Loch Struan – Donich Website https://www.donich.co.uk Argyll wildlife and nature as seen on the banks of the Donich Water Tue, 20 Oct 2015 17:47:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.4 So many beautiful places https://www.donich.co.uk/blog/2015/10/18/so-many-beautiful-places/ https://www.donich.co.uk/blog/2015/10/18/so-many-beautiful-places/#respond Sun, 18 Oct 2015 17:38:06 +0000 http://www.donich.co.uk/?p=5077 R and I were down in south Scotland visiting my parents this week. The fabulous weather is continuing at the moment although I realize that with the insouciance of fate that as I am not working tomorrow that today will probably be the last day of it. So we went out for a couple of walks, and I was reminded that Argyll is not the only lovely place, because the scenery around Loch Ken is quite stunning.
Today the trees were turning into their autumn coats, and there was every colour from green, to yellow, to pumpkin orange, to blood red on display. Early in the morning the mists were thick and the frost was rigging out the spiders’ webs in the grass as though they were part of a Christmas display. Then the rising sun burned that off and rose high above the low rolling hills, illuminating the scene so that every tree was reflected into the surfaces of the lochs (Ken and Struan) in exquisite detail.
Enough of the poetic language, but it was very nice anyway, and then we went home for a good Scottish lunch of shepherd’s pie and bramble tart with custard.
Heading home now with a car full of purchases made in the bright lights of Castle Douglas, and with a few more kilos of brambles for extra jelly to be made tomorrow. We are all very fortunate to live in such a very lovely country.

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Down South https://www.donich.co.uk/blog/2014/07/20/down-south-2/ https://www.donich.co.uk/blog/2014/07/20/down-south-2/#respond Sun, 20 Jul 2014 15:53:33 +0000 http://www.donich.co.uk/?p=3355 Well not proper south – south Scotland. My parents live in Dumfries and Galloway near Castle Douglas. It is a beautiful and unspoilt part of the world; not as ‘drop dead in your face gorgeous’ as the Highlands, but lovely rolling countryside with deserted lochs and low forested hills. In fact it always reminds me of the Cumbrian Lake District (where I grew up) rather than Scotland proper, with the exception that while places like Windermere and Keswick are always mobbed with tourists, particularly at this time of year, the ‘Glen Kens’ as this area is called is always very peaceful and empty.

The little village my parents live in is also very pretty and quaint and you can walk straight out of the back of the house and down to Loch Struan (about a mile away) down an abandoned railway line. The line used to run from Castle Douglas to Stranraer via Gatehouse of Fleet until it was closed in the 1960;s http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gatehouse_of_Fleet_railway_station Walking along the line is quite evocative and sad – particularly the old abandoned station at Skerrow. You can imagine what it would have been like with the steam trains huffing past – but now it is silent and more decayed every time we pass it. There is another railway story related to the village, that in the 1930s the royal train stopped there and Edward VIII got out on the platform at Parton. He gave the station porter a shilling with his own head on it – but later it was lost in the village. I keep meaning to look for it with a metal detector – it would be a real piece of history if we could find it.

So R and I walked down to the loch and I took some photos and a short video which I will add in as a separate post. Along the way I ate quite a few wild strawberries (R doesn’t do eating anything that grows wild), and at the loch we saw some little frogs. It was also quite interesting to see that the selection of plants and flowers is a bit different down here, and also that summer is considerably further advanced, for example the hawthorne has berries on it here – whereas back in Argyll it is still in flower.

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