accommodation isle skye

accommodation isle skye
Atholl Hotel
accommodation isle skye
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You may find this information helpful when researching the area prior to your visit

The area's population varies from a few hundred in the low season, to that many alone on the slopes, faces and ridges during the high season. It's not surprising, because people come for all kinds of reasons. Here is a perfect place in which to enjoy recreational climbing, or to hone advanced climbing skills. Here too, is the most dramatic classroom imaginable in which to study geology, vulcanology and glaciation. Classic features abound, bringing blackboard diagrams vividly to life. Environmentally speaking, the area provides pockets of near wilderness and alpine habitat. There's a visual feast for the photographer, artist or casual onlooker. The complex interplay of light and weather create a constantly changing panorama of colour and textural effects.

For lovers of things natural, the Cuillins are in themselves sufficient reason to visit Skye and Lochalsh. Treated with care and respect they will repay the effort a thousand times.

Strath is the south-easternmost portion of Skye. It is bounded to the west by Strathaird and to the south by Sleat. Traditionally Strath was the ancient lands of the Clan MacKinnon - marshals to the MacDonalds of the Isle.

Stay with us and visit Dunvegan Castle

has been the stronghold of the Chiefs of MacLeod for nearly 800 years and it remains their home. Built on a Rock once surrounded entirely by salt water, it is unique in Scotland as the only house of such antiquity to have retained its family and its roof throughout the centuries, surviving the extremes of feast and famine, the intermittent periods of warring with neighbouring clans, and the immense changes of social, political and economic life through which the Western Highlands and Islands have passed.

Open to the Public

The 27th Chief was the first Chief to share his home with the public by opening it for charitable purposes two days a week in 1933. Since then the number of visitors has risen from a few hundred to tens of thousands. Despite such numbers crowding into so small a space, we hope and want to maintain this atmosphere of a family home, while sharing with you our love for Dunvegan’s unique possessions of beauty and interest.

When Visiting

When you visit the castle you will see a fortress built for defence on a Rock in the sea. The massive exterior combines six separate buildings, of which you will visit five. The sixth building and the upper floors comprise the administrative and domestic offices of the present Chief and his family. During a tour of the castle you are free to look at everything without being hurried, ask any questions you wish of our guiding staff.

The Castle Gardens

Are open all year round and will prove of considerable interest to many, following paths through woodland glades, past shimmering pools and burns fed by a cascading waterfall. Stroll through the formal round garden, stand and admire the many Rhododendrons, numerous in their variety. The Castle Gardens were originally laid out in the 18th century and considerable replanting and landscaping provides a legacy which future generations can enjoy and admire.

Seal colony

A favourite with children and adults alike, take a fascinating and exhilarating boat trip through Loch Dunvegan to the seal colony and observe at close quarters these playful sea mammals.