THE
ORKNEYS, SHETLANDS & NORTHERN HIGHLANDS
Includes Aberdeen Whisky Trail and the
Northern Highlands
14 day tour inc. arrival/departure
days
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Far to the north of Britain,
we're in the land of the saga, the land of the long summer day,
the land of the Viking settlements of the Shetlands, Orkneys
and Europe's largest wildness area of Caithness and the Scottish
Highlands.
If you're seeking the peace and
solitude of an unspoilt landscape, inhabited yet not ruined
by 5000 years of human inhabitation, then this is a tour for
you. If you're someone who enjoys the call of myriad birds as
they sweep and plunge, or seeing patrols of rock top puffins,
or frolicking seals, then this is for you. If you're someone
who can appreciate 5000 years of history from truly unique Neolithic
settlements, through Viking remains and mediaeval castles, to
the sunken warships of two World Wars, then this is for you.
Most tours of the region rush
through in four or five days. We think it's worth a little longer
for what it life but full of care if we have no time to stand
and stare.
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DEPARTURE
DATES & PRICES FOR YEAR 2005
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Tour
Code
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Arrive
Inverness
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Depart
Inverness
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ORK
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Friday
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Thursday
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Ork
01
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Price
for groups on application
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| TENTATIVE
ITINERARY |
NIGHTSTOP |
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Day One - Friday
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| You
fly into Inverness, capital of the Highlands, where you'll be
met by your Back-Roads Touring Co. Ltd guide and transferred to
our local base. The remainder of the day will be free for you
to recover from your travels and to explore this small but lovely
city at leisure.
Please note: travel to Inverness
is easy and cheap from London's airports by low-cost airlines
(especially easyjet.com. We recommend you check their web site
for fares and availability).
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Inverness
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Day Two - Saturday
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| Our first
day's touring takes us east through Aberdeenshire following the
Speyside whisky trail.
The scenery is wonderful and
the sightseeing as varied as ancient pictish ruins to coastal
fishing villages.
Another highlight will be Crathes
Castle, a delight to visit. It is very well maintained by the
National Trust, filled with antiques, has a charming architecture,
beautiful gardens. In fact, it has everything anyone could want
in a castle, including ghosts and legends!
And there'll be much more to
delight on this gentle touring day.
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Aberdeen
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Day Three - Sunday
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A
day to explore Aberdeen. The city has one of the most distinctive
landscapes in Britain thanks to the use of silver granite in its
construction. Glittering spires, impressive Georgian columns and
the high imposing walls of the Victorian public buildings and
university sparkle in the sunshine.
The Maritime Museum illustrating the cities illustrious maritime
past, the Tollbooth Museum, set in old prison cells, or the Gordon
Highlanders Museum are all options for us to visit. And garden
enthusiasts will love the botanical gardens or the roses of the
Winter Gardens (subject of time of year) Of course, you may simply
wish to wander the streets and shop!
Later, we'll board our night
ferry to the Shetlands. Accommodation is in twin-berth cabins.
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overnight
ferry to the Shetlands
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Days Four, Five, Six - Mon, Tue, Wed
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dock in the Shetland's harbour town of Lerwick and have the next
three full days to explore this rugged, remote and beautiful island
that's as far away from Norway as it is from Scotland!
The region is actually made up
of over 100 separate islands, each projecting sharp cliffs into
a sea that reflects light and changes colour by the time of
day. It also changes shape, according to the weather and you
might see it as a gentle was on sandy beach or a boiling surging
force breaking violently on the land. Naturally, it's a haven
for wildlife, sea-life and bird-life. Puffins, gulls, shags,
cormorants, seals, dolphins, porbeagle sharks, and even killer
whales. Who knows what we might spot!
But the Shetlands are also rich
in history and heritage. Neolithic and Iron age man have left
their imprint. It is the Vikings though who gave the islands
their most recognisable culture. The most incredible site is
that of Jarlshof, where their two-hundred years of inhabitation
gives a glimpse into their past.
