








The adage “you get what you pay for” rings true for hostels in Oban. The YHA hostel was booked, so I ended up reserving at an independent hostel a short walk from the bus stop. At a mere £9/nite, it’s serviceable at best, with only a toilet in the WC (the washbasin is in my room), a separate shower (with only a handheld showerhead and a questionable door bolt), and a cramped and cluttered dining room/kitchen combo that’s barely big enough for three people to function in comfortably, yet is expected to serve eight or more at a time.
I’m here for two nights, giving myself a day to transition from Jura before I head off to the WWOOFing week in Fort William on Monday. Besides, travel options on a Sunday are limited, and getting to Fort William from either Jura or Oban would have been near impossible.
I got to Oban around 9pm (still daylight) and bunked my first evening, Saturday, with three 20-something gals from near Inverness who are on a bicycling/surfing holiday. Somehow surfing and Scotland just don’t pair up in my mind, but apparently it’s quite a sport on the west coast. I was astonished that so much gear and clothing and groceries strewn around the room last night could fit into the three small bags they took when they left this morning.
Taking advice from one of the hosts last night, I avoided the morning rush by showering before 7 on Sunday morning and dining before 7:30. No one was going for a ferry (they don’t run that early on Sundays), so the morning rush turned out to be just me and a fellow who works at the hostel until about 8.

Sunday was lazy and somewhat boring, mainly because Oban itself feels like a ho-hum, in-between place, a tourist-driven port city that ferries folks to the Hebrides, whale watching tours, nature treks, and other water- and island-based activities. Dozens of three-story stone hotels line the waterfront, and one street behind the main drag is elbow-to-elbow row houses, all converted to B&Bs. Although houses surround the city, Oban feels as if it exists solely to move tourists from one place to another with all the efficiency and charm of a trucking company.

“It was all much more fantasy than the first one.” A woman at the table next to me at The Pancake Place echoed my own thoughts to her companions afterward. “There’s absolutely nothing real about the second movie.”
The film had let out a little before 5, and I was hungry. Pubs and restaurants usually don’t start serving until 6 or so, and nothing looked appealing. The one promising restaurant I found, the Studio tucked out of the way on a hill, was booked all night. So I ordered some takeaway fish and chips from Norie’s, went to the bay, and watched the swans groom themselves on the sparkling water. It was warm with a light breeze. I walked around the streets some more, got to Tesco’s grocery store and a local coffee shop too late to buy dessert (each was closed), and decided on this place on the main street of Oban.

My mood today has been inward, and although I wasn’t in the mood for much interaction when I got back to the hostel, the evening picked up good energy after I met my new roomies, Donna and Isla.
Donna was bright and youthful. At just nineteen or so, she was staying for a second stint of four days at the hostel to work at the seal recovery center ten miles outside of Oban. She’s from Glasgow, and has a weekend job now at the center, after doing her internship/volunteering there. She bursts with excitement over her new career.
Isla was just coming off a deeply personal woman’s retreat on Mull, and was trying to ease her return to the real world to avoid the spiritual bends. I was feeling the same about my time on Jura, and we had a wonderful sharing of how important it is to stay with the moment, to listen for and heed the signs of our spirits, no matter what.
“Oban doesn’t hold energy,” concluded Isla, who has had the same response to the city as I have. “It leaks away.”
That’s a good way to describe this place—an energy leak, a transition place, a pass-through location. I’m glad to be one of those travelers who are leaving first thing tomorrow morning.