Orkney and Shetland, June 2024

A Return to Lerwick, and the Noss National Nature Reserve by Sea and on Foot – Isleburgh Hostel, Seabirds and Seals Boat Trip, Noss Circular Walk

I enjoyed the return bus and ferry rides from Unst to Lerwick and arrived to my accommodation at the fabulous Isleburgh hostel. It is housed in an elegant mansion once owned by a wealthy herring merchant and is located atop a hill, not far from the harbour, and with a great view out over a park. It was a wonderful place to stay for my last two days in Lerwick.

In the afternoon I was booked on a boat tour with “Seabirds and Seals” that would travel from Lerwick, around the island of Bressay, and over to the island of Noss which is a National Nature Reserve. It was a beautiful afternoon and I arrived early to Victoria Pier and took several photos of the harbour and one of our boat.

We passed along the historic buildings of the harbour front, with commentary,

and then motored past the picturesque lighthouse located on Bressay. It was built in the 1850s by brothers David and Thomas Stevenson who also built the lighthouse at Muckle Flugga.

We stopped at a cliffside location to view a colony of Kittiwakes, and then we backed into a deep sea cave where black shags were nesting in dark crevices.

Then we passed through a sea arch, which is only possible on certain tides. That was fun!

The stratified and tilted sandstone cliffs of Bressay were very striking.

We then headed over to the island of Noss. The cliffs below its high Neap Hill are home to thousands of nesting seabirds including guillemots, fulmars and gannets.

As we travelled, a great skua flew overhead,

and later a gannet carrying a feather.

There were birds on the sea as well as in the air. Here is a quartet of guillemots,

and many more on the rocks!

Some of the guillemots are “bridled”, which means that they have a white eye line.

We also passed close to so many beautiful gannets.

At the base of the Neap Hill cliffs, on a series of ledges just above the sea,

there was a collection of young gannets with their immature plumage of patchy brown and white wing feathers.

It will take between four and five years for them to gain their adult plumage.

The commentator, Marie, was excellent and she told us many facts about all of the seabirds, but I was only half listening. I was so excited to see the gannets in such close proximity,

and as they flew all around and above us!

Eventually, we had to leave the Neap Hill colonies behind,

but I managed one last shot of a gannet who decided to follow us.

It was so wonderful to be on the sea and so close to the birds! We stopped for coffee and biscuits in a sheltered bay within sight of an old farmhouse. The house is now the home of two wardens who monitor the bird populations on Noss during the nesting season, between April and September. Marie said that the wardens will pick up walkers from the nearby island of Bressay and ferry them across to Noss where there is a circular walk around the island. I had already planned a hike for the following day but was now thinking that perhaps I’d revisit Noss instead, this time on foot.

As we began our return journey to Lerwick someone offered to take my picture. As you can see, I was very very happy to have splurged on this marvellous boat ride!

We said goodbye to Noss, and motored around to the far end of Bressay to enter busy Lerwick Harbour from the north side, past a large cruise ship and the NorthLink Ferry as well as many docks, boats, and a large boat building shed.

The next morning I decided that I would indeed walk the circular trail around Noss. The ferry to Bressay leaves from Lerwick harbour and the crossing takes less than ten minutes. I managed to get a ride across Bressay which saved me a six mile road walk! Below, one of the wardens is coming over on the inflatable to pick up some supplies, and then at 10 a.m. the other warden, a young woman came to pick up myself and three other walkers waiting on the Bressay shore.

She dropped us off and then zipped back across the water to pick up another four walkers. After that she gave us all a brief orientation in the small Visitors Centre. She showed us a map of the 8.25 km trail, pointed out where various bird colonies are and where we were most likely to see otters, and she requested that we stay on the coastal trail and not cross into the centre of the island where terns and great skuas nest.

I headed off, following the shoreline above a curve of beach,

and then along Noss’ low western shore.

As the trail swung around to the southern coast it began to rise up onto low cliffs and then onto higher cliffs that were sculpted into stacks and arches.

