Scottish Daily Mail

St Cuthbert lives on amid Holy Island’s mystical ruins

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on snorkellin­g trips to see seals, and head to the island’s vineyard. BEST FOR: sun-seekers.

WHERE TO STAY: Karma st Martin’s, a beachside resort aping a hamlet of stone cottages. Try the local crab in its restaurant. Three nights’ B&B costs from £563pp, including transfers from Land’s End (ukprestige­holidays.co.uk).

PRIVATE HIDEAWAY

A TINY tidal islet off the Isle of skye, Eilean sionnach is roughly 200 yards wide. And this dramatic, rocky space will be yours entirely. you can arrange boat (or pub) trips with the skipper, and read, walk or watch for whales in the sound of sleat. BEST FOR: whale-watchers. WHERE TO STAY: In the unexpected­ly slick and stylish four-bedroom keeper’s cottage by the now-automated lighthouse. There is a roll-top bath, superfast wifi, underfloor heating and smeg kitchen appliances. From £295 a night (coolstays.com).

HOLY ISLAND

THERE is much to see around the rocky beaches and orchid-dotted mudflats of Lindisfarn­e, including a tiny walled garden created by horticultu­rist Gertrude Jekyll, a mock Tudor castle and a pyramid-shaped beacon.

The holy Island is also home to the mystical ruins of its medieval priory, chiefly associated with the miracle-worker st Cuthbert. BEST FOR: Budding pilgrims.

WHERE TO STAY: while most visitors to the tidal isle are day-trippers, the village has accommodat­ion for six at the rather homely Britannia house, an 18th-century cottage that’s close to its kipper-selling Post Office. seven nights cost from £540 (cottages in northumber­land. co.uk).

WALK IN THE WILD

LINKED to the main isle via the Churchill Barriers — four causeways built by Italian prisoners of war — south Ronaldsay is the most southerly of the Orkney Islands.

here, otters roam the beaches and lochs, and sheep farms are scattered across the heathland, making walks a pleasure.

It also has the haunting, 5,000-year-old Tomb of the Eagles where thousands of human and bird bones were found together. BEST FOR: hikers.

WHERE TO STAY: wheems Organic Farm, which is powered by wind energy. Its fleece-insulated, seafacing pods negate the brisk clifftop winds. From £40 per night (coolcampin­g.co.uk).

FIT FOR A KING

ON THE Thames, across a footbridge from Bray (and heston Blumenthal’s The Fat Duck), is Monkey Island. It has more anecdotes than acreage.

Tales of Elgar compositio­ns, wild nights in the swinging sixties, and banished mad King George III supposedly making it his home illustrate its brilliantl­y bonkers past.

It’s the perfect spot for riverside picnics, or starting jaunts to windsor Castle.

BEST FOR: Those who enjoy the finer things.

WHERE TO STAY: In the mighty plush hotel, formed from two Palladian pavilions with ornate wedgwood plasterwor­k and 17th-century frescoes. Guests get access to the floating spa barge, and shepherd’s huts are found in the herb-scented grounds. From £200 B&B per night (monkeyisla­ndestate.co.uk).

LIFE OF LEISURE

ACCESSED by a humpback bridge, Filly is a sleepy river island separating the thin, leafy Churn from an old mill stream.

here, days out typically involve National Trust visits, peaceful Cotswolds hikes, afternoons in genteel tea shops or, ideally, all three. BEST FOR: Romantic breaks.

WHERE TO STAY: The couples’ cottage is a former mill carthouse, which was turned into an apple store when the mill became an orchard. It is now the island’s only building.

Its bright, vintage interiors artily incorporat­e fire-bucket light shades and green cupboard-doors made from reclaimed wood.

you also get a roll-top bath and a waterside garden. seven nights’ self-catering costs from £795 (uniquehome­stays.com).

SURF’S UP

A SUPER-SIZED sea stack, The Island towers 80 feet above sandy Towan Beach in central Newquay. Getting there involves a discreet green door and a footbridge. you’re near an aquarium, and you can take a clifftop walk when you’re not enjoying the famous surf for which the area’s known.

BEST FOR: A family getaway.

WHERE TO STAY: In its sole building — an upmarket, twofloor home championin­g New England-style whites and greys. There’s also a billiards table, and a pergola decorated with fairy lights in the gardens surroundin­g the property.

The best of the three bedrooms has a four-poster bed. Four nights cost from £1,306 (boutiquere­treats.co.uk).

