Rinns of Islay
The Rinns of Islay is an area on the west of the island of Islay in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland.
It is a peninsula that is attached to the main body of the island by a narrow and low-lying isthmus towards its northern end.
It is about 24 km or 15 miles from the northern extremity at Ardnave Point to its southern extremity at Rinns Point.
To the north of the isthmus, it is separated from the main part of Islay by Loch Gruinart, a sea inlet about one mile wide which is mainly uncovered at low tide. To the south of the isthmus, it is separated from the main part of Islay by a larger sea inlet, Loch Indaal.
The main population centres are Port Charlotte and Portnahaven, based on the A847 that runs along its eastern coast.
The only significant inland body of water is Loch Gorm, about 3 km2, near the centre of the Rinns, which is drained to the sea by the River Saligo. This loch is notable as the site of Loch Gorm Castle, a ruined 15th century castle on a small island on the loch, which saw sporadic military action until the 17th century.
The Rinns is designated a Special Protection Area due to its importance for a number of breeding and wintering birds, particularly Greenland white-fronted goose and chough. The significance of the area owes much to its wide variety of habitats including bog, moorland, dune grassland, maritime grassland, marsh and extensively-farmed agricultural land.
The Rinns of Islay lighthouse is located on the offshore island of Orsay, near Rinns Point.
The Rhinns complex, a deformed igneous complex that is considered to form the basement to the Colonsay Group of metasedimentary rocks, takes its name from the Rhinns of Islay.
The southern, and somewhat hillier, part of the Rhinns contains various conifer plantations.
Distilleries in the Rinns include Bruichladdich and Kilchoman.
Historically, the Rinns have had a higher proportion of Gaelic speakers than the rest of Islay.