Leonie Charlton lives in Glen Lonan, Argyll. She writes poetry, fiction and creative non-fiction and is a graduate of the MLitt in Creative Writing at University of Stirling. Her work is informed by a deep attachment to the West Coast of Scotland where she spends most of her time. She enjoys walking and time with horses as ways to feel her way into landscape, to explore whatever reveals itself through quiet attentive travel. She also loves to sleep on the hill, to experience, over and over again, the privilege of re-entering that world when she wakes.
www.leoniecharlton.co.uk
First published in Great Britain in 2020
Sandstone Press Ltd
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Copyright © Leonie Charlton
Editor: Robert Davidson
Contains Ordnance Survey Data.
© Crown copyright and database right 2019
The moral right of Leonie Charlton to be recognised as the
author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the
Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
The publisher acknowledges support from Creative Scotland
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Sandstone Press is committed to a sustainable future. This book is made from Forest Stewardship Council ® certified paper.
ISBN: 978-1-913207-10-6
ISBNe: 978-1-913207-11-3
Cover design by Two Associates
Ebook compilation by Iolaire, Newtonmore
For my mother, Kathryn Ade,
for her inimitable joie de vivre.
Acknowledgements
So many people supported me on this journey through the Outer Isles. Too many to mention here, but I extend my heartfelt thanks to them all, to those who helped us during our travels with their warmth and hospitality and advice, to those who so generously shared their stories. Lasting gratitude to my three companions on the trip: Shuna Shaw, her wise, good-humoured and treasured company – we have travelled many paths together and I look forward to many more; the Highland ponies, Ross and Chief, who have taught me, and brought me, so much – their hearts are vast, their level of presence endlessly inspiring. Thanks also to writer and activist Alastair McIntosh whose book Poacher’s Pilgrimage broadened my vision and enriched my experience.
Deepest thanks to my husband Martin without whom this journey wouldn’t have been possible, his generosity and unstinting support constantly amaze me – thank you from the furthest reaches of my heart. Thanks also to our three children, Brèagha, Finn and Oran, who put up with my absences, both while away, and then at home when I don’t answer questions, burn the dinner, am utterly lost to my internal worlds; their patience means the world to me.
On my writing journey I would like to thank in particular the Creative Writing Department at University of Stirling, to the tutors Liam Bell, Meaghan Delahunt, Chris Powici and Kathleen Jamie, who opened up new worlds of words to me, ones founded on integrity and possibility. Sophy Dale for her support during the writing of the first draft of Marram, I honestly don’t know if it would ever have happened without her help with time management and her generous encouragement. Frances Ainslie for her writerly sisterhood and eagle-sharp editing eye. To Island Review who published an extract from an earlier version of this book. Finally, thanks to Robert Davidson and the whole Sandstone Press team.
Author's Note
I inherited a love of wildlife and landscape from my parents. My feeling of interconnectedness with the natural world defines and sustains my existence. Throughout this book I have taken the poetic licence of capitalising plant and animal names; not on every occasion, but in the moments that call for particular emphasis on a plant or animal’s presence. It feels crucial, in these times of climate crisis and mass species extinction, that we bring our full awareness and appreciation to the diversity around us. I have been inspired by writers such as Glennie Kindred who capitalises all tree names in her book Walking with Trees, and Robin Wall Kimmerer, who in Braiding Sweetgrass breaks with grammatical convention to write freely of Maple and Heron.
