Ailsa Craig is an uninhabited island off the west coast of Scotland that has a long and winding history, involving many different groups of people. Once the final destination for priests who needed to “find God again” and who were sent here by the Church to reflect, as well as a hideout for pirates looking to escape capture, the island is now an official bird sanctuary and home to thousands of Gannets, that nest along its cliffs. But there is another aspect to Ailsa Craig’s history that makes it an important place in the world of sports, and that is its longstanding use as a mining spot for the granite that almost all of the world’s curling stones are made from.
It was this part of its story that first interested Dutch photographer Elmer Driessen, who travelled to the area in 2019 in the hopes of photographing its rugged mass. He had read an article about curling the previous year, and was struck by how integral this island was to the game. “Apparently [the stones] were all made from the same two types of granite that they found on this tiny island,” he says. “I wanted to know more about this mysterious rock, so I decided to go to Girvan, a little town on the mainland that is nearby, and from where I could take a boat out to the island.”
After some trouble trying to convince locals to ferry him out to Ailsa Craig, and one failed trip to Girvan later, he finally managed to secure passage to the island through the help of a couple of friends and a man named Ian, who lived close by and owned a speedboat. He finally arrived on its shores in the summer of 2020 and the photos he took during that drip went on to become part of a project that he named after the curious island.
