logo
These are my favourite almost-secret beauty spots in Scotland

These are my favourite almost-secret beauty spots in Scotland

Times7 hours ago

The North Coast 500, a loop of about 500 miles from Inverness around the northern Highlands, may only be marking its tenth anniversary this year, but it's already become the stuff of legend. Eye-popping crowds, imposing campervans, magnificent traffic jams — those superlatives once used to describe the scenery now more commonly used with a side of weary overwhelm to tell tales of overtourism. Who would want to join such a scrum? Fortunately you don't have to, because after more than a decade of rootling around back roads, clanging on to car ferries and nosing along promising-looking tracks and trails, I've found plenty of tucked-away spots across Scotland. These are some of my favourites.
This article contains affiliate links that can earn us revenue
Before the NC500 brought bucket-list tourism to the Highlands, the entire northwest was like this: deafening silence punctuated by seabird calls, a solitary single-track road slowly egging you on through ancient forest and across salt-sprayed moorland. Driving on to the Ardnamurchan peninsula on Scotland's west coast, you'll hug the coast of sinuous Loch Sunart, the Isle of Mull swinging in and out of view as you coil around chunky Ben Hiant and onwards to Ardnamurchan Lighthouse and Corrachadh Mòr, mainland Britain's westernmost craggy reach. It's worth pushing northwards to white-sand Sanna Bay for a bracing dip in turquoise waters, then stopping at West Ardnamurchan Community Garden's honesty shop for salad leaves and homemade sauces. Mingarry Park has contemporary bedrooms with private hot tubs, local venison for dinner and endlessly distracting mountain views.Details B&B doubles from £181 (mingarryparkhouse.co.uk)
• Scotland travel guide
At the far northern reaches of the Scottish mainland, the land seems taken over by water, pooled with lochs and sodden with bogland as the triangular wedge of Caithness and Sutherland extends into the North Sea. It's also often overtaken by NC500 road-trippers, rushing through on a loop that never veers too far from the coast. They're missing the real highlight: the UK's newest Unesco world heritage site, the Flow Country. These peatlands are like nowhere else on earth. Take the boardwalk through Forsinard Flows nature reserve and you'll see why, the colours underfoot shifting like an opal in the light as the wildlife darts out to meet you. You'll spot lizards, frogs and dragonflies plus birds aplenty and can climb the lookout tower for a hen harrier's view of it all. Forsinard Lodge has straightforward rooms a short amble from the nature reserve.Details B&B doubles from £115 (forsinardlodge.com)
Getting to Britain's most northerly inhabited island is an adventure in itself, leapfrogging via ferry from Shetland's mainland first to Yell, then on to Unst. Once you're here it's all big skies and broad landscapes, from creamy windswept beaches up to clifftop moorlands, with a generous scattering of Viking longhouses (at least 60) and even a spaceport licensed to send small rockets into orbit. For now, though, those skies are the preserve of the seabirds (puffins, gannets, guillemots) and dark enough by night to see the Milky Way or even the Mirrie Dancers from August to April (Shetlandic for the northern lights). One of Britain's most northerly country houses, Belmont House, has cosy bedrooms with a touch of Georgian grandeur, walled gardens and candlelit dinners.Details B&B doubles from £180 (belmontshetland.com)
Calm waters dotted with tiny rock islands, romantic ancient castles and a climate gently warmed by the Gulf Stream make the Appin peninsula just north of Oban ideal holiday territory. Here you could paddleboard on tranquil Loch Linnhe, take the boat over to Castle Stalker for a tour with the family who own it or stroll the octagonal walled garden at Kinlochlaich, blooming with vivid rhododendrons and azaleas. My top pick, though, is the Isle of Lismore, which rises to barely more than hillock height between the peaks of Morvern and Mull. It's a cracking spot for gentle walks with mountain views, as listed in detail on the Walk Lismore website (walklismore.co.uk), and in summer is carpeted in wildflowers. The Pierhouse on the shoreline in Port Appin has views from the beds over Loch Linnhe to Lismore and local seafood dinners.Details B&B doubles from £155 (pierhousehotel.co.uk)
• 16 of the most beautiful places in Scotland