Leonie Charlton
Taynuilt, Argyll
2020
Contents
Acknowledgements
Author's Note
Preface
Day One: Oban to Barra
Day Two: Tangasdale Machair to Eoligarry
Day Three: Exploring Eoligarry
Day Four: Barra to South Uist
Day Five: Garrynamonie to Bowmore
Day Six: Howmore to Iochdar
Day Seven: Staying in Iochdar
Day Eight: Iochdar to Balivanich, Benbecula
Day Nine: Benbecula to Grimsay
Day Ten: Grimsay to North Uist
Day Eleven: Carinish to Vallay
Day Twelve: Leaving Vallay
Day Thirteen: Solas to Berneray
Day Fourteen: Berneray to Harris
Day Fifteen: Getting Organised
Day Sixteen: Leverburgh to Horgabost
Day Seventeen: Horgabost to Aird Asaig
Day Eighteen: Aird Asaig to Kinloch Rèasort
Day Nineteen: Kinloch Rèasort
Day Twenty: Loch Rèasort to Aird Asaig
Day Twenty-one: Aird Asaig to Callanish
Day Twenty-two: Sunrise at Callanish
Preface
I’m sitting in my writing box in Glen Lonan, Argyll. It’s early September, and three months since I got back from riding through the Outer Hebrides with my friend Shuna and our two Highland ponies, Ross and Chief. I can see Ross now, grazing on grass that has lost its summer sheen. The forested hillside rises up behind him, a single Rowan in full bright-berry stands out amongst the Birch and Oak. Beyond the soft shrug of these trees, half hidden in cloud, is Ben Cruachan. The writing box is the back of a refrigerated van that my father converted. He took out the steel meat hooks, put in windows and a door. Despite his attention to detail it relies on a dehumidifier to stay dry. Today is my first time in here for a while and I’m aware of its particular smell; a combination of damp emulsion and plywood, metal and mould. I push the window open wide and breathe in the cuspy autumn air.
Bracken has grown up past the windowsill. Coppery tones seep upwards from the ground and colour the under-fronds. There are Thistles too – purple flowers long gone but the heads are still holding onto tufts of down, silver turned to peaks of grey after weeks of rain. A single Foxglove folds across, its leaves riddled with rust-edged holes, empty flower cups darkening to a loam brown. On the inside of the windowsill is a stem of Marram Grass I found in my saddlebags after the trip. It is sharp and lucent. It reminds me of how I’d felt coming home, bright and still after all those slow-spent hours in the marram and cotton grass.
My mother passed to me a passion for horses which has been a lifeline, a source of love and grounding throughout my life. My relationship with her was fraught with pain and misunderstanding, at times I’d wondered if life would be better without her. Then she died and I was broken. Almost seven years after her death, long enough for nearly every cell in my body to have renewed itself, it felt like the grief and regret were intensifying. I was bone-weary of the guilt, a redundant emotion Mum herself had always said. She’d been a jeweller and a passionate collector of beads. During the months of planning for the Hebrides trip an idea had formed to leave a trail of beads for Mum. Where better than through this archipelago that she’d loved, itself a necklace of granite and sand, schist and gneiss
, strung on streams of salt and fresh water.
I have loved the Hebrides for decades, ever since travelling to some of the islands on work-trips with my father, Max Bonniwell, who was a vet in Oban. One summer Dad took my younger brother and me on a camping trip through the Outer Hebrides, memories of that fortnight remain amongst the most luminous of my life. I associated the islands with him and everything he embodied, which was the opposite of the emotional, cultural and physical chaos of life with Mum. Dad represented safety and stability. He smelt of veterinary disinfectant. He knew the names of all the seabirds and of all the sailing boats. Mum had also travelled widely in the Hebrides, but I’d never been out there with her, and now, in this unexpected way, was my chance.
The islands and strands we crossed, the people and wildlife we met, the days of travel alongside the ponies, the memories that surfaced as I laid down beads, would all wrest changes in my inner landscape. At the head of Loch Rèasort, where Harris meets Lewis, I would nearly lose my pony. I would be stripped back by fear in that place and find my own bedrock that had been hidden under layers of life-silt. The journey would prove to be a pilgrimage of love and personal sea-change. Marram is the story of how I found new relationships with my mother and with myself. It is also a love story of place, not just of how environment renews and nourishes us human beings, but also of how our wakefulness, our attentiveness, may give something back in return. We leave behind footprints steeped in appreciation, and perhaps the best gift of all to the sand and peat, two sets of smooth hoof prints.
