Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Flodday, Loch Maddy

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Gaelic name
  
Flodaigh

OS grid reference
  
NF941696

Highest elevation
  
25 m (82 ft)

Island group
  
Outer Hebrides

Lieutenancy area
  
Outer Hebrides

Norse name
  
Flot-øy

Area rank
  
199=

Area
  
50 ha

Council area
  
Outer Hebrides

Flodday, Loch Maddy httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Meaning of name
  
'raft' or 'float' island, from Old Norse

Flodday (Scottish Gaelic: Flodaigh) is an uninhabited island in Loch Maddy, North Uist in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.

The area of the island is recorded as 50 hectares (124 acres) in Rick Livingstone's tables, although it is not listed by Hamish Haswell-Smith in his tabulation of Scottish islands greater in size than 40 hectares (99 acres). No reason for this is given and his area calculation presumably provided a figure smaller than this total.

Loch Maddy contains a bewildering profusion of islands and islets. To the north west lie the smaller island of Fearamas and the complex island of Cliasaigh Mor/Cliasaigh Beag. The entrance to the sea loch is to the south east where lie the waters of The Minch. The village of Lochmaddy is to the west on the far side of the loch. Flodday is separated from North Uist by the narrows of Caolas Loch Portain.

The coastline is described as "lag boulders and gravel intertidal areas" to the north, east and west and rock or rock platform in the south and south east.

Folklore and storiesEdit

The Carmichael Watson Project records a brief story concerning a great northern diver. Kenneth MacLean, a local merchant, describes his sighting of this bird, at Flodday in 1884. Although he was familiar with the species it was the sole occasion on which he had seen it in flight. He recorded that "the wings went rapidly and the bird seemed to exert himself greatly". The island is also referred to in the Notebook of Alexander Carmichael, which contains material collected between October 1867 and December 1885.

The freshwater Loch na Beiste lies just beyond Caolas Loch Portain not far from the shore of North Uist. It was reputedly the haunt of a sea-cow.

References

Flodday, Loch Maddy Wikipedia


Similar Topics