Sometimes decline means preservation and Cromarty's lack of modern industrial success — not to mention its location just off the choked NC500 on the Black Isle near Inverness — has left it largely unmessed-with since its 18th-century heyday. That means plenty of grand Georgian merchants' houses and clustered fishermen's cottages, given a buzz in more recent years by the regular dolphin-spotting trips leaving from the harbour. These ply the sheltered Cromarty Firth in search of marine life, weaving around a quasi-parking lot of unused oil rigs that form an atmospheric backdrop. There's a buzzing arts scene here too, with exhibitions, live music and even sewing classes open to all at the Old Brewery, plus a seafront community cinema. Stay at the Factor's House B&B, its three bedrooms arranged around an almost 200-year-old home with views over the private gardens to the Cromarty Firth waters beyond.Details B&B doubles from £185 (thefactorshouse.com)
Despite being one of the best places in Europe to spot bottlenose dolphins, this slice of Scottish coastline near Inverness attracts a mere sprinkling of tourists. Why? You'll wonder as you winkle around in postcard-worthy villages that tumble down to ancient fishing harbours and burrow your toes into the sands of vast Findhorn beach. You'll want to visit Cullen for a bowl of the town's famous smoked haddock soup, Cullen skink, of course, plus cliff-clinging Findlater Castle; but if it's those dolphins you're after, among the best spots is Burghead, where the whitewashed visitor centre looks out over waters rich with marine life including dolphins, seals and whales. The former coaching inn, the Seafield Arms in Cullen, has stylish bedrooms with just-subtle-enough tartan decor, a lounge for whiskies beside the fire and easy strolls to the coast.Details Room-only doubles from £150 (seafieldarmscullen.co.uk)
• I love Scotland more than anywhere else. These are my 25 top stays
The single-track road may initially lack promise: a ribbon of tarmac plunging along a furrow in the landscape. But persist through the steep-sided grey of Glen Valtos on Lewis's far west coast and eventually you'll emerge at the most incredible beach you've ever seen. A bold claim perhaps, but Uig Sands has that effect on people, generally rendered speechless by this expanse of golden sand, deposited and smoothed to a sheen between one set of hills and the next by the retreating Atlantic. You'll romp, you'll whoop, you'll write in the sand — then it's time to head to wee Abhainn Dearg Distillery for a dram of whisky, and to wait for an incredible sunset. Afterwards, continue enjoying the view from Uig Sands, a restaurant with rooms that stares out across the beach and serves seafood suppers fresh from the boat.Details Room-only doubles from £120 (uigsands.co.uk)
Ripples of sand rush up to meet you before a delicate thud and a gentle spray of seawater herald your arrival into Barra on the world's only scheduled beach landing. The second-southernmost of the inhabited Outer Hebrides islands defies easy pigeonholing: is it remote because it's 60-odd miles west of the mainland, or accessible because it's a one-hour direct flight from Glasgow? Either way, it's a beauty — its shell-rich beaches backed by tufty machair grassland, its largest village, Castlebay, low-slung around a curved shoreline that protects the offshore medieval stronghold Kisimul Castle. Take a coastal hike to spot seals basking on the rocks of Seal Bay and view a rainbow of summer wildflowers blooming in the machair. The Castlebay hotel in the centre of the village has simple sea-view doubles, Barra seafood dinners and trad music in the bar.Details B&B doubles from £125 (castlebayhotel.com)
If the waters off Coll were Mediterranean not Atlantic, the island would be overrun, and the price you pay for its tranquillity is that near-constant breeze keeping your jumper in place. Despite its exposed location to the west of Mull, though, Coll clocks up some of the highest sunshine hours in the UK, tempting visitors to the beach (there are more than 30), onto boat trips to look for basking sharks and out for corncrake-spotting strolls through the RSPB reserve. It's a Dark Sky island too, with virtually zero light pollution to detract from the stars, while dinner is taken seriously here and might feature local lobster and brown crab alongside Coll-reared Hebridean lamb. The Coll hotel is the hub of the community and has bright and breezy rooms, creel-caught seafood and free bikes for exploring.Details B&B doubles from £145 (collhotel.com)
Where have we missed? Let us know about your favourite under-the-radar Scottish spots below

