Odd feature names

A question: along the Atlantic/Channel French coast a huge number of maritime physical features bear names with rural / agricultural etymology, people were historically tied to the land and when they went to sea for fishing they used farming terms, today we have rocks/shoals/capes named The cow, The pig, The butter pot, The big sow, etc etc, is it the same in the UK?
 
There are the Cow and Calf in St Mary’s Harbour. And a Bull in Start Bay. There is also a Chicken Rock somewhere off the Isle of Man, with its own lighthouse.
 
A question: along the Atlantic/Channel French coast a huge number of maritime physical features bear names with rural / agricultural etymology, people were historically tied to the land and when they went to sea for fishing they used farming terms, today we have rocks/shoals/capes named The cow, The pig, The butter pot, The big sow, etc etc, is it the same in the UK?
There you go, some Celtic coast names.
I’ve just noticed the yacht symbol, I think it’s the least hospitable place on the seaward side of Skomer island. (Shudder in horror)IMG_8908.png1771871313560.jpeg
 
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... There is also a Chicken Rock somewhere off the Isle of Man, with its own lighthouse.

My uncle was lighthouse keeper on the chicken rock when it went on fire. Many years later after it was automated my brother and I went out with him on a check trip. We jumped off the boat, climbed up the ladder and got to see the inside of the lighthouse from bottom to top. At the time he was head lighthouse keeper at Douglas Head, where we were staying with him and my aunt over the summer.
 
Buttock Point and the Maids of Bute.
Two woman waiting on their fisherman husbands who had perished at sea. They turned to stone they waited so long. Not sure why they waited near Buttock Point.

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