Up Helly Aa

   Its that time of year again. Lerwicks Up Helly Aa takes place every year at the end of January, come what may rain or shine. The viking festival is a very rare event not to be missed, many hours of preparation go into making it a very colourful occasion especially for the chief Juizer Jarl and his squad of hairy vikings. 

 We have one chalet left (due to a cancellation) for any last minute visitors! The chalets are only 5 minutes drive away from Lerwick and make a excellent base for visitors, open all year round.

Welcome to Easterhoull Chalets blog!

With Christmas and New Year celebrations over for another year, the village of Scalloway (Shetlands ancient capital) looks forward to the fire festival, held in the village under the shadows of the castle, built for Earl Patrick Stewart in the late sixteenth century. Patrick was a very evil man and treated the locals very unfairly, however his evil ways was finally his undoing and he was tried, found guilty and hanged in Edinburgh!

Seal pup’s big adventure gives motorist a gluff

An adventurous seal caused quite a fright when it was spotted on a road in Bressay, miles from the water.

Gemma Tulloch, 28, said she had to look twice when she saw the hefty pup by the roadside at about 11am.

She jumped out of the car to take a quick photo of the animal which was close to their home before contacting her dad who helped rescue the seal with a tonne bag.

“It was a complete shock. I had to take a double look, it was quite unexpected,” she said.

“He seemed to be following the verge of the road…he didn’t know where he was going.

“I was in the car and I was just going in over the island and he was just opposite our house. I hadn’t got very far and I stopped and I thought I would have to do something about him becasue he clearly wasn’t meant to be there.”

After being taken over to Lerwick the seal was transported up to Hillswick Wildlife Sanctuary.

Jan Bevington who runs the sanctuary with husband Pete, said the seal had belly-flopped along the road for about two miles.

“It’s a female and a decent size,” she said.

“I can’t see anything totally wrong with her but it’s just collapsed in its pen and it’s snoring near enough.

“It’s so tired I assume it’s the two-mile flop that’s done it.”

Mrs Bevington said seal pups that have moulted can go on land looking for food if they are hungry.

She believes the seal is about four to six weeks old and weighs about 30 kilos.

And other than being dehydrated the initial signs were that seal was in good health.

“If she’s ok we’ll feed her up for a week and let her go,” she said.

 

Fishermen’s photos inspire new exhibition

The latest exhibition at Shetland Museum’s Da Gadderie, At Sea and Ashore, is a showcase of four Shetland fishermen’s own photographs.

The idea for the exhibition came as a result of their photos being posted on social media sites – giving viewers a window into their world, both while they were off fishing, but also during the periods ashore.

The digital images got a huge reaction from the public, and illustrate not only the technical abilities of the self-taught amateur photographers but demonstrate their artistic ability too.

 

So who are they?

Johnny Simpson from Whalsay left school aged 16 in 1974. He got a job on the Whalsay boat Zephyr as cook and has been with her in all her incarnations ever since.

He got his first camera, a 35mm Ricoh KR10 back in the late seventies.

Now using a Nikon D4, Johnny says he was slow to embrace the change but soon saw the advantages to digital. His images of orcas taken while fishing and mirrie dancers while ashore are among his most popular.

Kevin Ritch, who has lived in both Unst and Burra, got the chance of a job on a Yell boat when he was 15.

His mother sent him off with a set of oilskins and he enjoyed the work so much it was three months before he went home.

He spent 10 years with the Madalia and then sat his ticket and got a job on the Alison Kay for 10 years.

He took a share when the new boat came along and has sailed as her second skipper for the last 15 years.

Kevin got his first camera when he was 16 and moved on to digital in 2001. His quirky, artistic images of birds and seascapes when he’s fishing and his eye for an unusual shot ashore are well appreciated on Facebook.

Ian Reid from Whalsay left school in 1990, gaining a job onboard the Korona through the government’s Youth Training Scheme.

He was on her crew for two years, followed by several years with different boats during some difficult years for the industry.

Ian says he was lucky, following the decommissioning of the Zenith in 2003, to get a job with the Resilient crew, and is still with them today.

He has always been interested in photography and after owning various cameras, bought his first digital SLR in 2005.

His favourite subjects when fishing are solans diving and his landscapes are hugely popular. He says without social media very few folk would get to see his and other people’s photos of Shetland.

