cracks and holes

The Giant's Bath Tub, Isle of Harris, Outer Hebrides, Scotland by Christoph Corves

I like to call this "The Giant's Bath Tub". It is situated on the coastal cliffs on the Husinish peninsula, on the Isle of Harris, Outer Hebrides. This rockpool has always been there since I first visited some 40 years ago. It looks out to the Atlantic, capturing the sound of the wind and the waves. Could a giant, living in the mountains, have a more beautiful bath tub?

This photo is part of the visual geography project "Cracks and Holes" which maps places and their stories on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

Shieling, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland by Christoph Corves

As land and food for animals were scarce on the Isle of Lewis, women and children used to spend the summer months with the sheep in the moors. They lived in small shielings that still exist in some places.

This photo is part of the visual geography project "Cracks and Holes" which maps places and their stories on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

Chains and Grass, Isle of Harris, Outer Hebrides, Scotland by Christoph Corves

It was a gray day in March. The clouds were coming down the hills. My mood was as misty as the weather. One of these days when I make photos, feeling that I don’t manage to achieve much. A fine drizzle started to fall. The wind began to pick up. The next front was moving in from the Atlantic. Soon it would be too wet to take my old film camera out of the bag. I walked down to a small pier in West Tarbert, took photos of the pier and the landscape. Walking back to the road I knew, I had not managed to capture the essence of this place. Suddenly it struck me, that focusing on the landscape I had noticed but overlooked the old chains behind the workshop. I went back and was struck by the beauty of these chains in the grass. I shot half a film. This photo captures the heart and beauty of the place - for me.

This photo is part of the visual geography project "Cracks and Holes" which maps places and their stories on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

The Great Wall of Bhaltos, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland by Christoph Corves

I like to call this wall "The Great Wall of Bhaltos". Building dry stone walls is a craft and an art on the Outer Hebrides. This wall is a beautiful example of this land art. It crosses the Bhaltos Peninsula, which is owned by the Bhaltos Community Trust. The Bhaltos Community Trust was the first community trust that was founded to take over the community's crofting land on the Outer Hebrides, in 1998. It set an important example for other communities to follow suit in the comunity-based Scottish land reform movement.

Find out more about the Bhaltos Community Trust here:

https://bhaltostrust.co.uk/

This photo is part of the visual geography project "Cracks and Holes" which maps places and their stories on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

SS Metagama, Stornoway Historical Society, Isle of Lewis, Scotland by Christoph Corves

This painting shows the steam ship Metagama. On Saturday 21 April 1923, the SS Metagama sailed from Stornoway to Canada, with 300 young Lewis emigrants on board, all but 20 of them young men, with an average age of 22 (Wikipedia). This journey was part of a wave of mass emigration from the islands. After the highland clearances, the loss of many young men in the British imperial wars and the first world war, this emigration in the 1920s left a lasting trauma on the isles.

You can see this painting in the office of the Stornoway Historical Society. Malcolm Macdonald, the director of the Society, found the painting in a container of construction debris at the harbour. When the harbour office was renovated, the painting was simply thrown away. Now it hangs on Malcolm's wall.

Information on the SS Metagama:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Metagama, 20.09.2025

This photo is part of the visual geography project "Cracks and Holes" which maps places and their stories on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

The Rock, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland by Christoph Corves

I had walked to the end of the road. Past all the houses. Past Uig, Breanish and Mealista. I had seen the Giant’s Beach. The sun had set over the Atlantic. The only sound was the wind in the grass.

The photo is part of the visual geography project "Cracks and Holes" which maps places and their stories on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

On the boat from Tarbert to Uig by Christoph Corves

On the boat from Tarbert, Isle of Harris, to Uig, Isle of Skye. The lady at the Cal Mac ferry terminal in Tarbert had told me, "Don't worry, my dear, there will be no waves at all." I had told her that I got sea sick easily. She was not quite right with her forecast, but a good plate of fish 'n chips and a cup of tea from the boat's cafeteria made this a beautiful journey.

The photo is part of the visual geography project "Cracks and Holes" which maps places and their stories on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

The Giant's Beach, Isle of Lewis, Outer Hebrides, Scotland by Christoph Corves

The Giant's Beach. This beach is right at the end of the road. I always wondered how these pebbles got onto that beach. Did they roll down the mountain? Did the sea wash them up on the shore? Did a giant play with them on the beach?

The photo is part of the visual geography project "Cracks and Holes" which portrays places and their stories on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

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Stornoway Castle by Christoph Corves

Stornoway Castle, Outer Hebrides, Scotland, 2025

In the visual geography project "Cracks and Holes" I map places and their stories on the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. Stornoway Castle was built by Sir James Matheson who bought the entire Island of Lewis in the 19th century. Matheson was a drug dealer. He made his fortune trading opium to China. When China attempted to stop the opium trade, Matheson convinced the British government to start the opium war against China. He evicted dozens of villages on the Isle of Lewis to establish hunting estates for the British elites. Organized crime was part of the British establishment. Scotland and particularly the Outer Hebrides were treated as other colonies of the British empire.

Shot on Kodak Tri-X400 film.