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Princess Anne takes a shine to lighthouses



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Published Date: 14 July 2008
PRINCESS Anne has stepped up her bid to see all 215 of Scotland's lighthouses, it was revealed yesterday.
The Princess Royal, who has been fascinated by lighthouses since she was a girl, made a secret trip to Arran on Wednesday to visit the Pladda and the Holy Island Inner and Outer lights.

And later this month she hopes to "bag" another couple off
Skye aboard her newly commissioned vessel Pharos, on which she plans several more trips throughout the year.

Roger Lockwood, chief executive of the Northern Lighthouse Board, of which she is patron, said: "She must have visited more than 80 with us.

"It is not just about ticking off another light on the list. She also likes to see the places and conditions in which the technicians have to work.

"The princess has done all the major lights now and it will not be easy to do them all because there are many that are scattered all over the place. But it will be a remarkable feat if the princess ticks them all off."

It is believed her obsession began when she was five years old on a trip to Tiumpan Head in Lewis with the Queen.

This month's trip will be the third to Skye aboard Pharos, named after the seventh wonder of the world, the famed lighthouse of Alexandria.

Her hobby is so consuming that she also visits many lights secretly on private yachting jaunts with her husband, Vice-Admiral Tim Laurence.

The princess and her husband have even been mistaken for "a couple of chancers" on a lighthouse-bagging trip in 2005 by Oronsay islander Duncan McDougall.

But, as with many lighthouse enthusiasts, her love of the "signposts of the seas" is likely to be as mysterious as the towers themselves.

Ian Duff, 59, Scotland representative of the Association of Lighthouse Keepers, said: "If you ask anyone, they can't describe their fascination, but it seems to be infectious. I think it's the beauty of the lighthouse, and the isolation – they are all on cliff tops or on remote islands.

"There is a romantic side to it – on a lovely summer's morning when you're surrounded by seabirds singing and the sun is rising.

"But somewhere like Sules Skerrie in October when you can't stand up in the wind and the waves are breaking off the towers is quite different.

"There's also the history of them, the engineering, and the architecture."

The lighthouses the princess has visited include Flannan Isles in the Outer Hebrides where on Boxing Day 1900 three keepers mysteriously vanished.

She has also visited Inchkeith, on an uninhabited private island in the Forth owned by Scots entrepreneur Sir Tom Farmer.





The full article contains 453 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 13 July 2008 9:30 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Guga II,

Rockall 14/07/2008 02:21:04
Very good. However, I hope she is paying for the trips herself, and that they are not coming out of the public purse.
2

Proper Job,

Thailand 14/07/2008 04:50:10
Mr Lockwood of the Lighthouse Board says:

"But it will be a remarkable feat if the princess ticks them all off."

Truly remarkable. And her with no help other than from shameless forelock-tuggers on the Lighthouse Board, in the Coastguard and doubtless the police and the security services. And only her own private yacht to use (when not blagging free rides on helicopters, I am sure); and no day job to distract her from her obsession; and only unlimited funds to devote to it.

Truly remarkable. Has your Honours List mention been approved, Mr Lockwood? Shouldn't be long now!
3

Gordon Angus,

Sydney 14/07/2008 04:51:01
The title of the hobby/interest is pharology, and what the article does not stress stronger is that she visits the majority in her role as patron of the Northern Lighthouse Board. She is incredibly knowledgeable about the nautical, engineering and scientific side, as well as such as the financial and political aspects. When she visited our plant at Burrow-On-Furness, the engineers and tradesmen had to struggle to respond to technical questions re lights being exported. She and her husband keep a yacht year round at Ardfern on Loch Craignish, Argyll and Bute, and they make private visits from her.
Yours,
G/.
4

Guga II,

Rockall 14/07/2008 06:02:30
#3. You must be after a mention in the honours list too.
5

somerferg,

perth 14/07/2008 06:29:20

Oh my goodness how does she manage it ? I am truly in awe of the horsey one to be so amazing. Imagine visiting all those lighthouses. Sure bets the hell out of working for a living.
6

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta 14/07/2008 06:48:29
Princess Anne takes a shine to lighthouses

Wow dudes .

With her looks what else could she do.

GC
7

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 14/07/2008 08:19:37
HRH The Princess Royal still maintains her feverish affection for a good mount - meaning, of course, her accomplishments on the horse.

I suppose HRH has to have something to do with her husband since it is rumoured that their marriage is on rocky ground - just like the lighthouses she drags him together in connubial contempt.
8

Michael,

14/07/2008 08:46:39
The princess and her husband have even been mistaken for "a couple of chancers". "Mistaken"? "Recognised", more like?

For a moment there I thought I'd woken up in 1959.
9

Martin_edinburgh,

Edinburgh 14/07/2008 09:35:25
Good on Princess Anne. Nice to see someone taking an interest in something of vital importance to our nation but hardly likely to elicit ten seconds worth of time from politicians given it's hardly politically 'sexy'.
10

AJ Fife,

14/07/2008 09:40:41
If Princess Toothy McGraw likes lighthouses so much, why doesn't she elect to live in one. I'd suggest Flannan Isle!!!
11

Mercian,

UK 14/07/2008 11:31:20
"It is believed her obsession began when she was five years old on a trip to Tiumpan Head..."

You know a lighthouse has strong phallic symbolism, but I don't suppose Ann could quite put her finger on it at the time...
12

lord john,

Borders 14/07/2008 14:54:29
Her husband is certainly going up the promotion ladder?I wonder what was his last naval ship? Drawing Vice Admirals pay for what?
13

Alternative (High-Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 14/07/2008 16:48:32
12:

"Drawing Vice Admirals pay for what?"

Being Chief Executive of Defence Estates. In other words, he is in charge of all the buildings and attributes of all three armed forces... A job which carries with it considerablt responsibility.

His last sea command was HMS Montrose, where he was also Captain of the Sixth Frigate Squadron. His appointment here lasted until 1997, when he moved to MoD.

OK?
14

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 14/07/2008 16:50:29
lord john

Laurence is drawing Vice-Admiral pay for administering HRH a "good mount" now and again. Didn't you read my previous posting?

It's an arduous job and one that may go unappreciated some of the time but SOMEBODY has to do it!
15

Jacqueline Hyde ,

14/07/2008 18:36:47
Pharos isn't actually PA's ship - she belongs to the Northern Lighthouse Board and, as well as acting as a floating hotel for the Commissioners and the Patron, occasionally earns her keep doing more mundane maintenance. The ship is actually Pharos X and was named - strangely enough - after Pharos IX.
16

Alba Abú,

Dunedin 14/07/2008 22:02:05
This is typical of these royal freaks. Nothing to do,only wander around the light houses of Scotland.What a tribe of mis-fits this lot really are. Away with them!

 

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