AWAY FROM IT ALL

THE isolated archipelag­o of st Kilda is among scotland’s most remote set of islands, at 100 miles from the mainland.

Visitors are only permitted on Hirta, which is inhabited by the employees of a small Ministry of defence base. The last permanent residents were evacuated in 1930.

Here you can explore ghostly abandoned homes and learn about a time when seabird feathers were collected as payment for rent. BEST FOR: History enthusiast­s

WHERE TO STAY: The campsite costs £20 per night per pitch. A boat sails from Skye daily, weather-dependent, for £470pp return (gotostkild­a.co.uk).

AIR OF MYSTERY

FOLLOW a sandbar from the South devon village of Bigburyon-Sea and you’ll soon arrive at bumpy Burgh Island. during her stay in the spectacula­r hotel here, restored in the 1930s, Agatha christie was inspired to write the whodunnits And Then There were none and, later, evil Under The Sun. Visitors can also head to the Pilchard Inn pub and, atop a steep hill, the ruins of a chapel. BEST FOR: Amateur detectives.

WHERE TO STAY: Burgh Island Hotel oozes sophistica­tion; think afternoon teas and a snooker room. nearby is a cove with turquoise waters. From £290 per night (sawdays.co.uk).

TAKE FLIGHT

HALF of the world’s Manx shearwater­s nest on Skomer and Skokholm in Pembrokesh­ire during the summer.

each evening they noisily return to their burrows. comical puffins, porpoises, an endemic vole subspecies and squabbling seals are there to spot, too.

Meanwhile, an Iron Age hut circle and menhir will leave keen historians weak-kneed.

BEST FOR: Birdwatche­rs. WHERE TO STAY: In a 16-bed bunkhouse on Skomer (from £30 pp per night) and, on further-out Skokholm — where day visitors aren’t permitted — in renovated cowsheds (£110pp for minimum three nights), both April-September only (welshwildl­ife.org). return boat transfers from £27.50.

STAR-STUDDED

TORPEDO boat base, festival host and celebrity hideaway — life on osea, a tidal isle in essex’s river Blackwater, is rarely dull.

But its idyllic feel, with strips of sandy beach, meadows and willowline­d lanes suggests otherwise. canoe, cycle, sail, or just relax. BEST FOR: celeb-spotters.

WHERE TO STAY: The private island’s village has clapboard cottages, with bikes and fishing rods to hire, plus a shared heated pool (from £245 a night, hostunusua­l.com).

There are also bigger beach houses, including the main Manor, sleeping 20 (from £2,214, stay onedegree.com).

COOL CUSTOMER

THOUGH not the smallest inhabited channel Island, Alderney does have the coolest residents across this archipelag­o: lots of rare, leucistic (blonde) hedgehogs.

There are also white-gold beaches, cliff paths, puffins, palmlike cabbage trees, crumbling Victorian forts and views of mainland France.

BEST FOR: Hedgehog lovers. WHERE TO STAY: In the capital St Anne’s new boutique hotel called, yes, The Blonde Hedgehog. Its nine rooms have nice touches, with tubs and teal-painted walls, and there’s a farm-to-table restaurant. doubles from £230 B&B (blonde hedgehog.com).

HIGHLAND INSPIRATIO­N

WITH moorland, mists, mossy pine woodland and sandy beaches, car-free eilean Shona on Loch Moidart is the Highlands in miniature.

It certainly seduced J. M. Barrie, who summered here in the 1920s while writing the film adaptation of his book Peter Pan. otters, red squirrels and dolphins are frequently sighted, too. BEST FOR: Boys who never grew up. WHERE TO STAY: eight comfy selfcateri­ng stone cottages dot the craggy shore (seven nights from £750, eileanshon­a.com).

or there’s the fully-catered, 16-person ex-hunting lodge, now containing bold Grayson Perry art (three nights from £1,200).

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 ??  ?? Divine dish: The Blonde Hedgehog hotel’s farm-to-table restaurant
Divine dish: The Blonde Hedgehog hotel’s farm-to-table restaurant
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Idyll: The Island, above Towan Beach, top, and Lindisfarn­e in Northumber­land, left
NEWQUAY ISLET Idyll: The Island, above Towan Beach, top, and Lindisfarn­e in Northumber­land, left
 ??  ?? Sweet living: A shepherd’s hut in the grounds of the luxury hotel by the Thames
Sweet living: A shepherd’s hut in the grounds of the luxury hotel by the Thames

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