Yesterday, we were at the most northerly tip of Britain, Dunnett Head, where sits an elegant, still operational lighthouse, built in 1830. On a rise just above it there is a collection of abandoned box-like buildings that once housed radar equipment, their utilitarian ugliness blighting what is otherwise a romantic spot from which to gaze over to Orkney and scan the sea, hopefully, for whale sightings. A few days before, we were at another ex-radar station, Balnakiel, near Durness, though that one has been imaginatively repurposed as a craft village, complete with a chocolatier operating from a classy coffee shop. Radar stations per se have had their day, but lighthouses remain, a tribute to early technology and the role it still has in navigation.
But the seas
around here were busy with traffic long before the invention of lighthouses. On
the island and mainland coasts, the remains of buildings from as long ago as five-thousand
years reveal evidence of frequent and prolonged connections with Scandinavia.
In the (most northerly) town of Thurso, there is a ruined church that looks
nothing special, but we had the good fortune to visit it on a morning when
Maureen, a volunteer custodian-cum-historian, was on duty to inform the curious.
She was at pains to point out that what is visible above ground is only the
latest iteration of a place of worship that has been on the site since the time
of the Picts. In populous places, new buildings sit upon old foundations.
Is the same
true of cultural mores? I’ve been reading some short stories by George McKay
Brown, an Orcadian author who was writing in the early 20th century.
His stories and characters are peppered with references to Vikings, Norwegians,
whaling, fishing, crofting and religious observance, reflecting the cultural
influences of the past upon the living. History, in that sense, is like
archaeology. Funny-sounding place name? Probably of Norse origin and
descriptive of a feature or purpose. But names stick, whereas other traditions
fade more readily. There are only residual traces nowadays of the particularly
strict Presbyterian ethic that is the backdrop of McKay Brown’s stories:
supermarkets are open on Sundays until ten p.m. and churches in smaller hamlets
have faded notices pinned to the doors announcing their closure and suggesting
alternative venues for worship.
Change is
driven by many factors, incomers being one. Some people move here to build a
different kind of life for themselves Like Phil, the Mancunian building
contractor, who sold up and is now the contented owner of Windhaven (the
most northerly campsite in Britain). Unlike me, he doesn’t miss Manchester. His
neighbour, who crafts objects in wood, is from Yorkshire. In the town of Tongue
(a corruption of the Old Norse “tunga”, a spit of land) there is a famous
bakery that, when it closed its doors, was revived – with a great deal of style
– by a young couple whose commitment to wholesome baking is apparent in the
excellence of their goods. He is from London; she is from Japan. And, on a walk
towards a remote beach, we passed through a croft and were greeted by the new
owners, a young couple from England. They had been there only five months and
were “loving it”. Crofting, they explained, is a pure form of sustainable
farming. When it comes to the future of farming, there is no need to reinvent
the wheel!
This wild
and windy corner of Scotland will stay that way for some time to come. The
lighthouse could well be here in another 184 years. What is changing is the
population. This current wave of incomers is another element of
history-in-the-making. They will certainly adapt to the peculiarities of the
terrain. They will also, in time, redefine what it is to be a Scottish
Highlander.