Three years ago I went on a CraftLit tour to London, Bath and Wales with Heather Ordover and 24 other fiber/literature enthusiasts and had a wonderful time. See my video of that tour here. Being a fiber, yarn and wool hog, I wanted another tour to explore even more of the UK and learn about the origins of some of the fibers I so love.
Doing some internet research last year, I found Joyce James and her tour into Scotland and the Shetland islands (the outer islands north of the mainland). The Tour I decided on was James' 16th annual one into these fascinating ancient places and is called "Scottish Skeins and Skerries"; you can read all about it here. The group is small (20 people) and was booked up by last December, so I am very happy my reservation was booked last Thanksgiving.
A few facts about the tour:
- Daylight hours will be close to 19 hours a day
- The outermost northern island visited is only about 150 miles south of the Arctic Circle
- Glasgow is the origination point in the tour, 8 hr. ahead of MST
- the time frame of the tour is from July 3-22, 2013
- average temperature for July will be from 50-62 degrees F with lots of rain!
- Lerwick (a featured town in Ann Cleeves' mystery crime series of books) and Jamieson & Smith
- Scalloway with a museum dedicated to the participants of the Shetland Bus operation during WWII. That operation and a quick history of those fishing boats can be found here.
- visiting a working croft (The Burland Croft)
- the Shetland Guild, including meeting with curator Dr. Carol Christiansen, and the Shetland Museum
- tours of the islands of Unst and Yell, the most northerly islands in the U.K. (we will see the
- Orkney Island, where I especially want to see the St. Magnus Cathedral founded in 1137
- the Outer Hebrides, including Lewis and Harris islands. The Hebridean Celtic music Festival will be playing. Look here for more information about that Celtic music festival.
- weaving sheds, crofts, textile dyers, historical experts, (lions and tigers and bears, OH MY! with apologies to the Wizard)
- The Crofter and the Laird by John McPhee (excellent!)
- The Shetland Bus (David Howarth) (good history)
- perused A Traveller's History of Scotland (Andrew Fisher)
- Sea Room, An Island Life in the Hebrides (Adam Nicolson) (not finished yet)
- Between Weathers (an excellent suggestion by Annie of the Knitsofacto blog) by McMillen (excellent, also)
- all of Alexander McCall Smith's 44 Scotland Street Series of books (very Edinburgh)
- The House with Green Shutters (George D. Brown) (did not like so much)
- Ann Cleeves series, of which I have read two: Black Raven and White Nights (am now a fan girl of Cleeves)
Oh, and we get to see puffins up close and personal on the tour. Here is a cute picture of a puffin, courtesy of Bing.
I am finishing up a wool sweater I want to take to Scotland and it should be finished today. Pictures of the knitted cardigan tomorrow (if that last cuff gets knit) on Finished Objects Friday.