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Holiday with your Horse on Mar Lodge Estate

Holiday with your Horse on Mar Lodge Estate Read More >
Mar Lodge Estate has been accredited by The British Horse Society as an Approved Centre under the UK-wide Horses Welcome scheme.

Book a mid-week, four-night stay in one of Mar Lodge’s very comfortable apartments or cottages during May and June 2013 and your horses stay free of charge (subject to availability).

Accommodation caters from 4 to 15 persons offering a significant saving on each apartment.

All enquiries to: Mar Lodge Estate, Braemar, Aberdeenshire, AB35 5YJ. Tel: 013397 20163. marlodgeestate@nts.org.uk.

Visit http://www.horseswelcome.org/mar-lodge-estate.html for information on equestrian facilities.
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Covesea Lighthouse

Covesea Lighthouse Accommodation Available from June 2013
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We are delighted to announce that Covesea and Halliman Skerry will re-open on 1 June 2013. Both properties are single-storey and offer good quality accommodation with all modern conveniences. Visitors can enjoy the superb sandy beach practically on the doorstep. Situated in the coastal town of Lossiemouth with a range of facilities including sea angling, two 18-hole golf courses, stunning unspoilt beaches and wildlife, an excellent range of shopping and quality restaurants and cafes, all making the most of the plentiful supply of fresh seafood.
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Camping Pods at Shore Lodge, Brodick Castle

Ideal for groups or individuals looking for accommodation on a budget. Find our more at www.hihostels.com
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Shore Lodge is a comfortable 14-bed self-catering facility in the grounds of Brodick Castle on the Isle of Arran. Prices from £18 per person per night.

In addition to the Lodge we are delighted to offer 3 camping pods sleeping up to 4 people. Guests booking the pods will have full use of all facilities within Shore Lodge.

Email holidays@nts.org.uk or telephone 0844 493 2108 for full details or visit http://www.hihostels.com/dba/hostel050109.en.htm
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Cultural Cruising

The Trust's Cultural Cruising programme has launched for summer 2013 at www.culturalcruising.com
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Isolation, Islands and Intrigue

The sea has been a natural highway since the last Ice Age, connecting people and places and allowing a bountiful trade and exchange of cultural life to develop. Nowhere is this more evident than the Scottish coast and islands whose rich archaeology paints a vivid portrait of the past. Places that seem remote and inaccessible to us today have in fact been inhabited for thousands of years...
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Celtic Connections

Historically the Celts were a diverse group of tribal societies throughout Iron Age and Roman-era Europe. The Roman Empire restricted these areas and today there are seven recognised Celtic nations: Scotland, Ireland, Isle of Man, Wales, Cornwall, Brittany and Galicia. Connected by language, art and literature, there remains a strong cultural identity and commonality between these nations, reinforced by the Celtic Revival of the late-19th and early-20th centuries.
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Visit culturalcruising.com to find out more.
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