Hi All, sitting out a pasing storm front in Fort William at the mo so we've ducked into an internet cafe. Hence I'm posting this time (Sami won't let me near her precious iphone in case my over-size fingers break it!)
Shame there has (thus far...) been insufficient interest in the "naked ramble" option, could definitely raise some extra cash - and laughs! C'mon folks, put your money where it counts!!!
Jack - sorry we've missed you, so near and yet so far!
As Sami already said, we've just completed the West Highland Way, 96 miles of glorious scenery and a taste of true wilderness atop Rannoch Moor. Finally managed to see Azure Hawker (been after that one for a while now) and seen loads of new plants. Stuff that you simply don't find in London - Alpine Lady's Mantle, Yellow Saxifrage, Great and Oblong-leaved Sundews. Still haven't found Pale Butterwort or Fairy Foxglove - but the Walk ain't over yet! Sam called Nightjar a couple of evenings ago which was the first of the trip. Recent misses have been the endemic Loch Lomond Dock, Feral Goats and Wallabies (!) so we'll have to return at a later date. Preferably outside of midge season. And not during the wettest summer on record...sigh.
Next leg of the journey is a low-level route along the Great Glen from Fort William to Inverness. Just 76 miles

We're hoping for Pine Marten at a known site. So far we've seen the scat but not the beastie itself. Oh, and Nessie is on the cards too with luck!!
Butterflies have been noticeable only in their near absence. We've walked through miles and miles of flower-filled meadows, glorious sunny hillsides, heathy bogs and wet runs full of cotton-grass. One area had 22 Ringlets and a single SPBF. Another wide expanse had a handful of SPBFs and a couple of Green-veined Whites. A third site held 5 Common Blues and around ten Small Heath. Other than that we've seen maybe 30 individual butterflies and about as many bees. Even the sundews and butterworts are mostly empty of insect prey. Apart from numerous micro moths and the midges there seems to have been a near total collapse of insect life up here. Frightening. Next year can only be worse, I fear.
Brighter news is that we met Fred Macaulay whilst walking to Bridge of Orchy. We went to his gig that night and were part of the act. The following day he walked up to Kinlochleven with 80s band Hue & Cry (I was a big fan in my younger days, so that in itself was a bit of a thrill for me). Sami and I joined them for a while and were interviewed on a mountain top. The whole thing was televised and is being shown on Scottish BBC during the first week of September. Find it on Sky and tune in. It's called Fred Macaulay's West Highland Wa-hey and is raising money for Scottish Children in Poverty. Should be good.
That's all for now. Hopefully the rain will pass quickly and we can get out there and find that elusive Marten. Or Nessie!!!
Cheers for now,
Gibster.