It is now five years since the October 2006 collapse of the Farepak ‘Save for Continue reading
Monthly Archives: December 2011
Hotbird405: What’s important

We came together a while back to bury an elderly member of the farming community.
As is usual in these cases the Church was packed full, every farming family for miles around was represented including those for whom this would be their only reason for coming to the Kirk.
After the service, when the committal had been carried out at our lovely local cemetery, a newer member of our community, not long arrived but realising already that this occasion was as much part of village life as any of the other things we come together for, spoke to me quietly.
That was very nice, he opined, but the person delivering the tribute didn’t seem to say very much about the deceased.
On the contrary, I said, look at what was actually said and what was not said.
Our friend was born and brought up in this community and received the benefit of his education at the local Primary School. Apart from a period when he accepted employment elsewhere in the county he lived a long life here, working on both his own land and on the land of others.
You may think, I said, that his achievements did not amount to much, and indeed you would be correct in observing that he never became rich, in the accumulated wealth sense of the word; He certainly never became famous, except that he was widely known throughout Argyll, and he never put any of his thoughts or knowledge into print.
However, I pointed out; Look at what was actually said, the things that were considered important by his peers.
A man who had an encyclopaedic knowledge of nature all around him, who was able to spot and enjoy things in nature that others might miss. A man who was a fine shot, whether it be for competition, vermin control or provision of something for the pot.
Above all, he was recognised as a man who could plough a fine straight furrow on undulating ground.
As personally I have never even mastered the art of driving a tractor, I’m told by my farming friends that this requires a high degree of skill and experience, as well as an innate sense of one-ness with the land under the plough.
To my questioner I was able to say, do you now see that what was said about our friend was all-embracing and important? These were the attributes that made him the man he was, not much use to the life he led for him to have had the capability to be a captain of industry or a brilliant academic mind.
This is what’s so important about our communities, our towns and villages, our mainland and islands.
Everyone has their part to play—and no-one is any the more or less important in the scheme of things.
Hotbird405 ©
The image above of a champion plough is from The Powerhouse Museum and is in the public domain.
Hyslop announces continued investment in Scottish museums and galleries
Fiona Hyslop, Cabinet Secretary for Culture and External Affairs, has confirmed Continue reading
Islay’s giant marine turbine starts testing as onshore wind puts up ‘House Full’ signs
One major renewable energy source for the future is going into testing, Continue reading
Invitation to Pillage at The Puffer
Alex Macrae’s original game, Pillage, is making a welcome return to The Puffer Bar on Easdale Island tomorrow night. Continue reading
If you want to find out where you are over the holiday…
There are two things to do: Continue reading
BBC ALBA on tour with the Vatersay Boys

BBC ALBA catches the thrills and spills of life on the road for one of Scotland’s favourite ceilidh bands. The Vatersay Boys Continue reading
Grant MacDonald: A Christmas to Remember