Puffins were on an off-shore stack, too distant for good photos,

but this fulmar was close and very peaceful looking despite being perched on the very edge of the cliff top!

Up ahead is a couple that was on the boat with me. They help give an idea of the scale of the cliffs.

This was a rather dizzying spot, with gannets nesting on the narrowest of ledges, and many soaring above the sea below.

I stepped as close to the edge as I dared, for this quick shot,

and then backed away and continued my climb up along the top of the cliffs towards the summit of Neap Hill.

Here are a view back, a view of the cairn atop Neap Hill, and a young gannet that soared past near enough for a photo.

The birds had definitely been easier to see from the boat, but I still loved this walk. After the excitement of being on the high cliffs, I relaxed and began the downhill trek along the eastern coast of Noss. There were views across Noss to Bressay and to Mainland, at least five geos to pass, and smaller pleasures as well – wispy tufts of cotton grass, pink ragged robin, and a lovely little wren.

Here is a view back towards Neap Hill,

and forward over the undulating land topped with sea pinks. Terns rose up in the air several times as I walked, and oyster catchers complained with their loud “pip pip pip” calls if I drew too close to their nests near the shore.

It was such a wonderful walk! I crossed over a stone fence on a stile, rose up and around a low hill to a northeast-facing beach, and then returned to the farmhouse where the warden gave me a ride back in the inflatable across the water to Bressay. Once on Bressay, I started the steep climb up the hill towards the parking area and then stopped for this view looking back down towards Noss. I was feeling envious of one of today’s fellow walkers who is a Shetlander and does this walk at least once every year.

At the top of the hill an older couple was sitting on a bench enjoying the view. He had wanted to cross to Noss but she is scared of boats. We chatted for a long time and I caught a ride back with them to the ferry terminal for the trip back to Lerwick, luckily avoiding the six mile road walk yet again! I took a few photos of the harbour from the ferry – a tall ship (the Christian Radich from Oslo) was now docked at Victoria pier!

I began my walk back to my hostel and noticed that there was no one at the “Welcome to Shetland” sign! Each time I had passed it on previous days it was mobbed by cruise ship passengers getting their photos taken but now it was free for me to take a selfie. It was my last day in Lerwick, with only three days left of my time in Shetland, and I was already feeling a little sad that my time in the Northern Isles was nearing its end.

But I also felt extremely grateful, and excited to travel to my next destination where I would see one of Shetland’s most beautiful sights, St. Ninian’s Isle and its golden sand tombolo. I was so happy with my day, and happy to greet the next. Thank you for travelling with me on this journey. 🙂

Orkney and Shetland, June 2024

Visiting West, South, and East on Unst – Lund Kirk, Underhoull Viking Longhouse and Broch, Uyeasound, Muness Castle, Sandwick Beach, Viking Longhouse and Framgord Kirk

My last full day on Unst dawned wet, cold, and windy. Now, I know that I’ve used these words over and over in my Orkney and Shetland posts! Typically, June is dryer and warmer than it has been during my visit, and many of the locals tried to make it better by saying, “We had a lovely May”! No worries, there’s nothing one can do except put on warm and waterproof clothes and make the best of it! Which is what I did as I rode my bicycle south from Baltasound against very cold and very strong wind. Luckily, the rain had lessened and soon ceased. I headed first to Lund, located on the west side of Unst, and stopped to photograph Bordastubble, Shetland’s largest standing stone at 12 feet high.

I continued to Lund to visit the ruin of a 12th century church, St Olaf’s Chapel, built on a headland and surrounded by a cemetery. Unfortunately, several large camper vans parked near the church marred the view on approach, but the ruin was atmospheric and the setting over the bay was inspiring.

I descended to the lovely beach, Lunda Wick, and had intended to start a walk here but decided instead to just take a short stroll. Someone had taken the time to make some pleasing spiral designs on the sand out of stones.

