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arransound.com radio, blogging, contest, Fingal's Cave, holiday, humor, International Dog of Mystery, Isle of Mull, prizes, Scotland, writing

Calling all writers, vacation lovers, and Arran friends!
Here’s your chance for fame, glory, and a new Kindle fire7 Tablet! Just drop us a note about a holiday memory. It can be a golden childhood recollection, a dream trip, or… the worst trip ever.
Please upload your entry HERE and help support Arransound.com Radio!
One of my vacation memories:

Note from Barb—JohnG on The Write Stuff has a fabulously atmospheric blog about Fingal’s Cave here today, reminding me of the time….
Okay, so maybe my holidays don’t exactly go according to plan.
In celebration of Child#4 completing her last University exam ever, I had (for me) outdone myself on planning our upcoming Isle of Mull trip—booked a cottage and a boat trip to view Scotland’s Fingal’s Cave, stockpiled trip essentials (dog treats and Starbucks Instant Via coffee), and reserved the car ferry. Best of all, weather reports predicted sunshine for the only time in weeks. [NOTE: Readers who know Scotland can just stop smirking. It’s so not attractive…]
What could possibly go wrong? Nothing except stopping for coffee, road repairs, traffic around Loch Lomond, gas, more coffee, and the need to …er… get rid of the coffee. As the arrival time on the GPS edged toward the departure time of the ferry, the Hub sped up until we were taking curves like Nascar champions, while I made helpful remarks regarding the amount of money spent on boat trips we would probably be missing.
“Don’t worry, though,” I assured them. “I can always blog about it.” The Hub went faster, and Child#4 turned an interesting shade of green. She was leaning out the window and threatening to revisit breakfast.
“I’ll take pictures,” I warned her. “For my blog.” (For a well-brought-up young lady, her response was pretty graphic. Then I remembered I brought her up, which explains a lot.) Luckily for all of us, we arrived at the ferry terminal.
Two guys in yellow jackets considered the loaded ferry and conferred. They waved the two cars ahead of us onto the ramp. Guy#1 pointed at our car while Guy#2 shook his head, probably worried about the added coffee and dog treat tonnage. Finally Guy#1 waved us on. Guy#2 told us to pull in at an angle against the closing door, and—clearly absolving himself of any dire consequences caused by our addition—leaped off the boat. Coward.

It’s a short trip from Oban to the Isle of Mull, but on a blustery day it can be full of dramatic views like 13th century Duart Castle, home of Clan Maclean. The boat rolled and some cheering passengers claimed to see dolphins. Others experienced their breakfast. Again.

It should have been a quick drive across to the other side of the island where the boat trip to Fingal’s Cave would depart. Except… the Isle of Mull espouses thrifty Scots virtues, and sees no need to waste precious land (that sheep could be using for bathrooms) on making roads wide enough for more than one vehicle at a time.
Everyone we met smiled and did the British-Wave as their cars did a little ballet…one backing or pulling off until the other could pass.
DIGRESSION: Americans know if you let other drivers cut in front of you, they will own your manhood and, probably, your car and wife as well. So expecting American drivers to not only back-the-f-up when facing another driver, but actually smile and wave? That’s like expecting the Queen to put on a bikini and serve ice-cream to paparazzi. It’s both physically possible and virtually inconceivable.
We’ve lived the UK long enough to wave, back up, smile, lift a hand or at least a finger (no, not that one) and inch our way across the island.
When the car started making cheerful chirping noises, we turned up the radio. Luckily, we made it in time for the tour boat—mainly because it was an hour late. Perhaps at this point I should mention my clothes. I only bring it up because I actually believed the weather reports (Warm!🌞 Sunny!) and online guides for our destination (Paved paths!), so I was wearing sandals and lightweight trousers. (Remember the sandals.)
Finally we got to Staffa for a stunning view of the columns and starkly graphic sheared-off rocks of Fingal’s Cave. Legend says Irish giant Fionn mac Cumhaill (Finn MacCool) and Scottish giant Benandonner threw boulders at each other, creating Ireland’s Giant’s Causeway and the basalt columns of Fingal’s Cave—probably because there wasn’t a giant kindergarten teacher telling them to use their words.
Supposedly, the cave is equally amazing inside. I wouldn’t know. As I was negotiating one of the ‘paved’ paths the rain had converted into bogs, I sank in above my knees.
That bog sucked hard beyond the telling.
For a moment I wondered if I’d keep sinking, but I knew I had to live long enough to blog this. I managed to stagger out, realizing my feet were free. Really free. As in free of my sandals. I bent over, poking around in the bog while a family of Japanese tourists took selfies with my mud-encrusted derriere as the background. (I imagine those photos are on Facebook somewhere, along with comments speculating on the muddy barefoot American waving her tush at them…) I was about to give up when one shoe surfaced. But no amount of prodding could produce the other one.

And that’s when it started to sleet. On the trip back from Staffa to Mull the only things keeping me from hypothermia were the dog sitting on my feet and the hope I could blog about this before pneumonia set in.
Mull itself was absolutely gorgeous. We stopped at a local weaver’s shop before checking into our wonderful cottage. Even in a downpour, it’s easy to be philosophical from inside a beautiful hillside cottage filled with warmth, every possible convenience, coffee, AND wifi. And if your window looks out on sheep grazing by blooming gorse…well, you’re either in heaven or Scotland.

