Autumn. Water-bird babies have fledged, we have waved goodbye to our summer visitors and staff, and now we three are alone on the Island again.
We will probably be running Tanera next summer (the Island has not yet been sold, so do book a cottage if you’d like to!) but the time has come – as we head into our fifth winter of isolation – to see if we can handle life on the mainland. So we are moving to a new home in Achiltibuie.
As with everything Island-related, moving house isn’t entirely straight forward: eyeing the forecast for a dry calm day, lugging cumbersome furniture down the mossy path to the pier, then down sea-weedy steps onto Patricia’s deck (high-tide is good), crossing to the mainland and up the pier into our trusty (rusty) transit van.
But the final part of the procedure is luxuriously simple: just drive right up to the door and heave it all into the house.
Not needing to triple-handle every bit of luggage or grocery is one of the many luxuries we will find in our new mainland life. We will get so fat!
Amongst other luxuries there will be an electric kettle and an electric toaster (both unbearable for Tanera’s generator-battery system): no longer will breakfast be tyrannised by screeching steam and carbonised toast. We won’t need to scour forecasts and tide-tables, or caveat every plan with ‘weather permitting’. A trip to Toddler group will be child’s play! (Haha.)
But luxury is in the eye of the beholder, and in my humble opinion, life on Tanera is luxurious in the extreme. I’ve written here copiously about the delights of the bay below our house: the gentle “oooOOooo” of eider ducks, the hysterical shrieking of oyster catchers… seals, otters, phosphorescence… and last week I had to hang up mid-phone-call and dash down the path to watch a basking shark ambling by, just metres from the pier.
We will miss the lavish non-nibbled vegetation, particularly the sumptuous cushions of sphagnum moss, the bog asphodel, devil’s bit scabious and red clover, and the licheny tangles of native woodland. We will miss the sense of wild liberty of having our own big space. We will miss the view.
I probably shouldn’t grumble. Our new home also has rather a nice view, South West across the Summer Isles to Torridon. There is a little patch of conifers waiting to fill our wood burner and be replaced with some nice native species, and I’ve fallen in love with the peaty burn that tumbles down from Ben Mor Coigach and out to sea at a sandy beach a short walk from the house.
So, after three happy years columning here, now seems a sensible time to close. I hope to make occasional contributions to this publication, and certainly plan to keep writing about our new surroundings, Tanera’s future, and the environmental issues close to my heart. Thank you for reading me.
This article first appeared as a column in the magazine Scottish Islands Explorer – November-December issue 2013.







