Template:Short description Template:About Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox landform

Cape Wrath Template:IPAc-en (Template:Langx, known as {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in Lewis) is a cape in the Durness parish of the county of Sutherland in the Highlands of Scotland. It is the most north-westerly point in Great Britain.

The cape is separated from the rest of the mainland by the Kyle of Durness and consists of Template:Convert of moorland wilderness known as the Parph. The first road was built in 1828 by the lighthouse commission across the Parph/Durness. This road connects a passenger ferry that crosses the Kyle of Durness with the buildings on the peninsula.

Much of the cape is owned by the Ministry of Defence and is used as a military training area, including as live firing range. Areas of it are also designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest, a Special Protection Area, a Special Area of Conservation and a Special Landscape Area.

EtymologyEdit

The name Cape Wrath is derived from Old Norse {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} ("turning point"), accordingly, wrath is pronounced Template:IPAc-en (a as in cat).<ref name=bbc20jan13>Cape Wrath locals accuse MoD of land grab, BBC news website, 2012-09-17. Retrieved 2013-01-20.</ref> Vikings are believed to have used the cape as a navigation point where they would turn their ships.<ref name=bbccoast>Life on the Edge, Northern Scotland – Cape Wrath to Orkney, Coast, BBC. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref><ref name=nlb>Cape Wrath, Northern Lighthouse Board. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref><ref name=gran1jul11>Carter.M (2011) My travels: Mike Carter in Cape Wrath, Scotland, The Guardian, 2011-07-01. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref>

HistoryEdit

Cape Wrath was once the home of a series of small crofting communities, although by 1845 the only families remaining on the Parph were those of shepherds.<ref name=kearvaig>Kearvaig, Royal Commission on the ancient and historical monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref> In the 1930s it supported a population of 30 to 40 people, including a small side school at Achiemore which had up to ten pupils in the 1930s but closed in 1947.<ref name=bbccoast /><ref name=herald2jun09>Cafe at the end of the universe ... where a cup of tea is guaranteed, The Herald, 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref><ref name=sentry>Achiemore, Royal Commission on the ancient and historical monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref><ref name=schools>Durness Schools, Education in Sutherland, 2009-03-29. Retrieved 2013-02-09.</ref><ref name=uney09>Uney.G (2009) Backpacker's Britain: Northern Scotland: thirty two and three day treks, p.86. Cicerone Press Limited. Template:ISBN (online). Retrieved 2011-01-28.</ref> Building remains at locations such as Kearvaig have been dated to the 18th century.<ref name=aote>'Archaeology on the edge – Cape Wrath', Sanctuary vol 38, pp.50–51, 2009, Ministry of Defence (available online). Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref> The Cape has few archaeological remains which can be dated to earlier than this, although a promontory fort at Eilean nan Caorach to the east of the headland may date to the late prehistoric age.<ref name=aote /><ref name=caorach>Eilean nan Caorach, Royal Commission on the ancient and historical monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref>

Much of the area has been used for sheep grazing, a use which continues today, and shielings, shelters built for shepherds, can be found across the Cape.<ref name=aote /> The area declined in population in the mid-20th century and is now almost entirely unpopulated, although military and tourism use continues.<ref name=bbccoast /> The Cape Wrath Lighthouse was built in 1828 and the access road from the Kyle of Durness dates from the same period.<ref name=nlb /> A Lloyd's of London signal station was built close to the lighthouse at the end of the 19th century to track shipping around the Cape.<ref name=devplan>Outline development plan for Cape Wrath Template:Webarchive, Highlands and Islands social enterprise zone, August 2013. Retrieved 2014-02-18.</ref>

