Friday 7 December 2012

8. Its Springtime!!



From: Stokes, Fiona
Sent: Monday, April 08, 2008 06:23 PM
FW: Its Springtime!!

Tha thu ann! Ciamar a tha sibh?
(Hello - How are you all?)

In Gaelic culture they don’t refer to time in months but in seasons, so I have dated this blog accordingly;

A snapshot from a spring morning –
Mark has been reading his fishing magazines in bed – as the sea fishing season has started today he checks his tackle bag ;o) (my old pampers changing bag which apparently has just the right kind of pockets and netting in it) and later mends the fishing rod I ran over with the landrover. He announces Thursday he will be down at the pier fishing for ‘errin’ as our Yorkshire mentor Gary calls them (‘Herring’ for us from the south who can’t work out the translation). At last we can restock the chest freezer with local fish – yummy! Mackerel seems to be an easy one to catch, but Mark quite fancies trying again for some Pollock – nice and big fish, and according to Birds Eye fish-fingers who use it all the time nowadays, it is also high in Omega 3’s – excellent for brainy boys & girls!
Looking out of the window it is SUNNY! Hooray! (Later it is raining, by lunchtime it snows – only to be expected – as they say here ‘If you don’t like the weather on Lewis, just wait a minute!’.)
Austin is bouncing up and down on the bed, excited to have discovered the art of telling jokes – he hasn’t quite mastered it, and really just uses it as an excuse to talk when he has nothing to say. An example of one of his jokes; ‘What do you get if you cross a <looking around the room for inspiration> lamp with a <looking again> carpet?’ I don’t know Austin, what do you get if you cross a lamp with a carpet? ‘A big fat doughnut!!’ Genius.
Morris still has his thumb in his mouth most of the time, but does take it out to speak his growing vocabulary – his and Austin’s favourite word is “Doughnut!”, don’t know why but they like to shout it out in joy, or substitute it in any sentence for comedy effect.
I wake up slowly and as ever my first thoughts are of – MOVING!!

New Home?
I had been waiting to send out another blog until there was some definite news on finding a croft, finding a house, setting up a business and starting a new life. Well, we’re sort of there…. We have found a house, and some land for a very, very reasonable price, and the bank seem to want to loan us the money to complete the sale. But we haven’t had the final say so yet, from the bank, and I try to protect myself from getting my hopes up too soon. Plus I’ve been scaring myself with internet articles about banks refusing new mortgages etc etc….. so I’ll just talk about something else and ask you to keep your fingers crossed – thanks!

Mark’s work is still coming in
We had to change banks, to one that had a branch on the island so we could pay cash in for Marks jobs. But even the Royal Bank of Scotland cannot help us with Marks wages, when he gets paid in meat! So far a haunch of venison, a large bag of mussels a joint of beef and what looks like half a sheep! I really don’t know how we can account for the spare Rayburn he was given last week either… But its all good news and we stand by our assumption that the last plumber that lived in south lochs died of overwork!

Pairc playgroup
Austin is loving pre-school! He’s going 4 mornings a week and there are 6 of them in the class; 4 girls and another boy Lachie. Annabel runs the group and she plays tapes of nursery rhymes in the background as they’re playing – Austin’s singing has returned (he refused for a while) and I love to listen to him singing something while he’s busy in another room or in the bath! The classroom is at the edge of loch Erisort and has phenomenal views from the windows on 3 sides. Its also opposite the croft we’re buying, which is a bit annoying timing wise, but if we’re in by 2009 there’s still time to save some diesel! Austin has had a shock however to be one of a crowd now. This was demonstrated in his first week when Annabel had taken the group off for a walk to see the snow on top of the mountains. Austin wanted to tell everyone the amusing story of Daddy climbing mountains that weekend, and having to run down the mountain, back to the car because he’d left his lighter behind. Austin is always amazed by stories of what Daddy does, but when he’d tried to tell the others he said ‘Do you know, some of them weren’t listening?!’

Judy Dotter
Austin seems to have an imaginary friend – he talks about ‘her’ and she pops into the conversation every now and again. Sometimes Austin will say something that really stands out – I imagine that he’s heard it on the telly or picked up a fact from someone other than me and Mark, but when we ask him about it, he says ‘Judy Dotter told me’. So far we have gleamed that he knows Judy is not real, he says she is just pretend, but even though he calls her a ‘her’, he says she is a little boy. Furthermore he says she lives in the bathroom….. I’ve done a bit of Freud in my time, but for once in my life I’m not going to analyse this one! When Mark was little he had an imaginary friend he called ‘orrible’ – mine was called Frederick and he was a cute hedgehog….enough now….

Holiday time
Christmas seems like so long ago, so I won’t go on about that. In short, it was truly magical!
We also had a trip to England in October which was so good to catch up with family and friends from all over. We flew from Stornoway to Edinburgh then down to Birmingham, so each flight was no more than an hour. I wasn’t sure how the boys would be, but it was soooo much better than trying to get them down to England by car! Stornoway airport is neat and modern, and not just a portacabin in a field (with the islands further south the beaches double as runways!) and the little plane that took us to Edinburgh was an ex executive jet from the 80’s, so leather armchairs to sit in and no more than 20 seats – we felt very special! Our first time back in England for nearly a year and my immediate thought was – all the cars are so shiny down here! – I expected the amount of them would shock me, but it was their new-ness that was more apparent. I also wondered why the hire car we had, automatically locked the doors when we were inside the car, but apparently car-jacking at traffic lights has become a huge problem in cities nowadays (?? What is it about corporations that they want to feed our fears??)
We also managed to squeeze in a sneaky holiday in February, just 6 hours south on the mainland to the Cowal peninsula – 20 minutes from Dunoon, a village called Kilmun . Again being back in civilisation was strange – there were lots of houses with no space between them and evidence of a lot of wealth (all the houses are much the same size, and basic on Lewis) but then it was a Victorian seaside town and had obviously been very big in its heyday. A lovely break again - good to catch up with old friends and make some new.

So I’d better sign off – thanks for reading another blog. I hope you’re having a good spring and I hope to be in touch again soon with more news on the croft…
Much love
Fiona, Mark, Austin & Morris.
XXxx

7. Its a long one.


From: Stokes, Fiona.
Sent: Monday, October 12, 2007 08:03 PM
FWD: Its a long one.
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Hello again from the Isle of Lewis!

How are you? Well, I hope, is it October already?? That must mean summer is properly over now, it suddenly seems late in the year – not long before Austin goes off to pre-school in January – yikes! Lots has happened since I last wrote one of these, me and Mark have both managed to get a few days away from the kids (though unfortunately away from each other too!) Mark went mountaineering in Skye, and I went to darling Cath & Anthonys ‘wedding weekender’ in Cornwall. But we’re about to embark on a family holiday altogether in a couple of weeks to visit the mainland for a whistlestop tour – Austin and Mo on a plane for the first time – very excited, but very aware it could be a nightmare!!
Enjoying a great wedding, perhaps a little too much...


