Saturday May 23, 2026
Dounby, Orkney Main Isle, Scotland
Distance traveled: 116 km. Cumulative distance: 2595 km
Weather: started out brilliantly sunny and fresh! Lots of "casual water" around and the bike was quite wet but it was easy to wipe off the bird poop. As the day progressed, increasingly cloudy and occasionally threatening.
We were up at 6:30 because we had a planned departure of 7:30. We were booked for the 8:45 am ferry to Orkney and the advised arrival time was ONE HOUR before the scheduled sailing but the Too Bad So Sad cutoff was 30 minutes before sailing. Google Maps had predicted a 15 minute travel time to the ferry last night.
We actually did a pretty good job of getting up with the alarm, getting ourselves showered and organized, checked out by 7:15 and the bike loaded and on the road at 7:31. I was somewhat surprised that at the ferry terminal, we had to go through a gate where we were asked for our reservation name. I was prepared to show my email confirmation but he just looked me up and handed Nan two tickets and a receipt (I had booked passage months ago) and instructed us to proceed directly to the ferry. All the cars were lined up in a "holding area".
We were instructed to wait at the top of the ramp with the two other motorcyclers; cars were coming off the ferry. When our time came, one bus was loaded ahead of us and then the three motorcycles boarded. Each was waved into position and as soon as we were off the bikes, a crew of guys came around and tied our bikes down including laying a piece of carpet over the seat where the rope was to lay over. I'm always glad for this step; I can tie my bike down but these guys do it everyday and it's their responsibility to ensure there isn't an insurance claim. I've been on some ferries where I had to bring my own straps.
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| Laying the carpet to protect the seat. |
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| Do a good job, boys! My deposit is at stake! |
The ferry is pretty big. Not quite as big as one of the BC ferries but plenty spacious. There are more trucks than cars, which surprised me somewhat given this is a Saturday. Also, as we discovered on the ferry, there is a music festival on at Orkney this weekend, so there will be plenty of traffic but appatently ot on this ferry so they must all be on the island already.
You will recall we were booked for the 8:45 sailing , so don't you think I was surprised when we pulled away at 8:30, a total of five minutes after I had said to Nan, "don't worry, we still have 20 minutes before we leave, and they never leave on time!
I can tell you that I was pretty happy that WE were on time, especially as I have a tendency to assume that schedule times are generally a little loose. How much do you think Nan likes that? I was also glad that we had scouted out the ferry terminal yesterday when we were in the neighbourhood as I was having a little trouble with our navigation system. Anyway, once it was clear that we were really underway and not the captain just trying to scare the last few people boarding to hurry up, I went to the pursor's station to find out what gives. Especially as I had double checked my booking confirmation to see that it really did indicate 8:45. It seems that if all the scheduled passengers have boarded, the Captain can make the decision to go, which he did. However, this doesn't mean that we are going to arrive early at our destination, the Captain is going to just go a little slower and reduce the overall fuel consumption. It's a climate initiative.
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| Taken at 8:45 am. We should still have been in dock! |
I could go on ad naseum about the sights we are going to see today. But let me preface your vomiting with a few words about Orkney. It is a harsh, unforgiving group of islands that will boggle the mind with its beauty. But I think the people here are tough and hardy. The wind is always blowing, which you can see by BOTH trees here, leaning hard away from the wind like somebody's comb-over. The colours are brilliant, particularly the pastures filled with cows and sheep, with an almost neon green defying that they are actual natural colours criss-crossed everywhere, seemingly randomly, with stone fences keeping the flocks in their assigned paddocks.
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| OK, so there is FOUR trees. |
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| Wild flowers along the side of the road. |
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| The Earl Patrick Stewart's castle build in 1601-06. |
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| He had a reputation for extravagence, cruelty, ambition, and debt he could not pay. He owed 150,000 pounds at the time of his death. |
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| The castle kitchen. |
There were stone slabs laid at the spots where upright stones would have been placed to complete the circle. I didn't think they were prehistoric, however.











