The Royal Marine Hotel at Hunters Quay had never looked more festive nor welcoming. For several years, it had languished overlooking a slipway which no longer received ferries every day of the year.
In this very special year, a new initiative brought hundreds upon hundreds of locals, gathering under the ice white lights to a communal Christmas Day festival. In a car park thankfully bereft of vehicles, venison was being slowly roasted over a massive outdoor fire and hotel staff wrapped up against the freezing temperatures circulated, ensuring everyone was being fed and watered in equal measure.
Somehow or other, even Dunoon Grammar School managed to become involved, inventing a traditional German “Oompah Band” to both entertain or irritate, depending on the listeners disposition.
Press photographers positioned themselves on the vacant slip, enthralled at the sight of the snow clad building, the decorations and the white haze hovering just 20 feet above the revellers heads.
The sea ice had come early this year.
The Clyde was closed to shipping from October 3rd.
In the years since Scotland experienced the largest celebration in the world on achieving her right of self determination, several significant things had happened. Global Warming fundamentalists had either accepted defeat or moved to a warmer climate. The truth about the suppression of Scotland’s nationality had been exposed with several high profile court cases leading to several political activists leaving the country.
The conveyor current in the North Atlantic had, as marine scientists predicted, stopped. The Gulf Stream joined the Conservative and Unionist Party as a historical footnote in our country’s history.
As a result, the annual Atlantic Blocking High which traditionally effected Scotland became rather more than a maximum 8 week event. Temperatures from November until March of Scotland’s first year of independence did not rise above freezing and the winds did not blow.
The sea froze off the west coast in totally treacherous calm conditions.
Starting independence with a National Emergency caused the already fractured SNP government to accept some hard truths and take equally unpalatable action, though thankfully the solution to the immediate problems had been inadvertently supplied by the fanatical Green element. A country supposedly rich in natural power was at risk of being brought to its knees. Even Hydro electricity was failing due to the weather; and the silly windfarms, nicely connected to the national grid, turned not a single blade for five lethal months.
All along, immediate answers to the problem were present, ignored as a political hot potato at the Clyde Submarine base. Six nuclear subs, complete with fully functional reactors sat unused. Sufficient power was available from all six vessels to supply the entire freezing nation.
England’s Westminster Government was more than happy to donate the vessels to the new Scottish Government with the single proviso they were not to be given back.
Two new industries quickly formed, one recycling the scrap metal from unused windfarms and another, re-sighting the nuclear reactors close to the linkups to the national grid formed from the greenie windfarms.
As four o’clock in the afternoon drew near, the photographers from the media turned their camera’s across the frozen estuary, their attention drawn by the distant ‘jingle’ of sleigh bells and the twinkle of alluring lights.
Santa was coming on a sleigh, across a frozen Clyde. And the people of Argyll, warm, slightly drunk, and well fed were waiting.
Grant MacDonald ©
Ewan Kennedy: A Virtuous circle from the Mishnish to seagulls with vinegar

The image above is only tangentially connected with the story that follows. It depicts an incident in the summer of 1978 when the yachts were returning to Oban Bay and the Unities had depleted their stocks of strong drink. The Stromas were able to render assistance, luffing up close under the lee of the Unity and handling over glasses of a concoction made from cheap whisky spiced with a liberal dose of Crabbies patent green ginger wine. This is the only original work by the late John Gardner I possess, done on a postcard as he sat in the Mishnish many years later. The connections will become obvious as this tale progresses.
Late one evening in early August about thirty years ago John and I had emerged from the Mishnish after a pleasant evening discussing such matters as the advantages of lanyards over turnbuckles and the delights of Number Three Rippingille stoves and strolled over to the Tobermory Pier, where we found lying alongside a stylish fast cutter, let’s just call her the Virtuous.
As we were admiring the ship her commander came on deck and the following conversation ensued.
JG “Good evening Sir, permission to come aboard?”
The Commander “Certainly not, this is a Customs ship and I am a Customs Officer.”
JG “I’m sorry, Sir, but you are not a Customs Officer!”
TC “I most certainly am!”
JG “With the greatest of respect, Sir, I believe you are not a Customs Officer but an officer of Her Majesty’s Prevention Service and thus a Prevention Officer!”
TC “My God you are right, Sir, You and your friend are most welcome to come aboard my ship.”
Our new best friend the Commander proved a charming fellow and showed us round his ship. We marvelled at the enormous engines and a curious device formed from stainless steel, the purpose of which was no doubt explained but soon forgotten. Then he invited us to descend into the depths of his command.
Down a steep metal stair we went to a small plainly-furnished cabin and were soon sitting round a table in the middle of which stood a very large round old-fashioned teapot, the sort of thing that might once have featured at a Sunday School picnic.
“I’m afraid this is a dry ship,” said the Commander, “but perhaps you would like something from the teapot?” as he placed three small glasses on the table and filled them with a cold slightly pink liquid that proved not to be tea.
For an hour or two we enjoyed the contents of the teapot while the commander regaled us with tales of maritime adventure and chases on the high seas. We learned that the Virtuous could travel extremely fast, but at the expense of rapidly depleting her fuel supplies. Trawlermen knew this and would steam seawards in the hope that they would out-diesel, rather than outrun the Virtuous. In the pre-computer age the calculations of how fast he could afford to run in order to catch his prey and escort her to port required great mathematical gymnastics on the part of the Commander.
Footsteps were heard on the deck above, some tourists who had climbed aboard wanting a guided tour of the ship. The Commander suggested to us that as he was a little tired and John, who was wearing his trademark sturdy dark blue navy pattern jersey, looked official and was plainly knowledgeable we should undertake this on his behalf.
The tour went well, as John explained about the fuel calculations and passed on some of the commander’s stories, until one of the visitors asked the purpose of the strange device referred to above.
“Ah, Madam, that is for when we are far from shore and food is running low, we catch seagulls and place them in this frying machine. They are delicious when served with vinegar.”
Ewan Kennedy ©
The image of John Gardner’s original painting above is reproduced here with permission of his widow, Betty.
Crazy She-Bat: Tales from the Great Unknown – and Argyll

