THE loneliness and wildness of
most parts of Gairloch are of course highly favourable to the presence and
observation of some of the rarer British birds and animals.
The list of
Gairloch birds given further on reveals a curious fact, viz., that several
kinds, such as the house-sparrow, bullfinch, blackbird, and red-shank,
formerly unknown or rare in Gairloch, are now plentiful; whilst other
birds, including the house-martin, skylark, and whimbrel, formerly
abundant, are now scarce. No local causes for these changes can be
suggested. There is no wholesale destruction of the smaller birds here as
in France. What then can be the reason?
Dr Mackenzie has some
interesting remarks on this point. Speaking of his young days (1815-1820)
he writes as follows :—
"Now, gentle reader, please explain why, till
we were men, no blackbird was ever heard of in Gairloch,—only heaps of
ring-ouzels; not a sparrow nor a magpie (except one unfortunate who was
shot, and report says cooked as game, at Kerrysdale, and pronounced
excellent), no rooks nor wood-pigeons, tho' plenty blue-rocks, and for
many years now these then strangers have found their way to the west.
Indeed blackbirds are now in crowds there, and have so entirely superseded
the ring-ouzel that one of these is quite a rarity. And please explain
also why not only
"When I was young and was werry little,
The only steam came from the kettle,"
but why then no bird ever touched any
fruit but cherries, while now no fruit, ripe or unripe, except black
currants, is safe unless netted; the very pears, not full grown, being all
pecked full of holes (or their mere skeletons hanging on the tree) by the
blackbird pests, who, one might suppose, would die on the spot but for
fruit that long ago not one of them would touch. Till three years ago I
never dreamed of netting my morello cherry-trees. No blackbird tin then
would look at a morello, had I offered him £5. Now, unless netted, I need
to use them before they are really ripe, or the black villains will eat
them all up. "When I was young house-swallows were legion. Nov they are
easily counted in the north. In our western church (Gairloch) then broken
window-panes were too plenty, and the swallows' operations (building,
feeding, and other arrangements), to the discomfort of those in the pews
below the nests, I suppose I should admit interested us a good deal more
than the preacher. Nightjars also then were very plenty, and one could
hardly take an evening walk without seeing them flit in the dusk and light
on the footpath before us, with their singular cat-purring song. I have
often come on their extra-simple exposed nest in the heather."
The
golden or black eagle may frequently be seen in Gairloch, soaring aloft in
the sky. There is a general inclination now to preserve this noble denizen
of the air. The eagle does comparatively little injury to game, but is
accused of killing lambs and even sheep. The golden or black eagle is a
size smaller than the erne or white-tailed eagle, which latter is also
sometimes seen in Gairloch.
There are several Gairloch anecdotes of
eagles. On the edge of the wood at the base of Craig Tollie an eagle
pounced upon a roe-deer, and deeply fixed its talons in the poor beast's
side. The roe taking to the wood, was near crushing the eagle against the
trees. The eagle clutched at a branch with the claws of one foot, still
keeping its hold of the roe with the other foot, but the speed of the roe
was so great that the bird was actually torn in two. One portion was found
fixed to the deer, which died from loss of blood, and the other in the
tree. Doubts have been thrown on the credibility of this anecdote; the
following extract from "Martin's Western Islands of Scotland" helps to
confirm it. Writing about 1695, Martin says:—"The eagles are very
destructive to the fawns and lambs, especially the black eagle, which is
of a lesser size than the other. The natives observe that it fixes its
talons between the deer's horns, and beats its wings constantly about its
eyes, which puts the deer to run continually till it fall into a ditch, or
over a precipice, where it dies, and so becomes a prey to the cunning
hunter. There are at the same time several other eagles of this kind which
fly on both sides of the deer, which fright it extremely, and contribute
much to its more sudden destruction. The foresters, and several of the
natives, assured me that they had seen both sorts of the eagles kill deer
in this manner."
