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Someone who cared had placed a bunch of wild bluebells on Edal's
memorial plaque.
They were wilting now, in the midday summer sun. But they had lost none of their poignancy.
The old stone dyke is there, sheltering the rowan tree and the memorial to Edal. But of the house itself there is no trace. After the fire, the site was cleared, and the only indication of its whereabouts is a simple memorial with a message to visitors that Gavin Maxwell's ashes lie below, on this, the site of Camusfearna. So much of it has gone; it is hard to imagine those days of activity . . .
Mij became a constant companion. He lived in the house, shared the author's food and bed, and accompanied him everywhere. Maxwell made a careful study of the otter, with a view to writing a book about Mij. However, it must be remembered that Gavin Maxwell was ahead of his time in his love for otters. To many people, otters were vermin which depleted fish stocks and should be exterminated. Thus, little more than a year after bringing him back from Iraq, Mij met his end under a roadman's pickaxe. Maxwell was naturally devastated, but soon resolved to replace Mij - otters had become a major part of his life.
Teko was an otter that Maxwell found in very similar circumstances to Edal. The owner was going abroad. A home had to be found for Teko. At the first experimental meeting, it was quite obvious that Edal was possessive of her home territory, and friendship with Teko would be out of the question. So separate quarters were constructed, and separate exercise regimes devised, to keep the two otters apart and happy. Then at two years old, Edal nearly died. She developed an infection of the brain arising from a septic tooth. She underwent a personality change and attempted to savage anything or anyone who approached her. At the same time, she was partially paralysed and would not eat. The advice from Maxwell's London contacts was to put her down, but the local vet would not hear of it. Despite her aggression, they managed to inject her with antibiotics daily until, when it had seemed a hopeless cause, she eventually began to respond. Edal never looked back, and went on to thrive under a number of 'caretakers' at Camusfearna, as her owner came and went partly on business and partly due to his own failing health.
However, in the early hours of January 20, 1968, a fire devastated Camusfearna. Gavin Maxwell survived with Teko, but Edal was lost - a tragic end to an astonishing decade of otter/man relationships. Maxwell's nearest neighbours at Camusfearna were those folk he chose in his books to call the MacKinnons, at the house he called Druimfiaclach. But by 1966 they were gone and "there was no occupied human habitation within five miles of Camusfearna". By that year too the estate owner was well advanced with forestry planting, and as the author stood on the hill above Camusfearna "there was a dense, dripping ten year old growth of Sitka and larch" at his back. Since then, the conifer plantation has grown and matured and provides dense afforestation down to the very boundaries of the Camusfearna site. A network of uncharted forest roads confuses the pilgrim with a walkers map. And cattle roam the ground where Edal once played, using her memorial stone as a rubbing post. At the gate, a crudely painted sign warns the visitor to 'Beware of the Bull'.
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