Legends of the Loch.
One dark, mysterious, haunting night on the whispering banks of the Loch, they gathered for the ritual. They were all there in attendance; it was to be a special night.
They ranged in ages from 17 to 84, they came from far and wide, all walks of life, all shapes and sizes, all with an unearthly sparkle in their deep, dark blackened eyes. Their eyes were as dark as the deep, cold water of the Loch. The waters were still and peaceful this night, with the full moon reflecting its light, just like that unearthly sparkle from their eyes. If you looked in either too long, you would become lost.
A slight warming breeze blew through the rustling leaves in the majestic trees that surrounded them, keeping them hidden from all those prying eyes. Nosey people. If only they did see, what a fright they would receive! Haunted for all eternity with horrors from this deadly night. Some rites were not meant for spectators.
They slowly assembled on the shore, one by one in total silence. The sounds of nature surrounding them, bats squeaking, owls hooting, the gentle lapping of water at their feet. The Gathering Stone lay there. Large, mystical and ancient. It had witnessed the ritual since time immemorial. Cold and scarred by the ages, it sat there alone. Waiting. They slowly began to approach it, taking their places around its weathered facade.
First, they removed their shoes and socks or tights. It was ill-mannered to be in the presence of the Gathering Stone with your feet adorned. Next they slowly began to undress and lay their clothes down on the ground, neatly, piece by piece until all were bare before it in the moonlight.
Old and young stood next to each other, wealthy and poor, fat and thin, short and tall, all unconcerned by their nudity, all oblivious to each other, but all united in the spirituality of the moment. All feeling that inexcusable pull toward the Stone as it called for them to honour it. An unknown, mesmerising power brought them here at the solstice. It could not be questioned, it could not be explained, it could not be bargained with.
The chant began with the oldest. Slow and rhythmical, a deep vibrating melodic incantation…
“Jesu………………… Senti…………………. Blu…………………. De…………………. Cald”
“Jesu………………… Senti…………………. Blu…………………. De…………………. Cald”
One by one, the celebrants and worshipers slowly joined in with their paganistic psalm…
“Jesu………………… Senti…………………. Blu…………………. De…………………. Cald”
“Jesu………………… Senti…………………. Blu…………………. De…………………. Cald”
All stood together, all slowly singing the sacred words…
“Jesu………………… Senti…………………. Blu…………………. De…………………. Cald”
“Jesu………………… Senti…………………. Blu…………………. De…………………. Cald”
Slowly becoming louder, moving slowly from side to side, slowly voices rising…
“Jesu…………. Senti………… Blu……………. De…………… Cald”
“Jesu…………. Senti………… Blu……………. De…………… Cald”
Uniting as one voice, swaying in time with the rhythm, rubbing their hands, growing in religious fervour…
“Jesu….. Senti….. Blu….. De…… Cald”
“Jesu….. Senti….. Blu….. De…… Cald”
Becoming louder and louder as they began to dance and fold their arms around themselves…
“JESU.. SENTI.. BLU.. DE.. CALD”
“JESU.. SENTI.. BLU.. DE.. CALD”
REACHING A FEVER PITCH CACOPHONY OF VOICES, DANCING WILDLY ABOUT THE GATHERING STONE…
“JESUS INT IT BLUDY COLD!”
And now we all know what happens at a meeting of the ConDemAll Alliance.
Crazy She-Bat ©, Inspired by the late great and sadly missed Rikki Fulton.








