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We require this information to understand your needs and provide you with a better service, and in particular for the following reasons: What we do with the information we gather other information relevant to customer surveys and/or offers.demographic information such as postcode, preferences and interests.contact information including email address.We may collect the following information: This policy is effective from Friday September 18, 2015. You should check this page from time to time to ensure that you are happy with any changes. Should we ask you to provide certain information by which you can be identified when using this website, then you can be assured that it will only be used in accordance with this privacy statement.Ĭrinan Hotel may change this policy from time to time by updating this page. This privacy policy sets out how Crinan Hotel uses and protects any information that you give Crinan Hotel when you use this website.Ĭrinan Hotel is committed to ensuring that your privacy is protected. Photograph of The Gulf of Corryvreckan - © Copyright Walter Baxter and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence - Image and further details from They were rescued only when passing lobstermen noticed a fire the party had lit in an effort to keep warm.Ī useful source for more information is the Explore Argyll & The Isles website: you can talk to us here at the Hotel on 01546 830261 or email: /* */ The boat capsized as the group tried to disembark, leaving Orwell, his two companions, and his three-year-old son stranded on the uninhabited outcrop with no supplies or means of escape. When the boat’s small engine suddenly sheared off from its mounts and dropped into the sea, Orwell’s party resorted to oars and was saved from drowning only when the whirlpool began to recede and the group managed to paddle the distressed craft to a rocky outcrop about a mile distant from the Jura coastline. On the return leg of an August boating daytrip to nearby Glengarrisdale, Orwell seems to have misread the local tide tables and steered into rough seas that drove his boat near to the whirlpool. To work on his novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, Orwell had fled the distractions of London in April 1947 and taken up temporary residence on the isolated island of Jura in the Inner Hebrides. Experienced scuba divers who have explored the waters have described it as "potentially the most dangerous dive in Britain".įamously, the author George Orwell nearly drowned in the Corryvreckan whirlpool in the summer of 1947. However, the nearby 'Grey Dogs', or 'Little Corryvreckan', is classified as dangerous. Local boats do daily trips from Crinan to the Corryvreckan.Īlthough not formally classified by the Royal Navy as unnavigable the Admiralty's West Coast of Scotland Pilot guide to inshore waters calls Corryvreckan "very violent and dangerous" and says "no vessel should then attempt this passage without local knowledge". Flood tides and inflow from the Firth of Lorne to the west drive the waters of Corryvreckan to waves of over 30 feet (9metres) and the roar of the resulting maelstrom can be heard ten miles (16 km) away. The whirlpool is on the northern side of the gulf, surrounding a pyramid-shaped basalt pinnacle that rises from depths of 70metres to 29metres at its rounded top. The Gulf of Corryvreckan, also called the Strait of Corryvreckan, is a narrow strait between the islands of Jura and Scarba in Argyll and Bute off Scotland's West Coast and only a few miles from Crinan.
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