Noss, Shetland

Exploring the sandstone cliff faces of the Isle of Noss will reveal ledges loaded with gannets, puffins, guillemots, shags, kittiwakes, Razorbills, fulmars and Great Skuas. The island was recognized as a National Nature Reserve in 1955, and has one of Europe’s largest and most diverse seabird colonies. Sheep have grazed the inland hillsides of Noss since the late 1800s and early 1900s when around twenty people lived on the island to manage the sheep farm. Along with the sheep, shaggy Shetland ponies graze the windblown slopes of Noss.

Our Zodiac Cruise with Elizabeth along the shores of Noss Island to see the more than 150,000 Gannets nesting on the mile long cliff was curtailed by a heavy swell, which meant that we were confined to the sheltered side of the island

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On to Lerwick

Cruise Barbados to Svalbard