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200km Celtic odyssey for missing Dunree sign 26.05.11

by Linda McGrory

HILLWALKERS exploring the Western Highlands of Scotland weren't surprised to find a tourist sign for a local museum. The only problem was - the museum is in Inishowen.
John and Marie Donohue from Glasgow were walking on a beach at Knoydart, a remote peninsula near the Isle of Skye, when they discovered a sign for Fort Dunree, the military museum near Buncrana, Co Donegal.
"The sign was lying just above a shingle beach and there was a stone on top of it, so someone had obviously come across it before us," said John.
By coincidence, the couple had actually visited the museum several years ago on a trip to Ireland as members of the Mountaineering Council of Scotland.
"We recognised the sign immediately and realised it must have blown into the sea at Dunree,” said John.
The avid hill walkers have strong family ties to the Frosses area of west Donegal where they visit every year.
They said they wanted to take the sign home to send it back to the museum but they abided by the unwritten code surrounding flotsam and jetsam.
John and Marie Donohue from Glasgow.
"There is a sort of rule that you cannot take anything from the beach found above the high water mark if someone appears to have put a claim on it. So we just took a photo of it instead," he added. The couple, who have two grown-up sons and three grandsons, decided to send the photo to Marie’s cousin, John Gallagher, who lives near Mountcharles, Co Donegal. John then contacted InishowenNews with the story.
The Fort Dunree sign which was found in the Western Highlands of Scotland.
Knoydart lies between the ports of Mallaig and Kyle and is widely known as 'Britain's last wilderness'.
The missing sign - made of lightweight synthetic material - had originally been posted at the entrance gate to the cliff-top museum, about seven kilometres from Buncrana.
Fort Dunree manager, David Magee, said he was amazed by the sign's Celtic odyssey from the northerly shores of Ireland to the western isles of Scotland.
"A few of our signs have blown away in stormy weather before but we haven't lost any for a couple of years. I think we'll just have to invest in some heavier, metal ones now," he quipped.
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