After visiting the museum in Hynish, I went for a little walk along the coast and then back to Hynish (and my car).
And back to the signal tower and the buildings of Hynish.
After visiting the museum in Hynish, I went for a little walk along the coast and then back to Hynish (and my car).
And back to the signal tower and the buildings of Hynish.
In Tiree, you are never far from a beach and the beautiful machair – the meadows typical for the Hebridean islands. A fertile, low-lying grass filled with wildflowers.
On this day I was doing a little loop around the island, exploring all the corners. Including a few little walks along the beach.
View towards Tiree airport.
Work began in 1802. A lade from Loch Bhasapol to the mill was constructed with a sluice gate at the loch end. This raised the level of the water in the loch and provided a year round flow to the wheel which is of the ‘breast’ type, as the water hits the wheel at mid height. The mill was completed in 1803, and from 1804 until 1945 a succession of millers lived and worked at Millhouse. However after 1945 the mill underwent a period of dismantling and decay. (Isle of Tiree)
Loch Bhasapol is the second largest loch in the Isle of Tiree and a place of watersports.
The Tiree Parish Church sits along a crossroad and I arrived here from all sides it was always the sight telling me that I was almost home at Drover´s Cottage, my lovely home in Tiree.
Scarinish is a bit like the little hub in Tiree. The Co-op, the post office, a coffee shop, a hotel and the museum are all around the harbour.
Little food library formerly known as a phone box.
Old meets new
View over Scarinish.
Tiree Hotel