"Cooked! Redone in the lab!"
I'm no photographer, John, but " I can fix it in post!"
We were all three of us blown across the road and and ended up on to the opposite verge. Luckily there were no oncoming vehicles.
I can definitely relate to that. In a post that disappeared due to a forum technical glitch, I described how when nearing Achnasheen, my destination for the day, the wind unceremoniously blew me right off the road. Twice. With no shelter from the wind, no room at the bunkhouse, and not wishing to have my tent destroyed, I stayed at the Ledgowan Lodge for the bargain price of £190. I later learned that the manager had indeed given me a deal, as the booking.com price was £310. Dinner (extra) and breakfast (included) were wonderful, though.
My last week was spent with an eye to the weather forecast. The overnights were becoming too cold for my inadequate, sleeping bag and much rain was forecast to be on the way. As a result, when I reached Tongue, I pointed the bike south and started heading back for Inverness. The campsite at Tongue was the last time I camped. I spent the next night at the Crask Inn (previously described and highly recommended), the following night in Tain at a B&B and then reached Inverness where I stayed at the Black Isle hostel. I spent a day playing tourist in Inverness and rode out to the Culloden battlefield on my way back to the hotel that had stored my bike box for me. Then it was up at 0430 for the long journey home. I have to say I’m not a fan of Heathrow Terminal 5.
And that's it! I had a great time. Any negative experiences were mostly do to my lack of fitness. The Highlands are……hilly! I only had one day where it rained from start to end, and that was my last day riding from Tain to Inverness. That’s probably pretty lucky for Scotland. There were no mechanical problems (naturally) with Nozomi the Raven.
Here are some photos to close things out. I may do a post later of pics that didn”t make it into round one, but I like, or have a good story to go with them.
1 Alt Cranaidh waterfall. It’s a 15 min hike over mud and rocks to get here, so there aren’t many tourists.
2 I thought this was a loch, but it’s just an unnamed ( on GoogleMaps) river flowing into Loch Laxford
3 Coastline near Durness
4 Lucky rainbow on my last morning. If you look carefully you can see the rocks in the river bottom. The River Ness is 100m across but only 1m deep as it flows through Inverness towards Beauly Firth.