Anyway – the roundup …

Firstly – Facebook.
In some ways I wish I’d never looked at this website, because now I have I’m completely addicted (thanks Cath for that one!). It is such a phenomenal way to waste perfectly good time, but I can’t help myself. (Thank God I don’t work in an office anymore..) For anyone who doesn’t know about it, it allows you to post various newsey things about what you’ve been doing on your own webpage, and put large amounts of photos on for free. Then you invite everyone you know by email to join facebook and create their own ‘profile’. The website will give you a run down of everyones news, new photos and who has just joined. So you end up getting in touch with people you haven’t seen for years, people you’re rubbish at keeping in touch with and generally chatting away happily while wasting evening after evening when you could be watching a perfectly good telly programme! Its great, and as Mark and I cant find anything worth watching on telly nowadays anyway (is it just me or is the news clinically depressing all the time?), we spend our time sorting out old and new photos and browsing other peoples histories instead. So if you want to keep in touch minute by minute with how we are (Mark is wishing he’d tidied his van up today, Fiona is still hearing piping music in her head from the celidh last night) or just look at some photos here is a link
Marks epic mountaineering on Skye with the CUMS in August http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=4250&id=559722923&op=6
Pics of the kids and home http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=9986&id=731090754
Perfect place to try canoeing

Kids in Kayaks with Otters
I managed to get out on the water one evening recently and chatted with a couple on their yacht moored further up the loch, who had just sailed down from Norway and Sweden and were on their way back to Dublin. That was cool. But I have to admit it’s been mainly our neighbours kids who have made best use of the kayaks this summer. Madeline (15) often rings up and asks if they can go out, so we lend them the life vests from the shed, and they help themselves to the boats and paddles at the bottom of the garden. The other night they came back, soaked from a water fight as usual, but telling us how some otters had come to play with them, swimming alongside the canoes. We often get a seal in the loch, but I’m looking forward to seeing some otters now – those big whiskers and sharp teeth – what handsome fellas!

Duckwatch

Our neighbour bought 4 ducks recently, which escaped and now live down at the river, 2 at the bottom of our garden and 2 further up. As they arrived about the same time as Alistair and Jenny visited, we have named the ducks after them and love to go and feed them and watch them waddling around (the ducks….) A great sound to add to my list of favourite things is the sound of webbed feet slapping along the tarmac road to chase a bit of bread. Funnily enough they have grown a lot thanks to our bread crusts, and next doors ‘stale biscuits’! A few people have their eyes on them for the Christmas table though….
webbed feet slapping the tarmac

MJS Property Services (we have cards you know www.vistaprint.com very cheap…!)
We think we have worked out what happened to the last plumber in south lochs – he must have died from exhaustion! Mark is very busy plumbing in stoves, fixing leaks, plastering new builds, 1st fitting in renovations and putting in the odd bathroom or shower room.
We had a nasty experience with a customer who couldn’t pay, so have lost a bit of our own money on materials bought up front, but they seem to be trying to put things right with Mark and the other contractors that they can’t afford to pay. Mark dealt with the situation the friendly way, by working out a monthly payment plan that they agreed they could afford and giving them time to look into alternative loans. The contractors who built the road up to the house, said they would park a digger across their gate unless they paid and told them their house was haunted! (We have now had a hefty lump sum as part payment, I’m not sure if the drive people have been paid yet…)
A little party for Mo's 1st birthday

Birthdays
Morris had his first birthday in June – we had a little party with Nick (2 months younger) and Finley (a year between Austin and Morris) and it was 2 hours of noise and chaos even at that age. We have since been to an 8 year old's party on the hill opposite and had a startling vision of what is to come…..
Austin turned 3 in September and enjoyed a trip to the toyshop in Stornoway where he fell reverently silent in the aisle of large dumper truck / digger / tractor type things. After a starry eyed few minutes he focussed on a bright orange bin lorry complete with 2 wheelie bins and the choice was made. It is still his favourite toy a month later only now he uses it less to scoop rubbish into the back, and more as a ride on toy to skid around the downstairs hot on my heels whenever I go.

Accidents
Ooh, ouch. Yesterday Morris dropped a tin of beans on Austin’s big toe and the nail has gone completely black. Lots of tears for a while there, but a bit of magic calpol calmed him down and he’s learning to be careful not to knock it whilst riding his bin lorry!
Mark on the other hand has too many ouches to mention, except for his broken jaw! He was smacked in the face by the handle of a stuck hammer drill, which split his bottom lip and gave his jaw an almighty whack, but he took it on the chin – ha ha !! :o/ Dr Lizzy at Gravir surgery gave her usual non-phased diagnosis, she shon a torch around and prodded him a bit but said that so long as he was talking he hadn’t broken it. Mark is not so sure though as he says it still bl***y hurts a week later.
The 6 million dollar van had some extensive work to get it through its MOT (we’ve only had it a few months) and then again when the clutch went. It finally had a nasty turn…into the ditch next to the house. Mark rang Iain and Richard who obliged with winching duties and it only took them 5 hours to get it safely back on the road undamaged (I think Mark is missing his off-roading weekends and quite enjoyed the morning in a funny way!)

The Gaelic (you MUST pronounce it GALLIC, not Gaylick…)
I have been trying to learn the native language again, this week with a 4 week course taught by the retired primary school teacher Christina – a lovely lady who has a career of patience behind her and a lot of stories to tell. It has been brilliant, and I really feel I’ve learnt much more this time (7 weeks previously with the course designer who was a promoter rather than a teacher). I obviously still find it hard to follow fluent spoken gaelic, but I can at least now politely ask people how they are, or introduce myself a bit. The library in Stornoway has a big gaelic section with lots of kids books. Austin enjoys the adventures of Peasan, a cheeky lamb, and his friends on the farm, Morris likes Where is Spot, or ‘Caite Bheil Spot’ and I like the Calum Clacha videos – this is Bob the Builder dubbed into Gaelic only Bob is now called Calum and has ginger hair..?

Buying somewhere to live and work
We have a semi-should-be-okay-not-really-sure-how-definite-but-could-be-fine-knowing-the-way-people-are-up-here agreement to buy a croft in nearby Cearsiadar. Its got plenty of room, some old sheds, a bit of bog, a steep hill, a windy plateau and a crackin’ view for a new build. But there is a lot of stuff to sort out legally as the sale depends on 2 other buyers also. Sounds like a nightmare? Yeah, but as I say it really is a great spot… will keep you posted – wish us luck!
could this be it...?

