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Duncansby Head Caithness

Scenic Place • Caithness • KW1 4YR
Duncansby Head Caithness

Duncansby Head is the most northeasterly point of the British mainland, a dramatic headland of red sandstone just east of John o'Groats in Caithness whose combination of the massive sea stack scenery of the Duncansby Stacks, the puffin colony on the cliff face and the extraordinary views across the Pentland Firth to Orkney make it substantially more dramatic and more rewarding than the more famous John o'Groats immediately to the west. The two great stacks of Duncansby, rising 60 metres from the sea in isolated pinnacles of Devonian sandstone, are among the most impressive sea stacks on the Scottish mainland coast.

The walk from the lighthouse at Duncansby Head south along the cliff to the viewpoint above the stacks takes approximately twenty minutes and provides progressively more dramatic views of the stacks as the path approaches the most impressive vantage point. At the height of the summer breeding season the puffins that nest in burrows on the cliff face between the stacks and the lighthouse provide one of the most accessible puffin watching opportunities on the north Scottish coast, the birds coming and going from their burrows at close range throughout the day.

The Pentland Firth visible across the water from Duncansby Head is one of the most powerful tidal races in the world, the enormous volume of water flowing through the strait between the Scottish mainland and Orkney creating tidal streams of considerable force. The view of this great tidal strait, with Orkney visible clearly on the far side, provides the most direct appreciation of the geography of this extreme corner of Britain.

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