On 27 September 1915, while sailing for Scapa Flow, HMS Caribbean, known as Template:RMS before being requisitioned for wartime service, foundered off Cape Wrath in bad weather. A tow by HMS Birkenhead was unsuccessful, and 15 died.<ref name=mna>Castle Mail Packet Co Template:Webarchive, Red Duster (Merchant Navy Association). Retrieved 2012-11-14.</ref> An inquiry later blamed the ship's carpenter for being insufficiently familiar with the ship and for failing to shut all the scuttles. Like most of the crew, he had joined the ship just 10 days earlier.<ref name=diver31may04>Divers explore WW1 wreck of HMS Caribbean, Divernet news, 2004-05-31. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref> The wreck was found in 2004, Template:Convert<ref name=diver31may04 /> off Cape Wrath, in Template:Convert of water and undisturbed except for fishing nets.<ref name=diver31may04 /><ref name=yp04>Robinson A (2004) [http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/around-yorkshire/local-stories/yorkshire-diver-first-to-see-wreck-for-nearly-90-years-1-2545421 Yorkshire diver first to see wreck for nearly 90 years Yorkshire Post. Retrieved 2007-08-06.</ref>

GeographyEdit

Cape Wrath is located in the traditional county of Sutherland within Highland Region. Durness is the closest village, Template:Convert southeast with Inverness around Template:Convert to the south.

The sea cliffs around the cape are composed of Torridonian sandstone and Lewisian gneiss.<ref name=spades /><ref name=spacite /> These rise to Template:Convert above sea level and include the highest sea cliffs on the British mainland at Clò Mòr around Template:Convert to the east of the headland.<ref name=bbccoast /><ref name=jncc3 /><ref name=sla /> Sea stacks, such as Stac an Dùnain at the cape itself and Stac Clò Kearvaig to the east, rise out of the sea off the coastline, with Duslic, a reef, Template:Convert north of the cape. The cape is part of the North West Highlands Geopark, a Template:Convert area with UNESCO geopark status.<ref name=greentourism>Scotland's first geopark Template:Webarchive, Visit Scotland, 2004-11-18. Retrieved 2013-02-09.</ref>

Crofting townships of two or three houses with associated enclosures existed at Daill, Achiemore, Kearvaig and Inshore into the mid-20th century.<ref name=kearvaig /><ref name=daill>Daill, Royal Commission on the ancient and historical monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref><ref name=achiemore>Achiemore, Royal Commission on the ancient and historical monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref><ref name=inshore>Inshore, Royal Commission on the ancient and historical monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref> The land originally formed part of the Sutherland estates owned by the Duke of Sutherland.<ref name=kearvaig /><ref name=inshore /> An area of Template:Convert, covering almost all of the northern part of the peninsula, is owned by the Ministry of Defence for use as a military training area.<ref name=nt13sep12>Fears over future as MoD buy-out of Cape Wrath land looms, The Northern Times, 2012-09-13. Retrieved 2017-07-17.</ref><ref name=bbc13may13>MoD drops Cape Wrath land purchase, BBC News, 2013-05-13.</ref><ref name=nt6jan17>£22.5k for Cape Wrath community land buyout, The Northern Times, 2017-01-06. Retrieved 2017-07-17.</ref>

ClimateEdit

As with the rest of the British Isles, Cape Wrath has an Oceanic (Köppen Cfb) climate. This is especially pronounced due to its western coastal location.

Its exposed northerly position can give rise to some exceptionally low winter sunshine levels: in January 1983 it recorded just 38 minutes of sunshine, a record low for Scotland.<ref>Gazetteer: Climate, Love of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-03. (archived at Archive).</ref> This exposed position, however, also means severe frost is rare compared to inland locations such as Altnaharra or Kinbrace. The record low of Template:Convert is comparable to those recorded in Shetland, the Hebrides and the Scilly Isles of England. A slight föhn effect can also occur with the right angle of southerly winds, exemplified by the record December high of Template:Convert.

