To provide you with the best experience, cookies are used on this site. Learn more
Water from the Isle of Lewis.
Machair Water has been shaped by rugged rocks, wind, rain and the ceaseless pounding of Atlantic waves, for over millennia to form a uniquely Hebridean water.
Dancing Flower Crafts designs and handmakes one off, unique Harris Tweed® gifts and…
This is the best preserved and most visited broch in the Outer Hebrides. It occupies a…
Medium, slim plant with pale to deep purple spike of flowers.
A broch is an iron-aged drystone hollow-walled structure found only in Scotland. Dun…
Blackhouses were common dwellings in the Hebrides. This was the last group to be…
The Blackhouse Village consists of nine restored traditional thatched cottages. The…
Gearrannan (Garenin) is a restored blackhouse village on the west side of the Isle of…
It is easy to imagine that you have stepped back in time to experience the way of life in…
Dail Mhor (Dalmore) is a long sandy beach with sea stacks, on the Atlantic Coast of the…
Dalmore beach and cemetery appear in many of Peter May’s Lewis Thrillers. Dalmore is a…
Lovely sandy beach with dunes, good parking and toilets. Great for surfing.
Stac a' Chaisteal is is a dramatic, pinnacle shaped stack, surmounted by a plateau…
Traigh Dail Beag (Dalbeg) is a lovely small bay and beach on the west side of Lewis.
A beautiful little gallery situated just above the sandy beach at Dalbeg, on the west…
Just enough is as good as a feast (Be happy with what you have)
Tha gu leòr cho math ri cuilm
Learn More Gaelic