In the garden
Austin and Mo have been helping me harvest compost over the last couple of weeks. We are mulching the veg beds with seaweed taken from the loch, and digging in horse poo to where potatoes will go next year.  Handily Gravir has a couple of ponies that graze in different fields, so me and the boys had an exciting afternoon walking up and down the road with buckets full of horse poo, after Austin had run around the field shouting ‘there’s a good one Mummy!’. And to think half a tonne of muck would cost £40 down at the alotment!
The vegetable garden had mixed results this year, mostly due to Morris not being steady enough on his feet to toddle in the garden and being young enough to want to put everything around him in his mouth (thank fully he’d passed that phase by the time we harvested the horse poo!). But I managed to unearth a couple of old lazy beds – these are strips of land that are raised so that the rain runs off the peat and the drainage is better. And I made some terracing on the steep garden which was good for some onions.
Not many people grow their own up here, mainly the older folk, but I managed to swap a few seedlings and sets with a few of the girls and we each had a mixed crop. I grew good old faithful courgettes which were covered while they were little to protect them from any wind, but when they got too big for my home made cloches (old bed frames covered in polythene) they managed ok outside and produced some delicious courgettes. In another lazy bed I tried some butternut squash but I put them in late and even with a cloche on, they didn’t do too much. I did have one grow (about 4 inches long!) so I know they will work and will just start earlier next year. A neighbour took some plantlets to try in his polytunnel and they did much better. I bumped into him at the Lochs show and he was chuffed to have just won a prize in the veg class for his potatoes and carrots – he asked whether I had entered anything this year, which of course I hadn’t, but it has given me ideas….
Otherwise we had lettuce, the onions and a couple of potato plants planted in old coal sacks which worked well (thanks Amanda for that idea). I really missed not having any beetroot this year, and again I was too late with the tomato plants so didn’t even make green tomatoes for chutney :o(
The big thing in the garden however was the rhubarb – the house has an old fruit garden with blackcurrant bushes, wild raspberries and a massive rhubarb patch, so after a grand harvest at the beginning of the summer Mark managed to make about 60 bottles of rhubarb wine! It has such a lovely pink colour, a ‘blush’, and a very light taste not at all bitter as you might expect. As far as strawberries go however, I kept the plants mainly for runners this year – we did get strawberries but as they weren’t netted most of them got nibbled by the birds. Mark has a vat of strawberry wine fermenting in the lounge near the nice warm stove, but they all came from the Co-op!

And finally, the weather
It’s autumn, but with a sunny day yesterday where the thermometer on the windowsill measured 35C, the Hebrides climate again surprises. I guess everyone in the UK had a crappy summer, but I’m told Lewis was let off easy in one way this year – or should that be in a million little bitey ways…. The midges have apparently been late and not so bad this year. I hadn’t been to the west coast of Scotland in the summer months before, so had never really encountered a swarm of them – but one morning here I looked out of the window and it looked like a blizzard – billions of them. They have reminded me of the film ‘28 days later’, where zombies eager to consume human blood mill around buzzing and groaning until fresh meat is spotted and suddenly they attack the victim. A simple trip to the recycling bin outside can quickly turn into a flappy sprint, yet looking out of the window it looked like it would be safe…. I bought Mark and I midge net hats – very fetching they aren’t, but they work well teamed with a polo-neck and some gloves! Not all was lost for summer playing however, as the wind here picks up by lunchtime and midges can’t fly in the wind so they retreat to the ground.
(If you’re going to come and visit the best time is April/May or September onwards to be sure. Well done to Jim, Alistair & Jenny, Dave and Charlie for braving the tricky season, so good to see you!)
We have been preparing for winter though, mostly with the purchase of a chest freezer, and a tonne of coal. Mark has moved the stove from the kitchen into the lounge now, which is a useable room no longer stuffed full of moving boxes, so we have that heating the radiators and water. Our previous landlord from the holiday house, has offered us free firewood so Mark spent a lot of July chain-sawing down fallen trees until his chainsaw broke – typical! – and thanks to the tonne of coal we might even manage to season the wood for next year now!

So I’d better stop rambling on (though I have managed to ramble up onto the hilltops opposite and found some old peat roads unused for about a 100 years, very exciting - and the views….!)
No, must stop now!
Keep in touch
With love
Fiona, Mark, Austin & Morris

4. New rental



From: Stokes, Fiona
Sent: Monday, April 12, 2007 10:13 PM

FW: New rental

Hello again !    Sorry for the lack of news lately, there have been a few computer nightmares in the move to our new abode. But for now the computer is up and running - and with broadband at last!! - so I'm taking the opportunity to send out some happenings.  (Mark was mid blog 4 when everything crashed, so he'll send that one out after blog 5.....!)
Well, after a bit of an emotional rollercoaster we finally got the keys to our new rental.  Photo attached of the view and proximity to the water, which means we're managing to get out in the evenings and do some canooing, one at a time though that is.

The sea air is wonderful, the fields (and even our garden sometimes) are full of lickle baby lambs, and we're really feeling privileged to be spending the summer is such a beautiful spot.
The rainbow needs both sun and rain...

However, as mentioned, there is trouble in our paradise... The wonderful planners at Scottish Southern Electric, have decided that a 'preferred' route for their 'Sub-Sea-Interconnector-Cable' (SSIC for short) is to be up the wildlife abundent loch, along the bottom of our garden, accross the hill opposite and up to a newly built 'Converter station' building the size of an IKEA warehouse.  You can imagine the size of this building when I say that all the power generated from every windfarm on Lewis, will in the future be channelled accross miles and miles of extra electricity wires, to converge on Gravir and be zapped accross under the sea to the mainland.  Yes, electro-magnetic radiation is a phrase that has become a part of everyday language here.
the 'proposed route' for the sub sea cable

Previous conversation was mainly undecipherable gaelic (says me, who is trying to learn it) and mostly talk of lambing and the road improvements at Habost (there will be a lane in each direction now!)  Windfarms are a great thing, renewable energy a must, but all the extra dangerous stuff that has to go with mass energy production - like miles of leukemia giving electricity wires - well, 'not in my back yard' please, or in this case, not at the bottom of my garden and accross the lovely loch where I like to go canooing and throw stones with my son!  There have been consultation exercises held - as we all know this is often more of a 'heres how its going to be' exercise than any real opinion collection, but Mark has gone to a meeting at the Teigh Celidh (meeting house) tonight where the village is forming a response to the 'preffered' location for the SSIC (I was told at the consultation presentation, that at the moment the Scottish Southern Electric project group is calling Gravir the 'preferred' route, but in the next phase of the project it will become the 'proposed' route - he made it sound such a 'done deal')  I'll leave it to Mark in his blog to go into the thing in more technical details, he is more of an authority on the specifications, however not quite as much as his local tv starring suggested - only 3 months on Lewis, and already Mark has been beamed accross Scotland!   Still, never mind, it might never 'appen..
Mark mountaineering on Skye - he really missed us....

On a more positive note, here's a whats hot and whats not in our world:
Whats hot for Mark: (Apart from appearing on tv!) Walking mountains on Skye and canooing to its neighbouring islands.
Whats not for Mark: Being away from the family for 4 days to go to Skye... and sub sea interconnector cables.

Whats hot for Fiona: Checking on my boys last thing at night, their little faces are so mesmerizing while they're asleep!
Whats not for Fiona:  Little boys who don't want to go to bed at night because they fell asleep in the car on the way back from town... and sub sea interconnector cables.

