Dunvegan developments

No. 30m each side.

I don't know if it has changed, but the original design was only for tenders. The anchors may not be adequate for the weight of a yacht. The MacLeod estate took a lot of convincing to allow even this.

Water hose is on the fishing boat pier, or if you poke around the back of the hotel the is a water tap.
 
I don't know if it has changed, but the original design was only for tenders. The anchors may not be adequate for the weight of a yacht. The MacLeod estate took a lot of convincing to allow even this.

Water hose is on the fishing boat pier, or if you poke around the back of the hotel the is a water tap.

You might be right. Only shallow draught boats could use it at springs anyway.
 
It's certainly changed some aspects of its character. In the 70s, boats that went north of Ardamurchan Pt had a certain 'status' amongst other cruisers. Now with the 'improvement' to facilities and lets not forget the arrival of Antares Charts, it's not quite so demanding.

And I have seen boats based in Ardfern and Craobh sporting the heather, which is really not on, oldboy.
 
Thanks for the reminder about Dunvegan- not that I'm likely to use it myself as it's just one sea loch away from home. If I want to go to Dunvegan it's a bit easier to drive :D
By the way, for those who have not heard of the place before, the 'veg' in the name should be pronounced to rhyme with 'beg' as it is an anglicisation of 'beag' for 'small' in Gaelic. So if pronounced correctly it doesn't have anything to do with people who don't eat animal products.
 
Traditionally it was for C|yde-based boats which made it past Ardnamurchan. I've seen it on a few boats based at Craobh or Ardfern, which is a bit oikish.

Oh No! It's oikish for heather, snobish for flag etiquette, one just can't get accepted anywhere these days.
 
Yes, in the 1960's going North of Ardnamurchan was like going around Cape Horn. :)

I imagine the tradition started for yachts with no auxiliary, in which getting from the Clyde to the Small Isles was a significant achievement. My pre-war CCC books include details of hiring a horse for the canal. Even with a 1960s auxiliary it would have been pretty hard.

Can't say I've noticed that around Ardfern....

It's not common, but neither is the heather in general any more.

Oh No! It's oikish for heather, snobish for flag etiquette, one just can't get accepted anywhere these days.

Neither really matters, of course.

We sail out of Strangford and have always got our Heather on the pulpit once landfall north of Ardnamurchan since time immemorial

Well earned!
 
Walking past a nice clump of heather on the edge of Gairloch Golf Course (recommended for lunch and superb beach in front) the wife suggested we take a bunch to tie to the pulpit like the boats that pass our house and I almost humoured her.
Now very glad I resisted, though with the port on the transom listed as Strangford we might have got away with it?
 

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