session before the return journey to the island. We hastily rigged up a heat lamp and a small enclosure, placing them gently on the ground where they immediately huddled together under the lamp—their fluffy yellow bodies turning a pinkish red. The urge to go out and start constructing an aquatic wonderland was strong, but all they really need is an upturned bin lid with a bit of water in it so that they can clean and keep parasite-free. The byre, newly free of chickens, felt very big and dark for four small ducklings. It was agreed that they must have access to the outside as soon as practically possible.

      It was at this point that summer break happened and I headed back south for a month. The thing with most ducklings is that they are yellow, and you can’t really tell how they’ll look once they get their adult feathers. So, on my return I was eager to find out what we’d got.

      They had been moved to a paddock all of their own, with a house that used to be the privy for the lighthouse keepers and their families in Victorian times. The grass had been left to grow tall, as John the crofter takes a few bales of hay from it each year. Rubi, Ophelia, and I went on a sort of micro-safari, trying to figure out where in the paddock they might be. Their ducky mutterings gave them away in the end, and we saw them in a flattened clearing just big enough for them. Two had become almost entirely white, one was more speckled, and the other was mainly black; they were only mildly disturbed by our presence. Having made their acquaintance again, we left them in peace. At that point in their development they were just generating low-level, conversational quacks. They are now beginning to practice their adult vocalisations, which can take you by surprise if you’re close by.

      They have taken to parading up and down the street. They enjoy getting into the corners where buildings meet the ground and the grass has grown longer for want of strimming. They shake their beaks furiously, burrowing them into the place where the grass meets soil—where all the bugs and slugs might be hiding. For the past couple of weeks there have been short, fierce downpours throughout the days, and the ducks make the most of the temporary puddles; they are straight in, drinking and cleaning their broad, smooth beaks that are dirty from digging. The sound of four ducks walking towards you through fresh, muddy puddles is a fantastic thing. Beatrix Potter’s description in Jemima Puddle-Duck, “pit-pat-paddle-pat, pit-pat-waddle-pat,” cannot be bettered.

    • Orientation

      The lighthouse keepers cottages from FIdden

      Take junction 13 north up the M5. Let it merge into the M6 and carry on north, past the tantalising
      Tebay services and other, more geographical marvels of England’s north. Travel through Glasgow—
      perhaps having stopped overnight in Carlisle—and continue to the beginning of the Highlands, bending
      left around Loch Lomond first. Squiggle through gently inclined valleys until Oban appears, quite
      suddenly. Rest a while as the CalMac ferry reduces its schedule to a paper exercise, then enjoy the often
      choppy sail to Craignure, Mull.
      Exit left and prepare for over an hour of single-track road with passing places, where blithe, wide
      camper vans dally and locals rally. No, they haven’t forgotten to turn off their indicators—they want to
      get by! Skirting Loch Scridain with its views of the sheer western peninsula, try not to crash. Turn left at
      Fionnphort, left again at Fidden, wiggle, wiggle, wiggle. Park at Knockvologan, put wellies on, carry
      what you can, and hike down—over the beach if it’s not submerged (in which case, take off your wellies
      and wade or go back to Fionnphort for the night if you start getting pulled out to sea). If you’ve made it
      over, you are now on Erraid. Follow the coast northwest, past Judy’s cottage, up the tractor track,
      through the gate below the old schoolhouse, and find someone to say hi to.
      After welcomes and refreshments, there is often talk about the journey—whether the newcomer found
      the island with ease or difficulty. Last week, however, a different conversation began in hushed tones,
      sparked by a daughter who had come with her mother:
      ‘We are in Findhorn, right?’\ ‘This is Erraid. Findhorn is three hours north of here.’\ ‘I didn’t
      think the Findhorn Foundation was on an island. What shall we do?’\ ‘You’re welcome to
      stay.’
      They ended up having a lovely week.

      It’s not as silly as it seems. Until very recently, the island of Erraid community was run by the Findhorn
      Foundation. Findhorn is famous in New Age circles for transforming a barren piece of land in the 1950s
      into a beautiful garden and retreat centre—with all the fabled giant cabbages you could eat. COVID had
      a major impact on operations, and the foundation has now shrunk to a fraction of its former size. As a
      result, it has rationalised its activities, passing the running of Erraid back to the island’s owners, the Van
      De Sluis family.
      An intentional community is one where a group comes together for a common aim. Here, it is to be as
      self-sustaining as possible and to be guardians of the historically important lighthouse keepers
      cottages. It’s difficult to be completely self-sustaining and, as one member recently pointed out, not
      even desirable—that would negate cooperation with the neighbours, a vital part of life in remote
      communities like the Ross of Mull. We also host paying guests who come to experience community life
      —usually for a week—or to retreat and take time for themselves: walking, reading, finishing a writing
      project, that sort of thing.
      There are six of us who have committed to a long-term stay here, usually between one and three years.
      Apart from Magnus, none of us have been here more than two months. Beyond the geographical
      remoteness from towns, shops, and services, building a workable, sociable, and fun group is the
      biggest task—the challenge we accept and work on every day. It quickly becomes clear that it requires
      more than simply making friends with five other people. We need to build systems that allow us to
      navigate any eventuality—from minor disagreements to deploying resources during a critical medical
      incident. We’ve all had some experience of communal living and decision-making. The selection process
      was rigorous, with probing interview questions, but we all arrive with our own habits, tics, tendencies,
      and foibles. Some of us tend towards overworking, some to introspection, others to extroversion. We need different amounts of personal space and time alone. Some get ill more often; some have
      diagnoses that require consideration. All of this needs ongoing attention and care.
      A lightness of touch is essential. In all the personal communication, the maintenance, cooking, ordering
      of supplies, caring for animals, and tending gardens, remembering that, as Alan Watts put it, “we are at
      play” is key to thriving here. The weather plays—battering rain into full sun in the time it takes to boil an
      egg. The sea plays—changing from clear blue to peat-brown after rainfall, varying its tides and currents
      so you never approach the far jetty quite the same way. The land plays—step off the street and the
      ground becomes ever-changing, from ageless granite to welly-eating bog to fine white beach sand.
      Yielding to all this is essential: a willingness to say “yes” to the games offered here. To learn the rules. To
      accept that sometimes you will be “out” and must contend with sea spray, cancelled ferries, a boot full
      of brackish sludge, or a waterproof jacket that worked perfectly well in the Cotswolds—but not here.
      To remember to be at play is to surrender. Not everything will get done today—not in the way you
      thought, anyway. The unexpected lurks around corners to test whether you’re still playing the game: an
      overflow pipe suddenly spewing water, an outboard motor that won’t start, the mobile cinema turning
      up in Bunessan. Can you welcome the novel and disruptive as the jokers in the pack.