Brief History of St Kilda

St Kilda, Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Day 19 , 17th July.

Hebrides, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel, Seascape

Here is a boatload of us heading off into the heavy fog and mist in the early-ish morning.

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Hebrides, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, Soay sheep, St Kilda, Travel, Seascape, Wildlife

Soay sheep on the shore.  You can see the self-moulting characteristic on a couple of them.

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Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, Soay sheep, St Kilda, Travel

Soay sheep and the Village

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St Kilda History

People have lived in the Hebrides for 6,000 to 8,000 years and it is likely that they have lived in St Kilda for 5,000 to 5,500 years – so from 3000BC to 3500BC. There are extensive signs of Neolithic tool making on St Kilda with many dolerite quarries.  Some of these are visible from the shore but I didn’t know at the time to make the right photograph.  They produced numerous stone tools including hoe-blades, pounder/grinders and skaill knives. Many of these were worked into the structures of the houses much later, when stone tools were no longer in use.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel .

The pounder/grinders are like the pestle in a mortar and pestle. The equivalent of the mortar is the cylinder quern, which are now very scarce because the islanders used to sell them to tourists in the nineteenth century. The skaill knives are roughly circular with one side for holding and a sharp edge.  One curious thing for this early period is that the stone tools show connections to Orkney and Shetland rather than the nearer islands of Lewis and Harris.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel

Cleit and houses. The drystone structure in the middle distance with a turf roof is probably an 1830s house converted to a byre (for animals to stay in over winter).

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In the Iron Age period (500BC to 500AD), the cultivated area of Village Bay was larger, including a low-lying plain largely now eroded by the sea. There may or may not have been a roundhouse or fort on Hilda or Dun though there are some clues that a souterrain (an underground passageway for storage ) near the current village may have been associated with one.

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Cleit and 1860s house

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However, there was clearly a round house from this period on Boreray, which collapsed in the 1840s and has never been excavated. Boreray is an island off the coast of Hirta that we glimpsed in the distance in an image in a previous post. Its name is of Norse origin and means “Fortress Island”.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel .

The Boreray roundhouse was called Tigh an Stallair, or “House of the Steward”. There would never have been a permanent population on Boreray, so this must have been something of a hunting lodge. It may have been built and used by regular visitors from Harris or Lewis. Bones of seabirds likely to have come from St Kilda have been found at sites in Harris and Orkney, also indicating contact by sea.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel .

The people on St Kilda grew barley and ran cattle and sheep. Though their soil was poor their yields were high due to a judicious use of different kinds of seaweed as fertiliser. They grew sorrel for green vegetables and harvested seabirds and their eggs, including gannets, fulmars, puffins, guillemots and razorbills. Until the nineteenth century they also harvested great auks. In the late nineteenth century they consumed between 300 and 350 seabirds per person per year but this was a tiny fraction of the seabirds available. They also fished from rocks and to some extent from boats using hand lines, being able to catch deep sea fish from the rocks. They also caught some seals but that was a difficult and dangerous exercise.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel

Some of the longer, rounded cleits are remaining houses from before the 1830s. For example, they may have bed cavities in their thick walls. This might be such a case, though it is outside the zone of the old village.

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The last great auk was captured on Stac an Armin in 1840 and was also the last known sighting of a great auk in the British Isles, though a couple were killed in Iceland a few years later. They tied up its feet and held it in their bothy (temporary hut) for three days. Then a storm blew up, preventing their departure. They decided it must be a witch and had caused the storm, so they beat it to death with sticks. It just goes to show that you can romanticise living in a wild bygone age but you can never know what it was truly like.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel .

The Norse ruled the Western Isles between about 800AD and the Battle of Largs in 1263 (an inconclusive battle but it ended Norse control of the Western Isles). After that the McLeods of Dunvegan held sway over St Kilda for 500 years. For much of that period, the Lairds operated as predatory raiders, descending annually with a large retinue for some weeks and demanding to be fed and housed. In this they may not have been much different from earlier Viking raiders. They exacted taxes in the form of commodities but also provided some support such as the occasional boat and assistance in times of disaster.

