How to See Scotland’s Most Inaccessible Islands on a Small-Ship Cruise
25.09.2024 - 14:41
/ matadornetwork.com
/ Cruises
St. Kilda is arguably Scotland’s most storied island destination. The archipelago, inhabited for 4,000 years and evacuated of its last 36 inhabitants in 1930, is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the home of nearly one million seabirds, including the UK’s largest colony of Atlantic Puffin. While intriguing, the westernmost island in Scotland is, unsurprisingly, a hard place to reach. But it’s not impossible. St. Hilda Sea Adventures is one of a handful of Scottish small-ship cruise lines that can take you there.
Every year from April to October, St. Hilda Sea Adventures, a family-run business that started in 2006, takes travelers on cruises past the many islands of the Hebrides archipelago. The Hebrides, located off the west coast of Scotland, consist of the Inner Hebrides (the islands that are closest to the mainland), and the Outer Hebrides (farther from the mainland). Kilda belongs to the latter.
“St Kilda is on the bucket list for many of our guests,” says Julie, a director and manager of St Hilda Sea Adventures. “Its remoteness, its history, and its wildlife are a tremendous draw. That is why we have over 10 cruises to the archipelago every season.”
The cruise line’s most popular sailing, and the one that is best suited for first-timers in Scotland, is the Mull Odyssey Cruise that travels around the Inner Hebrides, including the islands of Staffa, Iona, and the Isle of Mull in six or eight nights.
Photo: St. Hilda Sea Adventures
“The cruise is incredibly varied. For example, we visit the puffin colony on Lunga, Iona Abbey, Fingal’s cave on Staffa, and the colorful town of Tobermory,” Julie explains. But the St Kilda and the Shiants voyage is a close second. The 10-night cruise is an island and wildlife-packed trip to isolated islands and bays where its easy to spot sea and golden eagles, many species of seabirds, basking sharks, orca and minke whales, porpoises, dolphins and seals. For a deeper dive into local wildlife, St. Hilda Sea Adventures also organize guided wildlife cruises with wildlife experts on board.
Atlantic puffin and dolphins are some of the wildlife you can see during a Hebridean island cruises. Photo: St. Hilda Sea Adventures
St. Hilda Sea Adventures has four small ships. There’s the St. Hilda, a traditional, wooden ex-tall ship (a rigged sailing vessel) that can hold six passengers. There’s also the 11-passenger Seahorse II (an ex-Norwegian ferry), eight-passenger Gemini Explorer (an ex-cruising lifeboat), and the eight-passenger Spiederen (an ex-Norwegian rescue ship). “All four ships have been converted to cruise the western islands of Scotland in comfort and style,” Julie says.
Cruises to the Inner Hebrides vary from five to eight nights, while the 10-night longer cruises go to