The Outer Hebrides Wildlife Festival (OHWF) is returning this summer, and registration
for events for this year’s festival is now open.
The event is an annual community-led celebration of the incredible wildlife of the
Outer Hebrides. This year the main festival will run from the 21st to the 28th of
June, with events continuing through July as part of the OHWF Fringe Festival.
Local groups, business and individuals are now being invited to register their events
for this year’s festival.
The festival takes place across the islands, with a diverse programme of events providing
festival-goers the opportunity to explore, experience and connect with the incredible
wildlife of the Outer Hebrides.
Past festivals have included guided walks, boat tours, snorkelling and surfing safaris,
shorewatches, nature writing workshops, marine mammal survey training, Gaelic workshops,
art exhibitions, wildlife photography workshops, sunset bat walks, and more.
The festival is coordinated by Species on the Edge, a multi-partner conservation
programme working with communities across Scotland to raise awareness of and secure
a future for our rarest and most threatened coastal and island species.
Mairi Carrey, festival coordinator, said: “We’re excited to welcome everyone to
be part of this year’s Outer Hebrides Wildlife Festival! Whether it’s through guided
walks, interactive workshops, or getting creative, our goal is to provide an unforgettable
experience that leaves everyone inspired to care for our environment.
“Anyone in the Outer Hebrides can host an event; individuals, groups, businesses,
or organisations. We’re looking for a mix of events - if it celebrates or deepens
our connection to nature, it belongs here.
“We’re also inviting those with a space, indoor or outdoor, who are willing to offer
it for use during the festival to let us know. We’d love to pair you with someone
wanting to host an event who doesn’t have the space. You can register your interest
in offering a venue on the event host registration form on our website.”
Visual artist Sam Gare who hosted an event last summer will be sharing a new art
project commemorating the devastating mass stranding of 55 pilot whales at North
Tolsta in 2023.
She said: “We are thrilled to be sharing 'Keening, Song of the Stranding' as part
of the Outer Hebrides Wildlife Festival. It feels deeply fitting to present this
work in a space that values connection—to nature, to each other, and to shared experiences."