Strong winds can be a feature of weather conditions at the cape, with gusts of Template:Convert recorded.<ref name=gran1jul11 /> Template:Weather box

Natural environmentEdit

Because its landscape is largely untouched by man, Cape Wrath has a wide diversity of wildlife, including red deer, hooded crow, rock pipit, golden eagle, cormorant and gannet.<ref name=scotsman8apr10 /> An area of Template:Convert is designated as a Special Protection Area (SPA) and a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI).<ref name=spades>Cape Wrath, SPA designation, Joint Nature Conservation Committee. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref> The cliffs around the cape are an internationally important nesting site for over 50000 seabirds, including colonies of puffin Fratercula arctica, razorbill Alca torda, guillemot Uria aalge, kittiwake Rissa tridactyla and fulmar Fulmarus glacialis.<ref name=spades /><ref name=spacite>Cape Wrath Template:Webarchive, Citation for Special Protection Area, Scottish Natural Heritage, September 2009. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref> The SPA extends Template:Convert out to sea and includes the sea bed and marine environment which is a source of food for the bird population of the area.<ref name=spades /><ref name=spacite />

Numbers of seabirds in the area saw significant declines in the early 21st century with puffin numbers falling by 50%.<ref name=sanctuary09>'Ringing in the century', Sanctuary no.38, 2009, pp.20–23, Ministry of Defence (available online). Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref> An area of Template:Convert is also designated as a Special Area of Conservation.<ref name=sac>Cape Wrath, Site details, Joint Nature Conservation Committee. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref> Marine species present in the area include harbour porpoise, common seal and bottle-nosed dolphin as well as species such as sea squirts and sponges.<ref name=jncc3>Coasts and seas of the United Kingdom, Region 3 North-east Scotland: Cape Wrath to St. Cyrus, Joint Nature Conservation Committee, 2006. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref>

The cliff-top vegetation at sites such as Clò Mòr includes common scurvygrass Cochlearia officinalis and a wide range of habitats are present. These include cliff-top sand dunes at the cape itself as well as montane habitats found at sea level.<ref name=scotsman8apr10 /><ref name=sac />

An area of Template:Convert around the coastline is designated as a Special Landscape Area.<ref name=sla>Assessment of Highland Special Landscape Areas Template:Webarchive, The Highland Council, June 2011. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref> This area extends from Oldshoremore in the south-west to Durness in the east and includes the entire coastline of the cape area.<ref name=sla /> Just offshore is Stac Clò Kearvaig, also known as "The Cathedral" due to the appearance of two spires and a natural window created by erosion. To the east lies Garvie Island (An Garbh-eilean), one of the main targets for live firing by the military.

Inland the landscape is primarily covered in peat and is often boggy with difficult terrain and a number of lochans, the largest of which, Loch Airigh na Beinne, is around Template:Convert in area.<ref name=scotsman8apr10 /> The area has been described as one of the few coastal wildernesses in Britain.<ref name=sla /> Plant species include heather Calluna vulgaris, juniper Juniperus communis and ferns.<ref name=spades />

Cape Wrath LighthouseEdit

Template:Main article The lighthouse at Cape Wrath was built in 1828 by Robert Stevenson and was staffed until 1998, when it was converted to automatic operation by the Northern Lighthouse Board.<ref name=nlb /><ref name=gran1jul11 /> The lighthouse, which is a Category A listed building, is a Template:Convert tall white-washed tower built of granite with a single storey semi-circular base building.<ref name=listing>Template:Historic Environment Scotland</ref> The light, which is Template:Convert above sea level, is visible for Template:Convert.<ref name=nlb />

A complex of buildings close to the lighthouse were built by Lloyd's of London between 1894 and 1903 as a signal station to track shipping around the Cape. This closed in 1932, although the buildings were reused at the start of World War II as a coastguard station.<ref name=devplan />

Military useEdit

File:RAF Regiment Forward Air Controllers.jpg
RAF Forward Air Controllers guide a Typhoon of No. 6 Squadron RAF onto its target during an exercise at Cape Wrath.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) owns a Template:Convert area of the cape, known as the Cape Wrath Training Centre.<ref name=bbc13may13 /><ref name=range>Cape Wrath Range, Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref> The cape was used for training exercises from the early years of the 20th century,<ref name=modleaflet>Public Information Leaflet, Defence Training Estate Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref> with the first by-laws established in 1933 to allow use of the area as a firing range.<ref name=range /><ref name=modleaflet /> The area was used originally as a naval gunnery range and was bought by the MoD in 1999.<ref name=range /><ref name=modleaflet /> Since 2005 the area has been used as a multi-services training area and is one of the sites used in the Joint Warrior exercises, Europe's largest military exercise, and by other NATO operations.<ref name=range /><ref name=bbc13may13 /><ref name=bbc20jan10>'Don't bomb' idea for Cape Wrath firing range, BBC news website, 2010-01-10. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref><ref name=nt21sep09>NW will play part in largest military exercise in Europe, The Northern Times, 2009-09-21. Retrieved 2013-02-09.</ref> Training is allowed on up to 120 days a year,<ref name=scotsman2feb13>Cape Wrath will not be closed to public, MP says, The Scotsman, 2013-02-02. Retrieved 2014-02-18.</ref> usually taking place in the spring and autumn, although times can be unpredictable. The range is usually open for public access during the summer period and there is rarely firing on Sundays.<ref name=mod />

