Thursday, 28 June 2012

The Day We Saw the Warship - and the Lifeboats !

On Sunday we went out to the Skellig's once more.  We had Kathleen with us for the first time well over  year and our "regular" co skipper Breda.  It was an almost perfect day - the only thing was the lack of any wind, which meant that we had to motor all the way.
We took lots of photo's - of the Napoleonic look-out tower on the end of the peninsula, of lunch with all the flowers on it (all of which are edible) and the islands.  But the first real surprise was the naval frigate just sitting off the islands.  It was traveling very slowly around and around the islands.  It continued to do this well after we had headed for Valentia for the night and a deserved drink at the hotel there !  The possible purpose of this action only became a little clearer to us 10 days later.


The Napoleonic look-out tower.
A fine day and the naval frigate by the Skelligs
Breda on watch !
The small landing stage on Skellig Michael
Some of the thousands of Gannets on Skellig Beog
Very calm conditions
And here we are, Jill and yours truly.
The lighthouse at Valentia
 Neither of these two lifeboats are the regular one from Valentia.  She was in Southampton being fitted with the new, more powerful engine and the crew were being re-trained.
An idyllic scene
The Protestant Church on the island. A really lovely little structure from when the island was the trans-Atlantic nerve center for the first cable to be laid between Britain and the USA.
 For Kathleen ! One of her stones, with a cross!
The beautiful track down to Glenleam Gardens.
The 19th Century clock tower - and it still goes !
The next day the outer boat was heading off to the north. And here behind the two lifeboats is our yacht - Baltic Amber, with Cahersiveen and the Kerry mountains in the background. It took very competent boat handling to squeeze Baltic Amber into the corner so I was as close to the pub as possible.!
Here we are after a rainy early morning heading back to Dingle - a couple of hours away..
Amazing cloud scapes.
And 10 days later on the TV news we got a hint of what the frigate was doing - apart from simply wasting time !  You see, there was one of the largest drug seisures in Dublin.  So, it could well have been brought in around this time and  lodged in its various houses.  And then the culprits picked up.

1 comment:

  1. You tell a great story - I was hooked till the end to see what the frigate was up to! Super photos, great food, a good read.

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