I cycled back up the hill and around to Underhoull on the other side of the bay. Here there were the remains of a 9th century Viking longhouse, built on an earlier Iron Age site,

and nearby was the remains of an Iron Age Broch. A party of four were already there exploring,

and when it was my turn to explore I was happy to see some remnants of the broch’s outer ditch and banks which are often no longer in existence at other brochs. Their depth and height, however, don’t show well in the photos below.

I then cycled south to the small community of Uyeasound. The rain had started up again just as I was arriving so I sat on the ground in a small shelter at Le Petit Cafe, Chez Simone. It is an honesty box cafe where you can fix yourself a tea or coffee and buy a packet or two of imported French biscuits or jarred pate! There is also an honesty box for the Peedie Rock Shop where polished stones are displayed in wooden boxes for anyone who wishes to browse and buy. (There is no restaurant or cafe in Uyeasound, and the google photo I had seen of Le Petit Cafe had two chairs in the shelter! I should have remembered about the hostel, which is nearby, as I’m sure I would have been welcome to take refuge there!)

I ate part of my lunch as I waited for the rain to ebb, and luckily it didn’t last very long – the wind, which had remained strong all morning, always brings change in Orkney and Shetland! My next destination was Muness Castle, which is Scotland’s most northerly castle. From here, one can do a 12 km loop of Unst’s southeastern coastline to Uyeasound, and then back along minor roads. The castle was built by Laurence Bruce, half brother to the Earl of Orkney, who was appointed as the sheriff-depute and chamberlain for the Lordship and Bishopric of Shetland in 1573. But, he was banished from the Northern Isles four years later after Unst islanders complained of his corruption and tyranny. Despite his banishment, he returned to Shetland and began building this castle in 1598. A sign outside the castle said that it had been “Erected out of the sweat and tears of Shetlanders.” Thirty years later, the castle was attacked and burned by French raiders.

From Muness I cycled to nearby Eastings and the beach at Sand Wick. I loved the walk down across a field of lush green grasses,

and was happy to arrive at yet another of Shetland’s stunning bays. Many Norse settlement sites have been discovered along this stretch of coast, and archaeologists also excavated an iron-age house and two Pictish burial sites near the start of the beach.

An interpretive board let me know that these stones, some knocked over by winter waves, are the remains of a Viking longhouse. Two other Norse longhouses were found and excavated further along the beach, but the remains have almost all been eroded by the sea. (The sea would have been lower when the Vikings built their homes here.)

I walked half way down the beach and looked towards the far point. I had planned to walk there to see the remains of a Viking farm and church,

but I suddenly felt drained of energy. I turned and walked down to the edge of the sea and debated whether to carry on, or to go back. I didn’t really want to choose either!

So, instead of deciding, I rose to the top of the beach towards a small section of low dune and sat in the soft sand, tucked out of the wind. I rested, snacked on some nuts, ate an apple, and rested a bit more.

Then I felt ready – the distant point no longer seemed so far away and it actually did not take long to cross the beach, rise up onto the grass and walk around to the location of Framgord, an unexcavated Norse farm, and its 12th century chapel. All that remains of the long narrow chapel are its low stone walls, but there were several small stone crosses of Norse origin in the cemetery that date from the early 11th to the early 12th centuries.

The walk continues further up the coast where Viking noosts can be found in the grass above the shore, and the ruins of a crofting community, abandoned during the clearances, can be explored. But, I was content with how far I had come. I walked back down the length of Sand Wick,

rose back up the field to my bicycle, and then began the return journey to Baltasound. I stopped briefly when I saw a small herd of Icelandic horses by the roadside, and also at a standing stone, called Uyea Breck, that sits on a hill above Uyeasound.

The sky was clearing as I cycled down towards the village of Uyeasound, with the sea on one side and a small loch on the other, but the wind was still strong and cold!