The MoD owns a number of the surviving buildings in the area and operates observation posts and sentry posts during training.<ref name=range /> It is used for naval gunfire practice and for army artillery and mortar range firing.<ref name=mod>Military activities undertaken at Cape Wrath Template:Webarchive, Royal Navy. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref> Disused military vehicles are often used as targets.<ref name=bbc20jan10 /> The RAF uses An Garbh-eilean (Garvie Island) as a target for a range of training operations.<ref name=mod /> It is the only place in the Northern Hemisphere where NATO forces combine land, air and sea capabilities in assault mode for training manoeuvres, deploying ordnance up to Template:Convert bombs.<ref name=modcape>Cape Wrath Training AreaTemplate:Dead link, Ministry of Defence. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref><ref name=modcape2>Cape Wrath Training Area, Public access to military areas, Ministry of Defence, 2012-12-12. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref> Firing on the range is controlled from Faraid Head close to Balnakeil.<ref name=modcape />

In 2008 a heath fire was caused on the range during a period of live firing. An area of around Template:Convert was affected. Scottish Natural Heritage estimated that the area would take 10 years to return to its normal environmental conditions.<ref name=bbc20jan10 /><ref name=bbc21may08>MoD accused of 'wildlife crime', BBC news website, 2008-05-08. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref><ref name=bbc6jun08>New details emerge on cape fire, BBC news website, 2008-06-06. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref> Concern has also been raised of the effects of military exercises on nesting birds,<ref name=bbc20jan10 /> on sheep during lambing season and the effects of noise on local residents.<ref name=bbc21may08 /><ref name=bbc24feb03>Concern over live shelling, BBC news website, 2003-02-24. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref><ref name=nt29nov11>Protest over Nato exercise Template:Webarchive, The Northern Times, 2011-11-11. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref> A shell fired during exercises caused concern in 2002 when it landed Template:Convert off-target near the mouth of Loch Eriboll and around Template:Convert from houses.<ref name=bbc24feb03 /><ref name=bbc9jul02>Inquiry into shell incident, BBC news website, 2002-07-09. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref>

The MoD expressed an interest in extending its land holdings on the Cape in 2012 after being given the opportunity to purchase Template:Convert surrounding Cape Wrath Lighthouse by the Northern Lighthouse Board.<ref name=bbc20sep12>What motivates communities to buy land they live on?, BBC news website, 2012-09-20. Retrieved 2014-02-18.</ref> The plans were opposed by the Durness Development Group which cited concerns that historic buildings might be destroyed and that visitors may be unable to access cliff top paths.<ref name=bbc13may13 /> The group registered an interest in the land using community right to buy legislation and a petition opposing the sale attracted thousands of signatures.<ref name=scotsman2feb13 /> In May 2013, the MoD announced that it would not be continuing with the purchase.<ref name=bbc13may13 /><ref name=scotsman12may13>MoD retreats from Cape Wrath buyout, The Scotsman, 2013-05-12. Retrieved 2014-02-18.</ref>

TourismEdit

The cape is visited by between 2,000 and 6,000 tourists a year, attracted by the lack of settlements, plants, animals, cliffs, mountain backdrop and lighthouse.<ref name=devplan /><ref name=scotsman8apr10>Snap! Cape Wrath to grace playing cards, The Scotsman, 2010-04-08. Retrieved 2013-02-06.</ref><ref name=nt21dec12>Huge cost to economy if access to Cape Wrath is denied, The Northern Times, 2012-12-21. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref> The tourist industry is estimated to be worth between £400,000 and £620,000 to the economy of the local area around Durness.<ref name=devplan /><ref name=nt21dec12 />

The Cape is the northern trail head of two trails.