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The early years of the eighteenth century were a time of hardship and the population fell from 180-200 at the start of that century to 120-130 in 1727. Then in that year there was a devastating smallpox epidemic. Only four adults and twenty-six children survived, and that many only because three men and eight boys were stranded for nine months over the winter when they went fowling on Stac an Armin. There were not enough adults left to launch a boat and come to get them back. The Laird repopulated the island with people from Skye and Harris.

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The men were mainly hunter-gatherers, harvesting seabirds, eggs, to a lesser extent fish and sometimes seals. Gathering eggs and catching birds was a precarious task requiring great skill, agility and courage. Using home-made straw ropes, they descended the vertical cliffs and swung sideways if necessary to access distant ledges. The women were cultivators, growing barley and oats. The islanders stored and dried birds, feathers, eggs, barley and oats in the cleits. There were no cleits on Dun but 40 on Soay, 50 on Boreray and 80 on Stac an Armin (north of Boreray).

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They were communalistic in many ways, supporting the sick and infirm and evenly dividing up labour, responsibilities and harvesting of birds. Maintenance of the boat and allocation of berths on hunting expeditions was also divided up communally. On the other hand, they locked their houses with ingenious wooden locks that they made and maintained themselves. The reason for this may have been stores of coins gathered from trading with visitors that individuals wanted to retain for themselves rather than give up to the Community.

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Life in St Kilda in the nineteenth century was significantly changed by a succession of priests who came from outside. In the early years there was a developing split in Scotland between two wings of the Presbyterian Church. The establishment wing featured clerics who were appointed by the Lairds to comfortable benefices and who had little inclination to make any waves. The evangelical wing practised a fervent, committed faith that owed no allegiance to the Lairds. It was evangelicals who came to St Kilda.

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At the same time there was a movement to replace common land with private crofts and on the mainland many were forcibly displaced from their land in the Clearances. This never happened in St Kilda, largely due to the isolation and rugged conditions, but there was a move from communal to private ownership of land.

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The first Minister was John MacDonald, who first visited in 1822. His successor, Neil MacKenzie, who first visited in 1829, was more influential. We have already seen that Sir Thomas Ackland’s yacht gave its name to the Melbourne suburb of St Kilda. In 1834, on one of his visits to the island, Ackland donated £20 towards the building of new homes, which apparently was matched by the Laird. Prior to this, the villagers were living in a cluster of twenty-six rounded dry-stone houses. MacKenzie organised a rebuild.

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The new village was laid along a street vaguely parallel to the shore. Each house had its own narrow strip of land, stretching in front of it to near the shore and behind to the head dyke, the long wall enclosing the village and its agricultural land. The houses, still using dry stone construction, faced perpendicular to the street, sheltering from the strong winds which could come off the bay. The houses featured thick walls, some of which included recesses for beds, and a partition for a byre, where cattle would stay for the winter.

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In 1843 the evangelicals broke away to form the free church. The St Kildans adhered to this but the Laird did not and locked their church and tried to harass them in other ways. In 1852, 8 families and 36 people emigrated to Australia out of a population of about 110. 18 died on the way there, mainly of measles and their departure weakened the viability of St Kilda. Shortly following this, perhaps fearing further abscondments, the Laird gave in, reopened their church and allowed them their religious freedom.

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In 1860, a Captain Otter was charting the seas around the Outer Hebrides for the Royal Navy. He was at anchor at St Kilda when a huge storm struck that was in danger of sinking his ship but it survived. The villagers at St Kilda fared rather worse. The storm blew the thatches off all their houses which were knee-deep in water. Their barley had been harvested but not stored and was all destroyed, as was the oats crop.
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Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, Soay sheep, St Kilda, Travel .

Otter organised a public appeal and quickly brought effective relief to the islanders, much greater and more quickly than they would have got from their Laird. This was partly due to money from a £700 bequest in a will in 1857 for improvements in the Highlands of Scotland. The Laird, stung by bad publicity, insisted this was his responsibility and built new houses for the village in 1861 and 1862, which were mortared rather than dry stone and had roofs of zinc. The roofs however, were less than watertight and must have been very noisy when it rained so they had to be refurbished later. The newer houses face the bay whereas the earlier dry stone houses are perpendicular to that, sheltering from the weather coming from that direction.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel .

