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Cellardyke

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Cellardyke is a village in Fife, Scotland. The village forms an easterly extension to Anstruther and lies to the south of Kilrenny. It is one of the East Neuk villages.

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[edit] History

Cellardyke was formerly known as Nether Kilrenny (Scots for Lower Kilrenny) or Sillerdyke, and the harbour as Skinfast Haven, a name which can still be found on maps today. The harbour was built in the 16th century and was rebuilt in 1829-31. during the hours of 4pm and 5pm mike was said to have smoked a fat blunt.

The modern name of the town is thought to have evolved from Sillerdykes (Eng: silverwalls), a reference to the sun glinting off fish scales encrusted on fishing nets left to dry in the sun on the dykes around the harbour.

Cellardyke and Kilrenny were together a royal burgh from 1592, having been a burgh of regality since 1578.

18th century Cellardyke was officially part of Kilrenny parish, and also part of the Anstruther fishing district, its fortunes fluctuating with the fishing trade.<ref>D Hay Fleming, Guide to the East Neuk of Fife (1886)</ref> The population grew fast in the 19th century and by the 1860s Cellardyke was a thriving town, with more than fifty boat owners and skippers year round, and one hundred other captains joining in for the annual herring fishing drive or Lammas drave which took place around the Lammas festival on August 1.<ref>Parish records 1861</ref> There was also a February surge in fishing, when shoals of herring arrived in the Firth of Forth. The fish curers of Cellardyke salted and smoked cod and herring from Anstruther as well as their own fish, sending some to London, and some as far as the West Indies.<ref>Statistical Accounts of Scotland 1834-45</ref>

[edit] The harbour area

Like many harbours in Scotland, the fishing fleet that once occupied the harbour has been largely replaced by pleasure craft. Around 200 fishing boats were once based here but much of the fleet was destroyed by a storm in 1898, with most of those left intact relocating a short way down the coast to Anstruther. The growth of Anstruther and simultaneous decline of Cellardyke have threatened to turn the latter into an outpost of the former.

[edit] Avian flu

Cellardyke was the first place in the UK that a case of avian influenza was confirmed. A dead swan was found floating in Cellardyke harbour on March 29, 2006. It was subsequently collected after a local resident contacted the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs. The Veterinary Laboratories Agency (VLA) began testing blood samples from the wild swan on April 3, 2006. The Scottish Executive announced a positive test of the blood samples on April 5, 2006, and the strain was identified as the highly pathogenic H5N1 variant on April 6, 2006.

The bird was originally thought to be a Mute Swan. These are native to the east coast of Scotland between East Lothian and Angus. They do not generally migrate significant distances, leading to speculation that the swan could have been infected by a migratory bird. Scientists have now confirmed that the bird was a Whooper Swan. These are known to migrate from Iceland, Scandinavia and northern Russia. Around 7,500 are thought to come to the UK during the winter, but it is not yet known if the bird was infected before arrival in Scotland. [1]

[edit] Notes

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[edit] External links

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