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This is one of those rare 'trip of a
lifetime' type experiences that you should rush to take
advantage of. |
With an extraordinary itinerary
spanning over
2000 miles of touring, you get to see more of Britain in a
single tour than many people do in a lifetime.
Note that because the tour
extends over 17+ days, the 2000 miles of touring is broken down
into easy days. It isn't just a solid boring slog on a
coach!
Every day has you going out and
about, seeing and doing an interesting variety of things with
modest amounts of coach travel between stops.
Plenty of two night hotel stays,
and a clever strategy to make single night stops easy, help to
maximize your pleasure and your leisure.
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Detailed Day by
Day Itinerary for the 2019 Great Britain Grand Expedition
Page 1
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|
Tour Leader David (left) and
Coach Captain Jim (right) discussing the next treat in store
for members of the 2017 Scotland tour.
Come along yourself and be
part of the 2019 Grand Expedition.
This and the
second
linked intinerary page tells you all about where you'll go and what
you'll do.
|
Tour Itinerary
Part 1 - England/Wales
Because there's a lot to
tell you about this tour and its great deal of inclusions,
we have split the itinerary over two pages.
This first
page details the section in England and Wales,
the second page
covers our time in Scotland.
Wow - what an extensive tour around so much of England,
Wales and Scotland. Add a train journey from
London to Salisbury, and back to London from Edinburgh,
and you've done a complete circumnavigation! |
Our tour combines major
towns and cities with small
unassuming villages, interspersed with often unspoiled pure nature in
the raw.
You can read through the
itinerary simply by scrolling down, or if you wish to jump
to a particular part, here are links to each day.
Pre-tour options
In/around
Salisbury
Day 1 Salisbury to
Exeter via Glastonbury
Day 2 To Penzance via
Plymouth
Day 3 Around Cornwall and
Land's End
Day 4 To Bristol via
Tintagel
Day 5 To the Cotswolds
via Oxford
Day 6 Around the Cotswolds
Day 7 To Wales
and Wrexham
Day 8 To the Lake
District via Liverpool
The rest of the tour
continues on the second
page of the itinerary.
Day 9 To Glasgow via
Hadrian's Wall
Day 10 To Inverness via
Glencoe & Loch Ness
Day 11 Around
Inverness
Day 12 To Thurso and
Mey Castle
Day 13 To John O'Groats and
the Orkneys
Day 14 Around the Orkneys
Day 15 To Elgin via Dunrobin
Castle
Day 16 To Aberdeen via
coastal towns
Day 17 to Edinburgh/Glasgow via
Glamis Castle
|
Click here for the main
details of this expedition and the booking form to confirm your
interest.
Detailed Daily Itinerary
Monday/Tuesday 10/11 June -
or sooner :
Leave the US |
Take an overnight flight from the US to Europe today. |
Depending on if you wish to
join the tour in Salisbury or Exeter on Wednesday 12 June, you
should leave the US no later than Friday or Saturday.
Most flights from the US to UK are overnight, meaning you
arrive into the UK the day after you leave the US.
We suggest you arrive at least a day before the start
of the tour. This gives you some 'just in case'
time, should something come up during your travels (and the
travels of your bags too!) and also some time to decompress
and un-jetlag after the journey.
You could come a day or two early and spend the time
in London or elsewhere in Britain, or simply
at a Salisbury hotel, and to turn the extra time into a
positive, please consider our optional one or two night
extensions, immediately below.
Note - If you're considering an optional pre-tour extension, please read
the blue bordered option sections immediately below. Otherwise,
if you'll arrive on Sunday, skip on down to
the green bordered section starting on Day 1, Wednesday 12
June. |
Optional
Pre-tour Extension 1
: Two nights in Salisbury,
Sunday touring
(Monday 10 June) - Arrive Salisbury |

"Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishop's Grounds" - the
famous 1823 painting by John Constable.
 A
more recent photo of the cathedral, and from a
different angle than the painting.
|
If you decide to add two
nights in
Salisbury before the
tour, you would arrive into Salisbury on Monday 10 June. This gives you the balance of
Monday and then all day
Tuesday in the Salisbury area.
You would probably fly from home
on Sunday 9 June and take an overnight flight to
the UK (maybe to London) and then a quick 1.5 hour train
ride to Salisbury.
Most likely you would arrive into
Salisbury some time in the afternoon.
You can make your way to our
lovely hotel with a great location, close to the center of
the medieval market town of Salisbury, and home of
glorious Salisbury Cathedral, made famous in Constable's
pictures.
Salisbury Cathedral has the tallest spire of any church in
Britain and is home to the best preserved copy of the Magna
Carta, and is set in lovely grounds. Definitely a
recommended place to visit while you're in Salisbury.
You have the rest of today to explore
Salisbury as you wish. |
(Tuesday 11 June) -
Portsmouth
and/or Isle of Wight Touring |

Recently re-restored, Nelson's flagship
HMS Victory,
available to tour in Portsmouth, looks stunning inside
and out.

One of the few remaining hovercraft in the world
operates between Portsmouth and the Isle of Wight.

A view of some of Portsmouth harbor and the modern
Spinnaker tower, with three levels of observation decks
330' above the ground.
|
After breakfast this morning we travel the short distance to
Portsmouth (just over an hour's drive) where you have a
choice of three activities.
You'll probably be able to fit at least two of the
three into your day, maybe even all three.
The first choice is to go over to the Isle of Wight.
You can travel the short distance by fast hovercraft (a 10
minute journey) or
slower regular ferry (20 - 40 mins), with both offering regular services
throughout the day.
On the Isle of Wight, both Osborne House and Carisbrooke
Castle would accept an English Heritage Pass - have us
extend your pass to 16 days so you can save on admissions.
The second choice would be to immerse yourself in the
splendid Royal Navy Museum in the Portsmouth Dockyard area.
See Lord Nelson's flagship, HMS Victory, the Tudor warship
Mary Rose from the sixteenth century, the gripping special
feature on the Battle of Jutland, a WW2 submarine, and so
much more.
And the third choice? To simply enjoy Portsmouth as
you wish, strolling around, enjoying the harbor sights,
smells and sounds, the views from Spinnaker Tower, and the
museums, including Charles Dickens' Birthplace Museum.
However you spend the day, you're sure to have a wonderful
time.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
(Wednesday 12 June) -
Main Tour starts today |

The 15th century Poultry Market Cross in central
Salisbury still has markets held adjacent to it.
There are so many 'old' things to discover as you roam
around Salisbury.
|
Please now skip down to the green bordered
section for the main tour.
Of course, if you realize now that you would like more than
one day in Salisbury, please keep reading the next blue
bordered section where we talk about how you could spend
another day in and around Salisbury, too.
And, yes, there's even one more blue bordered section if you
want to add still more days in Salisbury. We've spent
up to a week in and around Salisbury ourselves - it is very
easy to fill in the time!
Included Meals: Breakfast,
Dinner |
Optional Pre-tour Extension 2 : A third day and night
in Salisbury, Friday touring to Stonehenge and
other (pre)historic mysteries.
(Sunday 9 June) - Arrive Salisbury |

This Salisbury pub calls itself 'The New Inn' but is
actually anything but new!
|
Maybe you decide to arrive
into Salisbury three days before the
tour starts, ie on
Sunday 9 June. That's a
great idea, because it gives you more time to 'recharge'
after your flight, and allows you to see and do considerably
more. In such a case, you'd
fly from home to the UK on or before Saturday 8 June.
You'd plan to arrive into Salisbury on Sunday, giving
you the rest of Sunday free to walk around the city, perhaps
spending time in an antique shop or two, or visiting the
cathedral or one of the many museums and other places of
interest around the town. |
(Monday 9 June) -
Stonehenge, Avebury, White Horses, and More |

This picture gives a good feeling for the enormous size
of the stone circle at Avebury.

The Cherhill Downs White Horse - one of many in
Wiltshire.

Not for the faint hearted. Locks, stretching as
far as the eye can see, and all needing to be worked by
hand!