  1. The Cape Wrath Trail, Template:Convert through isolated country from Fort William
  2. The Scottish National Trail, Template:Convert from Kirk Yetholm on the Scottish border.<ref name=bbc30oct12>Scottish National Trail aims to link landscape and history, BBC news website, 2012-10-30. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref>

Cape Wrath is also the turning point for the Cape Wrath Marathon. It runs for Template:Convert to the lighthouse and the same distance back to the ferry dock on the Cape side. The final Template:Convert leg of the race is run from the mainland side from the ferry dock and finishes at Durness Community Centre. The marathon is held each year as the final event of a week of races, the Cape Wrath Challenge.<ref name=run>Hundreds set to take on the Cape Template:Webarchive, The Northern Times, 2007-05-04. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref>

The sole inhabitants of the Cape are the Ure family, renting the main building. They converted it into a three-bedroomed home, and opened what is claimed to be Britain's most remote cafe, the Ozone Cafe, in 2009.<ref name=gran1jul11 /><ref name=devplan /><ref name=scotsman8apr10 /> The cafe was opened by the Princess Royal, and seats eight people.

The Durness Development Group has made proposals, assisted by the Highlands and Islands Social Enterprise Zone, to develop Cape Wrath as a visitor location. These may see the number of visitors rise to 10,000 and facilities at the Cape developed.<ref name=devplan />

TransportEdit

File:View of Bridge at Daill on Cape Wrath Road - geograph.org.uk - 1393888.jpg
View of bridge at Daill on the Cape Wrath road looking east towards the Kyle of Durness

From the south, the only route to the Cape is on foot from Sandwood Bay and Kinlochbervie. Access is restricted at times by military operations on the Cape.

A rough road of around Template:Convert links the lighthouse with the Kyle of Durness which is crossed by a passenger ferry service operating between May and September.<ref name=bbccoast /> The road was built as part of the lighthouse construction in 1828 and, in places, uses a series of rock causeways to cross peat bogs and revetments to maintain a route along steep slopes. Materials for the road were quarried locally and there are a number of quarrying sites along it.<ref name=road /> The road is marked with milestones and crosses the Allt na Guaille and Kearvaig River on contemporary arched bridges.<ref name=road>Kyle of Durness to Cape Wrath lighthouse, Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref><ref name=guaille>Allt na Guaille, Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref><ref name=kearvaigbridge>Kearvaig River road bridge, Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref> The original slipway on the Kyle of Durness was built north of Daill with an associated storehouse similar to that at Clais Charnach.<ref name=roadnorth>Kyle of Durness storehouse to Cape Wrath lighthouse, Royal Commission on the ancient and historical monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref> This was linked by a rough track with the road being extended south the slipway at Ferry House during the 1830s.<ref name=roadnorth /><ref name=roadsouth>Kyle of Durness, Royal Commission on the ancient and historical monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 2013-02-08.</ref>

The road, the U70, passes the hamlet of Achiemore where a Ministry of Defence check-point blocks access to the cape during live firing exercises.<ref name=sentry /><ref name=scotsman8apr10 /> It passes the farmsteads of Daill and Inshore, where the MoD uses the remaining house,<ref name=inshore /> before a track to the right links the road to the old hamlet of Kearvaig, where there is a beach and Kearvaig House which the Mountain Bothies Association have converted into a bothy. Margaret Davies, a walker, was found there dying of starvation in 2002.<ref name=kearvaig /><ref name=bothy>Margaret's story, The Guardian, 2002-12-18. Retrieved 2013-02-05.</ref> A minibus service operates along the road during the summer period linking the ferry slipway with the lighthouse.<ref name=bbccoast /> The road, ferry and minibus service are suspended during military training operations on the cape.<ref name=modcape />

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit