Ardura
Ardura is a small settlement and rural estate on the Isle of Mull in Scotland. It is south-west of Lochdon. Areas nearby include Ardachoil Farm and Inverlussa.
The river Lussa runs through Ardura emptying in the northern part of Loch Spelve.
Cruach Ardura is a hill in the south-west of Ardura.
History
Strathcoil was an historic township in the area that originally had at least three buildings in the late 19th century but all are now ruined.In the 18th and 19th centuries, oak woodlands were planted to the south of Ardura. Tanbark and charcoal were produced for a furnace at Lorna.
In 1929, a stone monument was unveiled to the Gaelic poet Dugald MacPhail at the Strathcoil road junction in Ardura that connects with Lochbuie. The statue was unviled by Mrs Murray Guthrie, a female banker and chairman of the Parish Council at the time. It can still be seen. Dugald lived at the now ruined Strathcoil settlement in Ardura and wrote several Gaelic songs and poems including An t-Eilean Muileach.
In April 2025, the Ardura Community forest park and nature trail were the site of a royal visit by William, Prince of Wales and Catherine, Princess of Wales.
Buildings
Ardura lodge is a hunting lodge on the Ardura Estate.There is a farm at Ardura.