Guestuser: Login or enrol?
Welcome to "MountainViews" Guest visitor - have a look around - enrol (free & quick) to see Lists & Logs etc.

Summit or area:
Set min height for summits.

Map of 150m+ Summits (clickable) + - (Map Zoom)

Local 150m+ Summits
Killurly, 331m   Beenrour, 418m   Bolus, 410m   Cahernageeha Mountain, 499m   Farraniaragh Mountain, 468m   Scarriff Island, 252m  

This session you have viewed
Scarriff Island

Users Online:
Guests online: 58

Conditions and Info
Use of MountainViews is governed by conditions.
Hillwalking is a risk sport. Information about the site and about safety is here.
Opinions in material here are not necessarily endorsed by MountainViews.
Information in comments, walks or GPS tracks may not be accurate as regards safety or access permission. You are responsible for your safety and your permission to walk. More.
Recent Items   RSS Feed for Recent Items.
Add to Google
Dunkerron Mountains Area Printable format
Maximum height for area: 784 metres Summits in area: 48
OS Map(s): 70, 78, 83, 84, 85 for all tops Set Area Map On
   

Scarriff Island Hill Kerry County
An Scairbh A name in Irish (Language)
(Ir. An Scairbh [logainm.ie], poss. 'rough place')
Height: 252 metres OS 1/50k Mapsheet: 84 for top
Grid Ref: V44376 55202 Latitude: 51.728142 Longitude: -10.253143
ITM: 444360 555268 Prominence: 252m   Isolation: 9.4km
Rating graphic. Why Scarriff is so named is something of a mystery, as it is quite some distance from the mainland in deep water. One possible solution is to interpret the name as Ir. garbh, 'rough', with a prosthetic s-, as happens with many other words, such as
Scarriff Island is the 1007th highest summit in Ireland. Scarriff Island is the most southerly summit and also the most westerly in the Dunkerron Mountains area. Our data has reached 67% of the goal for this summit. (Details)
   

COMMENTS for Scarriff Island 1 of 1
MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Scarriff Island in area Dunkerron Mountains, County Kerry, Ireland
Picture: Towards the Scarriff Steps Expand pics.
 
Mind the Goats
by wicklore  25 Jul 2011 ‘Mind the goats’ the man said cheerily. ‘They’re not used to people so they might go for you’. And he shoved off from the island, leaving us to our fate. And these weren’t typical goats. They were the big hairy kind, the strong kind with massive curved horns. The kind of goats that when they appear out of the shrouding mist look big and scary and make you stand ever so subconsciously closer to the next person. As we ascended Scarriff I noticed that the goats initially appeared in 1’s and 2’s before slipping away into the cloud. Each time they reappeared there were more of them. ‘They’re grouping for an all out counter-assault’ I whispered to my fellow walkers. ‘They won’t take this invasion of their territory lightly.’ But the goats played a diplomatic hand. They chose to wait and ascertain our motive for being there, before deciding their own move. And they discovered our motive was benign- to simply have the unique joy of climbing to the top of Scarriff Island. We meant no harm to the goats, the bird population, the flora, or the plentiful butterflies. And so the goats left us in peace and we left them in peace, giving each other something to talk about in the days ahead.

It’s not often, nay rarely, that humans land on this island. But some do, and the evidence of their passing is there to see. Scarriff has the remains of a dwelling. This family left in the 1920’s under a Government relocation scheme, supposedly after a resident had to swim several miles ashore to seek help for an ill family member. Their ruined home remains, along with overgrown stone walls which are home to some of the island’s many nesting birds. It was emotional to stand at their former home and imagine what life was like for the children growing up there. I could almost hear their laughter as I imagined them running up and down the steep grassy slopes above their house

There is evidence of more recent activity too – modern post and wire fencing is erected here and there, its purpose unclear. However the island was used periodically for grazing sheep so perhaps this fencing is a leftover from those times. But all of this has little impact on the 365 acre island – most of the time that you are walking you will see nothing but the high grass, heather and gorse that cover the land. The goats will appear sporadically and disappear just as quickly. And of course you will have the eternal accompanying sounds of the myriad of birdlife that choose this as their home.

