Nista
#5448 among destinations in the United Kingdom
Facts and practical information
Nista is a small islet of the Shetland Islands of Scotland, situated roughly 2 kilometres east off the coast of Whalsay. It lies to the north of Mooa. ()
ScotlandUnited Kingdom
Nista – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Grunay, Skate of Marrister, Whalsay Parish Church, Pier House Museum.
- 6.1 miNEIsland
Grunay
155 min walk • Grunay is an uninhabited island in the Out Skerries group, the most easterly part of Shetland, Scotland. Its area is 55.58 acres, or 22.49 hectares. The island is the site of the lighthouse keeper's house for the lighthouse on the nearby Bound Skerry. This house was abandoned following the automation of the light in 1972.
- 4.4 miWIsland
Skate of Marrister
113 min walk • The Skate of Marrister is a flat ledge that extends about 300 yards from the western shore of Whalsay, in the Shetland islands of Scotland. It is slightly more than 1 mile north-north-west from Symbister Ness off the village of Marrister, in Linga Sound. At low tide the ledge rises 5 feet above the water.
- 3.4 miWChurch
Whalsay Parish Church, Whalsay
87 min walk • Whalsay Parish Church or Whalsay Kirk is a Church of Scotland parish church on the island of Whalsay, Shetland Islands, Scotland. It lies to the north of the village of Brough, on the southern part of a promontory known as Kirk Ness, connected to the mainland by a neck of land.
- 4.8 miSWMuseum
Pier House Museum
122 min walk • The Pier House Museum is a museum in Symbister, Whalsay, in the Shetland Islands of Scotland.
- 1.9 miSIsland
East Linga
50 min walk • East Linga is one of the Shetland Islands. It lies between Whalsay, and Grif Skerry to the east.
- 6.4 miNEIsland
Bruray
165 min walk • Bruray is one of the three Out Skerries islands of Shetland, and contains Scotland's most easterly settlement. It is separated from Housay by North Mouth and South Mouth.
- 3.8 miSWForts and castles
Huxter Fort, Whalsay
98 min walk • Huxter Fort is an Iron Age fortification on the island of Whalsay, in the Shetland islands of Scotland, dating to around 300 BC. It is on an islet in the Loch of Huxter, connected to the shore by a causeway.
- 2.3 miSEIsland
Grif Skerry
60 min walk • Grif Skerry is an islet to the east of Whalsay in the Shetland Islands. Its name comes from the Norse or Norn for "deep sea skerry". The island is uninhabited, although there are some buildings on it. These are mostly fishermen's huts, and the remains of a haaf fishing station, so that fishermen could shelter from bad weather.
- 1.4 miWArchaeological site
Standing Stones of Yoxie, Whalsay
36 min walk • The Standing Stones of Yoxie is a Neolithic site in the parish of Nesting on the northeastern coast of Whalsay, in the Shetland islands of Scotland.
- 2.9 miSIsland
Rumble
75 min walk • Rumble is a skerry in the Shetland islands of Scotland, situated roughly 4 kilometres east off the coast of Huxter, southeastern Whalsay. It lies 0.75 miles to southwest of East Linga. The main island, also known as Rumble Holm, is 27 feet high.
- 4.7 miWIsland
West Linga
121 min walk • West Linga is an uninhabited island located between Mainland and Whalsay in Shetland, Scotland.