Foula Island, part of Scotland’s Shetland Islands, is home to a population of only thirty people who primarily earn their living as sheep and pony farmers. The island has been owned by the Holbourn family for the past hundred years. Growing numbers of visitors are making their way to Foula as bird watchers from around the world come to see its puffins, skuas, razorbills, gannets, and more. Getty Images photographer Jeff Mitchell paid a visit to Foula recently, and returned with these images of its people, animals, and landscape.
Foula, Scotland—the Most Remote Inhabited Island in Great Britain
- Alan Taylor
- October 6, 2016
- 25 Photos
- In Focus
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Read morePonies graze freely on the Island of Foula, Scotland, on October 1, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
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Read moreSunlight shines through the cliffs on the Island of Foula on September 30, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreThe plane arrives from Tingwall airport at the Island of Foula airstrip on September 28, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreAn oil rig supply vessel shelters from bad weather off Ham Voe on the Island of Foula on September 29, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
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Read moreSeals shelter from stormy seas near the jetty on the Island of Foula on September 29, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreThe water supply hut on Foula on October 2, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read morePonies run free on Foula on October 1, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
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Read moreJack, Penny, Sheila and Jim Gear walk their ponies to the Island of Foula ferry where they will be loaded for market on Shetland on October 1, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreThe Noup on the Island of Foula on October 2, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreA view of Gaada Stack, off the Island of Foula, on September 30, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
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Read moreSheep graze beside an old cottage on Foula on September 29, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read morePost mistress Sheila Gear, working in the Island of Foula Post Office on September 30, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreFran Sutton tries out a pair of roller blades during the primary school coffee morning on the Island of Foula on September 30, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
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Read moreA crumbling building and telephone box on the Island of Foula on September 29, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreSeventy eight year old crofter Eric Ibister sits in his armchair at his home in Hametoun on the Island of Foula, on September 30, 2016. #
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Read moreThe New Advance ferry manned by residents leaves the harbor to take the Grear family ponies to a sale on Shetland on October 1, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
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Read moreResidents of Foula take sheep off the island bound for the market on the boat the New Advance on October 2, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreJack, Penny, Sheila and Jim Gear walk their ponies to the Island of Foula ferry on October 1, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreThe Gear family ponies are loaded onto the New Advance ferry on October 1, 2016 in Foula, Scotland. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
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Read moreCliffs at The Noup--the second highest sea cliffs in the UK--on October 2, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreThe Noup on the Island of Foula on October 2, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreSeals shelter from stormy seas near the jetty on the Island of Foula on September 29, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
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Read moreFoula resident Jim Gear, plays to Stuart Taylor, Penny Gear, Sheila Gear and Davie Henry at a late night gathering on October 2, 2016 in Foula. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreFoula resident Davie Henry plays guitar at a late night gathering on October 2, 2016 in Foula, Scotland. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
Read moreA weather front heads into the Island of Foula on September 29, 2016. #
Jeff J Mitchell / Getty -
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