We left Camas Mor with some reluctance, it's a lovely spot and one that's usually difficult to land on. Ahead of us the sea shaded from aquamarine to indigo and every shade of aqua blue in between. The cliffs are high here and we began to pick out the stacks near to our destination.
A glimpse of another strip of pale golden sand caught our attention - and if Camas Mor is difficult of access then this beach takes it to another level. Backed by rugged, loose cliffs it would be a tricky scramble down and back. The scale of the place is put in perspective by the group of walkers on the skyline near the lowest cliffs......
We were now paddling in emerald green water - an indication of some depth over a sandy seabed. The sandstone stacks rose up in front of us, intricate and challenging.
When we came to shallower water the sea colour changed again - bright turquoise alternating with a deep green where patches of laminaria weed grow from the seabed......
...while behind us the emerald green was stunning - flashes of light darting across the seabed as the bright sunshine was refracted off the ripples on the surface.
As if this couldn't get any better, the colour of the water intensified close to the stacks, which added their own warm red shade to provide contrast.
Against an intensely blue summer sky, the contrast of the sandstone's red was startling.
Suddenly, we were past the stacks and the height of the land fell quickly to Rubh Reidh (the smooth headland). Rubh Reidh is named for the appearance of the sloping slabs. These are of a different type of sandstone, termed autoclastic (made of itself) and are understood to have been sediments broken and tilted 30 degrees to the northwest, possibly by earthquakes.
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