In addition to seeing the Jarlshof
remains we'll also be visiting the Lerwick museum where the
rebuilt longboats take the breath away.
Scalloway provides another focus
for our explorations. Here we'll see the infamous castle of
Earl Patrick Stewart and visit the Scalloway museum. And a further
highlight will lie in taking the boat our of Mousa to view the
best preserved broch (primitive housing) in existence and en
route see sea-life.
Our crossing to the Orkneys involves
us in a late night but it's a chance to experience the long
summer evening and we'll dine aboard.
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Shetland
Isles
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Days Seven, Eight, Nine, Ten- Thur, Fri, Sat, Sun
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have a relaxed start to the morning following our late night before
begining our Orkneys explorations. These Isles will provide some
of the most memorable sightseeing of the tour.
This archipelago comprises of
some 70 islands, and although it seduces with it's natural beauty,
it is the Neolithic history that grips one. This is a World
Heritage Site. For five millennia there has been human inhabitation
on these islands. A storm in 1850 uncovered the remarkable Skara
Brae where an intricate maze of 500 year old dwellings, largely
intact, was discovered. And the discoveries have continued since
with the islands now boasting over 3000 such Neolithic sites!
But there's also history of a
more modern time too. Evocative relics of two world wars lie
in the Scapa Flow. And in the 5000 intervening years many other
inhabitants have left their spoor so that there are castles,
churches (including one built by Italian POWs), museums, craft
centres, Martello Towers, preserved fishing villages, Victorian
gardens and naturally a whisky distillery for us to visit.
We'll also be visiting the outer
islands of Hoy, South Ronaldsay and smaller, more remote ones
where the sea and bird life are of particular interest.
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Orkneys
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Days Eleven & Twelve - Mon & Tue
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| We leave
the isle of Orkney and cross to the northern tip of Scotland and
explore the region of Caithness.
There are not too many places
in the World that one can honestly write are unspoilt, or undiscovered
but Caithness is surely one of them. This is true Back-Roads
Touring country and we promise you some amazing sights and unforgettable
experiences!
Here, precariously hugging wind-swept
cliffs are literally hundreds of castle ruins, connected in
many cases to the warrior clans Sinclair and Gunn. In the northerly
town of Wick we'll visit the Heritage Centre and learn how people
have survived in this incredible terrain of peat bog and over
the centuries.
Then there's Dunnet Head. This
most northerly point on mainland Britain rises some 100 metres
above sea level. The Dunnet Head lighthouse was built in 1831
by Robert Stevenson, grandfather of the author Robert Louis
Stevenson. It was automated in 1989. On a clear day the view
point allows the visitor to see as far as Cape Wrath to the
west and enjoy a stunning panoramic view across to John O'Groats
and Duncansby Head. to the south lies Morven, the highest mountain
in Caithness. We can also visit a traditional Caithness cottage,
hardly altered since it was built 150 years ago. The Caithness
Heritage Trust has restored Mrs Mary-Ann Calder's former home.
This crofthouse features a wealth of family history. It exhibits
original box-beds and a host of early machines and implements
which were used on the croft.
We'll also see a more modern skills
and visit a Caithness Glass centre to see it made and perhaps
buy a souvenir or two!
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Caithness
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Day Thirteen - Wednesday
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| We make
our way south towards Inverness , driving through some stunning
Highlands scenery and en route stopping a sites of both historic
and scenic interest. |
Inverness |
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Day
Fourteen - Thursday
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| Alas,
our days in the Highlands and Islands are over and you depart
from Inverness airport. From here you can travel back to London,
or to either Edinburgh or Glasgow.
They say that the Orkney's in
particular get under your skin, so maybe is 'au revoir' rather
than farewell!
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©
As we publish full tour descriptions, you may find others offering
our unique itineraries. But, just as you find when others
sing the songs of Paul McCartney, they're often not quite as
good as when sung by the original composer!
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