'I've opened my garden to TT fans for 20 years'

Alex Blake
BBC News, Isle of Man
BBC Glen Kinrade has short brown hair and is wearing a dark blue hoodie. He's standing outside with trees behind him.BBC
Glen Kinrade bought Stella Maris at auction in 2004

A motorcycling enthusiast who has been opening his garden to Isle of Man TT fans for more than 20 years said he was keen to continue the "local tradition" for the town after moving in.

Glen Kinrade owns Stella Maris, a house just below the hairpin in Ramsey, which overlooks the racing action.

He has been opening it up to members of the public since 2004 because it was something the previous owners had done and he did not want "to break a local tradition".

Tens of thousands of race fans visit the island for the annual two-week event held on 37.7-miles (61km) of closed public roads.

Starting from the Grandstand in Douglas, the course takes a clockwise route through to Glen Vine, Glen Helen, Kirk Michael, Sulby and Ramsey, before heading over the Mountain Road back to Glencrutchery Road in Douglas.

Glen Kinrade And old photograph of crowds watching from a garden over a hedge. A motorbike is coming round a corner.Glen Kinrade
Glen Kinrade inherited old photographs from the property's previous owners

While Mr Kinrade's spot in the south of Ramsey was "very quiet most of the year", TT was "a different proposition" and he had "the most friends I've ever had" during the two-week period.

He said he felt it was important the garden remained open to any fans that wanted to take advantage of the garden, rather than being restricted to friends and family.

The span of the garden offers different views of the action, from seeing the riders emerge from May Hill to watching the machines approach the sharp hairpin bend on their climb onto the famous mountain course.

A white house with archways surrounding the front with steps either side leading to the verandah. There are two dormer windows on the first floor and trees behind it.
Stella Maris sits below the Mountain Road's hairpin bend

Mr Kinrade said both locals and visiting fans from all over the world would "come back year after year" to the spot.

People enjoying the vantage point over the years had ranged from from "die hard motorcycling fans" to young families, and everyone has always left the garden "as they found it", he said.

Growing up in Ramsey himself, he said he knew the viewing spot from a young age and since buying the house in 2004 its renovation had been a "labour of love".

He would not be stopping the access any time soon, he added.

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