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Please help with 15 day Scotland driving itinerary

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Please help with 15 day Scotland driving itinerary

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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 09:27 AM
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Please help with 15 day Scotland driving itinerary

Greetings. I'm in the very beginning stage of planning a 15 day (including travel days) driving trip around Scotland in May 2025 for my husband and me and can really use some guidance. We are coming from Los Angeles, are well travelled but have never been to Scotland. My husband is the driver and has driven previously in England and Wales. We are most interested in history, beautiful scenery, small villages, Scottish people and culture, nature and village walks, castles, lochs, food. We are not really hikers, nor do we golf. We would like a variety of lodgings, experiencing the gamut from small guesthouses to a castle stay. We would love to stay 3 nights in an area if possible, though are willing to spend 2 to maximize our time. I think we want to start in Edinburgh for 4 nights (so much to see and do.) We'd also like to see Stirling (perhaps as a day trip from Edinburg?) as my husband enjoys William Wallace history, some of the Highlands, an Island (Skye? Mull?) the Jacobite train (husband again!) Cairngorms? Loch Lomand? Here's where I'm getting overwhelmed. Air is not yet booked so we have the flexibility of either round trip or open jaw travel. Please give me some itinerary help! Thank you.
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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 11:47 AM
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You might prefer small group tours. The roads are narrow and the sheep stupid.
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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 11:47 AM
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" We are most interested in history, beautiful scenery, small villages, Scottish people and culture, nature and village walks, castles, lochs, food."

You are in luck because those things are in spades in every corner of the country

Stirling is an easy day trip from Edinburgh -- however it is also a convenient stop on one's way to the west/islands.

The Jacobite does put a spanner in the works a bit (as does Skye in a way). The problem with the Jacobite is there is no way to do it without eating up an entire day. One would have to stay near Ft William the night before if taking the morning train or the night after if taking the afternoon/evening train. It is a lovely experience -- but it is looooong and the return journey is an exact duplicate of the outward journey so actually can get pretty boring. The good thing is you don't have to stay IN Ft William (not much to recommend the place) because Glencoe (35-ish minutes) and Ballachulish 30 minutes) are convenient enough. Mallaig - where you hang about for about 2 hours between trains has improved quite a bit so at least there are places to eat, shop etc.

You can't really drive to Ft William, take the train one way and continue your visit on to Skye because your car will be parked back at Ft William.

Now about Skye itself - it has become insanely popular. So the roads are crowded, many of the scenic places will not have available parking, and room rates have sort of skyrocketed. May has a Bank holiday weeked at both ends of the month when things are very busy -- so if you can avoid both the first and last 3 days weekends of the month it will help a lot.

But -- there are other scenic areas just as beautiful as Skye so it is not your only option

Last edited by janisj; Oct 18th, 2024 at 11:49 AM. Reason: a few typos
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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 11:56 AM
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OH - and one can get fabulous photos of the Jacobite crossing the Glenfinnan viaduct (which you can't do if you are sitting ON the train) if you drive the Road to the Isles instead of taking the train. The drive follows essentially the exact same route as the train with the advantage that you can stop at Neptune's Staircase, Glenfinnan, and drop dead GORGEOUS beaches that you only view from the train.

Then once at Mallaig it is a short car ferry ride over to Skye (if you must )
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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 11:58 AM
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Nope. Self drive it is.
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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 12:17 PM
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Janisj, what I mentioned were first thoughts only. Absolutely nothing is a deal breaker. With 2 weeks and our interests, how would you structure it?
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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 12:42 PM
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i'm on my way out for a few hours and will try to make some suggestions later today. Just how important is the Jacobite to your husband?

Also -- re the Cairngorms -- it is a 'National Park' but really isn't a must because there is more spectacular scenery in a lot of other places. A National Park doesn't mean the same thing in the UK that it does for example in the States. There are no gates, no entry fee. Its really just a nice area with towns and villages like elsewhere in the country. I personally would not plan a route to include the Cairngorms - but I wouldn't avoid them either since they are smack dab on the main north south route between the north and Edinburgh/Glasgow through the middle of the country.
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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 12:52 PM
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janisj, my husband is interested in the train, but it is certainly no deal breaker. No need to go out of our way if it is not convenient. I really look forward to your input!
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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 05:51 PM
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OK . . . back. You have 15 days total including travel time - that actually works out to about 12 days free 'on the ground' for seeing doing. There are soooooooo many directions you could go and all of which would include your history, scenery, villages, culture, nature, walks, castles, lochs, and food. But with just 12 days you do need to very selective and not have too many destinations.

Some random comments. Skye is terrific but as mentioned it is really popular and quite a 'time suck'. With a day give or take to get to say Portree, a day to get from Portree to your next destination and at very minimum 2 nights on the Isle (three nights would be much better - Skye is large and the driving is slow - like 25-30 mph slow). So IRL fitting in Skye eats up 4 to 6-ish days of your total trip. Worth it? Probably. But it also means missig masses of other things.

Another Island you might consider is Mull. The scenery is not quite as dramatic a Skye but much of it is drop dead gorgeous. Driving is slow on Mull as well but it can be done with 1 or 1.5 days less time investment, being closer to either Edinburgh or Glasgow and a smaller island. Whereas 3 nights is realistically minimum on Skye, 2 nights on Mull would be fine.

Open jaw is good but I would just go with whichever airport(s) get you the bes schedule or fares because EDI and GLA aren't that far apart.

If you can drop the idea of an island visit it makes things a lot easier. Honestly your options are MANY. I'd start by checking out the undiscovered Scotland website for some great information about every corner of the country https://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk


Just throwing out one possible itinerary:

Three nights in Edinburgh, collect car out at EDI, drive to Culross and explore, drive to Stirling, visit the castle and finish up somewhere in the general Callander/Aberfoyle/Doune area. Stay 3 nights (or 2 nights in a pinch) as a base for Loch Lomond, Doune Castle, Inchmahome Priory, the Trossachs, Loch Katrine etc. Then drive up the A84/A85 visiting Killin/Falls of Dochart, and on to Glencoe. Stay 2 nights as a base for Glen Etive, Glencoe and Loch Linnhe. Then up to Spean Bridge and across to BlairAtholl - maybe stay in Pitlochry or Aberfeldy 2 nights. as a base for some of the Cairngotms, Fortingall, Scone Palace. This totals 11 nights so it seems you have one day two night till needing to be at the airport. You could use this time explore some of Fife -- fishing villages, Falkland, St Andrews - and be a short-ish drive back to EDI.

Of course this is just one option - there are scores of different directions you could go. This one would give you gorgeous mountain glens, waterfalls, lochs, castles, great pubs, history in spades, and coastal villages.

But so would a lot of other itineraries - so not a lot of help huh??
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Old Oct 18th, 2024, 05:54 PM
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sorry for all the typos
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