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Drummore

drummore

Drummore is a name of Gaelic origin that means 'big ridge' and the big ridge in question is thought to that upon which High Drummore sits. Drummore is the most Southerly village in Scotland and a fact that it boasts about. It is almost as far South as Penrith in England. Drummore's harbour has had a varied history beginning in the early 1800s when it was used for importing lime. Much later the harbour changed hands to the Ministry of Defence who used it in conjunction with West Freugh and the Luce Bay bombing range. The MoD sold the harbour to the Drummore Harbour Trust Ltd in 2004. Drummore looks like a village that has been unchanged for centuries but in the 1960s there was a mudslide that blocked the main road into Drummore and the route through the town had to changed. The old main road ran from the Clashwhannon (you should notice the pub on the left as you enter the village) and is now a footpath down towards Shore Street. Shore Street includes some victorian buildings, including the Ship Inn. Drummore once had a castle, which, like the Castle of St John and Dunskey Castle, was owned by the Adairs of Kinhilt.

Out into Luce Bay, just a few miles offshore you may spot some rocky islands jutting out of the sea - these are the Scar(e)s. The islands host colonies of Gannets in the breeding season and are managed by the RSPB. Unfortunately there are no regular trips out to them.

 

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