All Sightseeing
Tour Guide Operators and Sightseeing in Scotland
- Save to ListCome and see our small museum, set beautifully overlooking the River Brora and the Moray Firth. Go down our Coal Mine reconstruction. Taste real Brora salt. Discover our Electric City. Roam with Dinosaurs. Children’s activity area. Fresh Coffee/Tea and snacks. Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +44-0- 1847 896508Email: info@caithnesshorizons.co.ukCaithness Horizons houses a permanent collection that tells the story of the county of Caithness from 416 million years ago to the present day including the Picts, the Vikings and the history of the Dounreay Nuclear Research Establishment. Read more...
- Save to ListThe Castlehill Heritage Centre builds on our earlier achievements – visitors can walk round the Heritage Trail which outlines the stages of the production of the stone, while an adjoining Sculpture Trail within the community woodland, demonstrates some artistic uses of the material. Read more...
- Save to ListExplore the World Heritage Site and discover the layers of history hidden behind the facades. Read more...
- Save to ListThe RSGS Fair Maid’s House Visitor and Education Centre is a geographical delight housed in the oldest secular building in Perth. Visitors can watch the planet from space in the Earth Room, see the continents evolve and learn about the hottest and coldest places on Earth in the Education Room and learn about maps and explorers, or curl up with Read more...
- Save to ListPhone: +44-0-1346 512888o much to see and do, lots of fun for all the family and really interesting. Shows you all about Fraserburgh form the start till present date, absolutely fascinating Read more...
- Save to ListGlencoe is a place of history, wildlife, adventure and myths. The mountains were formed through violent volcanic eruptions, and then sculpted by massive glaciers. Fingal, the legendary Celtic hero, is said to have made his home among these towering mountains, while his poet son, Ossian, found inspiration in the landscape. Read more...
- Save to ListIn the summer of 1886, with his seven sons and two daughters by his side, William set out to fulfil a lifelong ambition. Together they began building his Distillery by hand, stone by stone. After a single year of work it was ready and William named it Glenfiddich, Gaelic for Valley of the Deer Read more...
- Save to ListIn 1840 brothers John and James Grant applied for a distillery license. With the sea and the port of Garmouth nearby, the River Spey to the south, and surrounded by barley-growing plains, all the basic ingredients for malt whisky were close at hand. Read more...