Jane Elizabeth Shears: A West Coast Verse

This verse is for my passengers
I see them every day
I pick them up at bus stops
And drop them off along the way

I know just where they’re going
When they get on with their bags
They’re heading off to Tesco’s
To get the shopping and some fags

Most of them are friendly
And like to have a blether
Through morning, noon and night
I could talk about the weather

It’s good to speak in Gaelic
Upon returning here
The language of my parents
I hadn’t heard for years

I recognise the school kids
As they step upon the bus
I know by name the calm ones
And those who make a fuss

In the evening they look different
When they’re dressed up for the Ball
With miniskirts and high heels on
‘Two halves to the Corran Halls’

When I do the evening shift
I really see some sights
One night I sold a ticket to
A man in fishnet tights!

I truly like the summer
Because the girls are feeling hot
Most of them are decent
But quite a few are not!!!

In winter when it’s cold and damp
People are soaking wet
Once a man apologised
For his very soggy pet

Then that Labrador it shook itself
And all the bus was dripping
I had to slow to a snail’s pace
To stop the punters slipping

I need a lot of patience
When they give me all 5p’s
But I’ll forgive them anything
If only they say please

Soroba-Dunollie
‘The supermarket sweep’
If I do it two weeks on the trot
It makes me want to weep!!

Easdale on the other hand
Is the run I love the best
Especially on clear evenings
As the sun sets in the west

A driver’s job’s not easy
And the days are hard and long
But I try to keep on smiling
And sing a happy song

Well, variety’s the spice of life
And we’re always changing rotas
So all in all it’s not so bad
Working for West Coast Motors!

Jane Elizabeth Shears ©
6 Dec 2011

Nonchuk: My Year in 12 Photos

Nonchuk 1

January: Coffee, Dunoon

Nonchuk 2

February: Stob

Nonchuk 3

March: Rain on the water by Tarbert

Nonchuk 4 Nonchuk 5

April: Stumped.                                                May: The bike my daughters borrowed

Nonchuk 6 Nonchuk 7

June: The big stone on the beach at Lismore    July: Frankented

Nonchuk 8

August: The wall by the back door of the holiday cottage in Norfolk

Nonchuk 9

September: On the hill above us

Nonchuk 10

October: Flame

Nonchuk 11

November: Waiting for the ferry

Nonchuk 12

December: Mud

Nonchuk ©

Alistair Strang: Before politics was correct – they used to do things differently in Sutherland

Atlantic Salmon (crop) Hans-Petter Fjeld Creative Commons

A vague family kinship gave us access to a proper croft in a place called Oldshoremore.

To those not in ‘the know’, a proper croft in those days meant fetching buckets of water from a mysterious pool which was covered with wooden planks , bitter family disputes over who’s turn it was to empty and bury the outside toilet, even worse disputes over who had to clean up after the sheep when the gate had been left open and of course, the worst job. Fetching peat and ensuring the range was kept hot.

Every single time we visited would brand a new memory into my childhood. The place was – and remains – magical. I’ve absolutely no idea what my parents did whilst we visited the croft. They’d allocate jobs to the four children then somehow become vague figures who we’d bump into at mealtimes. So long as we, the children, did our part, we were free to roam and roaming was something I excelled at.

The frequency of our visits ensured some lasting friendships were made with local children who were impossibly mature when judged against us town kids. One such was Calum Gunn.

Calum enthralled me with his tales of catching salmon from the River Aisir. Between himself and his father, they would take turns shooting at seals patrolling the mouth of the river. The seals regrettably interrupted the Salmon Run which was an important part of their annual income.

It was also illegal to take fish from the river. Yeah, right.

In the weeks before the Salmon Run started, a sharp ‘crack’ during daylight hours generally meant yet another seal had met its maker and drew me irresistibly to the bay from which fishing boats had been launched in the 19th century. Whilst twin tailed birds dive bombed us, we’d scan the bay for the tell tale round black shape of a seal’s head and Calum explained clearly and concisely how to pull salmon from the river.