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How to become a real high flyer... woman's journey from air hostess to top pilot
How to become a real high flyer... woman's journey from air hostess to top pilot

Daily Mail​

time5 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

How to become a real high flyer... woman's journey from air hostess to top pilot

For many pilots, their interactions with passengers are limited to announcements over the PA. However, Sarah Johnson has an expert knowledge of the people she carries, as a former air hostess. The 39-year-old Scot spent seven years in cabin crew for Emirates as she saved the £70,000 needed to fund her pilot training. She said: 'I've always been fascinated by planes, even as a girl.' But when she left school and studied to become a translator at a Spanish university, she didn't dare believe that she would one day become a pilot. Ms Johnson, from Birse, Aberdeenshire, said: 'Attitudes to women pilots were different 20 years ago. I thought I was being silly – I was good at languages and becoming a translator was the road set out for me. 'But I couldn't shake the feeling that I wanted to be a pilot. I saw an opportunity to become a flight attendant, which meant that at least I'd be flying.' In 2010 she moved to Dubai to work for Emirates and said: 'Flying to Japan and Australia was amazing but I wanted to be flying the plane. I got into so much trouble as cabin crew because no one could ever find me. I'd be in the cockpit when I had the chance.' Ms Johnson embarked on a gruelling schedule, attending flying school in Los Angeles during layovers after 17-hour flights from Dubai. She said: 'The training was intense – after long-haul flights to Australia or New Zealand, I'd be up all night studying principles of flight or air law. It was tough.' After getting her pilot's wings, Sarah landed a job with Ryanair as a cadet pilot, moving up to junior pilot, senior first officer and then captain two years ago. Ms Johnson, who lives in Palma, Mallorca, with her financial consultant fiancé, said: 'I still can't believe I'm captain. When I had only two stripes, I used to put them together on my shoulder and look in the mirror, imagining what it would be like to have four as captain. My favourite part is the take-off. 'Every time I press the take-off thrust, it's such a thrill. 'A special moment was when I had my mum Chris and dad Martin as passengers. Of course, Dad made a dad joke about being relieved we landed safely. I can't see myself ever changing career. I'm lucky to have a job like this.'

Tourist taxes: be careful what you wish for, because holidaymakers have choices too
Tourist taxes: be careful what you wish for, because holidaymakers have choices too

The Independent

time7 hours ago

  • The Independent

Tourist taxes: be careful what you wish for, because holidaymakers have choices too

In these divided times, seeing multi-party agreement is uplifting. The setting: Glasgow city administration committee on Thursday 19 June. SNP, Labour, Conservatives and Greens joined in voting in favour of the city's visitor levy. From January 2027, people staying in hotels and all other commercial accommodation in Glasgow will pay 5 per cent on top of the bill. Each year, tourists and business travellers will provide £16m for the council to spend on civic improvements and promoting Glasgow. Edinburgh has already decided to charge overnight guests 5 per cent on top of the room rate, starting in July next year. Good to see the two big Scottish cities agreeing on something, too. Back in Glasgow, Ricky Bell of the SNP said there was 'no evidence to suggest that the introduction of a levy would be detrimental to the city'. Free money, then. And (almost) nobody who lives and votes in Glasgow will pay it. What's not to like? A load of locations across Europe and the wider world already have similar tourist taxes. Paris and Rome hardly seem short of tourists, so Mr Bell is surely right: a levy will not deter visitors. At the risk of disrupting such rare unity, I beg to differ. A couple staying in a three-star hotel in the French capital pay £9.50 per night in Paris tourist tax. I shall assume the room itself costs £110, which is what I have been seeing apart from during the Olympics slump last summer. With accommodation tax at 10 per cent in France, the pair will pay just short of 20 per cent in levies – which corresponds to the current rate of VAT in Scotland and the rest of the UK. With their new 5 per cent charge, Edinburgh and Glasgow will leap ahead in the proportion they extract from tourists. By next summer, the 'stealth' visitor tax on foreigners known as air passenger duty will extract £15 for European flights and £102 for North American visitors. It all adds up. Edinburgh and Glasgow are great cities, and share freely with visitors their immense cultural wealth in the shape of world-class museums and galleries. The assumption is that tourist demand is inelastic – the city councils can put on taxes without dampening the desire to visit. I am not so sure. If it were the case, why stop at 5 per cent – let's try 10, or 20? The UK already looks unwelcoming, with a £16 admission fee in the shape of the Electronic Travel Authorisation and a refusal to accept perfectly secure European Union identity cards – disenfranchising around 300 million EU citizens who don't have passports. Edinburgh is a special case. The capital is a huge tourism draw, home to the industry of government and a key business hub. But Glasgow does not enjoy such fortune. If accommodation looks too pricey, visitors from northern England may switch to day trips; other tourists will stay at properties beyond the city's boundaries and the reach of the levy. Either way, the entire spend at a Glasgow property is lost. Another unintended consequence could be that visitors switch to cheaper, characterless budget hotels rather than independent enterprises. Imposing a flat levy across the year looks odd, too. To stretch the season and persuade people to visit off-peak, it would be smarter to have a 15 per cent tax for the four months from the start of June to the end of September, falling to zero for the rest of the year. Fees for visitors are worthwhile if they are substantial and change behaviour The shrewdest tourism tax I have seen in a long while is the brand-new €20 (£17) charge for each passenger arriving on a cruise ship to the Greek islands of Mykonos and Santorini from July to September. Cruise firms are understandably cross that it has been introduced so late in the day. As Paul Ludlow, president of Carnival UK, told me: 'When things are sprung on us late, it's not the way in which we'd like to work.' The principle, though, is sound: 'We really don't need thousands more people arriving for the day and contributing little to the islands' economies, so the least we can do is extract €50,000 from the average ship.' I support every city, region and nation making choices about taxes and tourism. But every tourist has choice, too.

