MAIN MENU Next Walk Previous Walk Next Month Previous Month

Tuesday 20 July

Brochel Castle

Built in the late 15th or early 16th century by Raasay's first Macleod chief, Calum, the castle is built on a volcanic plug. It provided a strategic stronghold to control (and plunder) shipping on the Sound. Today much of the masonry has eroded, however the full structure would have had four, high, towers and would have presented an impregnable wall towards the sea.

Click on the photographs to see a larger image and use the arrows at the left and right of the larger images to scroll through them:

 
 
The Google map from my phone   Brochel Castle
 
Brochel Castle
     
 
Brochel Castle   Liz - as always, photographing
     
The beach below Brochel Castle
 
 
Malcolm MacLeod (normally known as Calum) built the road almost single-handedly from here to its terminus at Arnish, a distance
of almost 2.5km, over a period of ten years in an effort to save his community.
 
The views are wonderful!
     
 
Liz took some wonderful photographs of like in rock-pools
 
 
Raasay sheep
     
The long and winding road
     
 
A dragonfly   Overlooking the island of Fladda; three houses on it have been restored as second homes. The island can be reached at low tide via a seaweed-strewn natural causeway.
     
Looking across to sky - notice the clouds which often stayed all day
     
 
Amazingly friendly sheep   A rabbit
     
Wonderful sailing!
 
Go to the top of this page