Today seems a fitting day to start writing about this journey. The apples are half turned to red on the trees outside. A young Buzzard is mewing, he has been doing it for weeks while he flies elliptical circles. Each day the calls are getting stronger and higher. He is on his own now.
Day 1 to Day 14: Castlebay to Leverburgh
Day 15 to Day 22: Leverburgh to Callanish
DAY ONE
Oban to Barra
Our stuff was spread out across the metal-rimmed table in the dining area of MV Isle of Lewis: water bottles, camera cases, lip salve, cable ties, bananas, a stack of pink OS maps numbered 31, 22, 18, 14 and 8. There were two books placed face down at significant pages: Pocket Walking Guide No 3, Western Isles; The Outer Hebrides, 40 Coast and Country Walks. A purse full of Mum’s beads was there too.
We moved everything to one side when the smiling steward brought across our plates of fish and chips and rolling peas. ‘So, here’s to our trip then,’ said Shuna, her eyes aquamarine in the sunlight coming through the salt-chalked glass. We clinked the tops of our Peroni beer bottles. Shuna and I had been friends for fifteen years and we’d done several long horse trips together. We were both aware there were big gaps in our planning this time, but there wasn’t much we could do now, just hope that everything would work out. I told her about the man talking on the radio that week of the benefits of travelling without plans, how it leaves you open to new experiences, to meeting people in a different way. I’d taken it as a positive sign.
We drank quickly and, sitting there, watching diving Gannets spill the sea into spindrifts of white, our shoulders began to soften. The water bottles rolled backwards and forwards across the table as the sea pushed the boat up beneath us. I picked up the bead purse. It wasn’t exactly classy, made of soft plastic, the words ‘LAS VEGAS’ repeated in gold and silver and white across a shiny black background. Mum definitely wouldn’t have approved, but it was the perfect size and had a good sturdy zip. I opened it and looked inside at the huddle of beads, wondering where they would all end up. There was also a little roll of ivory silk thread which I’d found in Mum’s bead drawers. I’d originally thought I’d take a fishing line to tie the beads onto things because it was tough and wouldn’t weather. Then I’d started to worry that a bird might get caught in it, or worse. The silk thread would decompose eventually, but there was no need for the beads to stay put forever; Mum’s necklace would be fluid, made up of gestures of emotion in a certain place, in a certain moment. It would change shape, the beads free to move through storms and tides and seasons.
The boat rolled again and I felt my guts tilt. I tried to close the zip but a loose strand of silk had snagged in the zipper. I carefully teased it out, my fingers touching this spool of thread that Mum must have handled countless times. I thought of her hands and felt that old familiar wash of pain. I could see her fingers now, red from the cold. They were always cold. We were all always cold, living in those old stone-walled houses and barely able to afford to keep one room warm. She used to say that her hands were ugly, that they were manly. She didn’t wear rings because she hadn’t wanted to draw attention to her hands. I remember watching them for hours while she worked, her dexterity, her skill, even after the first brain tumour when they trembled and trembled. Yet still she’d persevere with threading the tiniest crystals, the tiniest seed pearls, taking as long as it took. Handling things she loved in those hands she didn’t love. Holding treasures between her fingertips, angling them to the light.
My brothers, Will and Tom, and I always said that she should have been rich; she had a taste for expensive things, for luxury, and yet had so little of that in her life. I knew she wouldn’t have approved of all the beads I’d chosen. I’d been in a hurry that day. Had found it difficult opening those drawers that still smelt of her. I’d kept thinking about her nails, always filed smooth so they wouldn’t snag on the thread. Then in her last few years how they had been bright red. How she’d had acrylic nails ‘done’ by a professional every month. Standout nails. So, did that mean she’d made peace with her hands by then? I hadn’t asked, that would have felt dangerously like connection. I was sorry that we hadn’t got a professional in to do her nails when she was in the Lynne of Lorne Nursing Home, that we’d let somebody we never met do them, a volunteer. Yes, her hands. They haunted me. Even when she was dying, and the rest of her rattled tiny, her hands had stayed big. Right to the end. I looked at my own hands as I pulled the zip closed. I didn’t know whose hands I had, but I knew they weren’t my mother’s.
