Day 1 - Friday, 28 August 2026

Welcome to Edinburgh, Scotland


Make your own way to your accommodation.


The rest of the day is yours to discover Edinburgh at your leisure.


This evening we will meet up for our Welcome Dinner at hotel restaurant


Day 2 - Saturday, 29 August 2026

Today, our full day Outlander tour will see us travel to the Kingdom of Fife to discover some well recognized Outlander filming locations.


Day 3 - Sunday, 30 August 2026

Today, we will travel to New Lanark to visit a unique 18th century mill and UNESCO heritage site as well as the beautiful ltown of Sanquhar where we will discover the Sanquhar Pattern.


Day 4 - Monday, 31 August 2026

Today, we make our way to Shetland where we will spend the next 9 nights.  Once we arrive in Shetland we will visit two local Shetland yarn producers and learn about thier sheep farming methods (Urdale Yarns and Laxdale Yarns).  We'll have an opportunity to purchase some lovely Shetland yarn before arriving at our B&B.


Day 5 - Tuesday, 01 September 2026


This morning we will meet our Shetland Knit Instructor, Janette Budge where we'll learn how to select effective colours for beautiful Fair Isle creations and put those selections together and begin knitting a small Fair Isle Yolk Bag.



Day 6 - Wednesday, 02 September 2026


Today we will be spent exploring the South Mainland with local historian and archaeologist, Chris Dyer.  We'll visit the Jarlshof Prehistoric & Norse Settlement, St Ninians Beach, Shetland Croft Museum as well as the Sumburgh Lighthouse.  If we're lucky we might spot a Puffin or two.


Day 7 - Thursday, 03 September 2026


This morning we will meet with Janette Budge for another knitting workshop. 


Discover the traditional Shetland technique of using a stuffed leather knitting belt and long double-pointed needles—tools that have been used in the Shetland Islands for over 150 years. Originally designed to stabilise the needle, the knitting belt allowed for greater speed and even enabled knitters to walk while working. Beyond convenience, it offers many ergonomic benefits, such as improved knitting tension and reduced strain on the wrists, arms, and shoulders.


In this hands-on workshop, you’ll begin by working with two long double-pointed needles (30–40 cm) and a knitting belt. We'll explore various techniques for holding your yarn during Fair Isle knitting, and you'll have the option to practice knitting in the round with two colours using the belt.


This afternoon we will visit Burra Bears and Donna Smith's studio.


We will also visit Burra Bears and Donna Smith's studio. 


Burra Bears is based in their small home studio on beautiful Burra Isle, one of the many amazing islands that make up the archipelago that is Shetland.   A mother & daughter team who spend most of their weekdays laughing & working together to create the Original Shetland Teddy Bear.


In 2015, Donna Smith was invited to be the patron of Shetland Wool Week 2015, a fantastic event held in Shetland each year in autumn to celebrate Shetland wool and the crafts associated with it. She designed the Baa-ble hat to help promote the event and she never imagined how many people would go onto knit it! That was her first ever written knitting pattern which sparked off her journey into knitwear design and pattern writing.



Day 8 - Friday, 04 September 2026


This morning we will visit the Shetland Mart and watch the sheep sales. We'll also visit the Textile Museum and the Shetland Museum.


This afternoon we will visit local Shetland knitwear designer, Nielanell. Nielanell was founded in 2008, in the Shetland Islands, by knitwear designer Niela Nell Kalra. 


Nielanell builds on the traditions and quality of Shetland-made knitwear, but follows its own design path. Through connection with place, history and world culture—and a passion for colour—they create unusual, contemporary Shetland knitwear. 

Nielanell has become known and appreciated for its cornucopia of colour and texture, and their knitwear is often described as art that you can wear. Many pieces are offered in a dazzling array of colours, made in small editions.

Intriguing design narratives, from unexpected sources, invite the wearer to add their own layer of meaning or memory.



Day 9 - Saturday, 05 September 2026


No activities have been arranged today.  Today is a free day to explore Lerwick at your leisure.


Day 10 - Sunday, 06 September 2026


After a sleep in, we will travel across to Bressay Island to enjoy a Sunday Roast Lunch.  After lunch we will visit Garths Croft Bressay; a sustainable agricultural holding run by professional archaeologist and historian Chris Dyer, focusing on native and traditional breeds, within a landscape of spectacular natural beauty and historical heritage. This promises to be a highlight of your retreat.


