In May 1933 Margaret Leigh took over the tenancy of Achnabo farm, in a beautiful corner of the West Highlands overlooking the isle of Skye.
In this unsentimental yet exquisitely written book, she recounts a year of farming life there, from the burning of the land and ploughing in March, through planting and sowing in April to haymaking and harvesting in September. Incidental details – such as a visit to the smithy, the arrival of some new bulls and the annual journey of the cows to the summer shielings – provide fascinating insights into farming life.
Local characters and customs feature too, adding another rich dimension to this reflective and poignant memoir of a world now vanished forever.
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'No one has ever realised better the glories of this wilderness of land and water . . . a book of rare quality'
" - The Scotsman
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'The best book that has been written about the West Highlands . . . it has the enthralled quality of a fairy story'
" - Glasgow Herald