The mass emigration of 1852 may have pushed the population below a sustainable level and this was made much worse by very high rates of infant mortality due to tetanus, which had probably started in the eighteenth century. In 1889 the Minister brought in a new nurse who delivered a couple of babies that survived. In 1892, after the nurse had left, the Minister went to Glasgow to obtain detailed instructions on good hygienic practice and started delivering them himself, thereby solving the problem. The likely cause was that the Hirta midwives had been smearing the rag that dressed the umbilical cord with fulmar oil, unfortunately kept in a gannet’s stomach.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel .

In the late nineteenth century, agricultural productivity had declined due to declining soil productivity. It occurs to me that a cause of this may have been the delivery of two tonnes of guano as part of the relief measures of 1860. I have seen a documentary suggesting that imported guano brought with it organisms that caused the potato blight in Ireland. Perhaps the use of the guano instead of their traditional seaweed fertiliser significantly eroded the productivity of the soil.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, Soay sheep, St Kilda, Travel .

The island gained a school in 1899 but hard times were coming. Their economy was now largely based on producing tweed and in 1914 the bottom fell out of the tweed market. They got some relief including employment from a naval wireless station during the war but this did not continue after the war. By 1925 the population had fallen to 46 and in 1830 they agreed to leave. The promises of conditions on the mainland were not fulfilled and most would have returned if they could but this was not to be. St Kilda is now a World Heritage area and the only inhabitants are personnel of a small naval base, and a few archaeologists and their volunteers.

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 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, Soay sheep, St Kilda, Travel .

 Archaeology, Architecture, Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, St Kilda, Travel .

Hebrides, History, Landscape, Photography, Scotland, Soay sheep, St Kilda, Travel .

 

Reference: Andrew Fleming: St Kilda and the Wider World (Tales of an iconic island)

First evening at St Kilda

St Kilda, Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Day 18 , 16th July.

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Later that evening we landed on St Kilda.  This is the “Feather Store”, where the locals used to store the produce that they submitted annually to the Factor to send to the Laird.  For centuries before 1779, the McLeod Lairds from Dunvegan Castle on Skye owned St Kilda along with Lewis and Harris.  Decades of wild spending and gambling forced the sale of St Kilda (along with Harris).  The new Laird was a retired sea captain also called McLeod, who built the Feather Store in the 1780s.

Behind the store is what must be an ammunition store for the gun that we see in the next image.

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In 1915, a German U-Boat shelled a radio station in the village but was careful to try to avoid shelling the villagers’ houses.  A few were still damaged and their owners received no compensation from the British Government.  The gun was installed later to deter a recurrence of this event.

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This is the “coffin cleit”, not far from the jetty.  We will see as lot of cleits in the next few posts.  They are storage sheds and drying rooms.  This one is unusual because it is quite long and has two entrances, one at each end.  It was used for storing wood.  There are no trees on Hirta, the St Kildans made use of whatever driftwood came their way.

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This image and the next one are also the “coffin cleit”.

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These are Soay Sheep, an ancient breed of sheep that used to live only on the island of Soay.  The islanders on Hirta had the black faced sheep more common in the Highlands (and that we have seen earlier in this trip).  When the islanders finally left in 1930, they took their black-faced sheep with them.  Soay sheep were then introduced to Hirta, where they had not previously lived.  The breed is said to be six million years old and to be similar to the wild ancestors of domestic sheep.  It is self-shearing, so that wool comes off by itself, as we shall see in some images in the next posts.  There is another ancient breed of sheep on the island of Boreray, which is I think not usually open to visitors.

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Obviously, the one with the horns is somewhat younger.

The Soay sheep belonged to the Laird and were probably always feral.  Conversely. the Boreray sheep were farmed by the residents and were also on Hirta in the eighteenth century.

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This is one of the “modern” houses, dating to 1861 or 1862.  I don’t think it has an original zinc roof, but I could be wrong on that.

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Looking along the “street”, the more modern houses alternate with older houses from the 1830s, dry stone constructions perpendicular to the more recent ones.