Whats hot for Austin:  'Hoppety Hops'  Every night after his bath he loves to skip around in a circle, naked, and we count him ten hoppety hops !  And red playdough, he's tried other colours but red playdough is just the bees knees!
Whats not for Austin: Having to go to bed after getting wired on 10 hoppety hops!...and sub sea interconnector cables.

Whats hot for Morris: Crawling! Hey-hey! He's mobile!  And High-5s, he holds up his chubby little hands for a big high 5 - usually its a bit wet too as he's started sucking his thumb.
Whats not for Morris:  Being woken up by his brother an hour after he's gone to bed, because Austins making such a fuss.  And sub sea interconnector cables and finally
High 5

Whats hot for Sheep in Gravir:  A long strip of the hill opposite leading out to an IKEA warehouse, once this sub sea interconnector cable is buried in their common crazing land!


Bye for now Fiona x

6. Mackerel are the new courgette


Sent:    20 June 2007 22:36
From: Stokes, Fiona
FW: Mackerel are the new courgette

Hello!

Mid summers eve is here (happy 5 years anniversary to me and Mark - where did the time go? Oh yeah. we had Austin and Morris and moved to the Outer Hebrides!) and while the beeb seems to think it's only just springtime (Did you watch Springwatch? - on BBC2 or on cbeebies- we did both!), Lewis is generally considered to be 3 weeks behind the south of England on the seasons, so ...err...that makes it...the end of May up here!  One thing that is for certain though - its fishing season!
Gravir pier, perfect for mackerel fishing

After a slow and unusual start - his first catch was a boat...  Mark has suddenly started bringin' home the mackerel. First it was 2, then a dozen, then a large binliner - to beaming smiles from me, but a little grimace when I realised I'd have to gut and fillet them all!  I decided not to tackle the large catch on the first night they arrived, and as the bag was still rustling for a while, it was just as well they chilled out in the fridge. 'Its electricity, they're not still alive'  Mark said as one of them jacknifed around in his hand. 'You should have seen the bloodbath down at that pier, there were 6 on one line all jumping around, I had to batter em quick with the end of my knife before they tangled the line up'...  I am terribly modern and I'm not used to seeing my food still jumping - electricity or not - I don't know what we'll do when we finally get some chickens or lambs, but all those mackerel eyes looking up at me from the sink was 'an odd' feeling.  But YUMM-EE!  Next catch is Pollock - a large white fish a bit like cod - apparently they've been hanging out by some rocks nearer to the sea, and Mark has a clean fisherman's knit jumper to go and catch some with!  Hooray!
Mark practices his fishing 'swishing'

So what shall we have our free mackerel with?  Well, in the garden I have a vast array of onions and lettuce, and the courgette glut is expected in August, but I'm not sure about the butternut squash.  I have had to protect all the veggies under large cloches (old bed frames covered in thick clear plastic) and butternut squash get enormous before they ripen their fruit - its worth a try though.  The alternative is to let things try their luck with the wind - I tell you, we will never need to use our garden vac again - if its windy the night after you've mowed you can wake up to a lawn sucked clean by the exciting Lewis weather! 

And as for the sunshine - its wierd - the sun is so much brighter here.  One argument is that its the lack of pollution in the air, but wowee, its like God has turned up the brightness a few notches!  And then left it on for a few hours longer in the day. We go to bed around 11, and it gets very confusing because it still looks like 8pm outside.  I was planting onions at 10.30 one night and had to come in because it just felt too strange! 

The boys don't seem to have been affected by it at all - Morris has just turned 1 and like most bodies that age he wakes at 6, regardless of light  - but they have a good blackout curtain on their window and if I give him a bottle of milk, he'll usually go back to sleep again.  They're both fine. Austin has mastered toilet training and gets himself to the loo with no help from us now. However he has also developed an 'interest' in peeing in unusual places. Today the dustpan, most days the front step, this evening his blow up boat, and even the other day my washing up powder box. I guess its a phase...I hope so, Marks had a chat with him.

I have to say it over and over, it is really a very very wonderful place Lewis - we're getting on pretty well I reckon.  Mark is busy with work which is good, and bad as we miss him in the day, but at least we're finding the work is here and people are recommending him on to others.  People say to us 'Its so good to have a plumber in South Lochs again' - I  don't ask what happened to the last one...

So a happy summer solstice to you all - remember to 'sprinkle some fern in your eyes, before you go to sleepy-byes, and the day that follows a solstice moon, fairies will appear by noon'. Its worked for me twice, so this year I'm trying in all good faith for a hat trick!!

Keep in touch
With love
Fiona, Mark, Austin and Mo-Mo.




3. Home is where the hearth is


Sent:    15 February 2007 21:02
From: Stokes, Fiona
Fwd: Home is where the hearth is.

Hello again!

The open fire here has become so much a part of our life - as I speak Mark is outside transforming the pine tree that came down in the gales, into a barrow load of firewood (and craft material for a couple in the village).  He says he needs to open up the logs so that the inner circles of the trunk - the 'heartwood' - is revealed.  Once its been left to season, the wood will burn most efficiently.  We have been using coal for the fire everyday, but now and again we have a novelty item to burn, just to see what its like - some peat, or some wood - (we still have no tv signal and old habits of gazing at something and daydreaming die hard!)  Having been in other peoples homes here, I think our consumption of coal is probably equal to the rest of the village!  I also feel somewhat guilty about what carbon emissions I'm releasing back into the atmosphere, but a real fire gives so much pleasure :o) 

We're both addicted to tending it, but Mark is the worst - the 'chimney-firestarter' as he became the other day.  It wasn’t so much the entire bucket of coal that went on the fire that did it, but more the way he drew it afterwards.  We aren't political people generally, but we do like a good broadsheet - the Telegraph is particularly a quality newspaper because it its wide enough to cover the whole fireplace and leave a gap at the bottom for the air.  This particular day, we had run out of the Telegraph, so Mark was using cardboard packing boxes from the lorry instead.  Part of his special routine of drawing also involves keeping the paper there long enough that it scorches in the middle, catches on fire and then gets sent up the chimney in a flurry of flames.  Fine with newspaper, but not so good with a packing box.  It was the chunks of burning cardboard raining down outside the sitting room window that first alerted us to the excess of the fire.  But then as chunks of burning soot started to rain back down into the fireplace, I thought perhaps we were in trouble.  From outside, through the floating ash, we could see that the chimney pot was a little more scorched than before, but there weren't the expected 3ft flames jumping out of it, so I relaxed.  Needless to say we've gone back to buying the broadsheets now, but as we only shop on one day it does mean we have lots of news at one point in the week, and nothing for the rest.
Stornoway's excellent pool

Friday has become our day of supermarkets and swimming.  It’s a lovely drive into Stornoway, but it takes 45 minutes (depending on who's driving of course….), so we only make it into town twice a week.  Thursday for playgroup when me and the boys are treated to a wonderful spread of home baking (chocolate brownies, vienese whirls, lemon sponge and shortbread shapes the first week!  Can you imagine!! If there was an M&S food on the island it would have some stiff competition!) and then Fridays for the whole family outing. 

