Sunday, 18 May 2014

An inspirational lifelong hostelling journey


Scottish Independent Hostels exists to help promote the values and uniqueness of a Hostelling stay in an Independently run hostel.  Hostellers also help one another and here is an excellent example from David & Valery Dean of the Lazy Duck Hostel who are always willing to help Scottish Hostellers, and even overseas ones too.  This is even more remarkable when you consider that the Lazy Duck is one of our smallest hostels, but as you will read, has much, much more besides.

David had a request for help from Christian and Jana Berking:

Hello David,
This is Christian Berking from Northern Germany. I am not sure you remember me and my wife Jana joining your beautiful homeland two times in august 2012 on our honeymoon. :-)  We spoke about  many different things, especially to build a cottage in the woods. Now we are on a big journey www.horizonte-erfahren.de  with our bikes. Behind the tour is to develop and managing our own home such a little bit like yours. Would you be so kind to give us some details how to manage a project like yours? I know that you build first your own cottage and bought some land. After some time it grows bigger and bigger. That' s all I know at the moment. How did you finance it and was it difficult to prepare yourselves in such a big project? Me and my wife are very interested to live in harmony with nature and have an income, when we are seniors.
We wish you and your wife a wonderful season
Yours sincerely Christian and Jana Berking


And this is the response from David.  Not only will it be very helpful to the Berkings, what a lovely inspirational insight into the lifelong journey of one of our most fascinating members! 

Dear Christian & Jana,
        Goodness me, what a journey you are having.  We wish you every success and fulfilment.  As to what has happened here at the Lazy Duck over 40 years, the glorious and perhaps unconventional thing about it, and us, is that in no sense has it been 'planned'.  There never was a five, ten or twenty years plan other than to feel in our bones that having come here when we were first married we would at some stage want to share this spot with others.

Our thirty years work in education until 1996 saw us living in accommodation attached to our schools first in England, then Wales and then, lastly in Valery's native Scotland about 90 minutes from here by car.  We came when we could to the cottage and then when in 1979 we built our house here we came for holidays with our children.  All the time of course we were both extending our land holding when the opportunity and finance allowed and working on the watercourse, now the ponds, and  planting and landscaping.

  Our professional work elsewhere though meant that what visitors now see as the Lazy Duck did not really accelerate until I 'retired' for the first time.  Valery too was fully involved in our educational work but when we did arrive here for full time living, apart from my continuing consultancy work abroad we were able in 1999 to develop first the conversion of our winter storage Drascombe boat house to make the hostel.  The camping ground followed by accident almost in 2003 when the horse ate all the heather under the 200 year old pine trees. The two eco huts followed in 2011 and 2013 respectively. Each development has more or less funded the next one and what savings we had  have been more sensibly used to top up the cost of these building projects rather than leaving our small amount of money in the bank. 

Essentially though it is we as non professional hospitality givers and accommodation providers which has allowed us to take a very fresh look at what we have hoped to do here.  We are not mightily impressed by the brash tourism machine which surrounds us.  Although, to a certain extent, we have to rub along with it we far prefer to bring to the Lazy Duck our own values of ethical connecting with visitors who arrive to what many of them see as this 'oasis'.

 In determining our response to them as people and in an attempt to exceed their expectations of what they have booked we need to understand the physical and human environment they have come from.  If we can do this then we can more usefully gauge our response to them both on arrival and throughout their stay.  In our publicity we aim to make no claims which could mislead.  Furthermore for instance,, we would rather a camper with children cancel because of bad weather than have a child's first experience of camping turn out to be a bad one. That said, we provide a shelter for campers which in itself can become a welcome and 'fun' refuge for all ages when the rain is throwing it down.  Laudable risk taking by and with children is one thing.  Misery is another.

Hut visitors in particular are often celebrating an anniversary, possibly becoming engaged to be married or just spending special and quite private time together.  Our contact with them following their arrival needs therefore to be thought about carefully.  Each couple is different in their requirements of us and we need to think about each of them and respond accordingly.  We must neither underplay nor overplay our part in their visit.  We must learn to 'read' them as accurately as we can.  In this 'slow' tourism exercise therefore where visitor numbers comparatively are really low we can afford to do that.

