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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Tour
Code
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Arrive
Inverness
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Depart
Inverness
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|
WISE
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Saturday
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Saturday
|
|
|
2004
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|
|
ORK01
|
08 May 2004
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10 Jun 2004
|
|
ORK02
|
02
Jul 2004
|
15
Jul 2004
|
|
ORK03
|
13
Aug 2004
|
26
Aug 2004
|
|
ORK04
|
27
Aug 2004
|
09
Sep 2004
|
TENTATIVE ITINERARY
Day One - Friday
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).
Inverness
Day Two - Saturday
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.
nr Aberdeen
Day Three - Sunday
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.
Overnight ferry to the Shetlands
Days Four, Five &
Six - Mon, Tue, Wed
We 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.
Shetland Isles
Days Seven, Eight, Nine,
Ten- Thus, Fri, Sat, Sun
We'll 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.
Orkneys
Days Ten & Eleven
- Monday & Tuesday
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!
Caithness
Day Twelve - Wednesday
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
Day Thirteen - Thursday
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!
Price US
$2599.00
Single Supplement US
$545.00
Whats Included ? Click
here for full details
Advantages and
price justification - click here.