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Robin Lloyd-Jones has been exploring the west coast and islands of
Scotland in his sea kayak for more than forty years. In this book
he recalls many a memorable expedition to wild and beautiful
shores. Amongst magnificent scenery and ever-changing seas, we are
transported to Jura, Scarba, the Garvellach Isles, Mull, Staffa,
the Treshnish Isles, the Monach Isles, Iona, Lewis and the Uists,
Skye, the Orkneys, and the Shetland Isles. Along the way, he
explains a great deal about kayaking, about the wildlife and
history of the areas he visits. More than that, however, he makes
us feel that we are with him in his kayak. Through his vivid and
beautifully crafted prose, we experience the terror of a force nine
gale, the tranquillity of moonlit trips, and the lure of tiny bays
and seal-meadows accessible only to a slim kayak. We encounter
dolphins, otters, unidentified monsters and nuclear submarines.
This is a book to set the imagination adrift and appeal to the
Robinson Crusoe in all of us; a book for those seeking wider
horizons, be their vessel an armchair or a kayak.
Turreted fairytale peaks, glistening snowfields, waterfalls
plunging over immense cliffs into the sea, a million tons of ice
capsizing - this is the setting for "Fallen Pieces of the Moon", an
account of a kayak trip along the west coast of Greenland, paddling
about 150 miles of coastline in the Nuuk fjords area. Into the
day-to-day account of contending with unsettled weather such as
fog, unstable icebergs, midges and bugs by the billion, are woven
insights into Inuit culture - their language, their shamanic
practices, their hunting and navigation techniques and much more.
On the way, the reader learns a great deal about the Arctic
animals, pollution and the Arctic environment. Information on the
early Arctic whalers, when whole fleets were beset and crushed by
ice, is included; and an appreciation will be gained of the
hardships endured by the Viking settlers and explorers such as
Frobisher and Franklin who suffered scurvy, frostbite and
starvation. Told with humour, the book is endlessly informative and
entertaining on topics ranging from cannibalism, kayak rolling and
Inuit string games to cargo cults or how the invention of bully
beef influenced naval tactics." Fallen Pieces of the Moon" is a
celebration of a sparse, billion-year-old landscape where the roots
of things, both physical and human, seem less hidden. It conveys
something of the wonder and awe that Greenland inspires in all who
have been there. It describes days of absolute stillness, sliding
though shoals of waxing suns; ephemeral cloudscapes on broad-winged
breezes; a high corrie where jet black ravens float in a crystal
bowl of Alpine air; and the ever-present icebergs like cathedrals
of glass, like floating jewels, like fallen pieces of the moon.
William Hutchison Murray (1913 - 1996) was one of Scotland's most
distinguished climbers in the years before and after the Second
World War. As a prisoner of war in Italy he wrote his first classic
book, Mountaineering in Scotland, on rough toilet paper which was
confiscated and destroyed by the Gestapo. The rewritten version was
published in 1947 and followed by the, now, equally famous,
Undiscovered Scotland. In 1951 he was depute leader to Eric Shipton
on the Everest Reconnaissance Expedition. In later years he became
a successful novelist and pioneer conservationist.
The west coast of Scotland casts a spell on anyone with a taste for
adventure, a feeling for the past or a love of the wild,
uninhabited places. With tidal currents of awesome power running
between fascinating patterns of islands, it is a challenging place
for any type of small craft. Robin Lloyd-Jones has been exploring
here in his sea kayak for more than forty years.In this enchanced
new edition of Argonauts of the Western Isles he takes us on many a
memorable epedition to wild and beautiful shores. Amongst
magnificent scenery and ever-changing seas, we are transported to
Jura, Scarba, the Garvellach Isles, Mull, Staffa, the Treshnish
Isles, the Monack Isles, Iona, Lewis and the Utis, Skye, the
Orkneys, the Shetland Isles to places with music in their names,
like Tir Nan Og the land of the ever-young, places which, once
visited, become part of you.Along the way the author tells us a
great deal about kayaking, about the wildlife and the history of
the area but, more than that, he makes us feel that we are with him
on his kayak.We experience what it is like to set out with one's
destination below the horizon and nothing but open sea ahead, to
bivouac under the stars, to spend the night aboard a wreck, to be
'hunted' by the vortex of the Corryvreckan whirlpool, to paddle
into dark, booming caves, to feel an Atlantic swell rolling beneath
the kayak and to become part of its rhythm. Through the author's
vivid descriptions we know the terror of a force nine gale, the
tranquillity of moolit trips, and the lure of tiny bays and
seal-meadows accessible only to a slim kayak. We encounter
dolphins, otters, unidentified monsters and nuclear submarines. And
when he writes of the magic of remote islands, the Robinson Crusoe
in all of us is awakened.This is a book to set the imagination
adrift, a book for those seeking wider horizons, be their vessel an
armchair or a kayak.
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