So, after our trip to Skara Brae and the parish of Sandwick, let me take you out to Birsay. Ah first we must stop for lunch at the
Orkney Brewery. No NOT a liquid lunch, though the beer is very good, but some lovely soup, or maybe the cheese platter, or a sandwich?? Oh all right then, you can try a bottle of the Corncrake ale....
We don't have time to take the tour today. But lunch was good! The Orkney Brewery building is in part of an old school. Photos of former pupils adorn the walls....
Do you remember having to stand to attention at school?!
And for kids, a chance to try on a very old "school uniform"!
And outside the sun is still shining....
Local farmers are doing their Spring ploughing....
And time to inhale the aroma from the brewery chimney!
And of course lunch for the wee doggies that waited so patiently in the car. Pippa and Lyra... posing nicely waiting for lunch!
Now we can set off for Birsay and a walk along the coast....
Just offshore, accessible at low tide is the
Brough of Birsay.
It has a lighthouse at the top of the island.
And the remains of Pictish and Norse Settlements (Click on the picture to see the remains near the shore).
And along the shore you can see, in the distance, the island of
Westray. One of the more Northerly of the Orkney islands. We'll take a nice easy flat walk now along the coast... my lungs like "flat"!
And
celandines are blooming. It's Spring!
Along the shore are little inlets....
And a dog out with his person did what sheepdogs do the world over...herd people in the absence of dogs!
Well we had two dogs with us but I think he thought they were hairy pyjama cases! Shetland Collies look like that! Lassie with short legs....(see photo above...)
This is what we are walking towards....the old Whalebone, one of the most photographed bits of Birsay I think!
But first we go past the restored 19th Century fishermen's huts and the boat nousts where fishermen would haul their boats up above high tide.
And here we are at the whalebone... It is the remnant of a whale washed ashore in the 1870s. It looks rather like a bird in flight. There is a fascinating story about it (and this walk)
hereWe need to head back now, look at this cloud - I think a hail shower might be due!
And a short drive from the Brough of Birsay is one of my favourite galleries. Home to Jon Thompson and Lesley Murdoch.
Jon creates the most beautiful birds in wood. They are so tactile. He also does a lot of work in ceramics, but it's the wooden birds that steal my heart. These I loved....
You can see some of the ceramic birds here... below the paintings.
And outside, miniature gardens... my favourite is the one with the standing stones....
And I love the "rock rose" growing out of the "ball"
So I hope you enjoyed your trip "out West" to Birsay. Next post we'll take a quick trip to St Magnus Cathedral and back to Stromness for a tour of the Ness Battery.
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