Scottish travel blog from an islander’s perspective
Shetland, Your Essential Travel Guide
After years of meticulous planning, research, and exploration, we are thrilled to announce the forthcoming release of our travel guide to Shetland. With stunning colour photographs and more than 250 pages brimming with useful information and insider tips, Shetland, Your Essential Travel Guide, is a labour of love, born from a shared dedication to showcasing the islands' natural beauty, intriguing history, and vibrant community life.
Whisky, castles, trains & bikes: A four-day family adventure in Moray Speyside
When you imagine Scotland, you think of quiet glens, river valleys, forests, gorges, lochs, and whisky that flows like water from tumbling burns. This is Moray Speyside; it’s a romantic image punctuated with visions of tartan-clad highlanders, heather, and ‘wild haggis’. It is liberally peppered with at least 50 malt whisky distilleries, making it one of the best-known regions, if less explored.
But we were here for more than just the uisge beatha, or ‘water of life’. Speyside is bursting with family-friendly activities and a drop or three of the strong stuff. This blog will show how you, too, can enjoy a family-friendly escape in Scotland’s whisky capital.
A guide to a day in Hoy and a walk to the ‘Old Man’
Orkney is a special island to Shetlanders; we share a ferry, an unreliable airline, Scandinavian ties and a friendly rivalry, which is amplified every time our football teams meet on the pitch.
Orkney, with a population of around 22,000, has about 70 islands, with 20 inhabited. Mainland Orkney can get busy during the high season, particularly on days when cruise liners visit, so it’s always worth considering an island trip. I’ve already written about our time in Westray, and in this blog, we explore Hoy.
Exploring the islands – Iona, Ulva and the Treshnish Isles
I adore islands and love nothing more than exploring new ones I’ve never experienced before. I love the process, the planning and poring over ferry timetables, checking weather updates and discovering what makes each island unique and special.
In June, we visited Mull, an ideal springboard for exploring several other islands in the region, including Iona, Ulva and the Treshnish Isles.
I hate the term’ island hopping’; it conjures up images of mindlessly ticking islands from a list in a cavalier-style bid to ‘see them all’. In a way, this is what we were doing, but I hope that this blog will provide a glimpse into what each of these islands is like, what makes them unique and why you should make an effort to visit and explore some of Scotland’s smaller islands in a more immersive way.
A week in Mull with Isle of Mull Cottages
I’m an island lass at heart. Islands run through my veins, and we were lucky enough to get the opportunity to spend some time exploring Mull recently. Islands provide an anchor to which I always return; they feel familiar and restorative – like home. The ever-present sea offers security and constancy in a fast-paced world. Islands allow me to slow down and breathe.
We spent our week with Mull Holiday Cottages, our trip coinciding with some of the best summer weather so far. Under the blue skies and turquoise waters of Mull, I was keen to explore these Inner Hebridean islands.
A week in Mull & Iona
For this island adventure, we travelled to Mull. Mull is part of the Inner Hebrides and sits off the west coast of Scotland, with Islay, Jura and Colonsay to the south, Kerrera and Lismore to the east, Coll and Tiree to the west, and the uninhabited Treshnish Isles and Staffa. Mull is an island known for its wildlife, scenery and fascinating geology; it shares much of its allure with Shetland, yet is distinct and different in many ways, as we were to discover.
A day in Westray, Orkney’s Queen o’ the isles
Orkney’s sixth-largest island, Westray, packs a real punch. Bursting with life and brimming with wildlife, it has retained its sense of identity and feels the most ‘Orcadian’ of all the islands we visited, with a distinct sense of community.
Westray can feel remote from Kirkwall’s ‘bright lights’ but is only a short hop by air or sea.
Flanked by wild Atlantic waters, Westray’s coastline offers some of Orkney’s best seascapes and dramatic cliffs. The island has a busy and vibrant feel with sweeping sandy beaches and a gentle, fertile interior dominated by farming.
Blue Skies Cottage, Auchmithie (Angus) review and itinerary for your stay
Auchmithie, where we were staying, is a former fishing village that predates Arbroath by several centuries, and although many of the small cottages were built as farming cottages supporting the rich farmland stretching far inland from the coast, creating a landscape of gently rolling hills, the village is best known for its fishing heritage.
