The mobile coverage is a bit patchy in the North of Scotland, so no updates yesterday I'm afraid. Plus when I got back to base my friends wanted to talk to me so not much time on the computer! Sadly not too many photos because it was such a grey, wet wind day, and everything on the camera looks like grey mush but here's one or two:
I went to Dunnett Head which is as far north as you can go without going in the sea. I had a little walk around and got soaked and buffeted by the wind. Here's the lighthouse:

Very bleak and lonely.
I then headed westwards through the sleet which was rattling on the roof towards Dunnett Bay. Here it is in the rain:

Those waves were quite handsome. With an all weather insulated wetsuit you could have probably done some serious surfing.
Then on to Castletown, which once upon a time was famous for its quarry. They made flagstones here, and had their own little harbour for shipping them all over the world. Hre it is all made out of interlocking flat stones:

Some of the old buildings associated with the quarry are still there and derelict, and a few are being turned into a heritage centre:
Then I headed westwards as the rain beat down on the aluminium panels and the road got narrower and winder to Durness. No pictures because I'd lost the light completely at that point. I turned south westwards on the A838, left at Laxford Bridge and back to Aberdeen via Lairg, Bonar Bridge and Inverness, where I topped up on diesel. I was wondering about the route through the hills in case it was snowbound, but in the even it was mainly rain with the occasional bit of sleet and the road was clear.
Scotland's absolutely huge. I was quite tired after holding the car steady round little twisty roads and winds that seemed intent to blow me off the tarmac. Must do it again over a couple of days so there's time to stop and look at a few things. Fantastic beaches, cliffs, caves, archaeology. Just the thing for me.