March is here, the days are drawing out and still skenes of
greylag and pink footed geese fly well above us between the coast where they
feed and the nearby loch where they overnight. “Welcome to Scotland” provides
excellent information on greylag goose and pink footed goose
What caught my eye recently and which has been the subject
of sometimes passionate conversation with those of our hostel guests who are
connected by umbilical cord, it seems, to their binoculars is the report of
research work at Uppsala University in Sweden that our birds can 'speak in
phrases'. Furthermore they can send out
a 'scan the surroundings for danger' call followed by a 'come here' call.
Pristine snow: the hill from
the hut
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When collecting their eggs therefore I must rank as a ground
predator unless that is, as I fondly imagine, I am seen as a harmless pal. I often take hostelling children into the
hens' field and to the hen hut itself.
There is something quite magical in collecting one's first warm egg.
Remember? Cautious fingers feel into the
nest, under a hen even and small faces are wreathed in anxiety followed by
triumph and delight. This time of year
we are seeing a surplus of eggs grow in the basket where folk are invited to
help themselves for a contribution to the feed.
Hebridean box bed hostel hut
comfort
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When the meteorite burned up in skies just twenty miles to the
north of us on 2nd March it was stunning.
The pair 'anniversarying' in the wood fired hot tub were struck dumb by
the blinding light and a few seconds later a low persistent rumble of
noise.
I was interested to
see former First Minister, Alex Salmond's erudite explanation of just how near
a catastrophic miss we in Scotland had just a bit later with 2013 TX68 Rather an embellishment perhaps of the more
modest appraisals coming from seasoned scientists? Maybe but then Alex now augments his MP's
salary by writing for the Aberdeen Press & Journal and, fair play I
suppose, it was avuncularly convincing
enough on U Tube. Read more here>
This late winter's honeymooners seek out our hostel's more
secluded spots, in the wood or by the water and now a spot in the field where
they can oversee the lambing process almost upon us. Our Soay sheep, originally from St Kilda are
just unique in looking after themselves, including the lambing process, year
after year. Don't though try and herd
them in the way we have watched the Scottish Blackface flocks on the admirable BBC 2's This Farming
Life. They splinter
remember, not herd!
What a great programme to allow supper time at the main
house kitchen table to take its time. It
stalls conversation of course and I wouldn't make a habit of it. Talking time is too important a feature to
our hostel team for it to be lost to television. Friday evening's, pre supper 'noggin'
together is the highlight and we clear the decks of the past week and look to
the next in all its simple detail as well as its complexities.
We had a 'refugee' employed hostel keeper drop in last
week. She had given up in despair and
reluctantly but with great relief taken leave of the hostel where for the past
three months she had been put in charge.
Those very few hostel owners who buzz off abroad leaving unsuspecting,
poorly inducted staff to carry the can just ought not to be in business. The last straw for this lady came after a
sickeningly drunken stag party of revellers had totally undone the half deep
clean she had achieved in the week before they came. They had not a thought, cared not a jot for
her and the efforts she was making to see them well looked after. To boot she was required to live in a single
room in the centre of the havoc and share the kitchen. Oh boy! What a misjudgement on the part of
her inadequate employers. That's not at
all typical of a group hostel situation mercifully. I know of hostels which positively welcome
stags and hens, engage with the organisers in a positive and forthright way and
provide for them admirably well whilst at the same time having the hostel's
boundaries respected. It's not our scene but all strength to their arm.
I love the idea being promoted by Re Foresting Scotland to
increase the nation's 'well-being' by reintroducing the concept of hutting. Read more here>
The movement is gathering strength and now with Scottish
Government backing we may see, alongside and possibly integral with some of
Scotland's independent hostels, a growing culture not unlike the enviable
achievement over several generations to be found in the Scandinavian
countries. The concept sits easily with
what a fair number of Scottish hostel keepers are attempting to achieve: diversity.
With a blackbird now singing to us each evening for two
hours before the gloaming sets in, the glow of departing guests in the mornings
each clearly wanting to tell us of how their two, three or more days in this
oasis has inspired and reinforced them in their 'other and real world' we can
feel good, yes, really good about having come to this stage in our own lives
whereby we can give service as a way of life and most certainly not as a
job. Very soon Easter will be on us, a
few small tents will arrive in May to add to buzz to these few acres and we
will, alongside all other tasks, continue to fell, block, split and store the non-native
lodge pole pine which feeds our six hungry wood burning stoves. Then there is the hot tub and the scavenging
we engage in to keep three chimineas gently reeking.
Bring on the Spring.
Hostelkeeper
Hostelkeeper