 The help we recruit from our local village for preparing accommodations or tradesmen who may meet our guests or international volunteer summer helpers who come to us, usually two at a time for two months between May and October are thoroughly schooled in this thinking.  Hostel visitors, who are our central reason for being here of course, come in all shapes and sizes, some solo and retiring, others in a group and happily gregarious.  We must be prepared well with our response to all and strive to be faithful to the human, empathetic values and culture which have inspired and guided us whatever we have found ourselves doing with our lives.

Finally, for now, it is fine and a privilege to be able to create a place such as this.  As seniors though we find the clock does not stand still and while the creating and maintaining has been much fun and most rewarding we recently have had to make plans for taking life a little more gently.  There were several options but only one good one for us.  It was to recruit joint managers to ' take the strain' and allow us to continue making a contribution appropriate to our age and stage.

 This we have now done and are fortunate in having live next door to us in what was the letting cottage a much younger couple whose extensive professional experience, high personal qualities and refreshingly like minded thinking to our own  are not only helping us maintain what the Lazy Duck can offer but encouraging us to achieve even more for our visitors.  The 'more' is not in terms of plant and facilities for we have probably done enough 'physical' creating on these three hectares/six acres.  Their contribution has been to 'modernise' us somewhat just in the way our own professional children hoped they would and to bring a sense of further youthfulness  into our lives and our work.  We could not have been more fortunate in the appointments we made.  They have been with us since last September only, but everything is looking good.

I hope this is of some help.  Every good wish to you for your own futures.  As members of the Scottish Independent Hostels network  www.hostel-scotland.co.uk   we would be happy to point you towards other equally motivated colleagues who would I feel sure be willing to share their hostel creating/owning/managing experience with you.

All the best,
David
David Dean
lazyduck.co.uk

 

Friday, 21 March 2014

A new Stone Plaque for Loch Lomond Memorial Park


The New Stone Plaque
One of the defining things about Independent Hostellers is the interest they have in their own community. One of our members, Jock Cousin of Balmaha House Hostel,  has recently been responsible for ensuring the placement of a new memorial plaque to those who gave their lives in the first and second World Wars to replace one stolen years ago.  Since 1995, the area around Ben Lomond, including the mountain summit, has been designated as a war memorial, called the Ben Lomond National Memorial Park. 
 

Photo: Ben Lomond National Memorial Park Sculpture marker stone now in place.  on the approach to the Sculpture.  It Reads                   This Land Rising from the shore of the loch to the summit of Ben Lomond was dedicated in 1996 as the Ben Lomond National Memorial Park to be held in perpetuity as a tribute to those who gave their lives in the service of their country.
www.balmahahouse.co.uk
Jock is on the right as the new plaque is placed on site
A few years ago the brass plaque for the sculpture was stolen, presumably for its scrap value.  Jock, a fighting soldier for 28 years with the British Military felt it was very important to get the plaque replaced and arranged at his own cost and through his military connections for a plaque to be commissioned and transported from Devon where it was made, to Balmaha.  This was no easy task as the new plaque was made of stone; Jock was determined to provide a memorial that would last and have no scrap value for thieves!

The stone plaque is a lovely thing and sits very well in its surroundings.  It carries the description “This Land Rising from the shore of the loch to the summit of Ben Lomond was dedicated in 1996 as the Ben Lomond National Memorial Park to be held in perpetuity as a tribute to those who gave their lives in the service of their country” . Due to the efforts of Jock, it will be there for a long time to come.



Monday, 24 February 2014

At the Hostel Door



So what's so surprising about Harris and Lewis being voted the World's fifth most delightful to visit islands in the World?  Following close on that accolade are ones for Mull and Orkney.  Trip Advisor travellers gave the Outer Hebridean islands top slot in Europe in their 2014 Travellers' Awards announcement.  Given the competition both in Europe and World wide that is amazingly good news for the islands themselves and for the whole of Scotland too.