The ruins of Old Wardour Castle.
|
After breakfast this morning we
will go touring around the Wiltshire countryside.
We plan to beat the crush of crowds by heading first to
Stonehenge.
The site is very well managed with lots of
explanatory material to help 'bring the stones to life'.
Admission is normally very expensive, but not for us,
because we will have English Heritage passes.
Effectively free admission makes
Stonehenge into a 'must see' activity.
Probably everyone knows Stonehenge. But many fewer
people know of the assorted other mysteries around Wiltshire,
even though some of them, like the white horses, are clearly
visible for miles around.
We'll go by at least two of the white horses on our travels.
From Stonehenge we continue north towards Avebury,
stopping on the way to see three mysterious ancient things
that are clustered close to each other - the West Kennet
Long Barrow, Silbury Hill, and The Sanctuary.
We'll visit Avebury, which can be thought of as 'Stonehenge
on steroids' - it has Europe's largest stone circle, plus
assorted other mysterious stone arrangements.
We then go to the ancient market town of Devizes for lunch,
and make a tiny detour to see an extraordinary flight of 16
locks on the Kennet and Avon Canal.
After lunch, we go to
Old Wardour castle - mainly ruined,
but perhaps even looking all the much better for it.
It also has a fascinating 'grotto' in the grounds.
Then one more strange thing - the Fovant Badges to complete
a day of touring around the unusual, and its back to
Salisbury mid/late afternoon.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
(Tuesday 10 June) -
Portsmouth/Isle of Wight - see Option 1, above |

The exterior and part of the gardens at Osborne House,
the palatial former home of Queen Victoria on the Isle
of Wight.
|
On Saturday we will travel to Portsmouth and
optionally on to the Isle of Wight with the people who chose
only the Option 1 package, then spend Saturday night in
Salisbury again.
Please see above for details of this in the
blue box
Option 1
section, above.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
Optional Pre-tour Extension 3 - More time in
Salisbury (Saturday 8 June and
earlier) |

Not many people associate Salisbury with water, but
there are actually five rivers running through
Salisbury. This shows an old mill, now a pub,
alongside one of the them.
|
If you wish to spend still more time in and around Salisbury,
then by all means arrive into the city earlier.
As you can see from the two blue panels above, you can
definitely fill in two or three days in Salisbury - Monday
touring around, and Tuesday going to Portsmouth.
So
perhaps, if you have still more free time, arrive into
Salisbury on Saturday, giving you some of Saturday and all
of Sunday before the two days of organized touring.
Let us know if we can offer suggestions or assist in any
way. |
Main Tour Itinerary
Day 1 (Wednesday 12 June) :
Tour starts in Salisbury, to Exeter via Glastonbury |

A view of Wells Cathedral on the left, and part of the
Bishop's Palace on the right.

In case you choose not to climb up, here's a close up of
the Tor, with associations to the Holy Grail and Arthurian
legends.

Those people who believe in 'ley lines' claim there is
an astonishing concentration of them all focusing on
Glastonbury in general and the Tor in particular.
|
Welcome to the start of the
tour! Most people will join us in Salisbury this
morning (or the days previously). We'll start off
heading west, on our way to Exeter in Devon.
We go first to the lovely cathedral city of Wells, where
we'll stop for lunch and a suggested walking tour around the
ancient heart of the city. A
particular highlight would be the Bishop's Palace,
surrounded by a moat in the heart of the city, and of course
close to the cathedral. From
Wells, it is only a short distance to mysterious
Glastonbury, where it is believed King Arthur and Queen
Guinevere are buried in the ruins of Glastonbury Abbey.
If you're feeling energetic, you might also wish to walk up
to the enigmatic Glastonbury Tor, a place where some people
believe there's an unusual convergence of ley lines.
From Glastonbury, we then proceed on into Devon and to
Exeter, the region's capital and another classic English cathedral
city. Some more people might
possibly join us in Exeter this evening rather than in
Salisbury this morning, it is of course entirely your choice. We'll enjoy a welcome dinner
tonight so we can get to know each other.
Included meals -
Breakfast Dinner |
|
Day 2 (Thursday
13 June) : To Penzance via Plymouth |

If you wish, you can descend down into the Exeter
Underground Passages.

