My dear mother was
indefatigable in finding amusements for me and for all the rest of the
young people. Collecting gulls' eggs on the islands of Loch Maree was a
favourite pastime. We went on many an expedition in May and June, and,
under the best of guides, Seumas Buidhe (Yellow James), the weaver at
Slatadale, and his big apprentice, we used to get from 150 to 200 eggs
in an afternoon. With the exception of perhaps three or four pairs of
herring gulls and about the same number of the greater black backs
(which always bred singly on isolated rocks), the whole gull population
consisted of thousands of lesser black backs, which are, I believe, our
only migratory gulls. Now, alas! they are all but gone. Before my time
the great breeding-place of the gulls was the big island of Eilean
Ruaridh Mor (Rory's Big Island). Then the gulls suddenly left, the
popular belief of the cause of their desertion being that some party had
gone birds’-nesting on a Sunday ! But I believe my father cleared up the
mystery; he found out that a shepherd with his dog had landed on the
island in the winter following the desertion of the gulls, and that the
dog had caught and killed a big pine marten. The animal was so thin as
to be little more than a skeleton; it had evidently driven the gulls to
such a pitch of exasperation by eating their eggs and young ones that at
last they had suddenly deserted Eilean Ruaridh Mor and made for Garbh
Eilean, Eilean Suthainn, and other smaller islands where we used to go.
It is interesting to speculate how the marten got to the island, seeing
that Loch Maree never freezes.
How certain memories
stick to one through life! Never shall I forget one birds’-nesting
expedition when I was a very small boy, perhaps about six. I was
wandering alone through the tangle of dwarf trees and tall heather
intent on trying to get more eggs than anyone else of the par by, and
had managed to fill every pocket I had, besides having two or three eggs
in each J little hand. Suddenly I slipped among the rocks, and my reader
can imagine the state my clothes and I were in when I rose to my legs!
In June and July our
expeditions consisted in going to one of the best trout lochs in
Scotland, Loch na k-Oidkche (the Night Loch), so called because the
trout in it were supposed to take all night long. Fly was never thought
of. We had three or four stiff larch rods with rowan tops, string for
lines, and a hook at the end baited with earth-worms. Two men rowed the
boat, we trolled the lines behind, and we used to get perhaps from 80 to
100 lovely golden-yellow trout, from half a pound to a pound in weight.
They ran rather heavier on the Gorm Lochanan (Blue Lakelets) a little
beyond Loch na h-Oidhche. Sometimes we put up at the Poca buidhe (Yellow
Bag) bothy, but its roof in those days was very leaky, and there was
little to be gained by being under its protection.
I used sometimes to long
to pass the night instead in Uaimh Bhraodaig, a spot where my father and
uncles had spent many nights when deer-stalking, and where there was
room for two or three fellows to lie down close together. IJaimh is
Gaelic for “cave,” but it was hardly a cave: it was only a sort of hole
under a gigantic fragment of rock in the wildest cairn I ever saw, with,
perhaps, the exception of Carn nan Uaimhag, at the back of Beinn Airidh
Charr. I shall give my uncle's description of it:
“When we went to the hill
for deer, expecting to be home at night, after an early breakfast, we
never dreamt of taking anything but a heel of cheese from the dairy with
some thick barley scone, a favourite bread downstairs, and handy as
never crumbling in one's pocket. But it happened to me when I came on
deer late at night, as I have often done, I could not get home till next
day. Once night fell on me when alone ten miles from home with a stag
and hind that I had not finished gralloching ere it was so dark that I
could hardly see my way to a large stone called Uaimh Bhraodaig,' which
gave tolerable protection to two or three people in need from the rain
and wind in those hills. I managed, however, and on my way startled a
foolish old grouse, who, not caring a straw for me, perched on a great
stone so nicely between me and the evening star that he got a little
round hole from my rifle that qualified him for supping with me, when
skinned hot and made into a spatch-cock that needed no sauce to be
