All Outdoor Activities
Outdoor Activities in Scotland
- Save to ListPhone: +44-0- 1520 755369Email: Info@shieldaigadventures.comOutdoor activity provider and hire service. Suitable for all ages and abilities. Bespoke adventures, wildlife tours and more. Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +44-0-7982649635North Coast Watersports is Scotland’s most northerly surf school that offers various surf lesson experiences and equipment rentals. Join our Scottish champion coaches in amongst the best waves in the UK, and see the breathtaking North Highland coast from a new perspective. Read more...
- Save to ListFowlsheugh’s cliffs come alive from April to July when more than 100,000 seabirds return to their summer home to breed. Kittiwakes, guillemots, razorbills, fulmars and gulls provide a sight, sound and smell experience like no other. All with a good chance of spotting a puffin too! There’s a two-mile walk along the cliff tops with fabulous sea views to a Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +A lovely short walk through coniferous plantation to Signal Rock; reputed to be a gathering place for the MacDonalds of Glencoe at times of trouble and the place where, according to legend, the signal was given by the Campbells for the Glencoe Massacre; although no evidence exists for the latter. There is an information board at the car park detailing Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +The Smugglers’ Trail leads from South Beach, Troon, along the Wrack Road across Royal Troon Golf Club, past Crosbie Kirk and through Fullarton Woods. From the Main Street, in Loans the trail crosses ancient woodland and enjoys stunning views over the Firth of Clyde. This historic route has been in regular use from early times including use by smugglers. Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +Beautiful and popular walk in a limestone valley to the dramatic bone caves. These cave openings part way up a steep side of the valley are where the remains have been found of species such as lynx, reindeer and polar bear which once roamed here. Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +The Clootie Well is a rather weird remnant of an ancient tradition once commonly found in Scotland and Ireland, of holy wells to which pilgrims would come and make offerings, usually in the hope of having an illness cured. The tradition dates far back into pre-Christian times, to the practice of leaving votive offerings to the local spirits or gods Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +GIANT DouglasDouglas firs tower over the paths leading to the roaring Black Linn Falls, where the River Braan crashes down into the deep, foaming pools below. Overlooking the waterfall is the picturesque folly known as Ossian’s Hall, built in 1757 as the focal point in an extensive designed landscape. Decorated with mirrors, sliding panels and paintings, it has been refurbished Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +This is properly the most famous walk on the Island and definitely the busiest. The ‘Old Man’ is a large pinnacle of rock that stands high and can be seen for miles aroundAs part of the Trotternish ridge the Storr was created by a massive ancient landside, leaving one of the most photographed landscapes in the world. Read more...