Gull Island

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Gull Island

Hampshire

Gull Island - geograph.org.uk - 52463.jpg
Towards Gull Island, with Wight beyondd
Location
Location: 50°46’48"N, 1°23’2"W
Grid reference: SZ435980
Data

Gull Island is a small uninhabited island at the mouth of the Beaulieu River in south-western Hampshire, as the river opens into the the Solent. The island is an area of raised ground approximately 1000 yards long and up to around 200 yards wide amid the tidal sands to the east of Needs Ore Point, and separates the river from the sea for its final stretch before entering The Solent. It forms part of the civil parish of Beaulieu.

Looking across to Gull Island, with the Isle of Wight in the background

The island acts as shelter for the final kilometre of the Beaulieu River against all but strong easterly currents and so provides moorings for boats on its northern side.[1]

Consisting primarily of salt marshes, Gull Island is a relatively new feature of the area and is not shown on Ordnance Survey maps of the 19th century. In 1985, with a view to protecting the salt marshes on the northern side of the Beaulieu River, the Beaulieu estate passed a bill to parliament requesting permission to build a shingle barrier joining the west of the island to the mainland at Warren Farm Spit, cutting off the "Bull Run" channel previously used by yachts. By 1992 the artificial causeway had been completed, extending along the southern end of Gull Island, although erosion of the island continues and will eventually remove all of Gull Island's marshes.[2]

The island currently serves as a nature reserve and bird sanctuary.[3]

References