As I proposed to my first and only wife, in a sand dune on Harris's Luskentyre beach forty years ago this year I know well how enchanting and bewitching this landscape can be.  But it's not just the landscape is it.  In coming to their decision the travellers who reported back to Trip Advisor commented in glowing terms on just what effort the residents of all the islands had made to make them welcome and to tempt them back.  A lot has happened in those forty years to build on the innate and natural open-heartedness of the islanders.

Thursday, 9 January 2014

An Insight into Independent Hostelling and Volunteering.


Lazy Duck Hostel Nethy Bridge CairngormsIt’s difficult to encapsulate what is so unique and special about the people who own and run Independent Hostels, especially since even within our own SIH Membership every owner and every Hostel is so totally different!

A great insight as to why people run a Hostel is The Lazy Duck owned by Valery and David Dean.  The Lazy Duck is the smallest Hostel within our membership and totally delightful.  Like many of our members, there are other types of accommodation on site running alongside the Hostel to provide a sustainable and profitable enterprise.

For over 30 years The Lazy Duck has hosted climbers, walkers, paddlers, campers, cyclists, mountain bikers - solo travellers as well as families and activity groups. Fiddle and clarsach, guitar and pipes have played late into the evening and many a 'craic' has been enjoyed round the camp fires at the Hostel and on the camping ground.

Monday, 9 December 2013

A White-tailed Eagle Tale from the Isle of Lewis

One of our most far-flung members, indeed a Director of SIH, David Roberts from Galson Farm Hostel on the Isle of Lewis has been observing some unusual behaviour from a White-tailed Eagle (often referred to as Sea Eagles).  I would thoroughly recommend visiting David's website and reading the news/gossip tab which lays out in delightful detail the seasonal happenings on his farm.

Recently we have been hearing a huge clamour from the ever increasing flocks of Greylag Geese. Rushing outside, it became clear the mayhem had spread miles along the coast, with several packs rising in abject panic. This was not a one-off since this recurred over several days.The cause of the pandemonium was a juvenile White-tailed Eagle. Having witnessed Golden Eagles overflying geese without reaction for many years, it would seem logical to suggest that the Sea Eagles are predating on the Greylags. Whilst l am aware they do take smaller geese on the lower Isles, these are a sight heftier a challenge, and l have yet to witness an actual kill..Is it possible that they have been taking young goslings and juveniles to date,hence the reaction? Will it transpire that as they acquire a taste,will harsher winter conditions force them into taking on fully grown adults? This would be  beneficial in controlling an ever increasing out of control Greylag Geese population with no existing predator,and maybe deflect damage away from lambs in spring, especially if this were to lag behind slightly,with hatching.

Saturday, 7 December 2013

At the Hostel Door


When all five lums in and around the hostel here are gently reeking with woodsmoke we feel the wind of seasonal change from Autumn to Winter is just about on us.  We lost our Soay ram this week as he simply could not make the transition from grass feeding to a diet of hay, sheep mix and the last of the vegetation.   Today, after the big winds we are inching our way around in the white stuff and keeping an eye on road conditions for tonight's party, oldie hill walkers returning for at least their fifth visit.
 
That inauspicious start to the festive season apart we are happy to look back on a bumper summer and autumn which have brought to us so many different discerning visitors.  A number of North Americans we learn like to spend time both in Ireland and then Scotland or the other way round.  This Celtic pilgrimage is echoed also by Bretons and Basques whose shores share in our rich seaboard heritage.  Add then to this our Welsh and Cornish cousins for whom, as with the Scots of old, it was the seaways more than land routes which saw them trading and of course fighting to protect or conquer and we can begin to understand the bonds which bring those North American descendants to explore our treasured Scotland.

Sunday, 1 December 2013

Solo Travellers in Hostels: Peter Wright of Inveraray Hostel


Are Hostels geared to catering for the Solo Traveller?
 
Solo travellers get a poor deal from accommodation in general. In hotels and guest houses they pay much more, often twice as much, as anyone else. Thank goodness for  Hostels, where solo travellers are charged no more than others!

So are hostels geared to catering for solos?