These are my favourite almost-secret beauty spots in Scotland
These are my favourite almost-secret beauty spots in Scotland

Times

time7 hours ago

  • Times

These are my favourite almost-secret beauty spots in Scotland

The North Coast 500, a loop of about 500 miles from Inverness around the northern Highlands, may only be marking its tenth anniversary this year, but it's already become the stuff of legend. Eye-popping crowds, imposing campervans, magnificent traffic jams — those superlatives once used to describe the scenery now more commonly used with a side of weary overwhelm to tell tales of overtourism. Who would want to join such a scrum? Fortunately you don't have to, because after more than a decade of rootling around back roads, clanging on to car ferries and nosing along promising-looking tracks and trails, I've found plenty of tucked-away spots across Scotland. These are some of my favourites. This article contains affiliate links that can earn us revenue Before the NC500 brought bucket-list tourism to the Highlands, the entire northwest was like this: deafening silence punctuated by seabird calls, a solitary single-track road slowly egging you on through ancient forest and across salt-sprayed moorland. Driving on to the Ardnamurchan peninsula on Scotland's west coast, you'll hug the coast of sinuous Loch Sunart, the Isle of Mull swinging in and out of view as you coil around chunky Ben Hiant and onwards to Ardnamurchan Lighthouse and Corrachadh Mòr, mainland Britain's westernmost craggy reach. It's worth pushing northwards to white-sand Sanna Bay for a bracing dip in turquoise waters, then stopping at West Ardnamurchan Community Garden's honesty shop for salad leaves and homemade sauces. Mingarry Park has contemporary bedrooms with private hot tubs, local venison for dinner and endlessly distracting mountain B&B doubles from £181 ( • Scotland travel guide At the far northern reaches of the Scottish mainland, the land seems taken over by water, pooled with lochs and sodden with bogland as the triangular wedge of Caithness and Sutherland extends into the North Sea. It's also often overtaken by NC500 road-trippers, rushing through on a loop that never veers too far from the coast. They're missing the real highlight: the UK's newest Unesco world heritage site, the Flow Country. These peatlands are like nowhere else on earth. Take the boardwalk through Forsinard Flows nature reserve and you'll see why, the colours underfoot shifting like an opal in the light as the wildlife darts out to meet you. You'll spot lizards, frogs and dragonflies plus birds aplenty and can climb the lookout tower for a hen harrier's view of it all. Forsinard Lodge has straightforward rooms a short amble from the nature B&B doubles from £115 ( Getting to Britain's most northerly inhabited island is an adventure in itself, leapfrogging via ferry from Shetland's mainland first to Yell, then on to Unst. Once you're here it's all big skies and broad landscapes, from creamy windswept beaches up to clifftop moorlands, with a generous scattering of Viking longhouses (at least 60) and even a spaceport licensed to send small rockets into orbit. For now, though, those skies are the preserve of the seabirds (puffins, gannets, guillemots) and dark enough by night to see the Milky Way or even the Mirrie Dancers from August to April (Shetlandic for the northern lights). One of Britain's most northerly country houses, Belmont House, has cosy bedrooms with a touch of Georgian grandeur, walled gardens and candlelit B&B doubles from £180 ( Calm waters dotted with tiny rock islands, romantic ancient castles and a climate gently warmed by the Gulf Stream make the Appin peninsula just north of Oban ideal holiday territory. Here you could paddleboard on tranquil Loch Linnhe, take the boat over to Castle Stalker for a tour with the family who own it or stroll the octagonal walled garden at Kinlochlaich, blooming with vivid rhododendrons and azaleas. My top pick, though, is the Isle of Lismore, which rises to barely more than hillock height between the peaks of Morvern and Mull. It's a cracking spot for gentle walks with mountain views, as listed in detail on the Walk Lismore website ( and in summer is carpeted in wildflowers. The Pierhouse on the shoreline in Port Appin has views from the beds over Loch Linnhe to Lismore and local seafood B&B doubles from £155 ( • 16 of the most beautiful places in Scotland Sometimes decline means preservation and Cromarty's lack of