Habridean Way trail hiking walk scotland
south-uist-beach-hebrides-scotland
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- In May 2018 the Kilbride cafe was open Monday – Saturday 10 – 4.30, and on Sundays 11 – 4. Unless you venture off-trail to Dalabrog this is the last refreshment for thirty kilometres.
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- For hikers of a disrespectful bent and who are not afeared of ghosties this would make an excellent bivvy, although personally I draw the line at putting a tent up in a graveyard.
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- The little roofless chapel at Boisdale is a welcome shelter from the maddening wind and a great spot for breakfast. I find these war graves of unknown sailors very moving – what a terrible way to die.
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- The trail passes through typical South Uist crofts that might at times seem a little uninteresting to walkers not either agronomically or ornithologically minded.
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- On top of that, the ruined chapels next to the hostel at Howmore are very interesting and atmospheric.
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- After scrounging yet more free food for breakfast I was sorry to leave the cosy common room, with its typical Hebridean decoration of strangely padded cycling shorts.
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- If you ask me, the lovely Gatliff Trust hostel at Howmore is a must. Apart from anything else, you get to sleep in an actual blackhouse. Just without the black.
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- Thank goodness for EU-funded boardwalks. Without them in these South Uist bogs a grown man on horseback could disappear without trace.
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- This nameplate is presumably either Uistian dry humour or one of a series of elementary English lessons for Gaelic speakers.
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- For centuries Hebrideans turned sand into fragile soil with creels of kelp and backbreaking labour. Now they just buy three bags of compost for a tenner, like the rest of us.
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- Carry on along the pavement until you see this sign. Obviously I can’t guarantee the bizarrely blue sky.
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- Looking from the beach the white building is the campsite facilities block, the grey bungalow on the left the owners’ house where you check in.