The ‘Gaff’ was the weapon of choice, a long pole with a sharp hook at the end. The aim was to lie on the bank at a point where the river narrowed with the Gaff already in the water and sharply pull it upwards when a fish swam past. A successful local would generally be able to buy a new car, crofting implements, or make some other flamboyant gesture with the income received from this annual plunder.

In the 1960’s, Fish Farming had not been invented and Salmon was very much regarded as a luxury dish.

One year, we were all present and correct at the start of The Salmon Run. My parents knew nothing of my intent but I’d spent the previous winter counting the days while waiting for this trip north. Concealed amongst the clutter of childhood holiday junk was my secret weapon.

A New and Improved Gaff.

Despite having lain amongst rocks watching distant seals being despatched, despite all the stories about how a target salmon was impaled on the steel hook, I actually retained a city boy’s abhorrence of blood. Not death, just blood.

I was going to catch a salmon but it would not be hooked through the gills. Instead, my ‘humane’ gaff was to be finally assembled using two wire coathangers attached to a pole by a roll of black insulating tape.

Essentially, this invention looked more like a garden rake with prongs bent firmly back on themselves, allowing a wide spread which would flip the target salmon out of the water onto the shore behind me.

It’s funny. At the age of 12, it all made perfect sense.

On this particular trip, my allocated job was water fetcher. Sometime around 5am, I filled the galvanised steel buckets – ensuring no tadpoles made it into the supply for the house – and with a clear conscience, made my way down to where the river met the sea. Assembling the Gaff was easy. There were ample poles with “No Fishing” signs and one of them sufficed to make the shaft.

A thankfully low tide  would mean I’d see a fish splashing up the rocky shallows from the sea before it came to the deeper peaty pool where I silently waited. My New Improved Gaff lurking below the surface eagerly.

Eventually, patience was rewarded.

Obviously, I remember what happened next with honest and concise clarity. A salmon, somewhere in size between a killer whale and the Loch Ness monster started its run up the shallows. My logic suggested it would pause for a rest where I stalked the calm pool. The game went exactly as planned. This Jurassic Fish slid easily under the surface, resting briefly above the Gaff.

I pulled sharply upwards, the metal web catching the underside of the fish.

Using insulating tape was probably the downfall of the plan. As I yanked my ‘No Fishing’ pole triumphantly, the metal part of the Gaff remained in the water and the panicked salmon fled, heading downstream back to the sea.What the fish did not know was I’d waited this moment for months and it’s failure to co-operated did not mean I was giving up.

I went in after it.

The battle between a 12 year old boy and a fish did not last for hours but memory suggests it may have. I chased that damned fish up and down the shallows as it splashed from pool to pool in the rocks exposed by the low tide. No sheep dog ever marshalled a sheep with the dexterity which was used on that salmon.

Eventually, a final flat lunge was sufficient and I stood hugging the biggest fish I have ever seen. Then I panicked and threw it over my head to the shore.

And there was Calum, his gun lying on the heather and his face alive with utter glee. He’d heard the commotion from his seal hunting hide above the bay and come down to investigate.

‘Do you want take that home with you?’ he asked.

Reality set in. I was soaked, I was bleeding from multiple cuts, I was probably in a lot of trouble with Mum & Dad.

‘No, you have it. I’d better get home.’

Back at the croft, no-one believed a word of the story. Given several historical precedents where I’d shown uncanny ability to fall into water, I suspect the matter would have rested with the finger of dubious suspicion falling on me.

Everything was to change the next day. Calum caught sight of my father driving to Kinlochbervie for ‘the papers’, a daily exercise as the morning papers found their way to the oddly named ‘London Stores’ by mid-afternoon.

When he handed my Dad a £10 note for the salmon, a family legend was born.

Me, I still don’t fish and retain a hatred of blood.

