Accommodation
Services of a professional tour manager
Comfortable coach travel throughout
Meals - as per the itinerary
All visits as outlined in the itinerary
Day 1
We depart from our designated pick-up points and head north, stopping en route for refreshments. We continue north by the scenic coastal road to Thurso and our accommodation at the Station Hotel, Thurso (or similar). All rooms have en suite facilities with TV, telephone and tea/coffee making facilities. Dinner is served in the evening.
Day 2
This morning, after breakfast, we visit Duncansby Head, the north eastern tip of the Scottish mainland. The single track road from John O’ Groats emerges at the lighthouse which was built in 1924 and became automated in 1997. With views north over Orkney and west to John O’ Groats and Dunnet Head, a well trodden path brings us to the first sight of the Geo of Sclaites, a huge cleft bitten deeply into the cliffs with a natural arch. Further along the cliff top there are stunning views south to Thirle Door and the jagged rocks and arches known as the Stacks of Duncansby.
Our next visit is to John O’ Groats, the landmark at the “end of the road”, the northernmost corner of Britain, 874 miles from Lands End. There are shops, ferry, exhibitions and a museum (of sorts) but the scenery is what it is all about here and it is magnificent with panoramic views over the stormy waters of the Pentland Firth to Orkney. This is a seabird haven with puffins, shags, fulmars, kittiwakes, gulls and gannets and many more species nesting in their thousands on the rock ledges. We continue to The Castle of Mey the former holiday home of the late Queen Mother. Originally Barrogill Castle it was first seen by the late Queen Mother in 1952, while mourning the death of her husband King George VI. Falling for its ruined, isolated charm she declared she would save the castle from ruin. Having acquired the most northerly castle on the British mainland, she renovated and lovingly restored it and for over half a century she spent her summers here and created the beautiful gardens you see today.
We continue on to Dunnet Head, the most northerly point on mainland Britain with some of the most extensive views to be found anywhere in northern Scotland. We return to the hotel in time for dinner.
Day 3
This morning after breakfast we leave the hotel and set out on our journey across Scotland’s northern edge, to visit the Strathnaver. Here we will see the Museum which is located in the former church of St Columba which was built in 1700. Strathnaver is one of the principal sites of the Highland Clearances. In 1814, the “year of the burning”, as many as 15,000 people were cleared from the one and a half million acre estate of the Duke of Stafford (later made the Duke of Sutherland) to increase the income from the land by letting it to sheep farmers.
Many emigrated to North America and never returned. Driving along this single track road beside the River Naver it is hard not to be moved by the thought of the terrible loss and upheaval that people here suffered.
We travel to Tongue where we will we will stretch our legs and break for a lunchtime stop (not included). The name Tongue has old Norse origins, though fairly obvious: it comes from “tunga”, a tongue of land projecting into the loch. Although the Norse people probably lived here between the 900 and 1200, nothing certain has been found of their settlement. When Thomas Telford completed the road south to Lairg in 1828, Tongue changed from being an island community relying on the sea for its communications. When the road to Thurso followed in 1836 a daily coach service ran and during the rest of the 1800s efforts to complete the road west to Durness continued.
We also visit the nearby Smoo Cave which has the largest entrance of any sea cave in the British Isles. Recent excavations show that the cave was in use 6000 years ago by the earliest settlers in the north. The “blowhole” and waterfall can be observed from an observation point above the cave. There is also a recent memorial to celebrate the life of John Lennon who regularly came to Durness on holiday as a boy. We continue via Loch Eriboll and Durness to Kinlochbervie on the tip of the north west coastline.
Our accommodation is at the Kinlochbervie Hotel which overlooks the busy fishing harbour. All rooms have en-suite facilities with TV, telephone and tea/coffee making facilities. We arrive at the hotel in time for dinner.
Day 4
Following breakfast this morning we travel to Knockan Crag, an open air visitor centre within the North West Highlands Geo Park, with information panels describing the history and geology of the local landscape, which also enjoys stunning views across the Sutherland hills. We continue with a look around the ruins of Ardvreck Castle and then on to Lochinver for some free time and an opportunity for lunch (not included). After a visit to Highland Stoneware, which pro-duces beautiful hand-painted pottery, we continue over the highly scenic road via Drumbeg and Eddrachillis Bay back to Kinlochbervie.
Day 5
This morning after breakfast we leave the hotel and begin our homeward journey, travelling via Laxford Bridge, Loch More, Loch Shin and Lairg. In the 1950s a hydro-electric dam was constructed which raised the level of Loch Shin by over 30 feet and it now forms one of the major attractions of the area, complete with a spectacular salmon leap. At one time the majority of the inhabitants in Lairg area resided on the high moorlands and straths, with the children of tenanting shepherds walking miles to school over rugged hill paths, but gradually these dwellings have been vacated in favour of a move down to the more accessible present village on the southern shores of the loch, which developed from around 1812. Continuing via Bonar Bridge and Tain we return back to our original pick-up points, where we expect to arrive in the late evening.