Skye & the Inner Hebrides
including Mull, Islay, Iona & more
Publication Date: 08th Nov 2024
£17.99
Inner Hebrides travel guide. Holiday tips and travel advice for the islands of the Inner Hebrides. Features Skye, Mull and Iona, Islay and Jura, Coll and Tiree, Raasay, Rona, Small Isles, Slate Islands, Colonsay, Gigha, Lismore and Kerrera, plus Oban and Mallaig. Covers accommodation, restaurants, language, wildlife, walks, beaches and culture
ISBN: 9781804691809
Published: 08th Nov 2024
Edition: 2
Number of pages: 288
About this book
Bradt’s Skye & the Inner Hebrides is the new, thoroughly updated, second edition of the most detailed standalone travel guidebook to this group of Scottish islands. Author Katie Featherstone, who loved the Inner Hebrides so much she moved there, features 24 islands from the Isle of Skye in the north to community-owned Gigha in the south, plus the gateway towns of Oban and Mallaig on the Scottish mainland.
Ransacked by Vikings, caught between warring clan chiefs and exploited by mainland nobility, the ongoing survival of Inner Hebridean communities testifies to the strength of their character. Reclaiming an identity through their native Gaelic language, cèilidh dancing and traditional industries remains a struggle, but despite fewer than twenty thousand people living across the region, each inhabited island has a distinctive history, character and culture.
With a bridge to the mainland and the most visitors, Skye is the busiest destination; it boasts the most varied landscape and most obvious attractions, including the Highland Games. Other, smaller islands remain relatively remote and less affected by the outside world. Pious Iona, Islay with its whisky, and Canna – where the village shop still runs via honesty box – all have their own individual charm.
Beyond cultural intrigue, the Inner Hebrides are renowned for their wild places, striking a perfect balance between feeling remote and being accessible on any budget. Scotland’s ‘right to roam’ provides infinite walking possibilities. Away from the villages, miles of intricate coastline, with sandy beaches and towering cliffs, enclose swathes of heathery moorland and hills. Hikers can enjoy Mull’s dramatic rock formations or Jura’s ‘Paps’ with only a herd of red deer or soaring eagle for company. On Skye, you can go beachcombing in the morning, then watch the Highland Games in the afternoon. Wildlife-watchers can snorkel with basking sharks off Coll, listen for corncrakes on Tiree, admire wintering geese on Islay or spot dolphins off Mull.
With extensive listings of accommodation and eating options, detailed transport advice, walking routes and packing lists, plus insights into history, myths and lifestyle, Bradt’s Skye & the Inner Hebrides is the ideal companion for an enjoyable visit.
About the Author
After having holidayed around the Inner Hebrides every year since she was born, Katie Featherstone (featherytravels.co.uk; @featherytravels) spent the first decade of adulthood getting as far away from the UK as possible, writing a lot and trying to learn how to use a camera. Around Christmas 2016 she considered that hiking in horizontal rain was more exciting than lying under palm trees, and hasn’t managed to shake the idea since. Since writing the first edition of Bradt’s Inner Hebrides, she has moved to Islay, becoming a full-time ‘it’s nice round here’ writer, focussing on history, hiking, and sustainable travel; her bylines include The Guardian, The Independent, Trail Magazine, TGO Magazine, Walk Highlands, Hidden Europe and Coast. When she’s not researching other parts of Scotland, she spends her spare time cycling around – surprising people with her squeaky brakes – and tramping through boggy bits of Islay in her walking boots.
Additional Information
Table of ContentsIntroduction
PART ONE GENERAL INFORMATION
Chapter 1 Background Information
Chapter 2 Practical Information
PART TWO THE GUIDE
Chapter 3 Skye (An t-Eilean Sgitheanach)
Chapter 4 Raasay (Ratharsair)
Chapter 5 The Small Isles
Chapter 6 Coll (Cola) and Tiree (Tirodh)
Chapter 7 Mull (Muile), Iona (Ì Chaluim Chille) and Ulva (Ulbha)
Chapter 8 Lismore (Lios Mòr) and Kerrera (Cearara)
Chapter 9 The Slate Islands
Chapter 10 Colonsay (Colbhasa)
Chapter 11 Islay (Ìle)
Chapter 12 Jura (Diùra)
Chapter 13 Gigha (Giogha)
Chapter 14 Gateway Towns
Appendices Glossary, Further Information
Index