Finally, keeping this ‘on topic’, those who’ve visited Ardentinny and seen the river at low tide will have an idea of the conditions where my epic battle took place. I didn’t build the rock seat which sits above that river but will confess to sitting on it, looking down at the water, and wondering what I’d do nowadays if a salmon lost its way.

Alistair Strang ©

The image of the salmon at the top is by copyright holder, Hans-Petter Fjeld and is reproduced here under the Creative Commons licence.

Ewan Kennedy: No lemon shops in Toberonochy

Toberonochy  Yacht Club

Each year an event takes place in conditions of secrecy only rivalled by the Bilderberg Conference – but less damaging by far to global peace and prosperity, consuming no oil whatever and attended by a much nicer bunch of people, on a small island off the West coast of Scotland.

It takes place in the open air, but participants are untroubled by the vagaries of the weather, viewing extremes of rain, strong wind and temperature as stimuli to, rather than distractions from, their water-borne adventures.

In all conditions they congregate. Strong winds and adverse tides present challenges to ever-longer turns to windward; in fact one year the weather obliged with a 180 degree wind shift while the crews were lunching after tacking half a dozen nautical miles South, coinciding with high water which gave a return journey of equal unpleasantness against a cold wet Northerly and a strong ebb tide. Despite, or maybe because of such things, participants, who, like those at Bilderberg are all personal invitees, return year after year.

In 2004 there was little wind and on the morning in question the fleet was becalmed under a dreich grey sky, the drizzly rain trickling down their necks. I have no photograph of that morning, as the scene was too grim for anyone to bother recording and the image above comes from a cheerier day. To add to the miserable atmosphere the Brother had brought along the Great Highland Bagpipe, with which to regale the little ships as they drifted along on the tide.

Through the Sound came a commodious plastic-hulled vessel, which dropped anchor in Kilchattan Bay and sent a lady crew member ashore on a mission, to acquire some lemons for the gin and tonic. Asking a local resident where such a purchase could be made she got the reply, ‘I regret, Madam, that there are no lemon shops in Toberonochy, in fact there are no shops here at all.’

At that moment out on the water the Brother filled the bagpipe with blaw and started on a tragic lament, in keeping with the mood of the morning. On hearing this the lady said, obviously stunned at thinking she had gate-crashed an aquatic wake, ‘I’m terribly sorry to intrude on your small community in this time of grief,” and made her way back, embarrassed, to her yacht.

Ewan Kennedy ©, saveseilsound

Note: The photograph above is reproduced by permission of Toberonochy Yacht Club.

Lynda Henderson: A short apprenticeship in poaching

West of Ireland port

I once made friends with a pair of well known local poachers after several lackadaisical summer conversations on a stone pier in an old port in the west of Ireland.

The port was about three miles up river from a difficult enough bar and was, like most rivers in these islands, a less good salmon river than it had once been.

Derby and Happy Harry had netted the river successfully in good times and bad. They sold their reapings to local hotels. It kept them in pints.

Derby was a pensioner in his sixties and had been in the British army – not so common a past in that part of the world.

He was about twenty years older than Happy Harry, who took visiting German salmon fishermen out for charter days on the river. Wearing a smart, rather naval jersey, he’d pick them up at the old quay in his long, elegant wooden clinker-built boat. Together they were a reassuringly professional equipe.

In his downtime, in mufti and in his secret life, he was an equally amusing companion and an equally focused one.

Derby was the master and by the stage I knew them, Happy Harry was the highly skilled understudy and inheritor of his ancient wisdom.

They played me like a fish, in our chats on the quayside – no hurry to land me, let me run out for a day or two, chat again, reeling me further in each time.

I knew the game but had no idea where it was leading. I hung on in there to find out.

One afternoon, Derby threw an unusually generous fag end of his cigarette on the stony ground, screwed the life out of it under the sole of his shoe, exhaled in the sunshine and closed his eyes.

I waited. This felt like the moment.

After a few minutes, Derby opened his eyes lazily, looking to the sky and, not seeming to focus on me in any way, said: ‘We’re thinking of going down the river tonight’.