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Looking through beyond one of the newer houses.  The small rounded structures are cleits.  There must be hundreds of them on the island.

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Further along the street….

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Inside a ruined drystone house.

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Walls and cleits at the far end of the road with Dun in the background.

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It’s not a place where stones are scarce.

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Arrival at St Kilda

St Kilda, Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Day 18 , 16th July.

I’m now back to posting on Scotland. I last posted on Fuiay five months ago. Since then I travelled to India and then decided to process and post those images before continuing with the North Atlantic trip. My last post for India was in Jodhpur. It’s quite a contrast between the colourful crowded Indian desert city and the remote wilderness of one of the most isolated parts of Scotland.

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Gob Na Muce, Dun

Sailing through the fog and mist, this is our first glimpse of St Kilda.  This is almost the main island of Hirta but in fact is Gob Na Muce, at the south-east tip of the island of Dun.  Dun used to be connected to Hirta by a natural arch and according to a map I have seen appears to be connected at low tide.

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Dun

Dun is a Gaelic word for a fort but there is no evidence of a fort there now.

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Dun

The name St Kilda is the consequence of two mapmakers errors long ago – a transposition error and a typographical error.  Norse sailors called the Haskeir Islands, off the coast of North Uist, Skildir, which refers to a domed shield, because from a distance they were low and rounded.  This name was then mistakenly transferred to what is now the St Kilda group, further out in the Atlantic, and erroneously rendered as S. Kilda or St Kilda.

There is thus no person who was St. Kilda, or perhaps she is the virtual saint of mistaken identity.

There is also a suburb called St Kilda in Melbourne in Australia.  In 1812, a Devon landowner, Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, visited St Kilda and later named his yacht Lady of St Kilda.  That yacht ran aground near Melbourne in 1835 and gave part of its name to the suburb.

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Dun

One of the four natural arches through Dun.

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Oiseval, Hirta

Looking north now, to the headland of Oiseval on the main island of Hirta, with the islands of Stac Lee, Stac an Armin and Boreray from left to right in the distance.

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Dun

This is another natural arch in Dun.  You might just be able to see the chink of light from the other side.

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Dun

St Kilda is an archipelago forty miles from the coast of Northern Uist (in turn south of Lewis and Harris), of which the main islands are Hirta, Dun, Boreray and Soay.

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Dun

 

St Kilda has huge numbers of seabirds including 30,000 pairs of Northern Gannets, 49,000 pairs of Leach’s Petrels, 136,000 pairs of Atlantic Puffins and 67,000 Northern Fulmar pairs.  There is also the St Kilda Wren, endemic to St Kilda.

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Dun

A sky filled with birds.  The tiny island of Dun is home to the largest colony of fulmars in Britain and until 1928 was the only place in Britain where they bred.

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Dun on the left, Hirta on the right.  Getting across the channel is one thing; climbing the cliffs of Dun may be another.  Perhaps it is easier on the other side.

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Village Bay, Hirta

And here is our first view of Village Bay in Hirta.  If you look closely (click on image for a larger view) you can see the many structures left behind by the previous inhabitants.

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Map of St Kilda

A map of St Kilda showing the islands.  We have come in past Dun at the south-east point to anchor in Village Bay.  Wen we leave we will go around the north coast of Hirta and out through the passage between Hirta and Soay.  In the small map at top right, you can see where St Kilda is by the red square.

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Note:  If you happen to be going backwards here, post by post, the previous posts to this one are a series on India by the previous post in my travel through Scotland is the one for Fuiay.

Fuiay

Fuiay, Outer Hebrides, Scotland.  Day 17 , 15th July.

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Fungus

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Peat diggings

Fuiay is a small island in the Outer Hebrides, off the northeastern coast of Barra.  It used to have six households but has been uninhabited since 1850.  Evidently people have come here in the recent past from nearby islands to dig peat.

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In the background behind the ship it must be Snagaras (the smaller island on the left) and Flodaigh.

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I think the island here must be Colla.  There would be many more islands visible if there were no fog.

