agurney
Well-Known Member
You have never been to the Old Forge at Inverie then- midgies the size of starlings waiting outside in ambush...
Are you sure they weren't clegs?
You have never been to the Old Forge at Inverie then- midgies the size of starlings waiting outside in ambush...
Questions, where would be a good place to leave her, considering I will need to fly back from Glasgow. Where would be a good secure place to leave her for a month or so that wont cost a fortune?.....
Ubergeekian
Please don't get me wrong, I support the policy that as many visitors as possible should be encouraged to stay in the Clyde, or if they do risk venturing beyond 'what passes for civilization' should use the marinas provided for them. I don't think it is fair though to pretend that our midges will not bother them. You need an awful lot of chain to escape them completely and many visitors never learn just to ignore them.
Living and sailing on the west coast I sometimes get carried away with enthusiasm for the area and start to promote it. It is not so much the annual visitors but the wealthy hordes who keep a big yacht up here for a year and sail it or just sleep in it for two weeks once a year that bother me. While they stayed in marinas it was OK but they are taking over the moorings now.
Last time that i was up at Oban sailing,there was talk of a flight being introduced from the Clyde to Kerrala marina using a aircraft that could take off and land on the water.
Perhaps the stories of midges stripping horses to the bare bones in 10 minutes are a mite exaggerated but if you have the misfortune to be present when temperature and humidity have heightened the libido of the female midge, you may well believe.
Clegs - last year I was attacked by a herd of the beasties midway between Toward and Bute, probably at least a mile offshore and with no wind - luckily I had a tazer on board. And then there are the Lions Mane jeelies ready to attack a lazily trailing hand or foot and they are worse than Somali pirates when it comes to climbing on board via an anchor chain.
So the advice is don't anchor, only use marinas that are more than half a mile offshore and wear full NBC suits at all times. And make sure you load up with plenty of fuel - there are islands with pumps that will only sell to the locals.
FUEL BIT MISLEADING-----pumps are card operated,only fishermen have them. Be nice to the fishermen------
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Beware - PUDDOCK can be found there !
/B]
or by the acute claustrophobia precipitated by the arrival of second boat at a previously deserted anchorage.
That was the one bit about west scotland that we didnt find true. Admittedly we went only up as far as Oban but we took our time, stopped in lots of tiny anchorages and never had one to ourselves. To the contrary, it was more crowded than some parts of the west country. Pretty, even sunny at times, but crowded.
That was the one bit about west scotland that we didnt find true. Admittedly we went only up as far as Oban but we took our time, stopped in lots of tiny anchorages and never had one to ourselves. To the contrary, it was more crowded than some parts of the west country. Pretty, even sunny at times, but crowded.
The trick is to use spots which are in the old CCC books but aren't in the new ones.
Far too many floating caravanners around these days who need their hands held all the time. That and Solent sailors who have come north to get away from the crowds and find it's too scary.
Not quite sure what you're getting at here! We're not Solent sailors and would only need you to hold our hands if you had big knockers and an obliging disposition. Do you?![]()