
The Ferry House is the only house at Feolin and used to be the house of the ferryman in earlier days. Feolin itself is nothing more than an anchoring place for the ferry and starting point for the only road on Jura, officially classified as the A846, which is actually more then it deserves in some places. If you book onto the Jura Boat Tours, local Robert Henry will take you out from the coast to catch a glimpse of other wildlife – including dolphins and whales.This tour over the island will start at Feolin, which will be the place where the majority of visitors set foot on Jura for the first time. Alongside its grand population of deer, Jura is home to many colonies of ordinary and grey seals, who make their home in nearby Loch Tarbert. It’s a great spot not just to walk or to enjoy the water, but to spy some of the local coastal wildlife. If you’re looking for beaches, Corran Sands and the quieter Small Isles Bay are best enjoyed during the summer when the water is a little warmer than usual. It’s accessible only by boat tours, which can take you safely to the whirlpool itself. Legend has said that many mythological creatures came from the whirlpool – from kelpies to mermaids to the hag goddess of winter. The Royal Navy even called it Britain’s most treacherous stretch of water! The third largest whirlpool in the world, Corryvreckan is found in the narrow strait between Jura and Scarba and created by the warm waters of the Atlantic and an unusual underwater makeup. The mysterious Corryvreckan Whirlpool is the stuff of local legend. This remote Scottish island provides the canvas from which these dedicated islanders take their inspiration and the distillery provides the means by which to bring this to life through whisky making.



Not only was it the place where he completed his seminal novel ‘1984’, but he also named it the most ‘un-get-at-able place’ in the world. To those not in the know, the island came to great prominence further South when author George Orwell stayed in Jura from 1946-48. It was even the source of the legend of Corryvreckan, where a Prince’s life was taken when he tried to keep his boat moored using three different ropes. Norse Vikings took control of much of the Inner Hebrides for centuries, thanks to their convenient location near Northern Europe.

Ulster is closer to Jura than Glasgow and would’ve made a natural place for residents to visit.įor a long time, the island was under Scandinavian rule. Some historians have even theorised that early settlers on the island were not from the Scottish mainland – but from Northern Ireland. Before this, Jura was almost entirely covered in forest and local animals – but the presence of Standing Stones on the island suggest that those early residents certainly left their mark. The island’s history dates back centuries, though many historians believe it was the Neolithic era that first welcomed humans onto the island.
