The Scotsman

‘Anthrax Island’ will be better for burning because it will help local wildlife return

- By ALISON CAMPSIE newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Owners of a Scottish island engulfed by fire at the weekend claimed the blaze has done "a lot of good" and will bring life back to the enclave once contaminat­ed with anthrax.

Gruinard island, which sits off the mainland between Achiltibui­e and Laide in Wester Ross, went up in flames on Saturday night, with fire ripping through the uninhabite­d island that was used for military-led biological testing in the 1940s.

Health officials at NHS Highland said there was no risk to thepublicf­romthefire­ongruinard, which is also known as Anthrax Island, or the Island of Death, given the experiment­s during World War Two.

What caused the huge fire on the island, which covers around 200 hectares, has not been confirmed. Muirburn – the burning of moorland to encourage regrowth for grazing, and a stray ember from a canoeist’s campfire, have been cited locally as possible causes. A spokeswoma­n for Gruinard Estate, which owns the island, would not confirm if fire was deliberate­ly started, but said the blaze did not run out of control on Saturday.

A spokeswoma­n for estate said: "It hasn't caused any damage. It has done good. The island was totally impenetrab­le and the sea eagles killed any wildlife there.

"In around two months, there will be green shoots.

"It will certainly have done the island a lot of good. It didn't go out of control. It looked dramatic.”

Oyster catchers, curlews and

geese are said to have inhabited Gruinard, according to locals.

Donna Hopton, who lives opposite the island on the mainland, said she saw smoke rising from Gruinard around 6pm on Saturday as she was out walking her dog.

Ms Hopton, who runs Gairloch Marine Wildlife, said: “The instant thought is that it was muirburn as its muirburn

season, but we thought that was a wee bit odd as the island is not used for grazing.

"The other rumour is that there were a couple of canoeists there at the weekend who had a campfire.”

The island has effectivel­y been a no-go zone for more than 80 years, with local shipping charts warning crews to stay clear.

The location was classified as anthrax-free in 1987 following a clean-up campaign after a group called the Dark Harvest Commandos highlighte­d the contaminat­ion.

In 1942, Gruinard was requisitio­ned from its owners for the experiment­s, with anthrax bombs dropped on sheep from a Vickers Wellington bomber plane to determine how harmful the highly infectious disease

could be in a warfare situation.

The power of anthrax became quickly clear when the sheep started dying after three days, with its potential to paralyse or render cities hospitable summed up in the report of the tests. A sheep infected with the Gruinard anthrax later washed up on the mainland with compensati­on quickly paid to several locals after a

number of farm and domestic animals died.

Following the fire, a Ministry of Defence (MOD) spokespers­on said: “Gruinard Island was decontamin­ated and deemed safe in 1987. As part of the sale of the island in 1990, the MOD agreed to undertake further work, if necessary, within 150 years of its sale.”

 ?? ?? 0 The fire broke out on Gruinard island around 6pm on Saturday.
Picture: Donna Hopton/gairloch Marine Wildlife/wildlifean­dgin.co.uk
0 The fire broke out on Gruinard island around 6pm on Saturday. Picture: Donna Hopton/gairloch Marine Wildlife/wildlifean­dgin.co.uk

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