Ah. I hoped the quiver of excitement didn’t show. Important to be cool.

In came Happy Harry on cue: ‘How would you like to come along?’

‘When would you be going?’

‘Just short of midnight. There’s no moon tonight and the tide’s right’.

It was summer and the days were long.

‘Yeah. I’ll come.’

‘Good girl.’ (This was Derby. My protegee status was in the process of being confirmed.)

‘We’ll take your boat’, he went on without drawing breath – this being the real point of the invitation. ‘The waterguard know ours too well.’

‘Sure,’ Sounding casual – unknowing, But I did know – that there would be a price to pay for this at home and a big price maybe. Anyone caught poaching salmon had boat and gear confiscated by the waterguard. It wasn’t going to be Happy’s boat.

I was to be the stooge with the boat and I silently accepted that casting in exchange for a learning I would never get from anyone else.

‘We’ll come over to yours after half eleven. You be down at the water. We’ll leave our boat on your buoy.’

‘OK.’

‘Wear dark clothes – and just old shoes’. This was Derby, looking hard at the bright yellow yachty wellies my jeans were tucked in to and that, on a summer’s night, might still catch the eye. Far too showy.

I was there and so were they. On the button. No chat. Quietly efficient. A gesture took me to my seat in my own boat which they simply appropriated – Harry at the oars on the bow side, with Derby behind me in the stern, shadowed even in the night by a flat cap.

Where Harry’s own boat was a slender river boat, ours had been built for sea-keeping on the east coast, a sturdy bellied clinker.

Harry rowed without even a splash – the first skills of the good poacher. White water is visible, even on the darkest night and the waterguard are sharp-eyed.

We slid noiselessly down the river with the falling tide – the second lesson of poaching. You want the most advantageous ratio of salmon to water so you aim to get to the netting place at slack water, just as the tide is starting to flow again, bringing the fish in with it.

The run down river was like Fantasia. With no moon, mythical stilt-legged creatures seen at water level, silhouetted against the stream, stalking on the sand banks exposed at low tide – turned out to be normal wading birds.

Derby might have been a pensioner but his eyes were quicker than a youngster’s. He could spot the flare of a match over a mile away on the shore. His survival as a poacher depended on such skills.

I’d wondered where exactly we’d be going and it was nowhere like I’d imagined.

We were in below the great sand dunes on the south side, at a spot where a handy little eddy brought the salmon close inshore.

The boat grounded with a grating kiss on the sand. I was given the end of a rope and gestured to get out. The only words spoken were from Derby, in a whisper.

‘Don’t walk in the water. They’ll see the splash. Walk on the wet sand. Hold the rope well in your hand. Keep an eye on us and when I give you the signal, you stop where you are. We’ll row in ahead and come in. Then we’ll all pull in the net.’

I nodded. They rowed out before turning west again to run parallel with the shore.

I smiled to myself in the dark. Still the stooge. If the waterguard spotted us, it was me they’d catch and the bold pair of poachers would be away in my boat.

The tranquillity of aloneness, strolling below those age old dunes, barely visible, with a silent boat gliding to the right of me in the estuary was broken by an unexpected thudding thump in the palm of my hand.

This was a pulse, strong and profound – but a pulse of death not life, connecting me physically and absolutely to what I was doing.

There was a salmon in the net between me and the boat, with Derby on the other end of the rope.

Then, suddenly these pulses came slamming into my hand, one after the other, sometimes in such confusion there were clearly several hits on the net at once.

It was thrilling, guilt-ridden and sick-making. There was no way of escaping the knowledge of the nature of the deed.

I walked further on along the wet sand, both hands on the rope, doubling the guilt, always watching the boat.

The signal came. I stopped. The boat came in to the shore west of me, with the rope just below the surface making a crescent of ripples in the killing lagoon it created.

We pulled the net in between us. Derby came to help me as I was the weakest link.