Ten miles later I arrived in Baltasound, just in time to visit the most northerly post office before it closed so that I could send a few postcards home. Then it was time to return the bicycle to the Unst Leisure Centre, a half mile away, and make the return half mile walk back to my Bnb. I was tired! But, the sun was now shining, the sky was blue, the wind had finally calmed, and flowers bloomed by the roadside. It was my last day on Unst and I had a lot to be grateful for.

I had explored north, west, south, and east. Yes, there was more to be seen, and walks I had not done, but I was content and very happy to have visited Unst, Shetland’s, and the U.K.’s, most northerly isle.

Orkney and Shetland, June 2024

To the North! – Hermaness Nature Reserve, Seabird Colonies, Muckle Flugga Lighthouse, Burra Firth, Bobby’s Bus Shelter

On my second day on Unst, Matthew from the Unst Leisure Centre kindly delivered to me an electric bike that I had arranged to rent for two days to help me visit different parts of the island. My destination for today was the Hermaness Nature Reserve, at the very northern tip of Unst. I was very glad to have splurged on the electric bike because of the island’s hills and, no surprise, because I had to ride against very strong headwinds! It was a cold morning and I only stopped once en-route, at Burra Firth.

An uphill ride then led me to the parking area of the Hermaness National Nature Reserve where a looped trail of 10 km would lead me across a sweeping expanse of moor and blanket bog to reach dramatic high cliffs full of nesting seabirds, and views of Muckle Flugga, the U.K.’s most northerly lighthouse which is built on a jagged pinnacle of rock and is at the mercy of the formidable North Sea.

I began the climb up a trail, with views across Burra Firth, to the white globe of the old RAF station on the hill named Saxa Vord.

The trail stretched ahead and soon became a boardwalk which made the walking very easy and dry across the soft boggy ground. The expanse of moor was punctuated by small rivulets and pools of dark peaty water. It was very windy, but the sun was shining and the sky was blue!

The boardwalk is also there to protect the nesting sites of Great Skuas, known in Shetland as Bonxies. Hermaness is one of the world’s largest colonies of these impressive birds but sadly the avian flu decimated 80 percent of Shetland’s Bonxies in 2022. I did see several as they flew overhead, warning me to stay away from their nests. The walk over the moor was a great pleasure, and then I arrived at the coast!

Wow! The height of the cliffs, the strength of the wind, and the motion and roar of the waves below was a bit dizzying, but these sheep and puffins, living on the steep slopes and right at the edge of the cliffs, didn’t seem to mind!

I turned and walked south towards a hill called the Neap, with a large gannet colony on the cliffs below. Turning back, the Muckle Flugga lighthouse had come into view!

I rose up towards the Neap and could smell the colony before I saw it! The cliffs were white with thousands of nesting gannets and the sky was full of them soaring and wheeling, so fast, in the strong wind.

Here is one who came close enough for a half decent photo!

The nesting birds were quite distant, and this was the best photo I could manage of these beautiful birds, many of whom were busy preening as they sat on their nests or rested on the cliffside.

I wish that I had walked the extra half mile past the Neap for more views of this large colony, but mindful of my leg I returned to the main loop trail that would lead me around to Muckle Flugga. The scenery was stunning!

And there were puffins!

I watched them for some time as they socialized in small groups or in cozy pairs. Sometimes, if one of a pair flew off, a bachelor (or perhaps bachelorette) would rush in and ask, “Hey, how about maybe you get together with me?”, only to be gently rebuffed. They would then leave and look around again optimistically, alert for another opportunity!

I continued on the path and came to a series of jagged sea stacks, all in a row, that were covered with gannets. Hermaness boasts around 30,000 breeding pairs!

This stack had a sea arch,

and I suspect that there might be a mathematical equation that describes the spatial distribution of these gannets!

Walking further east, and closer to the cliff edge, revealed even more groupings.

What a spectacular sight!

