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Breath of winter

1 September 2009

The morning of the 29th August, the anniversary of the ‘Leaving’ of St Kilda and I stand on the pier looking over a storm tossed bay, the wind from the NW, whipping down over Ruaival, beyond the hill summit there is an ominous darkness approaching from the direction of Boreray. It hangs over the hill like a shroud. The sea is a stealth grey, the contrasting white edges of waves crash onto the beach and the rocks beyond. The wind is picking up the spume and throwing it back at the sea in curtains.

 

 

 

Four gannets are hunting over the bay, hanging in the air before plunging vertically into the sea, their whiteness surreal against the grey. One dives close to the end of the jetty, banked over its wide wings showing their black tip insignia and its sulphur vivid head. Rising to the surface like a cork it shakes itself and launches into the wind. Watching them exocet across the water, they are magnificent birds, avian arrows, specialists in an air sea hunting ritual. Continuously they soar and dive, sometimes rising only a few feet from the water to spear back in at some half seen fish. ‘I wonder if the mackerel have arrived in the bay’ ?

 

 

 

A dark predatory shape rows through the air from the north east, its falcon like wings driving it low and purposeful across the water. A Great Skua targeting a rising Gannet, to pirate any catch the gannet may have made. The gannet rises fishless and the skua banks away, as if it never really had any intent of an airborne mugging and it has urgent business elsewhere.

 

The rain arrives from Ruaival in a torrent driven by the NW wind, I turn to the open door of the lobster pot store at the end of the pier, beaten there by the grey flutter of a lost racing pigeon. Driven ahead of the wind it crashes in desperation over my shoulder into the lobster pots of the interior. Perhaps remembering the safety of its home loft it sits looking at me from the top of a creel. We share the shelter as the storm passes, I know that he or she will never leave the island and I smell the cold breath of winter carried in the wind.

 

St Kilda Day

29 August 2009

Today marks a historic date in the story of St Kilda, the 29th of August of course being the day on which the last few islanders left in 1930. Increasing contact with the outside world had put a lot of pressure on their way of life and a greater level of communication with the rest of the world had contributed towards the final decision to evacuate the island once and for all. A steady trickle of emigration had begun some years previous and by the 1920’s it had become impossible to maintain any semblance of a self-sustaining community. It is now 79 years since the HMS Harebell sailed from Village Bay carrying the last 36 islanders to a new and vastly different life elsewhere.

  

St Kilda is again today inhabited, with a year round presence on the island. I myself am present on the island for a six-month stint through the fairer months from April to September. The MoD radar station has civilian personnel on the island all year, however even they aren’t permanent residents, alternating their time on-island in month-on month-off format. Not since 1930 has there been a permanent resident on St Kilda; no one has been able to truly call this place home for nearly 80 years. Even now it is unclear as to what will become of the semi-permanent population of the island in the coming years. Today the future of St Kilda is as uncertain as it has ever been. This part of the story is by no means unique to St Kilda.

Ian the Warden

Previous Entries

14 July 2009It's a hard life.
7 July 2009Breeding Birds
2 July 2009Birds Birds Everywhere!
18 June 2009Here they come...
13 June 2009Beachclean 2009
15 May 2009Death From Above!!!
10 October 2008And now, the end is near…….
29 September 2008Shutting up shop
28 August 2008Puffling Round-Up
6 August 2008Hiding places, old and new
17 July 2008BACK TO NORMAL
25 June 2008Water, water everywhere…….
9 June 2008Things have hotted up and dried up
31 May 2008The excitement of stray visitors
28 May 2008A month of firsts for the archaeologist
8 May 2008THINGS ARE HOTTING UP!
25 April 2008First impressions - It's All Gone Green
16 April 2008Spring migrants
5 February 2008Rat threat to St Kilda
16 January 2008Manse Mysteries
6 December 2007Remembrance Service
26 September 2007Last words
23 September 2007Found already!!!
17 September 2007I name this ship.....
8 September 2007Sheep catch 2007
30 August 2007Ups and downs in the seabird season
13 August 2007Cleit of the week...
10 August 2007Nights at Carn Mor
25 July 2007Walls, walls, walls
12 July 2007Anyone for a glass of Revoltosa?
22 June 2007Bonxie chicks & Brocken spectres - First impressions from the Petrel-Skua Team
8 June 2007Sad end for a fulmar
24 May 2007New archaeological survey of St Kilda
2 May 2007Springtime on Kilda
16 April 2007Rocks away!
2 April 2007A 50th Celebration
6 February 2007A winter wonderland
26 September 2006Another season over
25 September 2006Last visitors of the season
11 September 2006The hop, skip and a jump to Dun
5 September 2006“I’ve started so I’ll finish”
28 August 2006Big red boats
19 August 2006Fine dining, blood, sweat, and tears
9 August 2006Puffins, Kittiwakes and other news
12 July 2006Seabirds, belly dancing and Viking snails
15 June 2006The Army Invade St Kilda
2 May 2006We're back!!! St Kilda 2006
21 October 2005The 75th Anniversary mailboat has been found!!!
8 September 2005Now that’s entertainment (magic)
1 September 2005The 75th Anniversary of the last evacuation of islanders from St Kilda, August 29th 2005
30 August 2005Norman Gillies and Family return
12 August 2005Wacky races
4 August 2005'Christopher' Wren Inspects Work On Hirta Kirk
25 July 2005Poor year for puffins
15 July 2005New Gaelic Bible for the Kirk
8 July 2005Working the night shift at St Kilda’s petrel station
28 June 2005The view from my window
20 June 2005Archaeology goes down the drain
16 June 2005End of an Era for St Kilda archaeology
8 June 2005John, Paul, Ringo and Toastcrumb
2 June 2005Normal service is resumed...
21 September 2004Still over 60 knots
21 September 2004And so to bed..
7 September 2004What a difference a day makes..
6 September 2004By Royal Appointment
30 August 200429th August 1930
21 August 2004Soay sheep research
12 August 2004A lucky escape
9 August 2004Repairing the Dry Burn
26 July 2004Digging for fairies
1 July 2004First catch your bonxie....