The fourth set of photographs are a little bit different. They were taken by the late Leslie Williamson of Bixter, shareholder on-board the Evening Star, and were posted by his widow Marlene.

Without the benefit of social media and Facebook people would probably never have been able to share what feels like a portal back in time to the 1960s when the boat and her crew were fishing pioneers.

Looking back half a century later, much in the industry has changed and advanced, but many will recognise and appreciate the working life of the Shetland fishermen then. Thank goodness Leslie took his camera for that shift and that Marlene had the generosity to share them.

At Sea and Ashore opens to the public in Da Gadderie at 2pm on Saturday 14th January and runs until 26th February.

Photo of colossal wave goes global

The moment the wave hits the Skerry of Ashiness - Photo: Ryan Sandison

The moment the wave hits the Skerry of Ashiness - Photo: Ryan Sandison

A SHETLAND photographer who took an iconic image of Storm Conor on Boxing Day has described the attention he received from around the world as "mind blowing".

Ryan Sandison's photo of a massive wave breaking over the Skerry of Eshaness made it into most of the national newspapers and was shared more than 3,200 times online, while it has reached almost half a million users on his Facebook page.

It was also distributed internationally via London based photo agency Rex Features.

Sandison, from Hillswick, said the photo was taken from near a passing place overlooking Stenness and the rocks, which usually shelter the bay there.

"I was out going to see if there was any rough sea," he said, adding that the photo was taken from just outside his car as it wasn't a day to venture out much further.

"I was thinking 'this is a pretty good shot', but I wasn't overawed by it because we are used to seeing big seas here – I just thought 'that might not be too bad'," the 39-year old said as he recalled the moment he took the shot.

He added: "It is amazing to witness some of the seas you get around here, but sometimes you can't get a photo.

"Last year, when storm Gertrude hit the isles, the wind was so strong that the tops of the waves were being blown off.

"So it probably was even rougher that day, with the wave tops being cut off by the wind. On Boxing Day conditions were just perfect."

And there is some doubt as to the actual height of the waves that hammered the west coast of Shetland on that day.

It was widely reported that his photo captured a 46ft wave crashing into the rocks, but he believes it was much higher.

"There are two separate rocks, one is 38 metres high. That wave at its peak was double that height," Sandison said.

"This must have been thousands of tonnes of water hitting that skerry all at once. It was fascinating."

Lyall's Up Helly Aa cider set for launch

AN UP Helly Aa-themed cider is being launched later this month to celebrate Shetland’s Viking festival season.

East Lothian-based cider company Thistly Cross has teamed up with local wholesaler JW Gray to develop and distribute the 5.5 per cent drink in the isles over the coming months.

It will be formally launched at Lerwick’s Grand Hotel on the afternoon of 31 January before going on sale in local pubs and shops.

Thistly Cross sales manager Luke Fenton said the idea for the cider came via this year’s Lerwick Up Helly Aa guizer jarl Lyall Gair, who is a “big fan” of the company’s drinks and has developed a strong friendship with its staff.

“He’s been helping us out over the last three years by coming down to some shows in London, with his big beard and hair, and helping us talk to people about Thistly Cross,” he said.

“He told us all about becoming guizer jarl and he was keen, and we were too, to get involved. We’re a small company making craft cider and we love smaller events where we engage with different communities.”

Gair said the cider has been mooted since the summer when he met up with the Thistly Cross crew in London and he was given a sample of the drink to try while on his way to see the Scotland football team play before production started.

"They gave me a box of the 5.5 per cent cider to try on my way to London on a train with all my Tartan Army friends and me and all of my mates gave it the thumbs up.

"I was introduced to [Thistly Cross'] Peter Stuart at a wedding six years ago and we have kept in contact. Since then he introduced me to Luke a few years after. I keep sending them both a few photos when I find some Thistly Cross in a pub or off-licence."

The badge for the new Up Helly Aa cider.

Fenton said the cider will be available on tap in a range of pubs and hotels in Lerwick, with more premises expected to come on board soon, while it will also go on sale in five-litre boxes in shops.

He said it is a still cider, tastes a “little bit dry and not too sweet” and is suitable for vegans.

The drink will be available during the Up Helly Aa season, and if it is a success then they might make plans to follow it up with a different cider next year.