I continued on towards Muckle Flugga, the jagged rock topped by an impressive lighthouse with the same name. Its builders, brothers Thomas and David Stevenson, initially refused to build a lighthouse here because of the dangerous seas and challenging topography. But the government insisted, as a lighthouse was needed to facilitate the safe passage of naval ships bound for the Crimean War. The brothers created a temporary lighthouse in 1854, 50 feet high and 200 feet above the sea, but winter storms brought waves high enough and powerful enough to knock down the iron door to the keepers’ rooms! The lighthouse that stands today was completed by the Stevensons in 1858, and for 134 years Muckle Flugga and was the most northerly inhabited isle in the U.K. until the lighthouse became automated in 1995.

Below is the closest image I could manage. Before leaving Canada for Shetland I had watched an episode of “The Secret Life of Lighthouses” (S3E2) about Muckle Flugga and the enormous efforts, bravery, and engineering skills that it took to build. You can find the episode on the Knowledge Network, at Knowledge.ca, if you would like to learn more.

Beyond Muckle Flugga, some 600 metres to the northeast, is Out Stack, or Oosta, which is officially the most northerly piece of land belonging to the British Isles. Lady Franklin, the wife of Sir John Franklin, landed on Out Stack in 1849 when her husband failed to return from his expedition to find the North West Passage. She looked to the north and prayed for her husband’s eventual safe return, but of course her prayer would never be answered.

I sat on the grass overlooking Muckle Flugga, had my lunch, and watched the sea here for a long time. This was my only planned outing for the day, the air had warmed, and I had plenty of time, so instead of climbing the hill to continue my walk I decided that I wanted to visit with the puffins some more. I love them! They are often called comical, but I find them elegant and composed,

beautiful, bright, and socially and emotionally intelligent! (Granted, my opinions are based on limited observational experience!)

After my time watching the puffins, I rejoined the path and started my climb up the hill. I turned near the top for a last view back to Muckle Flugga,

and then crested the hill where I saw the few remaining stones of the Signal Station that once stood in sight of the lighthouse. Before the use of radio, the Signal Station and Lighthouse communicated with each other by means of Semaphore with regards to issues like items needed, supply boat deliveries, issues at sea, and medical emergencies. I began the downhill walk with the long inlet of the Burra Firth to my left,

and soon reached a section of boardwalk which undulated across the moor of blanket bog, heather, cotton grass and sphagnum mosses.

The boardwalk went on, and on, and on!

As I walked I thought about the men who would make the journey up to and then back from the Signal House on foot, without the aid of this boardwalk. It would have been an arduous, wet and sometimes dangerous walk – a series of poles marked the way to keep the men from getting lost on days of rain and fog.

For me, on this fine day, it was a most wonderful walk. All along the return journey I heard Skylarks singing their incredibly long, complex, and elaborate songs, but I could never spot them in the grasses! Their calls were clear and bright and so pleasing to the ear – a fine accompaniment to my walk. I reached the very last section of the trail, now on gravel,

and soon reached my bicycle. I began the six mile cycle ride back to Baltasound and only made three brief stops on the way. The first was here, to photograph the golden beach at the end of the Burra Firth,

and the second was here, where the place names are obviously of Norse origin and the cows are definitely Scottish!

My third stop was at Bobby’s Bus Shelter which has become a rather famous photo stop on Unst. The shelter is named after Bobby Macaulay, a seven-year old who wrote a letter to the local council asking them not to remove the shelter, when they had plans to do so, because that’s where he stored his bike when he caught the bus to school. The shelter was saved and someone furnished it with a small couch, chair, and other household comforts. Each year, the shelter is redecorated with a theme. This year, the theme was Leap Year, with a focus on Animals That Leap. I perused the books about animals that leap, signed the Visitors Book, and deeply suspected the involvement of a teacher or librarian in the endeavour!

I returned to my lovely and comfortable bnb, microwaved an entree, (there are no restaurants or cafes at present in Baltasound), and spent a quiet evening in my room. It was a wonderful day at Hermaness, at the far northern tip of the British Isles!