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For almost ten years, I’ve called the Ardnamurchan peninsula home. It’s a place that seeps into you slowly – a land of shifting light, open skies, and the constant presence of the sea. When I first arrived, I knew it was beautiful, but I didn’t yet understand how deeply a place could shape the way you see and feel. Over time, I found myself photographing less for the image and more for the experience itself – the quiet between waves, the warmth of evening light on the hillsides, the calm after a storm. Now, as I pack box after box and prepare to leave this special corner of Scotland, I find my thoughts wandering. I keep returning to how this place has shaped my life over the last decade, and how its wildness will always draw me back. The Peninsula is not a place that reveals itself quickly. It asks you to slow down. The roads twist and narrow until they give way to wide skies, rocky headlands, and the vastness of the sea. When I first arrived, I was struck by the wildness – the sense of being on the very edge of things. It felt raw and untamed. Over time, that wildness became something I relied on. Living here, you become aware of the rhythms that city life hides: tides that reshape the shoreline, light that shifts minute by minute, the sound of wind in the oak trees. You learn the landscape is alive and that you are part of it. My photography was very much my way into that understanding. I explored beaches, bays, hillsides and woodlands with my camera, eager to capture it all. But the longer I lived here, the less I chased the perfect image. I've learnt to wait, to sit quietly as the light changed, to notice how the sea softened rock edges, how mist shrouded the hills, how woodlands glistened after the rain and how silence could say more than a photograph ever could. One place that feels especially important to me is Ardtoe, a quiet sandy bay about twenty minutes – nine miles – from my home. I’ve spent countless hours there. From the shore, the Small Isles of Eigg and Rùm rise out of the water like sleeping giants, their outlines soft in some lights, sharp in others. I’ve stood there in stillness, when the sea becomes a perfect mirror, and in wild weather, when wind-driven spray stings your face and shakes the tripod. Moments like these ground you. You feel small, yet very alive. Over the years, I’ve come to know every turn of the bay there – the coves that appear only at low tide, the rock pools that hold miniature worlds, the patches of sea thrift that burst into bloom in late spring/early summer. Each nook and cranny carries a memory: a sunset photograph, a walk with the dog, a quiet moment after a storm. When you live somewhere long enough, these moments weave into your sense of self. Now, packing boxes and preparing to leave, I reflect less on what I’m leaving and more on what the place has given me. The Peninsula has taught me to pay attention – to light, to weather, to stars and to the moon, each weaving quiet stories during their interplay with the landscape. I’ve learnt that beauty is rarely in grand gestures; it’s in subtle details revealed only when you stay still long enough to see them. Saying goodbye to this place will not be easy. There’s comfort in the familiar patterns of light across the hills, the rise and fall of the tides and the waxing and waning of the moon. I’ll miss all that. When I think of what I take with me, it isn’t just photographs. It’s belonging – years of walking the same paths, watching the same sunsets, feeling part of a landscape. That connection doesn’t end; it simply changes shape. I know I’ll come back. You can’t live here so long without returning. The pull of wind, water, and wide horizons stays with you. I imagine standing at Ardtoe again, camera in hand, watching the light shift over the sea. The connection will still be there – quiet, steady, familiar.
The Peninsula has been more than a home; it has become woven into me. Even as I leave its windswept shores, I carry its shifting light, its ever-changing weather, and its untamed spirit with me. As I bring this, the final blog I will write while I can all the Peninsula home, I know it won’t be long before I return, even if only for a brief visit.
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