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2022

NM7317 : Easdale - Toposcope and gull

taken 3 years ago, near to Ellenabeich, Seil, Argyll And Bute, Scotland

Easdale - Toposcope and gull
Easdale - Toposcope and gull
The little cylindrical toposcope on the top of the hill on Easdale (38m, 125') has a circular plaque telling you what you can see in each direction. Well it would, if you could read it, but unfortunately it has been rendered somewhat indecipherable thanks to the guano from feathered friends like the one seen perched on it here.
Easdale (Eilean Eisdeal)

Easdale island lies in the Firth of Lorn directly opposite the village of Ellenabeich which is located at the southwestern tip of the Isle of Seil (Saoil).
It is one of a group of islands known as the Slate Islands due to their production of that commodity for many years.
Easdale is remarkable for several reasons; it has been quite dramatically excavated for slate giving it a rather moth-eaten appearance - much more so, as a percentage than any of the other Slate Islands with the possible exception of tiny Belnahua.
Despite its small size it has a thriving pub / restaurant, the 'Puffer Bar' - something many larger islands do not possess. Perhaps most remarkably it is the most densely populated of all Scottish islands with 235 people per km˛ - but this is a quirk of its tiny size as its total population is only about 60. This figure however is a remarkable increase on its lowest ebb when only five people remained on the island in the early 1960s.

Statistics for Easdale:
Area: 25ha (62 acres)
Population: 59
Density: 235/km˛ (609/mile˛)
Highest point: (Unnamed) 38m (125')
Chief (and only) settlement: Easdale Village (100% of population)
Note the area of the island given above is at MHWS (Mean High Water Springs) i.e. land that is always (usually) above sea level. At low tide the island's area increases by almost precisely 50% to 37.6 ha (93 acres)

The whole of Easdale island is a conservation area - see map: LinkExternal link
The former slate workings and quarries are a scheduled monument: LinkExternal link
Almost every cottage is HES Cat 'C' listed - there are 22 separate listings:
No.1 LinkExternal link - Note that this is the most informative listing
Nos.2-5 LinkExternal link
Nos.8,100 & 6 LinkExternal link
The Drill Hall LinkExternal link
No.9 LinkExternal link
Nos. 11,11A & 11B LinkExternal link
Nos. 12 & 12A LinkExternal link
No.13 LinkExternal link
No.15 LinkExternal link
Nos. 32,18 & 19 LinkExternal link
No.29 LinkExternal link
No.23 LinkExternal link
No.24 LinkExternal link
Nos.31,33A & 33 LinkExternal link
Nos.34 & 35 LinkExternal link
Nos. 41-43 LinkExternal link
No.44 LinkExternal link
No.48 LinkExternal link
No.36 LinkExternal link
The Coaley LinkExternal link
No.55 LinkExternal link
Nos.50-54 LinkExternal link

Easdale's own website: LinkExternal link
See also this Guardian article: LinkExternal link

The Slate Islands

The group of islands known as The Slate Islands form an archipelago in the Firth of Lorn to the SSW of Oban.
They get their name from the fact that they were extensively quarried for slate, particularly in the C19th. The populations of these islands were then much higher than they are now, with most of the men involved in quarrying the slate.
There are four principal Slate Islands, Easdale, Seil, Luing and Belnahua. Some also include the islands of Torsa (113 ha (280 acres)) and Shuna (451 ha (1,114 acres)) though neither of these islands had slate commercially extracted. These two small islands lie off the eastern coast of Luing, and while Torsa does have slate formations which were never exploited, Shuna is mostly composed of other rocks. See the end of this article for information on yet more 'claimants' to Slate Island status!
The two smallest islands, Easdale and Belnahua were the most extensively quarried, at least as a percentage of their land area.
Belnahua, the smallest island at just 6ha (15 acres) is no longer inhabited and access to it requires organising a trip with a local boatman. At its most active however as many as 200 people lived on this tiny island.
For information on the main four Slate Islands, please see their own shared descriptions, listed below:
Belnahua: Link
Easdale (Eilean Eisdeal): Link
Seil (Saoil): Link
Luing (Luinn): Link

Various other islands and islets are occasionally included within the Slate Islands. Most of these would more accurately be called 'Islands of the Firth of Lorn' as they are included purely for their geographical location rather than any appreciable quarrying of slate (or any at all in many cases). The two largest islands sometimes referred to in this way are Kerrera (1,214 ha (4.69 miles˛)) just off the coast from Oban and lofty Scarba (1,474 ha (5.69 miles˛) which reaches an altitude of 449m (1,473')) which lies between Luing and Jura.
Some of the smaller islets that are sometimes considered to be Slate Islands are those that cluster to the west of Luing , namely (from roughly south to north)
Lunga (Lorn not Treshnish) (250 ha (1 mile˛)),
Eilean Dubh Mor (50 ha (124 acres)) & Beag (15 ha (37 acres)),
Ormsa, Dubh Sgeir, Fladda and also, off the western coast of Seil the substantial Insh Island (33 ha (82 acres)).
I don't think that the Garvellachs were ever considered as Slate Islands however.


Creative Commons Licence [Some Rights Reserved]   © Copyright Rob Farrow and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
Geographical Context: Coastal Uplands Islands Primary Subject: Toposcope
1:50,000 Modern Day Landranger(TM) Map © Crown Copyright
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1:50,000 Modern Day Landranger(TM) Map © Crown Copyright
TIP: Click the map for more Large scale mapping
Grid Square
NM7317, 148 images   (more nearby 🔍)
Photographer
Rob Farrow   (more nearby)
Date Taken
Friday, 1 July, 2022   (more nearby)
Submitted
Tuesday, 23 August, 2022
Subject Location
OSGB36: geotagged! NM 7365 1710 [10m precision]
WGS84: 56:17.5300N 5:39.5611W
Camera Location
OSGB36: geotagged! NM 7362 1715
View Direction
Southeast (about 135 degrees)
Clickable map
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SW S SE
Image Type (about): close look 
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