This week we started what'll hopefully be a regular routine to get the boys ready for swimming lessons and had lunch at the sports centre!  Morris was in his element - there happened to be an over 60's aquarobics session going on in the main pool and the café looks out over the water.  We parked Morris in a high chair in front of the large windows and he was hooked!  20 or so elderly ladies gazing up at him and smiling and waving, he loved it!  From there we posted in some food and surveyed the rest of the surroundings which included a climbing wall. 
The sports centre seems to promote open and visible sporting, the café looks onto the pool and is next to the climbing area, so there's no room to be shy.  (The gym also looks out across the football fields and into someones flashy new kit-home across the way, but that’s probably by mistake rather than design.) 
The climbing wall was obviously a point of great interest for me and Mark- Mark believed it to be undergraded, whereas I thought it was just terribly small!  Perhaps it is my climbing style of elbows and bum out that made me survey it with caution, but then I realised, with the great outdoors being so great here, why bother going to the wall?? 

Road works - there will now be a lane in both directions
The road improvements from Ballalan to Lemreway alone have furthered crag climbing no end, with roads blasted through the 'Lewisian Gniess' to create some great looking slabs. And that’s before you get serious and start heading into the Harris mountains.  The only problem with climbing for us however is quite a fundamental one. It needs both of us…..and no children.  So for now, I have moved my attention to our canoes.  We live in the best place for bimbling about on the water, as the name 'South Lochs' implies….
Loch Odhairn - great for canoeing. Austin gets his first taste

We have just been offered the rental on a house fronting Loch Odhairn - perfect for evening canooing when the boys are in bed.  The owners want to do it up, for Mark to do the work, and for us to live in it while that goes on.  It sounds chaotic, and it needs some tidying up before we get in, but the view is just magnificient.  At the head of a sea loch, it looks all the way out accross the water, past the salmon farm, and out to Kebock head - a vast jut of headland that hasn’t changed for hundreds, maybe thousands, of years.  The first day we were here I felt something instantly for that bit of rock - not because I wanted to climb it, but just from the feeling of history....  The idea of being able to push out from the stone beach, and paddle across to look up at the headland, on a balmy summer evening - its worth putting up with no heating in the new house and a problem with the foundations (did I not mention the structural problems… rose tinted glasses I'm afraid). And the loch has visits from seals too!

So by the next blog, we might have a new address, instead of being at 10 Glen, Gravir, South Lochs Lewis HS2 9QY, we might be at 10 Gravir, South Lochs, Lewis HS2 9QX……spot the difference?

Bye for now
Fiona

Thursday 6 December 2012

2. Meeting the Community

The beautiful and quiet Glen Gravir,  road of holidays houses

Sent: 06 February 2007 20:03
From: Stokes, Mark.
Subject: Blog Two: Meeting the Community
       
       
        
       
        Day Seven:
       
        As planned today I took Austin up to the shed to introduce him to the mans world of shed life. He seems to have developed an apprehension of Hoovers based upon the noise they make and this also seems to extend to power tools. This is obviously a shame and something we will have to cure him of over time. Especially if we want him to do the hoovering around the house or if for example I tell him to go warm up the chain saw for me or something. We managed to cut a plank up into two and then put a ' vee ' into one end to make the pointy bit on the boat. The two bits got screwed together to give it some weight and then I drilled a hole through the front and attached 15ft of rope to it so that we wouldn't have to go through the rigmarole of making a boat again. Austin would perch  on the armchair in the shed watching me working, and then when I had everything set up for a quick flurry of power tool action he would go and stand outside in the rain by his own preference to be away from the noise, and fearsome whirling things. This system seemed to work quite well and to be honest I really didn't want to confront his fears there and then by waving a circular saw at him or anything.
Taking a break from the shed and power tools
       
        When we had made the 'boat' we went around the back of the shed to the little gate that leads to the valley and fields at the back of the house. There is a burn which runs down from the moors up to through this valley, and about twenty paces from the gate is a concrete foot bridge which we intended to stand on and throw the boat in the water. The level of the burn had risen up quite considerable and I had to wade out to the foot bridge and plonk Austin down on it. All was fun, we had a good two hours of walking along the burn trailing the boat on the raging torrent, occasionally having to drag it back from the bottom of a ten foot deep boiling back stopper of a wave where a small trickle over rocks might have previously been. Although it rained all day the wind had died down to a negligible pushing.
       
        Day Eight:
       
        Another gloriously sunny day, unfortunately also being a Sunday we couldn't make best use of the weather. Ideally on dry days I like to get the lorry opened up and aired a bit, and also rearrange stuff in there to make it easier to get to things. I would also have liked to set too on the downed tree and get it chopped up however, working on a Sunday around here is severely frowned upon, in fact they are still very unhappy if you so much as hang washing out on a Sunday. Instead we went for another little walk, Austin played outside in the good weather, and we had 'a day off' just like everybody else around here.
       
Glen Gravir, quiet on a Sunday... not unlike every other day...
        Day Nine:
       
        Fiona has been doing the paperwork element of our move, and whilst registering us at the doctors she enquired after a dentist for me, some of you may know, that since August of last year I have rather urgently needed a root canal drilling out and filling on one of my teeth. This exposed nerve in my mouth has not only hampered my intake of pleasurable foods such as chocolate and sweet fizzy drinks, but also plays up when eating anything but soup and bread as invariable some lump of grub gets wedged in the cavern in the side of my tooth and presses down upon the exposed nerve. This situation has not helped my general mood much over the past six months, but it has been quite a motivator for getting things done, as whilst I am occupied I tend not to notice the pain quite so much.
       
Keeping busy to block out the toothache
        I had gone through the process of getting the treatment lined up whilst we were still in Coventry, a protracted and expensive situation that culminated in a missed appointment three days before the completion of the house sale. Had I known that I would be spending the next month in and around Coventry anyway trying to get the lorry sorted and the last of our overstock of stuff sqiurrelled away I might have accepted a re-booking, however hindsight is something I'm not very good at in reverse. Anyway…. Fiona had got me booked into a dentist today in Stornoway for mid day. As the weather was pretty attrocious I gave myself an hour to get there and half an hour spare in case I had to sit anything out on the road. Flooding seemed to be the word for the day, with all the hillsides having changed from heather brown to white water. I had to stop at one point on my journey to take a video on my phone of a backwards waterfall. It was a large grassy slope some two inches deep in water running down to a fifteen foot or so drop. The water was running off this drop from the slope across a length of about 30 ft. However the water would only get a few inches down on its plummet to lower ground before it would be driven ten feet up into the air in a backwards solid sheet of water by the wind. This water was obviously falling back down onto the grassy slope with a fair few buckets of rain per second and perpetuating this bizarre phenomena.
       