The steep track down for the cable cars on the Babbacombe Cliff Railway.
HMS Courageous when
she was at sea.

Lanyon Quoit in Cornwall. We'll visit this site
tomorrow, but I'm showing it first because the mist and
otherworldliness of this scene best sums up the essence
of Cornwall.
|
After breakfast, we spend some time in Exeter. There's
a street market you might wish to visit, and the city's
impressive cathedral, too.
We also include a tour of a fascinating
series of medieval underground passages in which the water
pipes were originally housed (optional if you don't like the
thought of fairly narrow underground passageways!).
We then travel on to Torquay, a town located in the Devon
region referred to as the 'English Riviera' due to its
comparatively warm climate, and made famous as the supposed location
of Fawlty Towers.
We'll ride the steep Babbacombe Cliff
Railway down to the beach and back again, and stay long
enough for lunch. Maybe you might like to walk along
some of the 'Agatha Christie Mile'.
Then we continue on to Plymouth, where there are many things
to do, with a special option being a tour of Britain's
HMS Courageous nuclear
attack submarine, the only nuclear submarine in Britain open
to the public.
Plymouth of course has an American significance, it being
where the pilgrims set sail from, and there's the Mayflower
museum in Plymouth telling the story of the English side of
that great adventure that you could visit.
As soon as we leave Plymouth, we enter the magical world of
Cornwall, a region of England quite unlike anywhere else,
indeed, so different that it was formerly an independent
country and has its own language, Cornish.
The region is currently seeking semi-independence, much like
is experienced in Wales and Scotland.
The region has a different feel to it; we feel it is best experienced on a 'soft' day - perhaps with some
distant mist and overcast skies, so as to accentuate its
other-worldliness.
We arrive into Penzance late afternoon, where we'll stay two nights.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
|
Day 3 (Friday
14 June) : Land's End, touring around
Cornwall |

Another classic Cornwall scene, with the ruin of a
former tin mine on the horizon.

