An Eriskay walk

Eriskay has been joined to South Uist by a causeway since 2001. For this walk we drove to Eriskay ferry terminal which is a good place to park. The ferry to Barra was in harbour and we slightly regretted that we weren’t about to jump on board!
We then set off across Eriskay beach, or Cockle Strand, for the first part of our walk. It looks beautiful below, and it was, but what you can’t see is the biting wind and, at times, rain.
At the end of the beach we climbed up into the village and our first port of call was the graveyard. A new thing we noticed since our previous visit (2018) was a series of plaques around the island commemorating the life of Father Allan Macdonald who is buried here. He was Eriskay’s priest from 1894-1905 and built St Michael’s Church which is still in use. He was also a renowned poet, bard and Gaelic scholar.
By now it was lunch time and, what do you know? We were near the pub, Am Politician. A very pleasant interlude followed before we hit the road again, passing Our Lady of Fatima who marks the site of the original church on the island.
Soon after this, we left the road to climb up over the village, Am Baile, to Loch Cracabhaig. On our last visit we were lucky enough to see some Eriskay ponies up here. Not this time!
We descended to the road again, high above the ferry terminal which was empty this time. We admired some of the modern houses and looked down on Cockle Strand where we had walked earlier. From here we walked back down to the car.
This was a short but pleasant walk (5km), much extended by our lunch stop. I see on our 2018 visit we combined it with another Eriskay walk – clearly our stamina is failing!
Linked to Jo’s Monday Walk.
Next up – our walks on North Uist.

beautiful
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Thank you!
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So beautiful 😍. Even the gravestones there looks to be picturesque. I have been to Eriskay when we visited the Uists. Remember going to the pub and seeing a bottle of whiskey that was apparently ‘rescued’ from a shipwreck. Still need to see the original Whiskey Galore film.
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The whisky definitely was “liberated”! I think Whisky Galore is great, and possibly not a million miles from the truth.
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There are some lovely walks on Eriskay. Looking forward to your North Uist walks next time!
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Yes, it’s just gorgeous there.
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Did you find any bottles of whiskey, or ten shilling notes?
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They do keep a bottle of the whisky behind the bar, but we weren’t offered any! No 10/- notes though.
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Your stamina may be failing, but you still have way more than me! I am in awe of how you get around!
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Thanks Ann! However, I’m always surprised when I look back at places we’ve been before and how much more we did. Though I think part of it might be that lately we hire cottages rather than stay in hotels. There’s more scope to lounge about over a leisure breakfast for example.
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What a beautiful place to walk Anabel. The water is so blue and sand so white. Very beautiful.
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Yes, it was lovely. Those islands are amazing.
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Hi Anabel – ha ha about your stamina fading away – yes life catches up … but you two certainly get around and give us great views and news: long may your stamina keep up! I was interested in learning more about the Causeway – I picked up a bit by looking it up … what a great walk across from one island to another. Cheers Hilary
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Ha ha, life does have a habit of catching up! Called getting old I suppose. Glad you enjoyed learning about the causeways.
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This walk looks so beautiful. I love the rainbow in your header photo, Cockle Strand and the old house with modern addition. The blue decorated headstones are interesting. I don’t think I’ve seen that blue on headstones before. Living in Canada, I know what windchill means 🙂 Sometimes the sunniest winter day is still bitterly cold when we get the Arctic air.
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Thanks Natalie. We saw some interesting painted gravestones this time – red in another cemetery. They are very striking and I don’t remember them before, so I think the paint must be new since our 2018 visit.
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