Friends had told us we absolutely had to eat at Cafe Fish (“The only things frozen are our fishermen”) so we stopped in Tobermory, a seaside village almost too charmingly picturesque to be believed.
But we couldn’t linger to explore because as we headed out, the car’s cheerful chirping stopped. So did the power steering. The Hub wrestled it back to the ferry terminal, but as we pulled into line, our old friend Guy#1 came over and helpfully pointed out, “Yer bonnet’s steamin’.”

We took our steamin’ bonnet out of the ferry line and uphill to the Bayview Garage, where blue-haired mechanic Billie told us the water pump was a goner. I wanted to tell her it was okay because I could blog it, but I wasn’t sure I’d survive the reactions of the Hub and Child#4.
When Billie couldn’t source a new pump until Monday, we checked into Mull’s very last hotel room, booking the ferry back to Oban as foot passengers for the next day. (I’m not saying Child#4 was bitter about sharing the room with us, but she did compare the parental snorage to “call and response” of wild moose. Even I wasn’t sure I could blog that.)
Alas for Child#4’s hopes of catching up on her sleep on the train from Oban to Glasgow. While I took the dog for a final constitutional, she went ahead to grab seats for us.
Text from Child#4: Got us seats together. Next to baby. Screaming. As they do.
“That’s okay,” I shouted over shrieks of pure infant fury. “That means he’s tired and he’ll probably go to sleep.” I was right. That baby dropped right off to sleep—three and a half hours from hell later as his father carried him off the train. The rest of the time he screamed nonstop, ignored by his (deaf and/or stoned) parents.
I mentioned the blogability of this experience, and Child#4 informed me that not only would she never have children, but she was seriously considering moving someplace where neither children nor blogging are allowed, like prison or the set of Inside Amy Schumer.
Fame, glory, free books, and bragging rights! (And a Kindle fire7 Tablet!)
So…I’m sure you do a better job of holidays. Give us a brief description, and you’ll be entered in ArranSound.com contest.
Click here to enter! (For more info and fine print and all that, click here.)
I tip my hat to the Mistress! When I first started reading this I immediately put down my tea and pushed it as far away from me as possible. I remember this vacation. I remember what happened when I snorted tea. Fortunately new keyboards are not expensive. Not only did you have perfect fodder for your blog, you also had a damn good excuse for a pedicure. I think it was a good trip.
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Well, there were a couple of other things that went well, and I am as always very sorry about your keyboard. Maybe I should just order you replacements by the dozen?
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The sleet got me. Sleet! Not sunny and warm. Sleet. I think I’d have gone back to the bog after that. Head first.
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Yeah, sure, it was Scotland and the only thing you can count on for the weather is that you can’t count on the weather, and blah, blahety, blah… IT WAS JUNE for god’s sake. Is nothing sacred? How could I be standing 50% barefoot in sleet in JUNE? Now, no matter what month, if I’m travelling in Scotland, you better believe there’s a pair of wellies and a rolled-up down jacket with my name on them.
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This story is just as good second time around. 😀 I have spent a lot of time in UK. I never listen to the weather predictions and I always bring extra jackets, sweaters and footwear. 😉
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Wellies. And wellie socks. Don’t leave (Scottish) home without them!
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Belly-laugh worthy the second time around! Is Child #4 speaking to you yet?
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It was touch and go but I won her over with copious amounts of room-service ice cream and a promise to never ever share a room again.
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Reblogged this on Judith Barrow and commented:
Fame, glory, free books, and bragging rights! (And a Kindle fire7 Tablet!)
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THANK YOU JUDITH! Mwa.
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Reblogged this on Thorne Moore and commented:
Barb Taub’s adventurers on Scottish islands and a competition. What’s not to love?
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So glad you liked it and thanks a bazillion for the share!!
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The bar’s set high!! Loved this.
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Thanks Alex!
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My trips to Mull have nearly always been charmed with decent weather for at least four days in a week. That’s late March to mid June, in case you wonder. But I’ve never worn sandals on a trip out to Staffa!
Was that the Salen garage? They fixed a puncture/wrecked tyre for me once. Island prices are quite high…
Love Mull. Wish I could go back.
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Frankly, the garage being THERE and OPEN meant just about any price they wanted to charge was probably not enough for how grateful we were to them.
Still…that weather? Even for Scotland, having to stand 50% barefoot in SNOW (or at least sleet) in JUNE was insult added to injury.
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I missed this gem the first time around. Thanks for giving me a second chance.
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If there’s anyone who can spin a fabulous vacation story, it’s you!
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I chuckled all the way reading this, and then I got to ‘call and response of wild moose’ and had to laugh out loud. Like loud hard laughing, the kind that wakes people up. Try explaining call and response of wild moose to the unhappy person you disturbed. Ha!
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It’s hard to beat your holidays, Barb, for sheer adventure, tension and chill! I’ll remember this when we get to Scotland. My husband assures me it will be next year…
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