Part of the South Fife snorkel trail!

Immerse yourself in a snorkel adventure as you explore the skerries below the ruins of Seafield Tower.

Towering kelp provides refuge to a range of juvenile fish species, dahlia anemones and starfish as well as offering a meal to hungry sea urchins. Note that water depth increases markedly beyond the first rocky outcrop, as the coastal shelf slope steepens.

This site is part of a protected area and disturbance to harbour and grey seals must be avoided.

Trail leaflet

Download the trail leaflet for offline access to site information

Download Leaflet

Facilities

What other people say

How to get there

By road

The ruins of Seafield Tower are a 10 minute walk from Seafield beach car park; follow the coastal path south towards Kinghorn.

Access Google Maps location pin here (TBC).

By rail

The nearest train station is in Kirkcaldy (1.4 miles away)

By bus

Buses are provided locally by Stagecoach

Get directions

Provided by Google Maps

Local conditions

Here is the wind forecast and tide times for this snorkel site. It is your responsibility to assess whether these conditions are suitable for snorkelling.

Other considerations

More information

  • Get in touch with The Ecology Centre – an inclusive, community-led charity that enables people of all ages and abilities to experience, learn and benefit from the natural world in a safe and friendly environment. Based on the edge of Kinghorn Loch in Fife, the centre provides volunteer opportunities, outdoor education sessions and a cafe.
  • Contact the Dive Bunker who offer equipment hire locally.
  • The Beacon Leisure Centre offers hot showers for a small fee

Wildlife warning

  • This site is part of a protected area and disturbance to harbour and grey seals must be avoided.

Please be a responsible snorkeller; do not touch, take or tease wildlife.

This area is home to breeding seabirds (April-September) and seals (harbour seals June-July, grey seals August-December). Please behave responsibly and stay distant, wildlife should be left undisturbed. For more information see sealalliance.org and nature.scot. Avoid disturbing ground-nesting birds and livestock; follow the Outdoor Access and Marine Wildlife Watching codes.

Stay safe

  • Note that water depth increases markedly beyond the first rocky outcrop, as the coastal shelf slope steepens.

Snorkelling can be dangerous and is done entirely at your own risk. Information is provided free of charge; it is your responsibility to check the conditions present on the day and assess whether it is safe to snorkel.

Please read our top tips to being a safe and responsible snorkeller.

Share your snorkel stories #ScottishSnorkelTrails

We have worked hard with coastal communities and organisations across Scotland to create these snorkel trails, to:

  • make Scotland’s seas more accessible to more people
  • support responsible, local eco-tourism and community-led coastal projects across Scotland
  • encourage people to better understand, value and protect our precious marine ecosystems

We would therefore love to hear your feedback on how you’ve found using them! From photos, videos and artwork to posts, blogs and more – every piece of little or large feedback will be read and valued! You can share them with us via email (livingseas@scottishwildlifetrust.org.uk), Facebook (@Scottish Wildlife Trust) or Bluesky (@scotwildlife.bsky.social) – use the #ScottishSnorkelTrails.

Other snorkel sites nearby

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