The main purpose of this blog is to share some of the
amazing places I have been fortunate enough to visit and to do this through
story writing. Having said that, I live in one of these amazing places and
invite you to share my experiences of the glen and to slowly become acquainted
with its many and varied inhabitants, both flora and fauna.
To set the scene, I live at the head of a long narrow
sealoch. The photo on the home page is the view taken from the house early one
morning just as night was slowly giving way to day. As you drive up the west
coast of Scotland on your way towards the Isle of Skye, twisting and turning
your way along the side of a loch, you are suddenly rewarded with the sight of
a small sturdy castle standing sentinel at the point where three lochs meet,
Loch Duich, Loch Long and Loch Alsh. Welcome to Eilean Donan Castle, well worth
a stop and a visit; stunning views, a welcoming and interesting homely castle
with a very good gift shop and café. A short distance beyond the castle a small
road bends away to the right and disappears through thick trees, the only way into
our almost secret glen.
When returning home from my many adventures, my first
glimpse of Eilean Donan Castle (often at night looking like a fairytale castle beautifully
lit against the dark night sky) tells me I am home. Turning into the glen I
have such a feeling of being safe, as if the glen is waiting with open arms to
enfold me with its surrounding mountains. The journey up the glen is on a
single track road which wanders its way up and down and around, along the side
of the loch passing moorland hills, areas of rocky cliff face, through small
wooded areas and passing a number of homes dotted along the glenside with the
loch constantly in attendance on the right. After about three miles, the road
runs out of houses but I continue for another mile and there I find home, in
the centre of a cluster of three houses.
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