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And now we are heading off into the fog for St Kilda.  There was a discussion about whether we should head there because the weather was uncertain and in unfavourable conditions there is no safe anchorage.  I cast my vote definitely in favour of trying to go there because the others on the ship were English and could come back easily enough whereas I was from the other side of the world and unlikely to come this way again.

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Note:  After posting this, I travelled to India and wrote up those posts before continuing on with my journey in Scotland.   The post following this one is Arrival at St Kilda.

Vatersay

Vatersay, Outer Hebrides, Scotland.  Day 17 , 15th July.

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The Barra Isles are down below Lewis, Harris and Uist and Vatersay is the only one that is inhabited.

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It is the westernmost inhabited place in Scotland as well as the southernmost in the Outer Hebrides.

It has been settled for thousands of years and hosts the remains of an iron age dun (or fort) and a passage tomb from 1000BC.

There was a shipwreck here in 1853 where 350 of the 450 passengers and crew drowned.

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Puffins

Mingulay, Outer Hebrides, Scotland.  Day 16 , 14th July.

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On Mingulay I also got the opportunity to photograph puffins.  Most photographs of puffins you will see show them sitting on the ground.  In some places they will come quite close to you.  Photographing them in the air is much harder because they are small and surprisingly quick.

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I was also expecting to see them in Iceland but they had gone by the time I go there.  It all depends on their seasonal supply of sand eels.

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Not everything is easy in a puffin’s life.  This is a skua, a predator.

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These are Atlantic Puffins.  There are also two other species of puffin in the Pacific, as well as a closely related species the Rhinoceros Auklet.  They are also related to the extinct Giant Auk.

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Their nesting area is very close to the old village.  They would definitely have been a food source for the islanders, both them and their eggs, though perhaps they chose a more remote location when the villagers were still there.

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Here they nest in burrows in the ground, which requires a remote island, free I would think of feral cats.  In other places they may nest in cliffs.

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Mingulay

Mingulay, Outer Hebrides, Scotland.  Day 16 , 14th July.

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A couple of dolphins from the bow of the ship.  Some of the others got better photographs of them than me.

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A curiosity.  A fully restored cottage with people inside plus the derelict skeleton of a connected building.

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Mingulay is part of the Barra Islands, in a chain of the islands of the Outer Hebrides stretching down from Lewis and Harris and UistMingulay is the southernmost apart from Berneray.

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Mingulay was always a harsh place to live.  There were no good harbours and the island could be effectively inaccessible by sea for months at a time.  It was not affected by the clearances and in fact the population increased with refugees from other islands.  Ultimately, the islanders decided that life here was not sufficiently viable and left by 1912.

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This is the remains of “the Village”, the only settlement on the island.  An iron age midden was also found nearby.   The island has a long history of settlement.  There is an iron age dun and other traces of ancient settlement further south.

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The village has been largely buried by sand blown up by storms.  Here we see the lintel of a doorway so the sand must be from four to seven feet deep.

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Coroghan Castle (Canna)

Canna, Inner Hebrides, Scotland.  Day 15 , 13th July.

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A Canna panorama.  I am walking towards Coroghan Castle.

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Coroghan Castle is on the stack (Coroghon Mor) at the left, which rises 70 to 80 feet above the sea shore.  From this angle it is at the top left corner.

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Here it is, perched precariously on a steep slope.

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It is called a castle but it is really a small stronghold, utilising the rock face for some of the internal walls.  The walls look dangerously undermined by erosion.  It was described by Pennant in 1772 as “… a lofty slender rock, that juts into the sea: on one side is a little tower, at a vast height above us, accessible by a narrow and horrible path: it seems so small as scarce to be able to contain half a dozen people”.

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There was a notice warning not to go up to it but of course, I did.  I had to be vary careful because the path was very loose below the castle and it was not a suitable place to slip.  I got as far as the door but did not venture further.  It was altogether too precarious, especially with my camera gear.

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The castle dates from the seventeenth century.  It is said to have been used by Black Donald of the Cuckoo (now there’s a name for you!), 13th Chief of Clanranald, to imprison his second wife Marion MacLeod as a consequence of a love triangle.  Black Donald died in 1685 and the Cuckoo was his favoured gun.

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So here I am below the doorway, looking up.

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There were two floors originally, but nothing is left of the internal structure.

