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People For most of the year the St Kildans were on their own - vital supplies only came once a year when the tacksman came from Skye to collect the rents but sometimes more came from visiting ships which brought tourists. The St Kildans were Hebridean and spoke Gaelic although they soon learned some English when visiting yachtsmen and tourists made it sensible to do so. They dressed in a similar fashion to other Hebridean islanders. The St Kildans generally had very little contact with the mainland - their main method of communication was by attaching little wooden vessels to an inflated sheep's stomach which was then sent out to sea. This method saved the islanders from starvation on more than one occasion. They had no running water, electricity or gas; few books apart from the family Bible and no radio or television. They enjoyed music and games like horse racing and a form of shinty. They grew potatoes, some barley, oats and corn in the thin soil and they also kept a few cows and chickens. Until the mid-nineteenth century they kept horses to carry fuel (peat or turf, no wood) but mainly they carried everything on their backs. Blackface sheep lived on Hirta and Boreray and ewe's milk was used to make cheese. Sheep's wool was used for clothing, blanketing and tweed. Although the people of St Kilda lived on an island, they ate very little fish. Their meals were taken at unusual times and lacked variety and balance (often resulting in indigestion!). Breakfast was between 9-10am and consisted of porridge, milk and sometimes the flesh of a fulmar which was boiled in the porridge. Dinner was at 4p.m. and was usually mutton, fulmar or gannet flesh with potatoes when available. Tea was at 9p.m. in summer and 11p.m. in winter when they worked on into the night. This was tea with bread and cheese, the flesh of a fulmar and sometimes porridge. The islanders took thousands of birds and eggs from the cliffs every year but never so many that the colonies were destroyed. They caught puffins in the spring and summer, took the eggs of guillemots, collected fulmars in August and gugas (young gannets) in September. They dried the sea birds and kept them for winter in special stone beehive like stores called 'cleits'. They also used the rich, fatty oil from the bodies in many ways including for lighting. They sent huge quantities of feathers to the mainland to be used for stuffing mattresses. Bird feathers and oil were also used as payment for rent. Bones were shaped into useful implements and skins made into shoes. The St Kildans were accomplished rock climbers. This was a risky business and, climbing barefooted, a number slipped to their deaths off the wet rock ledges in the dark. Their whole life depended on the sea birds - without the birds the little community would not have existed at all.
The St Kilda population was very small and it was reduced even further through emigration and infant tetanus (infant mortality was a huge problem and in the eighteenth century it was very common for babies to die at about 8 days old from tetanus). In the nineteenth century it was clear that the remaining islanders would have to leave. They had always had a hard life and by 1930 it was impossible for them to carry on. There were too few people
Land The smoothness of the land on Hirta is a very clear contrast with the craggy roughness of the outlying stacks. Mullach Sgar, Mullach Mor, Conachair and Oiseval all have rounded curves, and along with the horseshoe shape of Village Bay on Hirta's smooth countryside, they have produced an open, grassy ring which is broken on the south west by the sea. Dun is separated from Hirta by a channel 20 metres wide which forms a breakwater to the Atlantic storms on the south west of Village Bay on Hirta. The south western cliffs of Dun have been deeply cut into by the sea and the whole island is slowly being converted into a line of isolated stacks. Even though Dun is very high, during stormy weather a great column of spume and spray overtops Dun and falls into Village Bay. The coastline is similar on Boreray and outlying stacks which are honeycombed with caves and creeks, some of which break through to form tunnels and natural arches (e.g. the 50m tunnel near Gob an Duin). Unlike most Hebridean islands, St Kilda shows no evidence of being affected by glaciation during the Ice Age.
Wildlife The extreme isolation of St Kilda means that only a limited range of plants and animals are able to survive on the islands. For example, of the 367 butterflies and moths recorded on the Western Isles, only 58 survive on St Kilda. Many of the animals that do live on St Kilda are either large in number or have adopted a unique character. One such example is the wren, which has evolved on St Kilda into a larger, less streaky version of its mainland relative. Another example is the St Kilda mouse. The house mouse became extinct immediately after the evacuation of the islanders because it depended on humans for its survival. The field mouse however still thrives, differing in size and colour from those on the mainland. It is much larger than the Scottish mainland fieldmouse, weighing over 70 grams when fully grown. It is now a protected species. It was not always a carnivore but it now feeds on dead sheep and birds as well as snails, insects, moss and seeds. A flock of primitive sheep found nowhere else in the world survives on the island of Soay. After the islanders departed, some Soay sheep were transferred to Hirta where they now run unmanaged. An unusual form of Blackface sheep is still marooned on Boreray. The islands of St Kilda are also home to many Atlantic grey seals and various whales and dolphins are frequent visitors. St Kilda is very important botanically. On Hirta the plant life is grassland - with wind blasted heather living on steep slopes. Some grassland is changed slightly due to the droppings of sea birds and sheep; and by the sea spray. In the Village luxuriant grassland containing buttercups and daisies has developed on the farmland abandoned by the St Kildans in 1930. There are no trees (except for the tiny Least willow which grows to 5cm high), shrubs or rare plants except moss campion and purple saxifrage. There is bilberry, crowberry, cowberry but no gorse bushes. The sea has a great influence on St Kilda's plant life - some plants which are usually found only in exposed coastal areas are found right across the islands. The high humidity from rain and salt spray has produced a peaty soil which supports 130 different species of flowering plants (including thrift, moss campion, primrose, roseroot, yellow flag, purple saxifrage and butterwort) and almost 200 lichens. Because it is unlikely that the great ice sheets of the Ice Age ever reached St Kilda, the islands are a reserve for pre-glacial plants.
Underwater life
Importance
Scotland. Scottish Natural Heritage is supporting a programme of wildlife research and survey on the islands, including a long term study of the Soay sheep, monitoring sea bird population and detailed vegetation mapping.The scientific interest of St Kilda is constant and of international significance to the study of vast colonies of sea birds. Soay sheep found only on St Kilda continue to inhabit Hirta as well as Soay. The islands have a sub species of wren and field mouse, a seal population and many things of botanical interest.
The St Kilda Management Plan Management Plans are one of the main tools used by The National Trust for Scotland to look after their properties. These plans set out the key features of the property and a vision for their future, and also contain a prioritised list of things that need to be done within the life of the plan - usually 5 years. The last St Kilda Management Plan ran out in 2001. A new plan for 2002-2007 needed to be produced, to serve a variety of purposes:
Issues
National Nature Reserve - these are legal reserves of national importance SSSI - these are exemplary places in Scotland for nature conservation. They are also special for their plants/animals or a combination of these. Biosphere Reserve - these are nominated by national governments of inclusion in the UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Programme set up in 1971 to co-ordinate understanding of man's influence on the natural environment. National Scenic Area - these are nationally important areas of outstanding natural beauty and represent some of the best examples of Scotland's grandest landscapes, especially lochs and mountains.
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