Scarriff is an island almost completely encircled by cliffs and insurmountable rocks. But someone in the distant past thoughtfully carved out some tentative steps in one section of gentle sloping rock, making access a little less slippery. It was here that our boatmen dropped us with their friendly warning about the goats. Reaching the summit in the cloud, we found an unmarked grassy mound. We chose to leave it as we found it, and took nothing but precious memories.
Help rate this comment for usefulness.  Choose a scoring button and then 'Rate' (Comment Rating 5.00) Your Score: Very useful <<  >>Average

The violent history
by Conor74  27 Jul 2011 Richard Mersey, in his "Hills of Cork and Kerry" refers to an event in medieval times involving John Arundel, Knight of Cornwall (not sure that title is accurate) who pillaged a convent in England, sailed to Ireland where he threw the nuns overboard to lighten the ship during a storm, and who landed on this island only to be dragged off it and to his death by a wave. There is no indication as to how accurate this version is, but it would be rather interesting to speculate if the Oratory, whose ruins we passed, would have stood gazing down on the scene. Anyway, I just had to check this one out a little more, and Wikepedia obliges with 2 different entries...

1. Sir John Arundell of Lanherne (died 1379), was an English naval commander...celebrated for his repulse of the French fleet off the coast of Cornwall in 1379... Having, according to Thomas Walsingham's story, profaned a convent at or near Southampton, and carried off many of its occupants, the fleet was pursued by a violent tempest, when the wretched nuns who had been carried off were thrown overboard to lighten the ships. The vessels were, however, wrecked on the Irish coast, according to some authorities near Scariff, but according to others at Cape Clear Island. Sir John Arundell, together with his esquires, and other men of high birth, were drowned, and twenty-five ships were lost with most of their crews.

2. He was born in Etchingham, Sussex, England to Richard Fitzalan, 10th Earl of Arundel and his second wife Eleanor of Lancaster (Eleanor Plantagenet).

Being in command of a naval expedition in aid to the Duke of Brittany, he defeated the French fleet off the coast of Cornwall.

Commanding a force with the purpose of bringing relief to the Duke of Brittany, Sir John was compelled to wait for stronger winds. During this wait he decided to take refuge in a nunnery, where his men "took no notice of the sanctity of the place and... violently assaulted and raped" those they found inside. Further to this Sir John "allowed his men to ransack the countryside as they liked and to impoverish the people". When the force eventually set out to sea, carrying with them goods stolen from a nearby church and under a pronouncement of excommunication from the wronged priests, the expedition was caught in a storm. Thomas Walsingham reports that during the panic of the storm, Sir John murdered those of his men who refused to make for shore for fear of being shipwrecked upon the rocks. Subsequently, after safely arriving on an island off the Irish coast, Sir John and his boat captain were swept back into the sea and drowned. He was buried in Lewes, Sussex.

Source'The Chronica Maiora of Thomas Walsingham, 1376-1422', ed. & trans. J. Taylor, W. Childs & L. Watkiss
Help rate this comment for usefulness.  Choose a scoring button and then 'Rate' (Comment Rating 5.00) Your Score: Very useful <<  >>Average

MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Scarriff Island in area Dunkerron Mountains, County Kerry, Ireland
Picture: Mountainviewers reach new heights Expand pics.
First Ascent
by mcrtchly  25 Jul 2011 As we approached Scarriff Island it appeared almost ominously through the fog ahead of us. As we got closer we could see that the island was draped in cloud which looked to me almost like some land that 'time forgot'. We landed on the NE coast of Scarriff , half expecting to meet some prehistoric creatures but we only found a herd of goats (along with the resident seabirds) and followed a SW line for about 1.6km to the summit. The going was a bit harder than Puffin Island, which we had already done on the same day, mainly because the extensive cover of long grass, bracken, gorse and heather which was sodden from the fog shrouding the island. Although there were no views from the summit (because of the fog) the views from lower down gave a stunning perspective of the coastline and an appreciation of the isolation of the family who lived on the island until the early C20th. Once again thanks to Wicklore for organising the visit.
Help rate this comment for usefulness.  Choose a scoring button and then 'Rate' (Comment Rating 4.50) Your Score: Very useful <<  >>Average

MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Scarriff Island in area Dunkerron Mountains, County Kerry, Ireland
Picture: dead eyes Expand pics.
 
