ISLE PASS

Incredible ‘fantasy’ island home looks like the perfect getaway – but locals say they wouldn’t live there for £1million

Water levels were at their highest in February this year at a record 11.2 metres

THIS STUNNING island home would be the perfect retreat - if it didn't 'flood every spring'.

Located in Ynys Groad Goch in North Wales the home looks like the perfect place to relax until the tide starts to rise.

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In the mid-1990s, the island’s properties and facilities were modernisedCredit: Susan Hughes/North Wales Live

A photo shared this week showed the horror owners would have to deal with.

Water was edging up the flood walls barely stopping it from damaging the property.

The Island between Anglesey and Gwynedd at high tide is divided by the water isolating the properties on there.

The Island had been an ideal fishing spot for families for over 400 years until it was turned into a rustic holiday let - and is privately owned.

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Locals claim they 'wouldn't live there for £1million'.

One woman said: "That would have me climbing out onto the roof."

Another local added: "I enjoy solitude but I wouldn’t live there if they paid me a million quid a day."

The Island is steeped in history and is one of the best-preserved of twenty fish traps built in the Menai Strait.

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The island includes stone weird and a fish-smoking chamber built in 1824 according to

Stone Weirs were built to trap fish - fish would swim over the stones during the high tide and become trapped behind the stones when the tide goes back out.

The properties on the island used to be used for fishing until 1959 and at its peak would trap huge amounts of fish - and sometimes humans.

It was reported in 1937 that a teacher from Bath named Margaret Phillips, 25, was sucked into a gully because she failed to hear people shouting warnings - due to her wearing a bathing cap.

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