modern industrial success — not to mention its location just off the choked NC500 on the Black Isle near Inverness — has left it largely unmessed-with since its 18th-century heyday. That means plenty of grand Georgian merchants' houses and clustered fishermen's cottages, given a buzz in more recent years by the regular dolphin-spotting trips leaving from the harbour. These ply the sheltered Cromarty Firth in search of marine life, weaving around a quasi-parking lot of unused oil rigs that form an atmospheric backdrop. There's a buzzing arts scene here too, with exhibitions, live music and even sewing classes open to all at the Old Brewery, plus a seafront community cinema. Stay at the Factor's House B&B, its three bedrooms arranged around an almost 200-year-old home with views over the private gardens to the Cromarty Firth waters B&B doubles from £185 ( Despite being one of the best places in Europe to spot bottlenose dolphins, this slice of Scottish coastline near Inverness attracts a mere sprinkling of tourists. Why? You'll wonder as you winkle around in postcard-worthy villages that tumble down to ancient fishing harbours and burrow your toes into the sands of vast Findhorn beach. You'll want to visit Cullen for a bowl of the town's famous smoked haddock soup, Cullen skink, of course, plus cliff-clinging Findlater Castle; but if it's those dolphins you're after, among the best spots is Burghead, where the whitewashed visitor centre looks out over waters rich with marine life including dolphins, seals and whales. The former coaching inn, the Seafield Arms in Cullen, has stylish bedrooms with just-subtle-enough tartan decor, a lounge for whiskies beside the fire and easy strolls to the Room-only doubles from £150 ( • I love Scotland more than anywhere else. These are my 25 top stays The single-track road may initially lack promise: a ribbon of tarmac plunging along a furrow in the landscape. But persist through the steep-sided grey of Glen Valtos on Lewis's far west coast and eventually you'll emerge at the most incredible beach you've ever seen. A bold claim perhaps, but Uig Sands has that effect on people, generally rendered speechless by this expanse of golden sand, deposited and smoothed to a sheen between one set of hills and the next by the retreating Atlantic. You'll romp, you'll whoop, you'll write in the sand — then it's time to head to wee Abhainn Dearg Distillery for a dram of whisky, and to wait for an incredible sunset. Afterwards, continue enjoying the view from Uig Sands, a restaurant with rooms that stares out across the beach and serves seafood suppers fresh from the Room-only doubles from £120 ( Ripples of sand rush up to meet you before a delicate thud and a gentle spray of seawater herald your arrival into Barra on the world's only scheduled beach landing. The second-southernmost of the inhabited Outer Hebrides islands defies easy pigeonholing: is it remote because it's 60-odd miles west of the mainland, or accessible because it's a one-hour direct flight from Glasgow? Either way, it's a beauty — its shell-rich beaches backed by tufty machair grassland, its largest village, Castlebay, low-slung around a curved shoreline that protects the offshore medieval stronghold Kisimul Castle. Take a coastal hike to spot seals basking on the rocks of Seal Bay and view a rainbow of summer wildflowers blooming in the machair. The Castlebay hotel in the centre of the village has simple sea-view doubles, Barra seafood dinners and trad music in the B&B doubles from £125 ( If the waters off Coll were Mediterranean not Atlantic, the island would be overrun, and the price you pay for its tranquillity is that near-constant breeze keeping your jumper in place. Despite its exposed location to the west of Mull, though, Coll clocks up some of the highest sunshine hours in the UK, tempting visitors to the beach (there are more than 30), onto boat trips to look for basking sharks and out for corncrake-spotting strolls through the RSPB reserve. It's a Dark Sky island too, with virtually zero light pollution to detract from the stars, while dinner is taken seriously here and might feature local lobster and brown crab alongside Coll-reared Hebridean lamb. The Coll hotel is the hub of the community and has bright and breezy rooms, creel-caught seafood and free bikes for B&B doubles from £145 ( Where have we missed? Let us know about your favourite under-the-radar Scottish spots below

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store