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Sunday, November 17, 2024 |
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Art preserves history Loch Ryan's Second World War flying boats |
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Flying Boats Loch Ryan. Watchtower Heritage.
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DUMFRIES.- Wig Bays years as a vital base for the flying boats that hunted enemy submarines are being commemorated in an art and environment project.
The aircraft were scrapped long ago, the RAF camp near Stranraer and its hangers have all but vanished, and even those who were children in the war years have grown old.
But Solway Firth Partnership, with funding from Dumfries and Galloway Council, has teamed up with the local community, environmental art organisation Wide Open, and artist and designer Kenny Mackay, to preserve the story of this fascinating piece of Scotlands history.
The project is part of the partnerships drive to encourage sustainable tourism by attracting visitors interested in its World War II history and wildlife.
A sound installation has been created at the observation post once used to watch out for German mines. Visitors entering the structure will be plunged back to the mid-1940s, surrounded by the noises of aircraft and submarine engines.
Kenny said: Its really quite ghostly with the sound of a Catalina flying boat, then one of the huge Sunderlands, followed by a U-boat diesel engine and the ping of a sonar. The idea is that its slightly ambiguous, but will add some real colour to peoples experience when they explore the area.
A large board has been built onto the front of the small brick-built structure where people can sit and play the classic Battleships and Cruisers war game.
The project has also seen the creation of three semi-sunken, concrete, circular seating areas along the bays coastal footpath, near Kirkcolm, where people can enjoy superb views of the loch. The materials have been chosen to reflect the rough-and-ready building techniques and the design is also reminiscent of coastal gun emplacements.
Kenny hopes people will find lots of different ways to enjoy them. He said: I think a lot of walkers will enjoy the chance to sit and look out over the water, but I expect children will find them very exciting places to treat as dens and play their own games.
The area is now quiet, peaceful and scenic but from 1942 into the 1950s it was a place of intense activity. RAF Wig Bay was a maintenance, testing and repair centre for UK and US flying boats that were hunter killers deployed to counter the submarines attacking Allied shipping in the Atlantic.
Local residents such as Donnie Nelson, aged 83, remember how there used to be dozens of aircraft floating on the loch, with more in hangars onshore.
He said: It was very exciting for boys like me, we loved watching these great aircraft taking off and skimming just above the water, then lifting slightly as they reached the land and roaring right over our heads. The noise was incredible and the Sunderlands were absolutely huge.
Donnie and his friends would lie on the beach and stare upwards to watch the planes go over just a few hundred feet above them. He later joined the Air Training Corps (ATC) and was sometimes treated to flights in planes that were being tested.
He said: I think this project is a great idea. I remember the way youd look out and see the planes parked all across the bay. Theres very little left now, but thanks to this it wont be forgotten which is good because it was very important to the people round here.
The project has also seen the provision of an interpretation panel and a leaflet giving information about World War II sites around Loch Ryan.
The official launch takes place on Thursday, when schoolchildren will walk out to the art installation, after which there will be a 1940s reception and tea party at Kircolm Primary School.
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