In further confirmation the following paragraph is
quoted from "Natural History Notes from Russian Asia," by A. H. M., which
appeared in the Field of 27th October 1883 :—
"The Kirghiz train the
grey hawks to catch larks and quails, and showed me an eagle I could not
recognise, assuring me they could train it to fly at wolves. This bird was
a long way off, but it looked to me like the golden eagle. I was told
that, after being kept without sleep or food for nine days, this bird
became quite tame, and would feed from the hand of the man who had trained
it during this period. A strap of stout leather is fastened round each
leg, allowing some ten inches play. When the wolf is sighted the eagle is
flown, and, as soon as it seizes him, it plants one foot firmly in the
wolfs loins, and with the other drags along the ground, catching at
anything that gives a little hold,—stones, weeds, &c. Should the wolf
turn, the eagle drives at his eyes with its powerful beak, and, the heavy
drag on his back causing him to go slowly, the falconer rides up and
settles him with blows from a heavy whip, or with a knife. This is
something like hawking. My driver swore, by all that was holy, that he
himself had killed many wolves with these 'birghuts,' or small eagles."
The method employed by the eagle of the Kirghiz in dealing with wolves,
appears to be exactly on all fours with that of the eagle attacking the
roe on Craig Tollie. Mr H. E. Dresser, F.L.S., F.Z.S., &c, author of
"The Birds of Europe," informs me he is sure he has been told that trained
eagles are sometimes breeched, to prevent their being torn asunder. The
strap employed by the Kirghiz seems to be an example of this. Mr Dresser
states that Atkinson (" Oriental and Western Siberia," pp. 492-494) gives
an account of trained golden eagles being flown at deer; and M. V. Scully
relates ("Stray Feathers," iv., p. 123) that he has seen many such trained
eagles, and he adds that in a wild state they prey on stags, antelopes,
wild-cats, foxes, and wolves. Surely the fate of the unbreeched eagle of
Craig Tollie is not improbable!
The next anecdote is of an eagle near
Kenlochewe. This injudicious bird carried off a cat to feed its two young
at its eyrie,— probably on Meal a? Ghubhais. The cat was alive and well
when deposited in the eagle's nest. Pussy made short work of the two young
eagles, and returned home safe and sound.
The incident is traditional,
not only in Gairloch, but also in the neighbouring districts. I understand
that in Assynt and Kintail, as well as in Gairloch, the following Gaelic
riddle is often asked, the answer being this very anecdote. The riddle is
as follows:— "Chaidh biadh do dithis go ceann Loch Maridhe dhith am biadh
dithis thainig am biadh dhachidh a rhithisd." Here is a literal English
translation,—" Some food went to two at the head of Loch Maree, the food
ate the two, and the food came home again."
Another eagle, not long ago,
at Talladale, was seen soaring above a foal, with the manifest intention
of attacking it. The mare watched her foal with evident anxiety, seemingly
prepared to defend her young at all hazards. The eagle, foiled in his
design, took up in his talons a part of a tree stump, and let it fall,
apparently in the hope that it would strike and kill the foal.
Dr
Mackenzie has the following note of a good bag of eagles made in Gairloch
in the early part of the present century. He says:— "Our game-killer,
Watson, had a good day once with eagles, producing three splendid birds
from a day's shooting, besides two young birds also killed. A pair nested
on the west side of Bus Bheinn, and another pair on its east side, both
out of reach, even by rope, although the nests were visible from tops
about eighty to one hundred yards away. Watson, by daybreak, was on the
top of Bus Bheinn, with swan shot in one barrel and a ball in the other.
Peering over the rock, away sailed one of the eagles, but the swan shot
dropped him in the heather below the rock. Another eagle at the nest at
the other side of the hill came to the same end. Then hiding himself among
the rocks, near where a wounded eagle flapped his wings, a third eagle,
coming to see what this meant, was invited down by a shot, making a brace
and a half of old eagles before breakfast. Then to shorten matters with
the two chicken eagles, he climbed the hill again, and ere his bullets
were all used up, both of them were dead, and their remains were visible
on the nests for many a year after, having got more lead to breakfast than
they could digest. I wait to hear of the gunner in Britain who could shew
his two and a half brace of eagles killed in one day, before breakfast!"