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A view of the shore, looking away from the castle.

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A last view, looking back….

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Another view of Canna with Sanday over in the distance, to the left.  This small church, known as the Rocket Church, was built by Allan Thom in memorial to his father Robert Thom between 1912 and 1914.  Since it is a Protestant church and the islanders are Catholic, it is little used.

A badly corroded Viking pin was found at the site of the church in 1928.

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Canna and Sanday

Canna and Sanday, Inner Hebrides, Scotland.  Day 14 to 15 , 12th to 13th July.

Lismore Lighthouse

Lismore Lighthouse

From Mull I took the ferry to Oban for an eight-day photographic cruise of the Hebrides with Chris Gomersall, Photographer.

Lismore lighthouse is at the end of Eilean Musdile, a projection of the island of Lismore in the Sound of Mull, on the opposite side of the sound from Mull.  It was built in 1833 by Robert Stevenson and automated in 1965.

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Launch and Ketch

Passing by an old ketch in the Sound of Mull.

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Ardtornish Castle

Ardtornish Castle is on the Scottish mainland, opposite Mull on the Sound of Mull, not far from Lochaline where a ferry from Mull arrives and departs.  It was the principal residence of the high chiefs of Clan Donald during the period when they were Lords of the Isles from the early thirteenth to late fourteenth centuries.

The last lord John signed a treaty with Edward IV of England there in 1461, agreeing to become an English vassal in exchange for a third of the Kingdom of Scotland when Edward conquered it (which never happened).   This later became known and led to the end of the Lordship of the Isles in 1493.   The castle was abandoned around the end of the seventeenth century.

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Sanday

We have now reached Canna where we stayed the night and went exploring the next day.  This view is actually of Sanday a small island formerly separated from Canna at high tide but recently connected by a road even at high tide.  Although Canna is run by the National Trust for Scotland as a single farm, crofting still survives on some parts of Sanday.

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Church of St Edward the Confessor, Sanday

This the deconsecrated Catholic Church of St Edward the Confessor on Sanday.  Although it looks as though it could be maybe a great age, it was built between 1886 and 1890 and is currently in a state of disrepair.

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Sanday and Canna

This is looking towards Sanday with Canna in the distance.

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Canna House and Gille Brighde Cafe and Restaurant, Canna

On the right is the Gille Brighde Cafe and Restaurant and behind the trees is Canna House. I left some of my photographic gear at the cafe when I went for a walk and picked it up and had a beer there on the way back.  Canna House was built in 1865 and remains in original condition including the fittings of the interior.  It has an extensive Gaelic library from its most recent owners, before it was taken over by the National Trust for Scotland.

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Sanday

This is Sanday again.

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Church, Canna

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Canna

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Post Office, Canna

The Post Office is a converted garden shed.

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Canna

Canna (including Sanday) was severely affected by the clearances.  Its population fell from 436 in 1821 to 12 in 2001 and is now somewhere around 20.

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Cate’s Cottage, Canna

Canna was a property of the Church based in Iona from probably the seventh century and was never part of the Lordship of the Isles.  It was sold to a private owner along with other properties of Iona during the reformation, so some time in the sixteenth century.  MacDonald of Clanranald sold the island to Donald MacNeill in 1827 after the failure of a kelp boom, so in the intervening period it must have been owned by these Macdonalds, related to the Lords of the Isles and based at Tiorem Castle.

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Canna

There is a nunnery or monastic enclosure over on that point.  I started off walking towards it but did not get that far.

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Canna

Canna has a long history of settlement going back to neolithic times.  There are many interesting remains including duns (iron age forts), standing stones, mediæval crosses and sheilings (remains of shepherd huts).

There is a fort Dun Rubha Nic Eamoin in the middle foreground or a little out to the right.  My first thought was that the rock formations are natural but maybe they were altered to form part of a dun and the walls built on them have vanished (reused, no doubt).

There was also a “township” in this vicinity, off to the right of the image, with about nine buildings, until a clearance in the mid-nineteenth century.  Little remains of that now.

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Canna

Natural or modified?

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Canna

The columnar basalt makes for interesting rock formations.

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