The so called 'First and Last House' at Land's End.
St Ives has a beautiful waterfront location.
Depending on the tide, we might be able to walk over
to St Michael's Mount.
|
Now, for one of the two major bookend experiences of our
Expedition - a visit to Land's End.
Land's End itself is often decried as a tourist trap, and
that might be true, but it is unavoidably so because of all
the people who go there to start or finish their journey between
there and John O'Groats.
Similarly, we too go not so much to marvel at any sights (although
the waters of the Atlantic crashing into the cliffs below
and the out-at-sea lighthouse are both impressive) as to
formally start our expedition.
Having done so, we continue touring through Cornwall.
We visit an old tin mine at Geevor, before
continuing on to the seaside town of St Ives on the other
side of the peninsular, fronting onto the Celtic Sea (rather
than the English Channel on the Penzance side).
St Ives is known for its arts and culture, and regularly
wins awards as being Britain's best sea-side town.
Whether that is true or not, it is certainly very popular,
even though it is far removed from the country's main
population centers.
We'll see the occasional stone circle and other prehistoric
structure such as Lanyon Quoit, illustrated above under
yesterday's entry, and the Merry Maidens.
There are some other possible stones and structures that may
or may not be visible depending on vegetation/tree growth.
Then we head back across to the Penzance side of Cornwall again, to
visit St Michael's Mount. We might vary when we go
there, so as to try and fit into
the day to work with the tides. It is fun to walk across the
causeway from the mainland to the island, only a couple of
hundred yards off-shore.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
|
Day 4 (Saturday
15 June) : To Bristol via Tintagel |
Port Isaac is a lovely little fishing village.
Tintagel Castle, in the mist (I do like misty shots in
Cornwall!).
The
leaning tower on Bristol's Temple Church.
|
Our first stop this morning is the beautiful little fishing
village of Port Isaac. If you enjoy British tv
comedy/drama shows, you'll recognize Port Isaac as the
setting for the long running series Doc Martin.
After the (hopefully) sunny and
lighthearted feeling of Port Isaac, we go somewhere much
more brooding - Tintagel and the remains of its castle, and
a place closely associated with the stories of Merlin,
Camelot, and King
Arthur - some say he was born here.
We
include time for lunch in Tintagel (perhaps have a local
specialty - a 'Cornish Pasty') and then continue our
journey northeast, passing out of Cornwall not long after.
We proceed
through and out of Devon, and end up in Bristol on the mouth
of the River Avon (a common river name, for example, there
are Avon rivers in Salisbury and Stratford too).
In Bristol you'll have a chance
to see Britain's version of the Leaning Tower of Pisa, the
Bristol Temple Church. The name 'Temple' records its
reputed Knights Templar origins.
We also see
the Clifton Suspension Bridge, originally designed by
Isambard Kingdom Brunel, who also designed the
SS Great Britain, the
longest passenger ship in the world when launched in 1845,
and now preserved on display in Bristol.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
|
Day 5 (Sunday
16 June) :
To the Cotswolds via Oxford |
I struggled to find a picture of Castle Combe that
fairly encapsulated its look and feel. So I gave
up and instead chose a picture of the peaceful cemetery
in its village church.
Arlington Row in Bibury.
A slice of Oxford. Please
click this link to see a full size picture of more
of Oxford (this image is just a small part).
Uneven horizontals and verticals on the old buildings in
Burford.
|
Now for a real problem in preparing this 'photo
itinerary'. Today we travel into an area of so many
'picture postcard' beautiful villages and gorgeous rural
scenes it is hard to know which images to select to
illustrate the next several days with.
In other words, we are going to the area known as the
Cotswolds, where we'll spend the next two nights.
This morning we first head up to
Castle Combe, often featured in movies and on television
shows as varied as Dr Doolittle and War Horse, Poirot and
Stardust.
We then continue to Bibury and one of England's most photographed
scenes (the cottages on Arlington Row, dating back to 1380). Some people (particularly those in Bibury, one
suspects!) claims this to be the most beautiful village in
the world. Come see for yourself, and be the judge.
Next, we continue to Oxford, only an hour from
London but in terms of 'feeling', truly a world away.
There's every chance you've been to Oxford before, but
there's equally every chance there's still a lot more
to this city you've yet to see and do.
We spend a full four hours in Oxford - time for you to
do many different things (as well as have lunch).
Maybe visit one or two of the colleges. Perhaps go to
some of the museums. If Oxford is less familiar, why
not start off with one of the scenic sightseeing buses that
take you on a circuit around the town.
Oxford is a regular star in many movies. Perhaps
you might want to do a themed walk around Oxford - an
Inspector Morse/Lewis/Endeavour walk, for example. Or
a Harry Potter or an Alice in Wonderland walk. Oh -
there are also themed pub walks, too, if you'd prefer a more
adult theme to your afternoon's pleasures!
Then we head to our Cotswolds hotel for the next two
nights in the lovely town of Burford.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
|
Day 6 (Monday
17 June) : Touring around the Cotswolds |
The
old mill (on the left) and houses in Lower Slaughter, on
the River Eye.
The road into Bourton on the Water. Just wide enough
for our coach. Hopefully!
Part of the Rollright Stones circle.
|
After breakfast this morning we give you a chance to 'walk
