Swimming during the summer months was not what I had in mind when
planning to live in the Outer Hebrides remembering from my childhood days on
the Mull of Kintyre that anything more than paddling was seriously painful, but
just recently I have been taking that daily dip. True this isn’t a leisurely
floating around in the briny but more of a vigorous splashing and relatively
brief episode but during the hot spell we’ve been having there is nothing like
it for toning up the aging skin. For us fellows it can be rather alarming at
first however reassuring to discover that given time everything does return to
normal. So as Sunday promises to live up to its name once more people load up
the car with all the plastic kit and head for the best beaches lugging boogie boards,
bucket and spade and bags of beachwear. I sling water, camera an extra tea
shirt and some fruit into the back pack and head due north taking the short cut
over the moor crossing to Garry avoiding traffic and people. Crossing
Leigasdail burn and following the ridge out to the high point between Traigh
Mhor and Garry I take a first skinny dip in the wee loch my very own natural
infinity pool. Swimming in lochs at this time of year can be dangerous given
that some are surprisingly deep and can remain bitterly cold at depth.
The ground drops steeply to Garry beach and I can already see from the crammed car park that the world and his wife have made it this far. There are times when I watch in horror as holiday makers drive all the way up to The Bridge to Nowhere above the beach and turn round slowing occasionally to take a snap shot then off, the boxed ticked, “Yes we’ve been there”. At times like that I see a case for seriously increasing the price of petrol or giving people an annual quota.
The ground drops steeply to Garry beach and I can already see from the crammed car park that the world and his wife have made it this far. There are times when I watch in horror as holiday makers drive all the way up to The Bridge to Nowhere above the beach and turn round slowing occasionally to take a snap shot then off, the boxed ticked, “Yes we’ve been there”. At times like that I see a case for seriously increasing the price of petrol or giving people an annual quota.
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