Up Helly Aa – top tips for enjoying Shetland’s festival of fire
Throughout Shetland, from January to March, the islands celebrate the festival of Up Helly Aa, with 12 Fire Festival and Up Helly Aa celebrations punctuating the darkness of winter with fiery processions, Viking dress and the world-renowned all-night parties that follow the burning of a Viking longship.
9 Things to Do in a Day on Jura
Jura, known as the ‘Deer Island’, and famous as the place where George Orwell wrote his dystopian novel, 1984, and where the pop band KLF burnt one million pounds in cash in a boat shed in 1994, sits off the west coast of Scotland and is part of the Inner Hebrides. With a population of around 250, the island has a close-knit community dominated by the ever-present Paps of Jura, visible from most parts of the island and giving the island a mountainous and rugged feel.
11 Things to do in Islay
Islay loomed large on the horizon as we ploughed past Kintyre from Kennacraig with CalMac Ferries. Passing Gigha, we headed towards the Sound of Islay – the narrow channel separating Islay and Jura – seeing a few solitary harbour porpoises along the way. Famed for its distilleries, fertile landscapes and island charm, Islay is known as the “Queen of the Hebrides”.
Where in Shetland do you find …
Puffins are one of the Northern Isles’ best-loved summer visitors who arrive back from winter at sea to nest between April and mid-August. Sumburgh Head is the most accessible place to see them without having a lengthy walk. The nature reserves of Hermaness and Noss are also excellent places to look out for these charismatic little seabirds.
Orkney’s lesser-known Neolithic sites
Orkney is perhaps best-known for its mind-blowing Neolithic archaeology that continues to rewrite much of what we know about prehistoric Britain, so much so that, in 1999, UNESCO designated World Heritage status to what has colloquially become known as the Heart of Neolithic Orkney.
7 tips for visiting Shetland
I know what it's like when planning for a holiday – so many questions and no one place where you can find the much sought after answers. I spend a lot of time answering questions online, whether on Instagram or my Patreon page. A lot of the time, it's the same questions that come up time and time again.I've done several podcasts on my Patreon page that cover many of the frequently asked questions in depth (you can see the topics covered here). The following are some of the general [...]
3 days in Speyside: a whisky lovers travel itinerary
Whisky tasting session at Cardhu distillery For a lass from Shetland, whisky seems an altogether ‘Scottish’ thing – we don’t produce whisky (yet) in Shetland, and we never really have, but that doesn’t mean we don’t have a good appreciation for the water of life.I’m leaving my island home for this blog and heading to the Scottish Mainland to tour Scotland’s famous whisky triangle in the beautiful Speyside region.I hope you enjoy this break [...]
St Kilda: an island on the edge of the world
St Kilda: the edge of the world St Kilda is a weather-beaten archipelago off the west coast of Scotland, some 40 miles from the Outer Hebrides. The cluster of islands sits alone in the vast expanse of the unforgiving North Atlantic. As Britain’s most remote point, it feels like the final frontier, a wild and foreboding place that looms from the horizon, echoing noisily with the sound of hundreds of thousands of seabirds. This is the land of the seabird. Yet until 1930, it was home [...]
More about Shetland
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In 2020, just before the world as we knew it drew to a standstill, my husband and I went to New York. We spent five days exploring the city and ticking off all the ‘must sees’ from the list. I spent months planning the trip in a notebook, and while we were there, I kept a little diary of our time. We did all the main attractions: Chrysler Building, the Empire State Building, the Flatiron Building, Madison and Times Square, Central Park, the Statue of Liberty, Brooklyn Bridge, DUMBO, Top of the Rock and much more besides.
I loved the few days we spent there, but a part of me felt that I could have planned it better.
But why am I telling you all this? When planning the trip, I felt overwhelmed and frustrated that nobody would prepare it for me, sit me down, and tell me what I needed to do to make the most of this beautiful city. I felt sure someone would offer a service to create a perfect New York itinerary tailored to my needs, but there wasn’t.