Houmet Paradis is an uninhabited tidal island located off the north east coast of Guernsey between Miellette Bay and Petils Bay. Part of the island has been quarried at some point in the past. It has also been used for gutting fish and grazing cattle. Houmet Paradis is mainly covered in grass and bracken.
In Victor Hugo's novel The Toilers of the Sea, the hero of the book Gilliatt commits suicide at Houmet Paradis by drowning himself.
The island was previously known as Houmet de L’Eperquerie, but the name was changed when it was bought by the Collas family, as their estate was at Paradis.
In 1951 James Watson from Newcastle-upon-Tyne purchased the island for £500. In 2004 his grandson sold it to an anonymous group of Guernsey islanders, who wanted it to become a nature reserve managed by the National Trust for Guernsey. Sea birds nest on the island and visitors are requested not to visit the island, apart from the central path, between 1st March and 31st July each year.
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