When financier and philanthropist Ian Wace saw an advertisement for Tanera Mòr in Country Life, it seemed so beautiful that he decided to go and take a look. “And it was very beautiful. But then I thought, ‘Well that’s a stupid idea, why on earth would anyone do that?’” Four years later, in 2017, the island was still on the market, this time with Savills. Clearly something about Tanera had captured Wace, and he went to see it again: “I realised it was dying, going the way of every other island that gets into that sort of situation. And I thought, ‘If you have the ability to save one, maybe you should do something.’” What that saving would actually mean, he had no idea.
Tanera Mòr, which means “island of the haven”, is the largest of the Summer Isles archipelago, a mile off the coast of the Coigach peninsula in northwest Scotland. It is a place of great loveliness – 800 acres of rocky terrain and sandy bays, with transporting views in every direction. But there is much more than natural beauty to Tanera’s magic: this is a very human story of regeneration, resilience and community, of what is possible with thoughtful investment and imagination. It is the story of creating a vibrant new world inspired by an ancient one.
“At the beginning I had zero view of what I would do,” says Wace, who has invested tens of millions into Tanera over the past nine years. “I came here with an open mind. I absorbed it and looked – and you had to look carefully, because it had basically gone.” The ruins of buildings were, in the main, about a foot high, the weeds about three feet high. Robbie Punt, now a guest host, was one of the earliest to join the Tanera project back in 2019, intrigued by what he’d heard about the plans for regeneration. He describes how they sent up drones to discover the footprints of the old houses buried in heather and undergrowth.