snooks
Well-Known Member
If you pass Mull to starboard, there's a dram awaiting here, too!
So who's offering whisky, and when?
If you pass Mull to starboard, there's a dram awaiting here, too!
Cimo, its Brown's: while they do keep a good stock of hardware and ironmongery, they keep an even better selection of malts. Try the Ledaig, not from Tobermory but Oban but good value for those who don't want too much peat and iodine in their West Coast malt.
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I have no problem with including Out Stack, Sula Sgeir, St Kilda, Ireland and the Sicily Isles in what I understand as the British Isles. I'm not sure about the Channel Islands and Rockall, I don't quite see them as part of the British archipelago.
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I notice in your original post you say you have no problem going via Sicily ......... none of my business but, I've done a bit of sailing in the Med and, all things being equal, and just between the two of us, I should get a bigger boat !!
If I can just chip in.... whilst people are 'circumnagivating' Britain, could they at least refrain form calling Islay and Mull 'The Western Isles'! I got all excited reading about a cruise in ST recently only to find they bottled out through the canal and came nowhere near the most interesting bit. Cop out.
British Isles - According to Wikipedia (so it must be true) -
"The British Isles are a group of islands off the northwest coast of continental Europe that include Great Britain, Ireland and over six-thousand smaller islands. There are two sovereign states located on the islands: the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, and Ireland. The British Isles also include the Crown Dependencies of the Isle of Man and, by tradition, the Channel Islands, although the latter are not physically a part of the island group.
The term British Isles is controversial in relation to Ireland, where there are objections to its usage due to the association of the word "British" with Ireland. The Government of Ireland discourages its use, and in relations with the United Kingdom the words "these islands" are used. Although still used as a geographic term, the controversy means that alternative terms such as "Britain and Ireland" are increasingly preferred."
If you draw less than 1.60 there are three! You can use the Forth and Clyde as well as the Crinan and Caley
guernseyman
You have managed to add further confusion to my voyage: I started off not sure of where I was going, now I don't know the name of the place I wish to sail round.
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probably of little constructive value Fascadale, but -
go on your voyage and trace the actual passage taken.
post your route here on your return and we will help put a name on it!!!![]()
Or more likely you'll be told you went the wrong way and/or missed the best bits!go on your voyage and trace the actual passage taken.
post your route here on your return and we will help put a name on it!!!
guernseyman
Thank you for a most interesting post.
I really enjoyed the Wiki article British Isles naming dispute
You have managed to add further confusion to my voyage: I started off not sure of where I was going, now I don't know the name of the place I wish to sail round.
I quite like the title "The West European Isles" although I think the Icelanders and Faroese might have something to say about that.
......... Has anyone suggested a better collective term acceptable to all? ("Irish Isles" is hardly an improvement!)