Butter Road

Himself had to go into Ballydehob for an appointment. I hitched a ride and decided to walk the old Butter Route from Ballydehob to Schull, a 10km meander. The sun was shining, my sandals had dried out from the blipmeet on Bere Island, I had cheese and apples - I sallied forth. This is lovely route - once used to take butter (on donkeys) all the way to Cork where it was sold at the wondrously named Firkin Crane - a firkin as you will know is a small barrel containing around 9 gallons or 34 litre!

First you go along small roads, the estuary on your left, then up into the hills with glimspes of the sea beyond.  As I was approaching the start of the proper butter route, a tiny greenway, five cars passed me - so far all I'd seen was a man on a tractor. I squeezed into the hedge then to my alarm saw they were full of walkers and they were doing my walk! How dare they! I lingered in a field and ate my lunch, letting them get ahead.
That worked. A lovely meander amongst all this greeness. I met an old man with the bluest eyes, we agreed it was a grand day, a fine day for walking. I climbed some rickety stone steps to peek into a ruined house, sneaked into an old barn to look at some ancient tractors and jumped (carefully) on stepping stones to cross a proper ford. The peacock butterflies were out too.
Arriving in Schull I needed a huge ice cream and tried a pink Magnum (this info is for Lady Marchmont who is partial to a Magnum)  - not really recommended, even the chocoolate was pink, though I do like the expresso flavoured one.
I rendezvoused with Himself and we had a quick chat up with TJ. Schull was heaving. We admired some huge etchings in the Blue House Gallery and on returning home I was straight out again for a swim. No jellies, clear cold water - heavenly.

Still trying to sort out my new Blip regime. I feel terrible if people comment and I don't so the new idea is to turn off comments during the week and put them on again at the weekend. Might work. Bear with me.

Comments
Sign in or get an account to comment.