Day 11 - Monday, 07 September 2026


Today we will explore the North Mainland.  We'll have time to visit Becky at Silly Sheep before making our way to the rugged coastline at Eshaness. Fish & Chips are on the lunch menu at Frankie's Fish & Chips and if you're up for dessert, we'll stop at the Original Cake Fridge.


Day 12 - Tuesday, 08 September 2026


Unst is as far north as you can possibly get without leaving the UK!

Glorious scenery and teeming wildlife are just two of the many reasons to visit these unspoilt remote islands. Both are part of Shetland– Unst is the most northerly of the British Isles, while across the Bluemull Sound lies Yell, famous for its birdlife and dramatic, rugged wilderness.

The Trust looks after seven parcels of land on Unst, the nearby small uninhabited island of Daaey and some croft land on Yell. The islands are of special interest to geologists, botanists and birdwatchers.

Unst is the ultimate Shetland destination - the absolute end of every Great North Road in Britain, it has the northernmost of everything. It is also one of the most spectacular, varied and interesting islands in Europe.

Unst is one of the richest Viking heritage sites in Europe, with over 60 longhouses uncovered by archeologists at Underhoull, Belmont and Hamar. At 61 degrees north, the island was said to be the ideal resting spot for Norse travellers on the trading route between Scandinavia, Greenland and Newfoundland. Many Norsemen settled in this northerly outpost, working the land and making it their home.Thanks to its extreme location, Unst has always played an important role in the nation's defences. The remains of a very early Second World War radar station can still be seen and the Ministry of Defence radar base on top of Saxa Vord, visible from much of the island. The base was reactivated in 2019 and new equipment installed.


Many Unst families are still involved with the traditional crofting life, but there's a variety of other work , including quarrying, fish farming, craftwork (fine knitwear in particular), wildlife tourism and even space exploration.

Yell is a rectangular-shaped island much of which is covered in peaty moorland and grazing sheep, who often quite happily wander out onto the open road – so drivers beware! The untouched moorland is interspersed with coastal crofting communities, the largest of which is Mid Yell.


The island has been inhabited since Neolithic times and there are 12 known broch sites. The Vikings settled during the Norse period, as is evident in placenames like Dalsetter and Gossawater. In the 17th century, Burravoe in Yell became an important Hanseatic trading post and the fishing industry was an important part of the island's economy right up to the 1950s.

More recently, in 2014, Yell became the site of the world's first community-owned tidal power generator in Bluemull Sound, in the north of the island.



Day 13 - Wednesday, 09 September 2026


Today, we say goodbye and head back to Edinburgh.  No activities have been arranged for today. 



Day 14 - Thursday, 10 September 2025


Today we venture out of Edinburgh to visit Di Gilpin.


We'll stop will be at Comielaw Farm, located a couple miles from Pittenweem where we will spend a couple hours with Di Gilpin and her team.  Di has worked with many yarn companies over the years and created the Rowan Scottish Tweed, which was made at the Harris Tweed mill in Carloway, Isle of Lewis. She wrote a book of designs in this amazing yarn, 'Shorelines" with patterns focused on intarsia, colourwork and gansey knitting. The really exciting news is that with Sheila Greenwell, her right (and left) hand woman, they worked on a new book! It is a fabulous source book for Gansey Knitters with 10 new and exciting contemporary designs in a range of yarns including our special Lalland Lambswool, Frangipani Gansey 5ply and Rowan yarns. 


Working on small samplers to explore how colour works with both Fair Isle and Cable. Everyone will then go home with the Schiehallion Hat pattern! All yarn for sampling provided.


The Schiehallion hat celebrates the paintings of the Artist Dora Carrington (Bloomsbury Group). This was originally a hand knitting piece using cable and colour to create a painterly knitted canvas showing the landscape and geology of Andalucia. Dora Carrington stayed in Yegen ( a remote village in the Sierra Nevada mountains Southern Spain) with the writer Gerald Brennan (The Face of Spain) and Lytton Strachey at Brennan’s house for some time in March 1920( ninety nine years ago). `She found it a ‘unique arcadia’ and had ‘seldom been so happy continuously day after day’. Her incredible painting of the mountains towards Almeria has been an all time favourite of mine. Her reading of the landscape and colour of this extraordinary part of Spain is deep, rich and evocative. I have tried to approach the design of Schiehallion in the same way….bringing a richness to the pattern and to the colour using our own Yarns, to reflect the magical colours of the Scottish Mountain Landscape. 



Day 15 - Sunday, 14 September 2025

Today, we say goodbye to Scotland.  We will be transferred as a group to the Edinburgh Airport for our international flight back home.