[Up]
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next]
[Date Index]
[Thread Index]
Re: Dalmally
Hi Juli
Its awesome to read your description 
of Dalmally and area. I closed my eyes, and I could smell and feel the 
air.
My Sinclair`s came from Perthshire, which I know 
nothing about yet.
Ken W Sinclair
 
----- Original Message ----- 
Sent: Wednesday, March 24, 1999 7:39 AM
Subject: Dalmally
 
>
>Hi Donald and Friends -
>
>Dalmally 
Church is beautiful.  The square shaped clock tower with 
the
>attached octagonal church is very unusual but beautifully positioned 
on its
>small rise of land.
>
>My gran and I parked in the 
parking lot of the church and had a wonderful
>lunch of Scotch broth and 
soft rolls in the car as we watched the sheep in
>the adjourning 
field.  After lunch I scrambled up the hill and through the
>gate in 
the stone wall to enter the cemetery.  I only walked through the 
old
>section - closest to the church.
>
>My first impression 
of the church and cemetery is difficult to describe.
>Immediately I felt 
overwhelming excitement and yet even more pronounced was
>the deep sense 
of peace or balance that washed over me.  Somehow I knew I
>had "come 
home."
>
>The air in Dalmally, to quote my gran, "is sweet" and 
combined with the soft
>Scottish mist that was falling created an almost 
theatrical atmosphere.
>February is a wonderful time to visit the 
Highlands if you are interested in
>capturing a feeling of what it might 
have been like years past.  The stark
>form of the bare trees against 
the low hanging gray sky, the intense green
>of the grass, the mounds of 
rust colored dead bracken and everything around
>you water logged all 
combine with the beautiful clear air.  Time stops.
>Your senses are 
overcome with the rugged beauty of the land.  I wanted to
>taste the 
rain, listen to the "squish" of my shoes in the soft ground, touch
>the 
moss covered stones, fill my lungs to capacity with the fresh cool 
air
>and photograph all that I saw and do this all 
simultaneously.
>
>Dalmally Church and cemetery is beautifully 
kept.  Dunoon cemetery struggles
>with an outrageous level of 
vandalism (and an apparent apathy to it.)  There
>was no evidence of 
such a problem in Dalmally.
>
>The high gloss red double door is 
very welcoming.
>
>Donald, all the stones in the old section face 
East - do you know why?  I
>have heard tales of "The Gates of Heaven 
always being open in the East."
>Some stones would be easier to view if 
they were inscribed on the other
>side.  It is difficult to squeeze 
between the stone and the side of the
>church when the stone is 6 inches 
from the building to read the inscription.
>So there must be a very 
important reason for this.
>
>For anyone visiting Scotland - Argyll 
is worth the visit.  I thoroughly
>enjoyed the Loch Awe area.  
Kilchurn Castle, at times described as gloomy,
>has become my favorite 
piece of real estate.  It is currently up for sale -
>asking price - 
bids over 150,000 pounds.  Worth every penny as far as I 
am
>concerned.  A group of Germans were looking at it while I was 
there.
>Wordsworth was also impress with Kilchurn and wrote the 
following:
>
> "Child of a loud-throated war, the mountain 
stream
> Roars in thy hearing; but thy hour of rest
> Is come, and 
thou art silent in thy age,
> Save when the winds sweep 
by...
>
>Personally I think Kilchurn and Loch Awe deserve a little 
more exciting
>poetry - but hey I'm not Wordsworth.
>
>Time to 
get on.
>
>Have a great day.
>
>Juli
>
>[ 
This is the Sinclair family discussion list, sinclair@jump.net.
>[ To get off or on 
the list, see http://www.mids.org/sinclair/list.html