enjoyed extremely, the cheese and scone having disappeared by midday. My
friend and I just reached Uaimh Bhraodaig in time to gather some of the
large heather sticks found near such rough ground, and with my flint and
tinder box (for lucifers were a pleasure yet to come) I got up a little
fire for cooking and warming my wet feet before I rolled my plaid about
me as bed and bedding. That reminds me that, often as I have slept on
the hill sound enough till cockcrow, I never saw anyone who could sleep
through the early morning chill, even though dry and stuffed into a heap
of dry heather. Uaimh Bhraodaig was half-way up the eastern shoulder of
Beinn an Eoin (the Bird Mountain), and for, say, 500 yards all round it
was a heap of great stones left there by Noah, bad enough to clamber
over in daylight, but detestable in the dark, and only to be endured in
preference to a long, cold, wet night on the open hill. I had roasted
and finished my much-admired grouse, and had, of course, taken off my
wet shoes—wet leather ensuring cold feet all night, whereas even with
wet stockings, if I stuffed my feet into a bundle of dry heather they
generally got warm enough not to prevent sleep. I was just dozing,
lulled by the croaking of some ptarmigan (their song sounds so different
from that of the red grouse or black game) as they flew from the
hill-tops in the evening to sup on the heather they can only get lower
down. A Yorkshire farmer who had been sent to our parts used to insist
that gravel must be their food, as nothing else was within their reach
on the hill-tops! Suddenly I heard a very different music from that of
the ptarmigan, evidently the voices of people, some of whom were so out
of temper that it was anything but psalmody which in the dead calm night
floated up some hundred yards to my annoyed ears quite clearly. The
sweet songsters of the hill were benighted poachers making for Uaimh
Bhraodaig, and as we were alone and preferred having no bed-fellows, I
handled my rifle and went outside. I distinctly heard very ugly language
regarding the quality of the road over which they were scrambling and
stumbling much more than they liked in their iron-shod shoes; so, making
my voice-sound as unearthly as possible, I groaned out loudly in Gaelic,
"Who is there? Wait till I get you". There was instant silence, and then
such a scrimmage and capering about on the big stones as sent me back to
my bundle of heather delighted to be left with no comrades but the
ptarmigan till daylight. Years after I learnt that two lovers of venison
more than of law had been out on a private stalk, and had a miraculous
escape from Satan, who nearly got them on the hill at night.
I myself was told as a
boy a terrible story connected with Uaimh Bhraodaig, and I give it here
as told to me. A brocair (fox-hunter), being benighted on the hill
somewhere near the upper end of Beinn an Eoin, thought the only thing to
do was to pass the night in Uaimh Bhraodaig. Some time during the night
a terrible apparition appeared to him, and he fled before it,
accompanied by his two lethjjioin (lurchers), and ran as never man ran
before. Across his path was the Garabliaig River, which flows into Loch
Maree. He took a flying leap across one of its chasms, which was quite
beyond the powers of any ordinary human being, and landed on the other
side, but both his dogs, which attempted to follow him, fell into the
river and were drowned. The brocair was quite a young man, and had not a
grey hair in his head when he entered Uaimh Bhraodaig, but by the time
he reached the first house in Talladale his head was as white as driven
snow. This story was believed to be quite true by everyone when I was a
boy.
Birds’-nesting
expeditions were also made to the islands of Loch Maree after ospreys’
eggs. There were two eyries there, one of them in a real curiosity of a
place—namely, in Eilean Suthainn, one of the biggest of the islands in
Loch Maree. There is a small loch, and in this loch (the depth of which
is about double that of the neighbouring Loch Maree), there is an island
on which stood one big Scots fir. In it was the ospreys’ nest, as large
as a waggon-wheel, with three eggs. It was lined with lumps 'of wool and
bits of cow-dung, and lying at the foot of the tree I found a dead
mallard, which appeared to have been freshly killed by the ospreys!