it off' with an
English 'ramble' - an easy walk through the fields between
the two tiny villages of Upper
and Lower Slaughter.
It is an unchallenging mainly level ground one mile walk, but of
course, if you prefer, the coach will be pleased to take you
instead.
We'll make our way around the Cotswolds today, taking it easy, and
stopping in a few of my favorite villages. They're all
fairly close to each other.
The plan is to travel from Lower
Slaughter to Bourton on the Water - indeed, if you wish, you
could continue walking on to there from Lower Slaughter - it
is another easy and slightly downhilll walk.
Bourton on the Water is noted for its five bridges that
cross the River Windrush that flows gently through the
middle of this town, the oldest having been constructed in
1654.
Then we continue on to Stow on the Wold, and on to Broadway
where we'll stop for lunch.
After lunch we visit the
Rollright Stones and two other adjacent similar ancient things, and
then head back to Burford after a lovely lazy day of touring
around the beautiful Cotswolds.
You'll have some remaining time in Burford to stroll around town
as you wish. There are a number of interesting things
to see.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
|
Day 7 (Tuesday
18 June) : To Wales and Wrexham |
A local treasure hunter discovered the Shrewsbury Hoard,
buried in a field near Shrewsbury, in 2009. It
contains over 9,000 Roman coins.
The
1008' long, 125' high, 18 arched Pontcysyllte Aqueduct
was completed in 1805. As well as boat traffic, it
is possible to walk over it.
The lovely town center of the Welsh town of Wrexham.
|
We leave the Cotswolds this morning and continue
making our way generally north.
Our first official stop is
Stratford on Avon - famous for its association with
Shakespeare and its half-timbered buildings. We'll do
a quick drive around Stratford, and discuss the controversy
surrounding if Shakespeare really existed or not, then after
a stop in the town, continue on.
We arrive into Shrewsbury in time for lunch. If
people wished, we could detour to Wroxeter and its Roman
ruins on the way in to Shrewsbury, although like most Roman
ruins in Britain, there is very little remaining today.
Shrewsbury itself, the county
town of Shropshire,
is a nice market town, with over 660 listed buildings
(due to their historic/architectural importance) within it.
It has been the site of many conflicts between the Welsh and
English, with the modern day border just nine miles to the
west.
After lunch we hop over the
border (no longer subject to armed dispute!) into Wales, where we travel through some towns with
totally unpronounceable names and visit two of Thomas
Telford's extraordinary
engineering feats - the Chirk and Pontcysyllte Aqueducts,
now a designated World Heritage Site.
We'll see Telford's work pretty
much everywhere we travel in Britain, he truly was an
extraordinary and prolific engineer.
From there, we it is a short
drive on to Wrexham, a major town in Wales, where we spend
the night.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
|
Day 8 (Wednesday
19 June) : To the Lake District via Liverpool |
A couple of narrow boats at the Waterways Museum;
Liverpool barely visible on the horizon.
One of the different styles of elaborate housing in Port
Sunlight, constructed from 1888 - 1914.
The 'Three Graces' on Liverpool's waterfront (the Royal
Liver Building, the Cunard Building and the Port of
Liverpool Building).
The
small village of Lakeside at the south end of Lake
Windermere.
|
We saw two amazing aqueducts yesterday. This
morning we will go to the National Waterways Museum,
traveling through the lovely walled city of Chester on the
way, to learn more about the history of canals in
Britain.
Due to the largely flat nature of the country
and its relatively small size, canals were common
and a practical (essential) means of bulk haulage until superseded first by rail
in the 1800s and then by road in the 1900s.
They are now enjoying a resurgence as a leisure resource,
and there are about 2,200 miles of canals still
navigable.
Next is a visit through Port
Sunlight, the idealistic model town built by Lord Leverhulme in the
Arts and Crafts style for workers at his nearby soap factory, and named
after his famous Sunlight soap. There are over 900
historically listed buildings in this township.
If you've been on our
Scotland's Islands and Highlands tour you might remember his
troubled association with Lewis (which he owned in its
entirety) and Harris.
Then we take a tunnel under the River Mersey and emerge in
Liverpool, another World Heritage area, and birthplace of
the Beatles.
For some of the nineteenth
century Liverpool was Britain's most important city, with a
larger economy even than London, due primarily to its
shipping and related industries. Traces of Liverpool's former
stately, imperial and Victorian glory can still be seen.
We'll spend some time in
Liverpool, and have lunch there, before proceeding on north
again.
We have another choice (well, we
have choices every day and you're welcome to suggest
itinerary changes) - would you like us to swing through
Blackpool on the way up to the Lake District, or would you
prefer we spend more time in the Lake District itself?
Either which way, we'll spend
tonight in the Windermere part of the beautiful Lake
District National Park.
Included Meals: Breakfast |
|
Day 9 : Please now go to
the second page of the
itinerary for the rest of the daily itinerary
information. |
|
Note - the schedule sometimes changes slightly to fit
in with traffic, etc, and so this itinerary may slightly change between now and departure.
Click here for the main
details of this expedition and the booking form to confirm your
interest.
Originally published
25 Jan 2018, last update
30 May 2021
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