Natural History in the Highlands and Islands. F. Darling Fraser

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are a few hundred acres of Scots pine of greatly varying density stretching up the southern side to an altitude of 1,000 feet. There are alders, oaks, rowans, and hazels along the river bank, and some hundreds of acres of birch at the head of the glen reaching up to 1,500 feet. But all round the cultivated strath and the house which was built in 1769 there are signs of planting for beauty: limes, many fine beeches, sycamores, ashes, elms, oaks, chestnuts and big old geans; and until a few years ago there were many acres of fine larches on the north side. The wild life of such a glen is obviously profuse and varied. We have these men of a past age to thank for planting that which we now enjoy, just as we may blame those of a century earlier who were denuding the Highlands of timber.

      Loch Maree is another place where there are some very fine woods, but here the sub-arctic quality of the northern zone is being lost and replaced by the complex of sub-alpine vegetation. Near where the Ewe River from Loch Maree goes into the sea in Loch Ewe there is a famous garden which grows a great variety of rhododendrons and azaleas and many sub-tropical plants and plants from Oceania. This is just another facet of the Highland paradox, the garden at Inverewe lying between the stark precipices of Ben Airidh Charr and the bare windswept slabs of Greenstone Point where the sea is never still. And if I may add one more touch of paradox, I saw a kingfisher on the rocks at Greenstone Point at the edge of the tide, one September day.

       CHAPTER 3

      RELIEF AND SCENERY (continued)

      THE WESTERN HIGHLANDS OR ATLANTIC ZONE

      SOUTH of Skye the coasts of the West Highlands fan out much more than to the north of that island. Indeed, there are several considerable islands reaching out into the Atlantic. The Outer Hebrides are not masking the influence of the Atlantic on this area as they do on the north coast of Skye. The influence of the Atlantic Ocean on this zone is both direct and inhibitory, and indirect and encouraging to a wealth of plant growth. The island of Islay, for example, changes character completely between its western and eastern halves. On the Atlantic side there is the lack of trees and shrubs and the presence of short sweet herbage salted by the spray from innumerable south-westerly gales, whereas there are beautiful gardens, palm trees and some forestry on the south and east sides. The Rhinns of Islay on the Atlantic coast are not heavily covered with peat as is a good deal of the eastern half. Islay is an island of many good arable farms, and it has several square miles of limestone country.

      The waters of the North Atlantic Drift cast up on these Atlantic shores pieces of wood and beans of West Indian origin, and plants such as the pale butterwort (Pinguicula lusitanica), pygmy rush (Juncus pygmaeus) and the moss Myurium Hebridorum which occur again on British coasts only in the south-west, here turn up in fair numbers. The pale butterwort occurs in the bogs of Portugal and western Spain, and on the west coast of France; Myurium moss is found in the Azores, the Canaries and St. Helena as well as in our Outer Isles. Dwarf cicendia (Cicendia pusilla) has also turned up in this zone, though previously found in the British Isles only in the Channel Islands. More recently, Campbell and Wilmott (1946) have found another Lusitanian plant in Stornoway Castle park, namely Sibthorpia europaea. The work of Professor Heslop Harrison and his group from the University of Durham should be consulted. It is his opinion that these western cliff edges escaped the last glaciation and thus their Pleistocene flora was not exterminated. Others hold that the flora must have been introduced since then.

      Jura is not so well served with the rich quality of vegetation we may find in Islay or even in small Colonsay and in Mull. It is composed of quartzite, which is poor stuff. Jura is also heavily covered with peat and suffers in consequence. A thick blanket of peat has a very great depressing effect on the variety of vegetation and in limiting the growth of deciduous trees. Jura is an island of high hills. The Paps rise to 2,571 feet and are quite rough going. It was on these hills that Dr. Walker of Edinburgh in 1812 conducted his classic experiment on the differential boiling-point of water at sea level and at the top of the Paps. Jura has a very small population of human beings on its nearly 90,000 acres. The island is so poor that its long history of being a deer forest will probably continue. In mythological literature Jura appears as being uninhabited and a place where heroes went a-hunting. It was on Jura during the latter part of the 19th century that Henry Evans conducted careful studies on the red deer. His were the first researches of a scientific character on Scottish red deer, yet he never set out to be more than a scientific amateur.

      The island of Scarba, of about 4,500 acres, high and rocky, lies north of Jura. The Gulf of Corrievreckan is in the narrow sound between the two islands. This celebrated whirlpool and overfalls is caused by the strong tide from the Atlantic being funnelled through a strait, the floor of which is extremely uneven. The sound is quiet at the slack of the tide but is dangerous to small craft when the tide is running. The largest whirlpool is on the Scarba side of the sound, but there is a spectacular backwash on to the Jura coast which used to be reckoned very dangerous in the days of sailing boats. The maximum current is probably about 81/2 knots which is very fast for a large bulk of water. No herring drifter or ordinary motor fishing-boat could hope to make headway against such a current, for their maximum speed in calm water is not more than 10 knots.

      This West Highland zone has what the North Minch lacks, a number of sizable islands which are not big enough to lose their oceanic quality, and not so small that they are utterly windswept. The islands of Colonsay and Oronsay, west of Jura, are an excellent example of islands which have the best of almost all worlds. Naturalists may be glad that Colonsay is in the possession of one who recognizes its value and beauty in the natural history of the West. Most of the island is of Torridonian sandstone of a different complex from that farther north, but there are overlays here and there of limestone and its derivative soil, and the 100-foot beaches are another place of good soil. There are sand dunes, cliffs and rocky beaches where several rare maritime plants are to be found. There are fresh-water lochs with water lilies and the royal fern in profusion. Natural woods of birch, oak, aspen, rowan, hazel, willow and holly also occur, and beech has been planted. The sight of these, so near the Atlantic and its gales, may be imagined from this short passage from Loder’s exhaustive book:

      “The woods are being rejuvenated by young plantations of Birch and Aspen, which are springing up naturally and contending for supremacy with an annual luxuriant growth of bracken. The Woodbine twines over the trees, and festoons along the edges of the numerous rocky gullies that cut up these slopes. Ivy has climbed up and formed pretty evergreens of the more stunted of the forest trees. The Prickly-Toothed Buckler Fern grows in profusion, and the little Filmy Fern is also to be seen under mossy banks.”

      There has been considerable planting of coniferous and deciduous trees for amenity in this Atlantic island so that it now presents a luxuriant and well-wooded aspect in the neighbourhood of the house. But in gazing on these woods now and noting Colonsay’s wealth of small birds, we should remember the effort entailed in beginning to establish these conditions. Loder says:

      “When planting in the island first began, the trees made so little headway that it was considered amply satisfactory if they formed good cover. For the first ten years or so they made little progress, and many places had to be planted over and over again. Protection from animals and weather was provided in the first instance by dry-stone dykes, 5 feet high. Alder and Sea Buckthorn were planted along the most exposed edges. Alders and various species of Poplar were used in wet situations but the poplars did not last well, and were liable to be blown over. It was only as the trees made shelter for each other that they began to show any vigorous growth. Indigenous species such as Birch, Oak and Rowan, have sprung up on hilly ground where the planted trees failed to establish themselves.”

      The trunks of trees in these Atlantic places tend to become covered with lichens such as Parmelia perlata and Usnea barbata, and mosses such as

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