Cameron takes to his bike for a challenging traverse of the Outer Isles from Vatersay to the Butt of Lewis.
A USEFUL little guidebook dropped through my letterbox the other day and I wish it had been available 10 years ago. How I could have benefited from this beautifully illustrated guide to the 298km (185-mile) Hebridean Way, a cycling route from Vatersay to the Butt of Lewis in the Western Isles.
Gina and I tried to walk it a few years ago. We started out from Castlebay in Barra in good fettle and fair weather but wind and incessant rain dampened our enthusiasm. We ended up catching a bus from Benbecula to Tarbert in Harris and another to Stornoway and the ferry home.
Sometime later I made a TV programme we called The Hebridean Trail. This mix of bike and hike showed me the wonderful areas we’d missed first time. I was so enthused I went back the next year with a pal and cycled the route again. While the “official” Hebridean Way is fairly new, people have been riding it for decades.
The launch of the newly designated Way a year ago encouraged Pete Martin and Janet Moss from Cumbria to write Cycling on the Edge. The route isn’t difficult to follow, but the guide is full of useful information.
I rode with my pal Hamish Telfer. Mull, Ardnamurchan, Rum and Eigg all looked majestic as we sailed across the Minch from Oban courtesy of CalMac but even these faded into relative insignificance as we swung into Castlebay in the golden hues of a setting Hebridean sun. Lovely Heaval, Barra’s highest summit, rose radiant above the scattering of houses, and the ancient ramparts of Kisimul Castle added romance.
On the ferry we had phoned the excellent Café Kisimul in Castlebay to book a table. There was one problem we’d overlooked. We wanted to begin our bike odyssey in Vatersay, the most southerly inhabited island in the Western Isles, necessitating a big hill climb out of Castlebay and down to the causeway that links the islands.
Esta historia es de la edición June 2017 de The Scots Magazine.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición June 2017 de The Scots Magazine.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Unst To Orbit
Shetland's spaceport is set to take Europe by storm, launching rockets to the stratosphere
Just Passing Through
A tale of the unexpected unfolds at dawn in a Stirlingshire glen as a rare, shy creature slips out of the shadows
Brigadoon Revisited
An affectionate look back at the low budget \"synthetic Scotch\" movie that still sparkles in the mist, 70 years on
A Brand New Opening
The Scots Magazine revisits the Old Course in St Andrews almost 70 years on and celebrates recent progress in welcoming women
Kenmore's Crossroads
Fury over a luxury redevelopment at the Perthshire village made news headlines around the world but is the tide of popular opinion turning?
Seeing Double!
Sam Heughan's Outlander body double, lain Wilkie, shares stories about his experiences on and off screen
The Story & The Song
With a soundtrack to a Shetland tale, author and musician Malachy Tallack blends his artistic passions in his latest venture
A Rebirth From The Earth
Erland Cooper's intriguing project has given nature and two determined fans a hand in shaping and bringing his new album to light
Nip Of Champions
Whisky has long been associated with moments of triumph, including a recent example of clever sporting motivation
The Waterside Hotel
A spectacular spot on the stunning Ayrshire coast