Summer Isles
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The Summer Isles (Template:Langx, {{#invoke:IPA|main}}) are an archipelago lying in the mouth of Loch Broom, in the Highland region of Scotland.
GeographyEdit
Tanera Mòr is the largest island and was the last one to remain inhabited.<ref name=Herald>Kane, Jenny (20 November 2014) "Last permanent residents leave Summer Isles for the mainland". The Herald. Glasgow.</ref> It was formerly home to an Atlantic salmon fish farm, some rental holiday homes, a café and a post office, which operated its own local post and printed its own stamps from 1970 until 2013, but a new set is planned for 2016.<ref name="Scotsman 18Oct2016">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The island has no roads, and the only recognisable path goes around the Anchorage, the sheltered bay on the east side of the island. Boats sail to the island from Achiltibuie and Ullapool.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Other islandsEdit
- Bò Bhùiridh
- Bottle Island
- Càrn Deas
- Càrn Iar
- Càrn nan Sgeir
- Eilean a' Chàr
- Eilean Choinaid
- Eilean Dubh
- Eilean Fada Beag
- Eilean Fada Mòr
- Eilean Mullagrach
- Eilean na Saille
- Glas-leac Beag
- Glas-leac Mòr
- Horse Island
- Iolla Mhòr
- Isle Martin
- Isle Ristol
- Meall nan Caorach
- Meall nan Gabhar
- Priest Island (Eilean a' Chlèirich)
- Sgeir an Aon Iomairt
- Sgeir Bhuidhe Mòr
- Sgeir Loisgte
- Sgeir nam Mult
- Sgeir Ribhinn
- Sgeirean Glasa
- Stac Mhic Aonghais
- Tanera Beag
ConservationEdit
The islands are part of the Assynt-Coigach National Scenic Area, one of 40 in Scotland.<ref>"National Scenic Areas" Template:Webarchive. SNH. Retrieved 30 March 2011.</ref>
Frank Fraser Darling, an important figure in the development of Scottish conservation, lived on Tanera Mòr for two years in the 1930s. His book, Island Years (published 1940), records his time in the Summer Isles, painting Priest Island as a place of great beauty as well as great wildlife.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Literature, film, and musicEdit
- The Summer Isles feature in a novella of the same name by Ian R. MacLeod.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- The fictional Summer Isle, Cladach Duillich (Sad Shore), features in the 1977 Desmond Bagley novel The Enemy.
- The third movement of a guitar suite, "The Great Western Road," on the album of the same name by Tim Slemmons, is entitled, "III. Evening in the Summer Isles."
- The Children's Film Foundation (CFF) The Big Catch (1968) features a group of boys who plan to sail to The Summer Isles to capture a wild pony. Filming took place in and around Ullapool and Lochinver.
- The pagan island of "Summerisle" featured in the motion picture The Wicker Man (filmed in 1973 & directed by Robin Hardy) is sometimes mistakenly associated with this archipelago, but in actuality The Wicker Man was filmed around Newton Stewart in Dumfries and Galloway.<ref>The Wicker Man (1973) filming locations movie-locations.com. Retrieved 1 August 2008.</ref>
Summer Isles Philatelic BureauEdit
Since 1970 the Summer Isles Philatelic Bureau has been issuing stamps of the islands for tourists who place them on mail to be carried to the nearest GPO Post Box on the mainland.<ref name="catalog">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>"The Post Office" Template:Webarchive summer-isles.com. Retrieved 8 December 2008.</ref>
CultureEdit
The musician Mairearad Green grew up in Achiltibuie on the Coigach peninsula, overlooking the Summer Isles. She has released an album entitled Summer Isles.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
- Panorama of the Summer Isles (QuickTime required)