The most numerous and noticeable birds about Loch Maree in the months of
May, June, and July, are the black-backed gulls. They fly with great speed
and apparently little effort. I have often endeavoured, watch in hand, to
estimate the velocity of their flight, and I have come to the conclusion
that in a calm atmosphere, or with a favourable breeze, they attain the
speed of a quick train, viz., nearly fifty miles an hour. They breed on
the islands of Loch Maree, and appear to have almost displaced the herring
gulls, which used to be pretty numerous on the islands. Very few gulls now
breed on Eilean Ruaridh Mor, though it seems from the following anecdote
of Dr Mackenzie's that this island was a favourite gullery until the
incident he relates occurred:—
"Some years ago it was observed that,
without any visible reason, the gulls quite deserted Big Rorie's island
for another at a little distance, till a shepherd, landing with his dog,
found a pine-marten-cat in the island, mere skin and bone, and despatched
him. How he had got to the island, half a mile from the mainland, and the
water never frozen, no one could imagine; but though he may have lived
well for a time on the gulls, there being nothing else to feed him on the
island, unless a chance grouse or a roe, he soon made a desert of it, and
would have died of hunger, but for the collie who ended him." Gairloch is
not without examples of very rare birds, but those usually seen, though
rare in many parts of the kingdom, are mostly the common birds of the
Highlands. They are interesting enough to all,—to the lover of nature they
are delightful; let the gunner spare them; let the bird-nester allow them
to rear their young in peace. In the bright spring-time there is to my
mind nothing sweeter than to listen on a calm evening to the sounds of the
various birds that haunt the neighbourhood of Inveran. You may hear the
whirring wings of the wild ducks, goosanders, and mergansers flitting up
and down the Ewe; the sand-pipers, in great numbers, piping as they hurry
along the river banks; the black-cocks crooning in the adjoining fields;
the cock-grouse crowing on the moors close by; the rooks cawing all
around; the wood-pigeon cooing in the neighbouring woods; the herons
screaming on the margin of the water; the curlews whistling their weird
call not far away; the night-jar humming his prolonged trill below Craig
Tollie; the corncrake uttering its creaking note in the meadows and
growing corn; the owl hooting from his tree or rock; the familiar cuckoo
calling on all sides, near and far; a host of the smaller birds singing,
chirping, and twittering around; whilst above them all the ravens croak,
the grey crows screech, the sea-mews cry, and (sometimes) the wild geese
gabble, high in air. Observation of this teeming bird life has a
wonderful fascination for many, and I can imagine no purer pleasure. Mr
Alexander Cameron in his song about Tournaig (Part II., chap, xxiii.)
notices some of the birds of Coile Aigeascaig; he must have often enjoyed
their exquisite symphonies.
The insects which frequent the air are not
all delightful. Some of the moths and butterflies, as well as the large
dragon-flies (supposed by many to be the originals of our artificial
salmon-flies), are beautiful enough. These abound more especially on the
north-east side of Loch Maree, where limestone occurs. The flies that
sting or bite force themselves upon our notice, and the tiny midge is the
most obnoxious of them all. Wasps are rather plentiful in some seasons,
but the midges are always in swarms on warm calm evenings from July to
October. Even royalty can claim no immunity from their attacks ! Her
Majesty the Queen notes in the diary of her visit to Loch Maree, "the
midges are dreadful, and you cannot stand for a moment without being
stung;" and again, " there is a perfect plague of wasps, and we are
obliged to have gauze nailed down to keep these insects out when the
windows are open, which, as the climate is so hot, they have to be
constantly." A visitor to one of the hotels recorded his opinion of the
midges thus:—
"I love Maree's soft rippling waves ; I
love her mountain ridges; I love her silver birken trees,— But I
detest her midges!"
It is a curious fact that prolonged residence in the
country seems to render one slightly less liable to the attacks of these
minute pests ; but when they swarm on a calm evening in September, every
one must give in, and cease all stationary occupation out of doors. Many
different washes for the skin, aromatic and otherwise, are recommended,
and some persons wear veils ; but preventive measures are never wholly
successful, and it is best to retreat before the little aggravating foe.
How dreadful must have been the sufferings of the Rev. John Morrison,
minister of Gairloch, when stripped naked, tied to a tree, and exposed to
the attacks of the midges, at Letterewe, as related in Part I., chap.
xvi.! With some people each particular midge bite inflames, and produces a
small lump like a pea under the skin. Total abstinence for the time from
alcohol, or at least from whisky, will generally mitigate this unpleasant
result. If it be a midgy evening, choose if possible an exposed breezy
road for your stroll, and you will escape the creatures. Fishing is out of
the question if it be so calm that the midges are bad.
The stone-flies,
gad-flies, or horse-flies, are very troublesome at times, but can easily
be dealt with. The large caterpillar which is the larva of the fox-moth,
is very abundant on the heather in the shooting season.
The beasts of
the earth next claim our attention. Except deer, hares, rabbits, and (on
calm evenings) a few bats near woods or houses, few of these beasts come
under the observation of the ordinary visitor to Gairloch. Some indeed of
the beasts which are considered vermin, such as badgers, otters,
marten-cats, and polecats, are now nearly extinct; great raids were made
upon the two former some years ago for the sake of their heads and skins,
which were and still are much used for sporans to wear with the kilt.
With respect to martens, Dr Mackenzie says:—"Martens have so fine a fur,
that I remember a lady friend going into a London furrier's shop with a
boa made of martens' skins, trapped by our gamekeeper, and which the
furrier would insist was sable fur! I once shot a marten entangled in a
net spread over a magnum bonum tree on the Flowerdale garden wall, the
gardener being provoked by finding many plumstones on the top of the wall,
and blaming jackdaws for the theft, while the marten was evidently the
thief, his caggie on dissection being well packed with magnums!"
There
are plenty of wild-cats in Gairloch, but the majority of them are domestic
cats gone wild, and their offspring. Occasionally specimens of the true
wild-cat are trapped. Here is another anecdote of Dr Mackenzie's; it tells
of a wild-cat having its young in a singular place :—
"One morning the
fox-hunter's dogs picked up a scent behind the Tigh Dige (Flowerdale)
garden, on charming jungly Craig a chait (rock of the cat), that carried
them away over the hills for about five miles to the side of Loch Tollie,
where they lost scent opposite to a mite of an island, all covered with
bushes, about a hundred yards from the shore. No more scent being found,
the dog-master made up his mind it must be an old cunning fox, whose
bedroom the island was. So he stripped and swam to the island, followed by
his dogs; to his and probacy their amazement, they were faced by a monster
wild-cat, hardly yet dry from her swim, who had brought home to her six
kittens a nice grouse for breakfast. They needed no more grouse after that
interview. What a deal of thought pussy must have had ere she could make
up her mind to constant swimming in Loch Tollie till her kittens could
leave the island, as her only chance of saving them from the detested
fox-hunter! Did she reason out the question, or was it mere instinct? Who
can tell?" The lover of the picturesque must admire the shaggy cattle of
the breed now called "Highland," especially those of Mr O. H. Mackenzie of
Inverewe, and of Dr Robertson of Achtercairn. The black-faced lambs are
particularly bonnie when young, but visitors seldom come to Gairloch early
enough to see them. Goats, mostly in a semi-wild state, are kept on some
of the rocky sheep-farms; the idea is that they, being good climbers and
fond of cropping the herbage in steep places, may safely consume the
tender grass in spots where, if left uneaten by goats, it might tempt the
"silly sheep" to destruction.
Some small horses and ponies are bred in
Gairloch. A shaggy pony sometimes adds to the interest of the landscape,
or diversifies the appearance of a shooting party. |