Monday 14 March 2011

Island 44 - Lundy, Devon

Lundy is one of my favourite islands.  I spent a week there in June 2001 and returned for day trips to find my 4,000th geocache in July 2009 and again in July 2013 and July 2016.  The island is located 11 miles north west of Hartland Point in Devon

Lundy is 3 miles long and half a mile wide and for such a small island it has a wide variety of terrains.  The east coast in more sheltered than the west and so has more vegetation and wild flowers.  The top of the island is relatively flat and the island is made of granite apart from the SE corner which is composed of slates.  There is also a pond and boggy area (Pondsbury) where orchids grow and the island becomes more barren towards the north end, where the soil is shallow and more rock is exposed.  The landing beach is the only easily accessible one.

I love lighthouses, so this island is great, as it has 3 - one at each end and one in the middle.  The Old Light on top of the island was replaced by the North and South Lights, as too often it was foggy or hidden in cloud and could therefore not be seen.  It is the only one of the 3 that you can go inside and climb to the top and watch the world go by.

Lundy is thought to mean 'island of puffins' in Norse.  However sadly there are very few puffins on Lundy today.  I saw only one the whole week we were there in 2001 and that was only through the warden's telescope.  If you want to see lots of puffins, I suggest you go to Skomer, the Farne Isles, the Treshnish Isles or the Isle of May.

Lundy has been inhabited since the Bronze Age.    The Norman family the Marisco's owned it for about a 100 years from 1150 and the current pub, the Marisco Tavern, is named after them.  After that Lundy was owned by the Crown, pirates or private individuals. 

It was owned by the Heaven family for over 80 years from 1834 and it was known for a time as the Kingdom of Heaven.  They built Millcombe House, the road up from the beach and the church.  Quarries were opened in 1863 and there are several ruins on the island from that time.  After the Heavens it was owned by Mr Augustus Christie, then Martin Coles Harman.  After his death in 1954 it passed to his son Albion and 2 daughters.  After Albion's death in 1968 his sisters put it up for sale. 

It was then bought by the National Trust and is currently leased to the Landmark Trust, who run all the self-catering accommodation on the island.  http://www.landmarktrust.org.uk/otherOptions/lundy.htm

Lundy can be accessed by boat from Bideford or Ilfracombe.  The passenger boat used is the MS Oldenburg.  http://www.lundyisland.co.uk/oldenburg_visual.htm 

The drinking water tastes horrible, as it is treated rainwater but you do get used to it after a few days.  We were somewhat underwhelmed by the very rare Lundy cabbage, which is only found on the island.  However the mammals on the island are more interesting - black rabbits, wild ponies, Japanese sika deer, Soay sheep and goats.   The deer, sheep and ponies were introduced to the island by Martin Coles Harman.  There are no reptiles or amphibians on the island.

The island is a staging post for migrating birds.  In the summer guillemots, razorbills, kittiwakes, gulls, storm petrels, manx shearwaters and a few puffins breed there.  The waters round the island have been a marine nature reserve since 1986.

A fifth of the island is enclosed pasture.  The rest is rough grazing interspersed with heather, bracken and bare rock. 

Website of the Lundy Field Society  http://www.lundy.org.uk/


Devil's Limekiln
300 feet deep hole in the ground with near vertical sides. The rock just off the end of the island at this point is called Great Shutter Rock because legend says that it is the original shutter or stopper of the limekiln.

Millcombe House

The Battery  
This was built by Trinity House as a fog and signal station in 1863.  In foggy weather a blank round was fired every 10 minutes.  It was abandoned in 1896 when the North and South Lights were completed.

The Devil's Slide - natural granite plane, popular with climbers

Stoneycroft and Cemetery from the Old Light

East coast showing Heligoland Bird Trap

St Helena's Church and Millcombe House

 Castle
 - probably built by Henry III after the Marisco's were removed.

 North Light - built 1896

 North Light

Millcombe House

 Old Light

 Old Light

 Landing Beach, South Light South Light (built 1896) and Rat Island

 Marisco Tavern

 I assume that the T.H. stands for Trinity House

 Tibbetts
 - available to rent as self-catering accommodation - over a mile from the village and it has no electricity.

 Millcombe House from above

 Old Light from the Graveyard

 St Helena's Church and Government House

 View of Stoneycroft from the top of the Old Light

 North Light

 St Helena's Church
 
Pondsbury

 Brazen Ward

 Gannet's Bay

 Hut at the North Light

Old Light - built by Trinity House in 1819

 East coast from the Landing Beach

The MS Oldenburg at the Jetty

Castle

Old House

MS Oldenburg at the Jetty

 Looking south down the east coast towards Rat Island

 Disused quarry on the east coast

Path down to the Old Light
 
South Light and Jetty from near Benson's Cave

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