There was another fir-tree where they bred on a promontory nearly
opposite Isle Maree, from which I got two eggs. But, alas! the birds
have been extinct in that region for at least sixty-five years.
There were expeditions to
eagles’ nests on the Creag Cheann Dubh (the Black-headed Rock) in Beinn
a Bhric and on a rock opposite the Garbh choire of Bathais Bheinn.
There, wonderful to say, we were able to walk into the nest. We were too
late for the eggs, but we found two good-sized eaglets, and there were
five whole grouse, quite freshly killed, lying near them, as beautifully
plucked by the parent eagles as any well-trained kitchen-maid could have
done.
I had often heard that
shepherds made great use of eagles nests to fill their larders, and my
uncle corroborates as follows: “Eagles sometimes built where not even a
rope-dancer could get at them—a sad case for shepherds, who were accused
of concealing the whereabouts of their nests when in accessible places.
It was said that they tethered the eaglets to the nest long after they
could fly, because until the young birds left the nest the parents never
ceased to bring quantities of all sorts of game to feed them, quite half
of which was said to go to the shepherds larder. A shepherd admitted to
me that he once took a salmon quite fresh out of a whitetailed eagle's
nest. Fawns, hares, lambs, and grouse were brought in heaps to the nest
for months—an agreeable variety at the shepherd's daily dinner of
porridge and potatoes and milk."
We also made expeditions
seawards to Eilean Fuara and the Staca Buidh (Yellow Stack). My pet
terrier Deantag (Nettle) was the first in my time to discover the stormy
petrels nesting in large numbers in the cracks of the dry, peaty soil.
None of the natives had been aware of this fact, because the petrels
when breeding never show themselves in the daytime. Fuara thus became
quite famous among ornithologists, but of later years steam drifters
have been in the habit of leaving their herring-nets stretched out on
the island for days to dry, and that finished the poor little “stormies,"
which, like so many other birds, have disappeared.
This is what my uncle
says about stormy petrels in Longa: “On Sundays when there was no
service in Gairloch Church my father often booked us boys for a sail in
his charming thirty-foot-keel barge to visit some of the townships round
the coast and have a kindly word with the people, or even a scold,
though that was rarely needed. Sometimes we landed for a walk on Longa
Island. It was about half a mile in diameter, all glens and moor, with
good grass, which was kept for wintering for the young of the sixty Tigh
Dige cows, so that they might be in the best of condition when ready for
market the following year, dressed in their beautiful long, shining
coats, the pride of Highland cattle. We often came home with faces
nicely painted with blaeberry juice and also crowberries, for that most
coveted wild fruit grew in Longa. When it was found out that Longa was
our destination, a little dog was often put into the barge to help us to
discover if one of the stormy petrels ("Mother Carey's Chicken"), who
loved wild Longa as a breeding-place, was at home in the peat-holes or
under flat stones, which were generally chosen by 'Mrs. Carey' as a
waterproof covering for her wee white egg or little black, tiny pet.
Doggie always knew by the wild, fishy smell whether 'Mrs. Carey' was at
home or not, and thus saved us much Sunday digging in our endeavours to
bring her to Tigh Dige to be shown to the dear mother."
In winter and early
spring, when there were no birds’ eggs to be got, my mother and I used
to fish vigorously. We had a good crew always ready, and setting
cod-lines was great sport. I remember that on a certain fine sunny
February morning the long lines had been set as usual overnight close
off Longa Island, and we thought it a good opportunity to try for
otters. There was a spring tide, and big George Ross, the keeper, with
his gun and terrier formed part of the crew. We lifted our lines, and
our small fourteen-foot row-boat could hardly contain the fish—sixty
full-sized cod and two giant haddocks. Then we landed and tried the
cairns along the shore without success, so we began cutting off the
cods’ heads and getting rid of their insides to lighten the boat. While
engaged in this we missed the terrier, Bodach (Old Man), and soon we
heard a faint yelping high up in the interior of the island, where he
had discovered otters. We followed him, and the keeper, leaning down and
peering in, thought he could see the eyes of an otter a good way inside
the cairn, so he let off the gun into the hole and killed it!
