
3 minute read
Mullman’s Merry Christmas
Our older children, Oliver, 14, and Hazel, nine, expressed an interest in buying presents for friends and family for Christmas. So, in true Brooks family tradition, we took them to earn some cash picking winkles. I grew up doing the same and saved up money to buy my own pool table when I was 10.
Picking winkles is not for everyone, especially if the weather is blowing a gale and hail stoning but, luckily, the children had a nice spell of weather over the weekend and we had an enjoyable family time scrabbling around on the shore.
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We came to an agreement with our youngest daughter Blue that she could get an item of her choice at the shop in Salen if she looked after little Oak for us.
Oak didn’t really need a lot of looking after though, as he was knee deep in rock pools pointing out all the sea life.
The picking was regularly interrupted with squeaks of excitement every time they found something hiding among the seaweed. The fl apping butterfi sh were most common, but there were lots of other small fi sh that live among the rocks on the shore and are stranded when the tide goes out; fi sh that Mull otters love to feed on.
These included young sea scorpions, fi ve bearded rockling, gobies, pipefi sh, little fl atfi sh and 15 spine sticklebacks.
We also found squat lobsters, something I do not remember seeing before on my winkling excursions.
We all had to be careful for the often half buried small spiny sea urchins. They are “ beautiful, but get a spine under your nail and you know about it for days.
I found a delicate saddle oyster wrapped around a small stone and a large common whelk attaching its bundle of bubble eggs that you often fi nd washed up on the shore to a rock.
Our two girls have one day at week at Ulva Ferry Primary School doing shore school. All 15 pupils in the school go out with their teachers - yes, they even have two teachers now at that school, for the fi rst time in a long time - and learn all they can about what they fi nd.
They are loving that school. Thank you to everyone involved for making it a school our children look forward to going to - most mornings.
We are in full winter now, but already nature is showing signs of the spring to come.
Our sea eagle pair are hard at work building a new nest for the 2022 season already. One might not expect common dolphins to hang around over the winter, but we have seen small groups of them from our home at Ulva Ferry. We are so lucky to have been granted this home. It’s a dream come true to be able to sit at my window and watch all the wildlife.
And the rays of light!
The lovely late Eleanor Cameron from Bunessan used to pick me up to take me to school.
Thanks to her, those rays of light coming down through the clouds will always be known to me as ‘God Speaks’ and it seems appropriate.
It’s a regular reminder here on Mull that we are so
lucky to be witness to all of nature’s/God’s creations. For those interested, the common dolphin I wrote about last month is still swimming round and round a fi shing fl oat in Craignure Bay. Daniel Brooks is a wildlife guide, adventure seeker, conservation campaigner, forager, bushcrafter, rewilder and father of four.
His website mullman.co.uk is coming soon.