Supervalu and chocolate
by jackill  25 Jul 2011 Back in 1911 Lawerence Shea and his wife Bridget would have looked out of this bedroom window at Deenish Island.
He could not read or write and spoke only Irish. Five of his seven living children recorded in the census could and spoke Irish and English.
How alien would our lifes today seem to these people
In 1901 the same Sheas were living on the mainland in the townland of Coomatloukane.
Two shepherds father and son John and Patrick Galvin shared the house on the island at that time.
One of our boatmen said that a story goes locally that one of the Galvins once swam to the mainland to get help for a family member with appendicitis.

Thatch gone now, and only one window with a frame.
Help rate this comment for usefulness.  Choose a scoring button and then 'Rate' (Comment Rating 3.67) Your Score: Very useful <<  >>Average

MountainViews.ie Picture about mountain Scarriff Island in area Dunkerron Mountains, County Kerry, Ireland
Picture: The bulk of Scarriff Island rising from the Atlantic. Expand pics.
by paddyhillsbagger  3 Aug 2009 My hat goes off to the first one to climb this island hill. Not only does it look quite imposing, but simply sailing the water to it would be an adventure!
Help rate this comment for usefulness.  Choose a scoring button and then 'Rate' (Comment Rating 2.00) Your Score: Very useful <<  >>Average

(End of comment section for Scarriff Island. Recent comments about other mountains below.)


RECENT CONTRIBUTIONS 1 2 3 .. 22 Next page >>
Track
Exploration of routes on Ballincurra.
simon3 4 hours ago.
Starting from the forest entrance to the south this track sh walk, Length:5.6km, Climb: 213m, Area: Ballincurra Hill, Shannon (Ireland) Ballincurra H

  
Track
Simple way up from the SW.
simon3 4 hours ago.
Park near the start off the road which was retarred in 2012. walk, Length:2.8km, Climb: 152m, Area: Knockadigeen Hill, Shannon (Ireland) Knockadigeen

  
Summit Summary
Silvermine Mountains Far E Top: Trivial ascent, some views, gateway to wooded Ea
Collaborative entry Last edit by: simon3, jackill 4 hours ago.
Park in the carpark at R84440 69415 (388 mtrs), cross the road and head uphill and east for about 200 meters, the summit is at a track junction.

Summit Summary
Knockane: Easy though rough to get to, great views.
Collaborative entry Last edit by: simon3, jackill 4 hours ago.
Park at a forest entrance R850 665 , room for 5 cars, walk into the forest right at R844 663 which will bring you through the forest onto moorland. As it peters out you have a rough 200 meter cros...

  
Summit Summary
Cooneen Hill: Briars, pines and pain
Collaborative entry Last edit by: simon3, jackill 4 hours ago.
Start from the forestry entrance at R90294 66782 and walk uphill, taking two lefts and one right off the main track onto a very rough track thats almost blocked near the end with felled trees, to...

  
Summit Comment
Cooneen Hill: View from the South West
simon3 4 hours ago.
Knockane affords this view of Cooneen Hill from the SW.

Track
Experimental track of a trip to Keeper Hill and 2 nearby summits.
simon3 a day ago.
This may not be at all an optimum route. walk, Length:20.8km, Climb: 859m, Area: Knockfune, Shannon (Ireland) Knockfune, Knockane, Keeper Hill

  
Forum: General
Thank you MV
ahendroff a day ago.
At 5.42pm today I completed my 404th and final Arderin. Long journey to here. Delighted & overjoyed. Humbled at the challenge also. And thanks Mountain Views for that. Gougane Barra will always be...

  
Track
Varied, strenuous wild Bluestacks walk.
simon3 3 days ago.
This varied route explores the two Ardnageers, Croaghbane, C walk, Length:21.0km, Climb: 999m, Area: Ardnageer SW Top, Bluestack Mountains (Ireland)

Summit Comment
Soarns Hill: Forested summit
slemish 2 days ago.
Getting to the summit of Soarns Hill is difficult and the extensive forestry means that views are severely limited. But as it qualifies under MV prominence rules, off I went to climb it. I parked ...

  
Summit Comment
Soarns Hill: Local summit visit
Harry Goodman 2 days ago.
Climbed Soarns Hill to-day as one of the 100 listed hills nearest to my home. I used three5four0's very helpful route description. The following additional information may be useful. The second...

  
Forum: General
...
BleckCra 2 days ago.
Thank you kevin carroll. If I can put a smile on that contrary face, the Matterhorn should be a cakewalk.


RECENT CONTRIBUTIONS 1 2 3 .. 22 Next page >>