Today we anchored off the town of Douglas on the Isle of Man in the Irish Sea. I was here three years ago and I remembered a lovely island with very friendly people. The place hasn’t changed.
I’m going to repeat some of the history and facts about this place because I find it very interesting. Man has been inhabited for more than 8500 years. At various times in its long history the island has been under Gaelic, Norse and Scots rule. At present it has a unique status in its relationship with Great Britain. It is a Crown Dependency with King Charles III being the titular head of the island, but Man has an independent parliament, the Tynwald. The island has no capital gains, wealth, inheritance or stamp taxes and a highest income tax rate of 20% so it is a tax haven. Its parliament the Tynwald is considered to be the second oldest legislature in the world after the Icelandic Althing and it is actually the oldest continuous parliament because the Althing was disbanded for a period of time. It also happens to be the first national legislature in the world to give women the vote in 1881 although it excluded married women from that right. (How weird is that?)
Anyway, they speak a variety of Gaelic language here in addition to English of course. The Manx language was nearly lost but several years ago it became compulsory to teach it in primary school and now all signs on the roads are in both Manx and English. The island was created after the last Ice Age and as it sits in the midst of the sea it has no snakes (hooray), no foxes, wolves or deer. It has a breed of sheep found no where else called Loaghtan sheep which have brown coats and four horns (they may have as many as six) and are good for both their wool and their meat, unlike other sheep which are generally bred for one or the other. It does have one very strange animal though. There are wallabies (relatives of kangaroos) on the island! There is a nature reserve on the northern end of Man and a couple of wallabies escaped and they have been busy procreating. Who knows, this may become the Kangaroo Island of the northern hemisphere.
The Isle of Man is approximately 222 square miles in area with a population of about 85,000 and a per capita income of more than $89,000. That’s because so many shell companies and wealthy people have declared residency there because of its tax advantages. Near the end of May Man has a very big and famous motorcycle race which brings in thousands of biking enthusiasts and which has been operating for nearly 120 years.
Enough about the history of the place. I took a tour today which brought me to the southwestern corner of the island to the village of Cregneash, a living history museum run by the Manx National Heritage Society. This is a sort of Manxian Colonial Williamsburg. There are reenactors in the houses costumed as they would have been hundreds of years ago, loaghtan sheep are raised there and the farms around are operated as they would have been. Some of the cottages are privately owned but the residents are required to maintain the same outward standards as those of the National Heritage buildings.
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| These are some scenes along the road to Cregneash |
The buildings are made of stone with fences that are also stone, much of which looked like flint to me. The roofs are mainly thatched. In one building I met the village blacksmith who was busy creating some farm implements for his neighbors. He was a man from Colorado! I know blacksmiths are in great demand because that’s a dying craft and this man had an opportunity to come to Man and took it. At another cottage I met a fiddler who played me some tunes on his fiddle. Sitting by the window in his cottage was an old Singer sewing machine and I asked him if he was also a tailor. He said he wasn’t but he told me about the machine. Evidently more than 100 years ago a ship carrying among other things a load of singer sewing machines ran aground off the tip of the island. The machine he had sitting there had been salvaged. It was one that didn’t even have pedals. To operate it there is a hand crank on one side.
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| The village of Cregneash |
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| The little church |
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| My excellent walking companion Alan |
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| Sorry it's blurry, but this is the village blacksmith |
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| Some loagthan sheep and lambs |
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| The village fiddler |
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| That's the salvaged sewing machine by the window. I kept thinking of the Fiddler on the Roof in that cottage. |
After we took a leisurely stroll through the village we headed to the most southwestern tip of the island where we could see a small island called Calf Island divided from Man by a very rough area of seas. The terrain around us reminded me a lot of some of the northern Scottish hills which are essentially treeless except these hills seemed a little greener. I’ll see if I’m right in a few days when we get to Scotland. Which reminds me, I should mention that the weather in Man is actually pretty temperate because it is impacted by the Gulf Stream. While it gets cold, they don’t get a great deal of snow except in the highest elevations.
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| It looks pretty wild down there |
After our stop at the end we headed back across the island to Douglas through little villages. We passed the ruins of a monastery which was dissolved by Henry VIII after his break with the Catholic Church. The town of Douglas has a lot of hotels and vacation apartments along the waterfront promenade to accommodate vacation travelers and the many visitors who come for the motorcycle race.
It was pretty late when we got back to the tender dock so I didn’t walk around. I must say something about the lovely people who were my guide and driver though. Tove was our guide and she was an absolutely delightful person. She answered the many questions we had (I’m almost embarrassed to say most were from me because I want to know everything about everything – she probably was thinking “not another one” but she didn’t seem annoyed). Alan was our bus driver and when we stopped at Cregneash, the walk to the village was along a fairly steep and uneven path with some rabbit holes along the way. Because of my almost irrational fear of falling and breaking something and because I don’t want to hold other people up, I was going to stay in the bus. Alan the driver insisted that I go and he gave me his arm and we walked along a slightly different path. He is a native of the island and was a delightful ambassador for his home. I remember that the people I met during my last visit were just as nice and friendly. It was an all together lovely day. I wouldn't hesitate to come back here again if my travels bring me this way.
In the evening I dined with Lisa and Charles, a very nice Australian couple with whom I've sailed several times. Lisa is one of my dancing partners and a trivia teammate. We have a lot of fun together. Her husband Charles is quieter but has a wicked sense of humor. We were joined by Caroline, the Entertainment Manager. It was a nice evening and all in all a great day. So Nite-nite for now.


















