Immediately another otter bolted and made across the heather for the
sea. Everyone tore downhill after it, and someone giving it a lucky blow
with a stick, it was secured before reaching the water. We came back
with a nice mixed cargo.
My uncle was not so
lucky. He says: “ We boys had offers out for young otters which we meant
to train to fish for us at command, and one day, to our great delight, a
lad brought to Tigh Dige a creel with four young otters. They were the
size of kittens a month old, such dear little pets, and we instantly
procured a tub of their native element, into which we emptied the little
darlings. To our amazement, they yelled and strove like mad to get out
of the tub. Then came old Watson the keeper and took a look at them, and
he ruined all our hopes by quietly telling us they were young
polecats!''
In this manner the days
and the years passed by very happily. Nor was my education being
neglected. I was always being taught a little, first by my old nurse,
and afterwards by my mother's lady companion, who taught me English and
Gaelic. I also went to a Gaelic Sunday-school class and thoroughly
learnt my Gaelic Shorter Catechism; and the French boy read French with
me under the direction of my mother. It was not the fashion in our
family for the boys to be sent to school. My grandfather's plan was to
have tutors, who spent the summers and autumns with the boys at Gairloch,
and who went with them during the winter to Edinburgh, where they
attended classes. None of my four uncles nor my father was ever at
school, and it was my father's special wish that his sons should be
brought up in the same manner.
I do not think it could
be possible for any two young men to turn out greater successes than my
two half-brothers, the late Sir Kenneth S. Mackenzie and his brother.
Sir Kenneth was far and away the most esteemed man in the county of
Ross. He was appointed Chairman of the Commissioners of Supply and
Convener of the County Council, was at the head of everything that was
good, and, like his grandfather, was Lord-Lieutenant of the County. My
second brother, Francis, was quite as great a man, and equally beloved
and respected. I quite agree with my grandfather and father that Eton
and Harrow, Oxford and Cambridge, do not by any means produce the best
men as Highland proprietors; such training just turns them into regular
Sassenachs! It is surely better that a Highlander should be something a
little different from an Englishman. When they are sent to English
schools as small boys of eight or nine years old, and their education is
continued in the south, they lose all their individuality. They may be
very good, but they have nothing Highland about them except the bits of
tartan they sport, which were probably manufactured in the south and
their kilts tailored in London! My uncle writes that his father, Sir
Hector, and his wife, the bliantighearna madh (the auburn lady) as she
was always called, spoke Gaelic to each other as often as they did
English. Today my daughter and I do the same. Why should the present
chiefs and lairds call themselves Highland if they can't speak a word of
the language of their people and country? One would not call a man a
Boer in South Africa if he could not speak a word of Dutch, nor call a
man a French-Canadian if he could not converse in the French of his
country, even though it be something of a patois. Then, again, many of
the lairds are so unpatriotic as to have forsaken the Church of their
forefathers. Instead of worshipping with their tenantry and their
servants in the Presbyterian Church in their neighbourhood, they motor
great distances to some chapel where they can find very ritualistic
services and probably hear only a very poor sermon.
A distinguished lady
remarked to me quite lately that the three best educated and most
intelligent and most charming men she had ever come across in the course
of her life had never been to a public school; and if I were asked who
was all round the most intelligent and best educated man I ever came
across, I should say it was my uncle John Mackenzie. He also was never
at a public school.