As we pulled, the water boiled and thrashed white, the danger time for being caught by the waterguard.

There were odd dark clusters in the net. Too dark to see what they were but Harry was cursing and wrenching at them. There were cracking noises and he would throw things away in the dark.

Eventually the realisation came. These were crabs we’d trawled off the bottom in the net, grabbing and grabbed by clumps of net and Harry was breaking them up.

There was something else that was strange. For a generally quiet if funny man, Happy Harry would suddenly break into vicious swearing, tearing at something, ripping it up and hurling it from him with an imprecation to help it on its way.

I discovered afterwards that these were red mullet caught in the net. Foodies love them these days, but then – and likely still, fishermen have a superstitious hatred of them. I never did find out why.

When we had the net in almost to the shore, Derby threw me a sack. ‘Just grab them and throw them into that.’

Ah. My imagination hadn’t quite carried me to this point, the sharp end of the experience.

I’m squeamish. I’d never touched a living fish. The prospect was unappealing. I must have hesitated.

‘Can you not do it?’ – Derby, incredulous, on the brink of contempt.

I summoned some steel. ‘Of course.’

Doing it was a different matter though. I picked one smaller than the rest, bent down and touched him tentatively, He leapt in the air – and so did I, with a screech. Unforgiveable.

I couldn’t flunk out twice. I tried a sudden hard grab round the middle, throwing them immediately into the sack. It worked, the hard grab seemed to still them and stop the wriggling. I could do this. I didn’t look. I just grabbed and threw. As fast as I could go.

As I reached for what I could see was my last fish, some odd reflected light caught his face as I grabbed him. He opened his mouth wide, eyes gleaming and – spoke. It was a voiced ‘Uh’. I threw up on the sand.

There was no way back from that, really.

We rowed back up river, still with the tide, still silent but this time without the unspoken camaraderie of the outward trip. I had been a failure – but they owed me the boat. It was all very uncomfortable.

They came in for coffee when we got back, honourably offering me half of the catch and clearly relieved when I left it to them. They went off in the dark with their fat sacks over their shoulders, down the hill to their own boat, vanishing towards the quay – still without a splash of oars. To be caught at the end of a night would be cruel luck and these two took care at every point.

I walked back up the hill to the house and the peat fire, my head full of images I couldn’t yet fit together and struggling with the curious way worlds come together and separate.

In the morning as I rowed over to the quay to do the shopping up the town, I met the best of the local rod and line salmon fishermen pulling his boat in from its mooring. The gentle, kind, good mannered man blanked me.

The word had got around this small place already – about what I’d been up to the night before and who’d I’d been up to it with.

He regarded me as having turned to the dark and he never spoke to me again.

I mourned his loss. I’d valued his casual friendliness. It had spelled acceptance. No longer.

But, while his skills were mysterious and wonderful, so were those of Derby and Happy Harry. They knew every eddy of  the river, every curve of the current, every sandy promontory. In their different work they were every bit as skilled, as intuitive as the line angler – and as traditional. They were just on the wrong side of a law made for landowners.

I made my inner accommodations, am grateful to this day for the experience, paid the cost I had to pay – and kept my boat.

Happy Harry had been out early that morning, in his posh boatman’s kit, courteously escorting visiting German fishermen safely down the slippery steps on the quayside, into his boat and off for a day’s fishing.

They came back up river in the afternoon, the anglers empty handed and cross, one saying: ‘If there were fish in this river we would have caught them.’

I caught Harry’s eye and we both choked a grin. We knew there were no fish in the river and Harry knew exactly where they’d gone. He’d been up the rest of the night delivering them.

Lynda Henderson ©

The image at the top is cropped from a photograph by copyright holder, Paul Stokstad and is reproduced here under the Wikipedia Commons licence.

Hotbird405: What’s important

A champion plough from The Powerhouse Museum pubic domain

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.

Grant MacDonald: A Christmas to Remember

Royal Marine Hotel Hunters Quay

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 ©