|
|
Visit
Isle of May
Lying
5 miles (8 km) off the Fife coast, the Isle of May is the largest
of the islands of the Firth of Forth. It is 1½ km long and ½ km
wide and amongst naturalists is noted for its colonies of seabirds,
its migrant birds and its colony of grey seals. Designated a national
nature reserve in 1956, it is now recognised as an important seabird
research centre.
The island is accessed during the spring and summer when a regular
boat service operates from Anstruther and Crail to the landing
at Kirkhaven. Weekly stays are possible in the Bird Observatory
by prior arrangement.
Close to the Kirkhaven landing stand the ruins of the Chapel of
St Aidan which are all that remain of a priory built in the 12th
century and dedicated to the Christian missionary who was killed
on the island by marauding Danes in AD 875. The Isle of May was
an important religious centre until its monks moved to Pittenweem
in the 16th century, but the island remained inhabited until the
early 18th century.
In 1636 Alexander Cunningham built a lighthouse beacon, the first
permanently-manned lighthouse in Scotland and in 1844 a subsidiary
'Low Light' was built on the east side of the island.
During both World Wars the island was under military occupation
and in 1989 the Main Lighthouse became fully automated prior to
the ownership of the island passing from the Northern Lighthouse
Board to the Nature Conservancy Council, now Scottish Natural
Heritage.
If
you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
Return
To East Neuk
|
|