        When I got to the dentist, having filled in the perfuntuary forms and put myself on the 12 month waiting list to be registered with them, I didn't hold out much hope for getting any treatment this side of next christmas, I was already hatching plots in my head for a specific trip down to the mainland to visit a dentist, when I was ushered upstairs by a pleasant young scot. He was the dentist, and his assistant could have been a catalogue model, I always wonder how it is that dentists surround them selves with pretty young girls, What happens to dental assistants when they grow up? Surely they don’t all marry the dentist, otherwise they would never stand for him having another pretty young assistant in to replace, perhaps dentists are not monogamous, ah well who knows. Anyway the chap told me he'd have the tooth out If I wanted, I discussed the long term effects of losing yet another tooth from my mouth at such a late age, and he reassured me that I would still be able to eat steak?!? Fortunate that I am not a vegetarian as I might have been offended. Ten minutes later I was sat back in the car slightly shell shocked and examining the tooth, still covered in gobbets of flesh. Ho hum, back home to not drinking (Alcohol), smoking or eating until the next evening. If I had realised I was going to lose one of my teeth I might have had a better breakfast and eaten a big lunch before the treatment, I spent the rest of the day moping around feeling hungry and pretending I couldn't talk. Within an hour of being home we had quite a good sign language thing going on, what I don’t understand is why the rest of the family weren't talking back but signing as well.

Listened to shipping forecast at six and we were due Storm Force 10 winds for the rest of the night. Built the fire up and read some more book for the evening. I might be able to put the tv back in the lorry soon, as we only use it in the mornings to occupy the children with their video's or DVD's whilst we get the fire lit and make breakfast etc. To be honest that’s mostly me as Fiona actually plays with the children first thing in the morning, something I can never bring myself to do.
       
        Day Ten
Austin and his mini toothy-pegs
       
        Another moochy day I guess, weather reasonable, Jobs achieved a few, I am talking again now, and we regularly examine my ex-tooth. It has become the new weapon in the 'war on toothbrushing' which is waged nightly with Austin. Generally he will only allow you to brush his teeth now if you first open your mouth wide in order that he can examine all your fillings and 'bad' teeth in minute detail, whilst you brush his tiny milk teeth in a desperate attempt to prolong the life of them before they are pushed out by his adult teeth in a few years time.

Dodgy dial-up
During the day I did some more lorry stuff, and all our computers are now in the house in pieces, and the contents of our previous kitchen cupboards are being revealed under the layers of mould that have formed on all the old fingerprints and unseen spillages that a few months storage in a damp lorry in Scotland expose. I have one of the Computer keyboards to do that I am delaying, it looks like it had a cup of coffee or something spilt on it ten minutes before it was packed, the streak of mould is bizarre! I can tell you what colour the world would in two months, if we were all abducted instantaneously by aliens right now, it would be a bluey-green layer of mould.
Unpacking...

The weather wasn't bad today, Fiona disappeared off to one of the neighbour's house's for a nose around and a cuppa, whilst I did the Lorry stuff and Austin got intimate with all the storm drains around the house. At one point I heard a far away echoing of 'dad, dad, daddy, I'm Stuck!'  wandering over to investigate, and I must add wandering as the tone was neither shrill nor squeaky, a sure sign of genuine trouble, I eventually found Austin up to his knees in water trying to ram his push-along-ride-on Thomas the tank engine down a narrow culvert which he was trying to negotiate. It wasn't Austin who was stuck but Thomas who had streaks of genuine coal muck on his plastic face. I couldn't help but smile of the irony of a plastic steam engine replica with fake coal truck, actually streaked with coal dirt from where he had been rammed repeatedly into our coal bunker. Aren’t two year olds great at getting genuine with their toys. That night at dinner Austin and I discussed the possibility of buying a toy digger, dumper and bulldozer for exclusively outdoor use, pushing real mud, water and stones around, as opposed to a pile of pencils or whatever he imagines up in the living room, I think we are both in favour of the idea.
Our neighbour's 'toy' digger, it may need a bit of oil to get going
       
        This evening our neighbour came to introduce himself, another incomer, like most of the people I have met here, Gary is certainly a character with the pulse on everything. A former double bass player with the East London Philimonic Orchestra, he is now erm…. Up here. I am going to get involved in dragging his Yacht higher up the beach on Monday when the tide is at a high 5.1m I think it might be a good in for myself to the Men of the area. It was a nice night listening to somebody else talking about themselves and their experiences up here since they arrived.
       
        Day 11
       
        Today has been a pain of a day, I have spent a lot of time trying to achieve things with call centres, whether that might be closing down final accounts with utility companies or moving address with our bank's etc. Every establishment we have dealt with between ourselves over the past four months does not recognise our new postal address code. So none of their websites will update our address's, and quite often you have to get quite insistent with the telephone operatives in India that yes it is a valid uk postcode, it's just that it only covers 13 houses of which only two are occupied, and thus it doesn't feature highly in the  post code distribution list. I can see now why there are companies that market themselves just for this function, reregistering yourself with everybody you deal with. Admittedly in your initial interview with said company you might have to be on the phone for three hours whilst you real off all your personal details about your whole life, but blimey its only three hours!

Our remote postcode, not always on the call centre database
Today I'm particularly cross with Npower, I've managed to close my electric account with them but my gas account after 25 minutes on hold to be put through to be somebody who said look we are really busy right now give me your number somebody will phone you back one day, all I wanted to do was reel off my card details and pay a final bill, for which I have received fourteen separate pieces of mail in 20 days. When they did ring me back four hours later the only thing the guy could do was give me a free phone number to start over with, as nobody in his building had the authority to receive payments. God knows who the consultants are that are restructuring that customer and data management system but they are doing an awful job as far as the end users are concerned. Whoops sorry Tom, but really sort it out!!!!
       
IT consultants playing aeroplanes
        My bank was great, I was on hold for fifteen minutes after which I was told I was locked out on security coding due to a computer error, and my phone and internet banking were frozen until I renegotiated access through a convoluted series of questions regarding the weight of my mothers aunties cat or some such, which couldn't be undertaken right now as the computer was on go slow, could I hold a bit longer…. My reply,' yeah sure I'm legally obliged to inform you of my change of address so why not' ten minutes later the girl picked up on me again to say sorry but they were all packing up for the day and the servers were down and IT couldn't get the bank back online for four hours or so………?!? WTF, a bank have total systemic failure, I think I'll be changing bank soon and getting the calculator out to check the interest calculations on our small fortune. This is of course the same bank who have written to advise us that they want to close our savings account as we are earning too much interest on it. This isn't actually what they said but they other products they offered us were poor by comparison, and ours was regrettably being withdrawn from the market place. I remember the same thing with Orange, who basically threatened to terminate my account because I was one of their customers still on Everyday50 after six years. Its amazing the effort that institutions will go to, in order to get you off incentive deals that backfire on them.
       