One of the charms of the
good old times in the Highlands was the strong family affection shown to
relatives, even if not very near kin. My grandfather, Sir Hector, had
two younger half-brothers, General John Mackenzie and Captain Kenneth
Mackenzie. The General was known as “Fighting Jack,” and had
distinguished himself in the Peninsular War and fought also at the Cape,
India, Sicily and Malta, while the Captain was in all the great battles
of his time in India. When they were disbanded after the great war they
were naturally drawn to the homes of their youth, and my grandfather
gave the younger one, Captain Kenneth, the farm of Kerrysdale, A
Chathair bheag (the Little Throne or Seat), which then included part of
what is now the Gairloch deer-forest. There he built a house and reared
a large family of children and grandchildren, and thus he resided within
about a mile of the Tigh Dige for, I think, about seventy years. General
John passed a good part of his life at Riverford, and at Balavil Farm,
close to the east-coast family mansion of Conon. In these modern times I
often hear the horrid and unnatural assertion that it is disagreeable
having one’s relatives all round one. So much for the twentieth century!
How I loved my two old
grand-uncles! They were such pattern gentlemen of the old school. The
General always accosted me in Gaelic when I was taken to see him in
Inverness, where he latterly lived, and would ask me which parts of Loch
Gairloch were fishing best. He said his heart was in Gairloch, and a
common saying of his was that he would rather meet a dog from Gairloch
than the grandest gentleman from any other place. I always felt it a
feather in my cap having known so well my grand-uncle, who had served
under the Earl of Cromartie, who had fought at Culloden on Prince
Charlie's side! General John raised a whole company of a hundred men for
the 78th Regiment of Ross-shire Highlanders, every man of them from the
Gairloch property, and he died in 1860, aged ninety-seven, honoured and
beloved by everyone. He had been sent to France as a boy and spoke
French like a Frenchman, and his good Gaelic was a great help to him
among his devoted men when fighting the French in the Peninsula.
Speaking of his manners, my mother often told me that when living at
Riverford, near Conon, he used to look in constantly in the afternoons,
and, after a chat, when he left the room he always found his way out
without turning his back on his hostess.
It was such a joy to me
as a child walking over to Kerrysdale and being spoilt there with the
kindness and hospitality of old Uncle Kenneth and Aunty Flora and their
charming daughters and grandchildren. I remember so well in 1861 or
1862, when I was about nineteen, going to call on my old grand-uncle
Kenneth at Kerrysdale, he being then past ninety. On my telling him that
I was thinking of buying Inverewe, he brightened up, and told me that,
when he was an ensign of only fifteen, one of the first jobs he had to
do after getting his commission was to go with a party of
non-commissioned officers and men to get recruits from Aird House, the
home of the laird of Gruinord. The lady of Gruinord, the Baniighearna
bhuidh (the Yellow Lady), was at the time very keen to get a commission
for her son. This could be managed if she provided a certain number of
so-called recruits, so she turned her ground officers into a press-gang;
they kidnapped a number of lads, sons of her numerous small tenants, and
these she had safely confined in a black hole under the Aird House
staircase. It has always been said that she greased the soles of the
feet of these lads and semi-roasted them opposite the fire until they
were so tender that even if they escaped from the black hole, they could
not go far! And it was to fetch these unfortunates that my grand-uncle
was sent as a boy with his armed force. They made a very early start
from Aird House, and he breakfasted with our relatives, the Lochend
Mackenzies, at Inverewe, where they then lived in a long, low house
thatched with heather. I give the menu of his breakfast, which he
distinctly remembered. It consisted of a roast leg of mutton and a big
wooden bowl of raspberries and cream. And he finished up his story by
saying: “And if you, Osgood, make a garden there, I guarantee you will
grow good raspberries in it."
We were not very expert
at flowers in those days in the Baile Mor garden, but Lios na cathraclia
bige (the Kerrysdale garden) was more up to date, my grand-uncle being,
like most of the Gairlochs, keen on flowers and trees. I shall always
remember the smell of Daphne and Ribes there, and the big clumps of
Gladiolus cardinalis, which was not common in those days, and the lines
of Christmas roses, which flourished and bloomed in winter and early
spring and formed edgings to the garden walks. |