It was bright out on deck. The bolted-down plastic seats were coral red under the overhead sun. The ferry’s jade-streaked wake trailed back down the Sound of Mull towards the mainland. I could make out the double peak of Ben Cruachan, my home hill. We’d already passed the Lighthouse on Eileen Musdile on the starboard side, and the green contours of Lismore, that fertile limestone island where my pony Ross was born in the year 2000. Now on the port side was the Isle of Mull where Shuna’s pony, Chief, was born in 2010. The ferry trip was taking us past their birthplaces. It hadn’t occurred to me until then that the ponies, now in an Ifor Williams horsebox on the vehicle deck below us, were both islanders.
I stood on the stern deck for a long time. The engine’s vibrations travelled up through my feet to the tangle of nerves under my ribcage. The air smelt of salt and diesel. As we came to the end of the Sound of Mull, Ardnamurchan Lighthouse snuck into sight on the point. To the west the isles of Rum, Eigg and Muck hunkered down on the horizon. Rum’s hills lifted in easy blue across the miles of sea. Ross is a Rum Highland pony with rare ancient bloodlines. These ponies were bred to be versatile, one of their jobs being to take deer carcasses off the hill. They were described by Dr Samuel Johnson in his 1775 Journey to the Western Islands as ‘very small but of a breed eminent for beauty’. They have unique colour combinations: fox dun and silver dun, liver and mouse and biscuit dun too. Some have zebra stripes up their pasterns and eel stripes along their spines. Ross’s passport states his colour as ‘dappled chocolate’; his mane has blonde highlights and in summer you can see the dark dapples across his body. It may be myth, but some say the unusual colours come from stallions that swam ashore from Spanish Armada shipwrecks and bred with native ponies. I love to think of the Spanish horses mixing with the Scottish horses on this Atlantic seaboard. I also love to think of some of those shipwrecked horses having survived, and Ross carrying their blood all these centuries later. Chie
f is a bright silvery grey. They are a striking pair, but most important of all they are great travel companions. Ross’s experience makes up for Chief’s inexperience, and Chief’s bravery bolsters Ross in moments of doubt.
We’d left the Sound of Mull behind and were now out in the Sea of Hebrides. The last time I’d made this crossing was ten years previously, in July 2007, with Martin and the children on our way back from a holiday on Barra. It had been a hot windless day and the crossing was smooth. We’d leaned over the railings as we sailed through a broth of Basking Sharks. The sea was alive with them, their black fins visible a long way into the distance, cutting through the glittering sea. Today there was no sign of them, but every now and again a great spear-billed Gannet glided past, quickening my pulse every time.
I found Shuna standing in the observation lounge. It was exhilarating up there, all that height and light and the views through 180° of glass. My feet stepped across the carpeted floor. There was a quiet reverence in the air with people dotted about, binoculars on tables, maps out, knees crossed.
‘It’s fascinating,’ Shuna whispered, turning to me. ‘The couples, I think they must be the Jaguar Club, and they’re all in matching pairs. Look, over there, those two, angular and skinny, and this couple, bespectacled and round-faced, and these two,’ her voice dropped even lower as she nodded towards the nearest couple, sitting with their long legs stretched out, ‘they’ve both got hair that sticks out at the back, and matching socks.’ We were both smiling. A woman walking past swayed suddenly as she lost her balance. ‘Better than Alton Towers, this is,’ she laughed, her face wide with delight. I recognised her from the ferry queue. She was in a camper van which had stood out; the rest of the queue was mostly made up of classic Jaguars, crouching convertibles with their soft-tops down, their curved panels gleaming suede green and pearl.
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