        The weather has been medium today, this evening though it is particularly calm, I'm not sure whether I was lingering over the cigarette or the stars this evening when I was fetching in the bucket of coal at tea time. I love the stars and to see like this before usually involved spending a few nights out camping twenty miles up landrover tracks in the deeper wildernesses of wales in the middle of winter. Here I can pop outside for ten minutes look up, and lose count in a split second. I have seen constellations here by looking up whilst having a fag that I only knew about in theory, it really is quite special. No Aurora yet, but its getting a bit late in the season for that, plus I'm rarely up that late. From what I remember in Canada and from what I've heard since the Aurora is best just before or around dawn, and is often affected by solar flare. The chances of me being awake at dawn now that Morris sleeps through the night again are pretty slim. Fiona on the other hand is regularly up at six am, checking Morris is still alive and then coming back to bed, perhaps I ought to get her to go out and look at the sky then and take pictures if its there, I'll ask her if she knows what she is looking for,……. And another evening of chatter went by.
       
Clear island skies with no city light pollution
        Day 12
       
        Good strong sunlight through the curtains this morning, that a good sign. Got up after breakfast! Even better. For child related tasks we have a daily rota for certain stuff, including getting up and supervising. I relish my mornings in bed, reading a book with a coffee and toast. Fiona sleeps through hers! We have a set time for when the 'Working' day begins but I think most people would be envious, of our one on one off days!
       

        As weather was so good I was outside from 9.40 ish when the sun had warmed up until about 3.40 when it really started getting cold. Have done crappy stuff like getting more things out of the lorry. Jet washed all the slippy slime and moss of the paths so we all slip over a bit less now. Opened up the drainage ditches that were clogged with grass and rocks. A lot of the standing pools of two foot deep water have now disappeared from around the house so I'm a little less worried about Austin driving Thomas into every puddle. Austin was filthy after his morning play this morning, he had dragged the full ash bucket over to a ditch as was throwing handfuls of ash into the water and watching it drift away. He only went indoors because he got scared by a tornado bomber 15ft above his head at about 500 miles an hour. I had not yet told them all about that bit! I found Austin a few seconds later, mud splattered, and screaming, he had chosen to grovel under the land rover for safety, and because of that I gave him much praise.
       
Bright skies in Gravir
        We had a another visitor today, the island equivalent of a yummy mummy, she walked the 2 miles from her house to ours pushing her pram and she was fair well puffed out when she got here. After Fiona chatting to her for about five minutes at the gatepost, I eventually suggested they go inside for a cuppa so I could get back on with jet washing the pavement they were stood on. Fiona is now going on a yummy mummy date to the local playgroup, 10 miles away. Its ok as its an english language one, Fiona had the option of a gaelic playgroup, but as she can't speak it herself yet, how could she imagine that Austin might learn it all. Especially at his age!!
Up the hill in the sunshine


This afternoon we all just ended up on the top of the hill at the back of the house again. I found a really good viewpoint that looks over the whole island to the TV transmitter, unfortunately somebody elses ariel was already there hidden in the heather. I need to have a better look from our own land.  I got a mobile signal the other day just by driving out the other side of the valley and getting line of site with the TV mast. It’s a shame nobody does Geographic shadow maps related to the tops of TV transmitter masts other than the big boys. Guess I'll have to do my own at some point to help with choosing house sites. That aside the views were glorious and the quality of light was fantastic, Fiona even walked back down the hill and up again to get her camera.

Austin and I just sat on a grass hummock looking at the tiny world below us until after about five minutes he announced that he was bored ( a new word for him!) and so we set off scrambling up again. Austin loves going up, he is not so keen on coming down. He also finds the heather quite bothersome, as it is at waist height for him, but he gets on well with it all.

Gorgeous day to discover the moors
We all crossed a really good old peat hag on our way back, about five foot deep and four feet across. Helping each other down and up again was fun. The kids went to bed early tonight absolutly shattered, Austin sat for an hour watching dvds barely keeping his eyes open after the walk, and had to be spoon fed his meal at tea time as he was so tired out. For the past week he has been trying it on at bed time, lurking around at the top of the stairs for the early part of the evening until you shout at him sternly enough and then he stays in bed. Tonight though we nearly didn't make it to the end of his story. That’s what I like to see. I just don't know what we'll do when his body adjusts to the extra exercise levels, he really is going to run us ragged soon. I can just hear it now 'come on dad lets go up the hill again' with my reply of 'but that will be the third time this morning' falling on unhearing ears as he runs off ahead of me.

Fiona's off to town tomorrow to get the groceries and do her ritual failure to go to anywhere but the supermarket. I am planning to take Austin for a pic-nic/hike, I'll take the kiddie pack with me so I can always carry him comfortable if he get tired or it gets rough. There is a hill I have seen that I want to go to the top of….
       
        ….
        ….
        To be continued…..but at a weekly run down from now!
       
        Oh yes, and our phone number now is 01851 880 335!
       

1. We are here


From: Stokes, Mark.
Sent: Friday, January 12, 2007 10:13 PM
                Subject: Blog One: The First
               
               
                Dear All,
               
                We are Here….. Here being a very secluded spot in the remote east coast of one of the Islands of the Outer Hebrides. First morning, I stepped out for a crafty cigarette and listened to the noise of nothing, then I heard the churning of the burn in the bottom of the glen, and the caw of a raven riding the morning thermals, after that the world was filled with sound, sheep, windrush, the rattle of dried summer plants in the garden, water dripping from innumerable spots, a cacophony of nothingness.
               
                Arrival was fun, travelling to the island a day sooner against my best advice we came in on the Stornoway boat, colloquially known as the 'Vomit Comet'. After Austin had deposited his dinner over his clothes and mine and Fiona had turned a shade of green I haven't seen on somebody who didn't puke before we retired to a less food orientated area of the boat, I think Morris handled the journey well, but it is difficult to tell with a seven month baby if he is travel sick or if it is just normal sick.
MV Isle of Lewis
               
                Arriving at our rental at about 9pm having collected coal, milk and bread on route, we discussed the bail out plan in the last ten minutes of the journey. After only five minutes searching I found a well hidden key and let us in. The beds were unmade and the cottage had not been visited since ourselves in September, this later turned out to be an administrative error due to our landlord's father going into hospital the day before we arrived (Ahem!) as it was only our own mess about the place it didn't seem half as bad. Especially as we kept finding things we knew we had lost in the past few months of life. All the ice blocks from our cool boxes, a set of Austin size cutlery, several other kitchen related items and a once cherished toy etc etc.
               
