Unearth Orkney's unique history, wildlife, islands, activities and culture by taking time to browse our Orkney blogs.
Low lying with lovely beaches, old customs, the UK’s tallest land-based lighthouse and a 19km sheep dyke which extends around the island to keep the sheep on the beach: find out a bit more about the remote Orkney island, North Ronaldsay here!
The Italian Chapel was built by Italian Prisoners of War in 1943 and is now visited 100,000 times a year. Read on to find out more about how the Italians created this beautiful building in their spare time, using only scrap metal and concrete!
The Old Man of Hoy is a 449 ft tall sea stack and St John’s Head is one of the highest vertical sea cliffs in Britain. Did you know these fascinating facts about these amazing landmarks?
The Bishop’s and Earl’s Palaces are located in Kirkwall, just across the road from the impressive St. Magnus Cathedral. Both the palaces and the cathedral help to highlight the islands’ strong links with Norse history. Along with St Magnus Cathedral, the Bishop’s Palace is one of the most well preserved buildings from the 12th century…
The Brough of Birsay is a tidal island situated off the north west of the Orkney Mainland. It is a ‘must see’ when visiting Orkney. There is a short walk from the headland of Birsay onto the Brough. The headland and beach is connected to the tidal island via a causeway. It is recommended that…
The Churchill Barriers are a series of four causeways linking the Orkney Mainland to the islands of Lamb Holm, Glimps Holm, Burray and South Ronaldsay with a total length of 1.5 miles. They were built in 1940 as naval defences following the sinking of The Royal Oak, but now serve as road links, carrying the…
In 1942, during World War 2, more than 1300 Italian prisoners of war were captured in North Africa and taken to Orkney. 550 were taken to Camp 60 on the previously uninhabited island of Lamb Holm, where they were put to work building The Churchill Barriers, four causeways created, using a series of massive concerete…
Maeshowe Chambered Cairn is arguably the most impressive of the Neolithic chambered tombs in not only theOrkney Islands but in all of north-west Europe. Maeshowe is approximately 5,000 years old and the largest of the burial tombs on Orkney’s Mainland, standing at a height of 7.5 metres tall. In modern times, Maeshowe appears as a…
During the Devonian Period (416 – 359 million years ago) Scotland lay to the south of the equator in a semi-arid environment. Scotland was all above sea level and was very mountainous. The mountains were probably as high as the Swiss Alps are today and it is due to 400 million years of erosion that…