                Day One consisted of a shopping expedition to Stornoway, two full trolleys and some four hours later  we returned home with enough food for a month.
Stornoway harbour
               
                Day Two, 'The recovery of the Lorry' We fetched the lorry in the stealth of mid morning, unfortunately Bernie the landlord of our local, which is just thirty minutes drive away was out  some scousers camping in the pub car park chatted with me for a bit and then I fired up the beleagured lorry and drove it home. As I left the car park I had noticed some broken glass on the floor which I tidied up, as you do. Ten minutes into the drive I was convinced there was something wrong, I go out to inspect the front wheel which sounded like It was about to drop off, it was just bodywork catching on it, the broken glass was from a busted headlamp and all the bumper was broken. It seems the Lorry had suffered a bit whilst away from my care and attention. Reasoning that one should expect no less for a vehicle parked in the only pub car park for a 50 mile radius, for over a month over the christmas and new year period, I pulled the body work off the wing got back in and drove off. (I did wonder about those scousers in the car park, I mean ok they had a camper bus and all but it was January!)
The van - an A reg mercedes horsebox
               
                I have been avidly examining the weather station I received as a 'leaving gift' from our new year group of friends, It is a brass reconstruction of a barometer, thermometer and hydrometer, all contained in a glass bell jar on a timber plinth. For some days I had been convinced that the temperature reading had been a bit low. Having recovered the lorry to the house I was able to quickly lay my hands on a few more thermometers and make an approximate mean calibration, the gift is highly accurate and has been correctly recording temparatures of 3-4 deg.C. within the confines of the house. (I am expecting a 1000 kg of coal to be delivered tomorrow to slightly rectify the situation). With regards the barometer element of the weather station I suspect it is not quite fast enough to keep up with whats happening. I have been working today in bright sunshine, horizontal hail, and anything in between, when I do check the barometer its either pointing at rain or fair, sometimes within minutes of each other, I have never seen something made wholly of brass move so fast. I'm worried the parts might wear out on it prematurely.
No. 10, our holiday cottage

               
                Day three, A collective sigh of relief went up as the final doorway gave in and our own sofa was esconced with the confines of our huge living room, having ousted a few armchairs to the master bedroom to make way I have finally got a sofa back that is long enough for me to stretch out 6'3'' without touching at either end (just!) Although second hand when we purchased it, our sofa is of the sort that when people sit in it they struggle to get out at the end of a visit, usually acommpanied by such stocks phrases as, "this is a nice sofa". Here is me at 10:30 pm with a glass of wine, an open fire and a glorified bed typing to the world about how great life is. Of course before I could remove the sofa I had to get out and check all the more pragmatic items such as back up stove, generator, battery lamping, and extension leads etc all the necessary stuff when you move into a place such as this. If we lost power we would lose lights, heat, cooking, hot water, and probably sanity, the latter would be down to having to go outside every four hours to refuel the generator, in what would probarbly be pretty minging wheather to have caused a power cut, say 60mph winds or something, thus requiring being roped to something heavy in the house before going out for fear of being blown off and away someplace other than the generator and weighted down jerry can.

Glen Gravir
               
                Day Four, a glorious day of perfect weather, we got a whole five hours of wonderful daylight to do things in. Austin was out playing with all his outdoor toys which I had unpacked, Fiona took morris of for a walk to find out whether the more derilict buildings down our road really did have people living in them or was it just sheep. All of the croft shed has been tidyied up with all of the owners tools on a new workbench I made from some scrap wood and breeze blocks. I have got my own tools and 'things' arranged down a ten foot trestle table made out of our scaffolding. The generator is out and arranged with its fuel supply, the battery pack invertor is now plugged in on trickle charge, and one of the metal storage boxes is lashed down to the floor with survival gear in it. In the evening it started to get a little bit windy, by 1am Austin had woken up and called me upstairs to tell me excitedly 'dat wind roar like a dragon'.
               
                Day five, a late start, sunrise around 11am, sunset about 3.15pm. The wind didn't die down during the night and now we can visulise better what is happening outside. Every time you see a squall of rain passing horizontally for 15 seconds at 70 mph you really do start to get a feel for how windy it was at night. Had the coal delivered today. Sure enough I went out and helped the unload it. Then I barrowed it up the drive and around the back into the newly refurbished coal shed. I admit I nipped into my shed for a fag every time I saw a heavy squall running down the valley. Even so it was a good solid three hours of hard labour. I knew it was bad when finally a wheel barrow with three 25kg sacks of coal in it, left my hands as it flew away in a 3ft arc! As I had my next cigerette I decided to reflect on how hardcore this was. I was wearing a fleece rompasuit from my caving gear, an offshore survival boiler suit. Two fleece hats, ear defenders, goggles and a hard hat, and I had just been considering breaking out a rope to get my self back to the house, when the wind died down?!? I took the opportunity to go and examine the tree I had just watched blow over and then blow down a field. It was still in fairly good nick and I have manged to negotiate the firewood salvage rights over it if I chop it up myself with the chainsaw. Unfortunatly, a lot of the bark is missing from it as it was all stripped off by the wind. Evening, wind dies down about 9pm, fiona and I remark on the sudden silence of it all. We discussed things like how it was possible that a double glazed house could have draughts etc.
               
                Day six, this day was scheduled for Fiona to drive off on her own with just Morris and explore the extensive shopping precincts of Stornoway for a few hours in the afternoon. The romanticism also involved Fiona having some sort of arty farty lunch on her own of possible danish with latte or some such and being engaged in conversation by other liked minded yummy-mummys. The reality of the day was, roaring dragon back with us by 6am, no sunrise till 10.45am kids going beserk after being shut up for a day with the possibility of more days being shut up. Fiona expressing concern about keeping hold of the pram in the wind and driving rain as she popped from one shopfront to the next. So we all went, just to have lunch and go to one shop. Lunch was hardly danish and latte though, it was cheesy chips in what is now the independent school cafeteria, with formica tables and chairs, a hugely noisy heating system, loud music and the chatter of 150 schoolkids playing pranks on each other.
Closest thing to a Macdonalds 'cheesey chips'

I think Fiona is trying to discourage me from going into town, we had to walk past fourteen, pubs, bistro's, pastry shops, coffee bars etc to get to this place. Maybe she couldn't see them though as she had her head down leaning into the driving rain at the time clutching Morris back to her everytime the wind tried to take him away across the bay. We got home to the finally expected power cut. Breaking out the head torches and getting my wellies back on to go out and get the camping stove out for tea I had a revelation. I checked the meter and sure enough we hadn't put any money in for a few days. Bless us though we were good to go with the whole emergency plan 6b, doing dinner bath and bedtime with no light and heating, I think if we can do that then its about time we started applying ourselves to something more productive!
               
                Tomorrows plan is to make wooden boats from scrapwood in the shed and then surf them on the whitewater stream under the foot bridge in the field behind the shed. It’s a bit more sheltered there and I wont need to rope Austin to me. Fiona can do landslide watch from the kitchen window and call us on the radios if we need to run for our lives. I can see about forty false calls should be about enough exercise for both Austin and me.
               
                Hope this finds you well and enjoying your first week back at some desk job, discussing anecdotes with your colleagues over the christmas and new year antics, don’t forget us, as I'm sure we are going to make a heck of an anecdote.
               
               
                Mark and Fiona, Austin & Morris