Tour Features

  • The tour starts and finishes in Glasgow
  • Ferries to Mull and Iona included
  • Professional guide
  • A varied, well-thought-out walking programme visiting Iona, Ulva, Erraid, the Treshnish Coast, Loch Buie and much more.
  • Minibus transport throughout the tour
  • Small group sizes
  • Two accommodation bases: bed and breakfasts in Tobermory and Fionnphort
  • Evening meals aren’t included
8 Days
4-8 participants
4-7 miles a day
Moderate challenging
From £2300
31 Jul - 7 Aug AVAILABLE

Accommodation

This walking tour has two bases: Tobermory and Fionnphort, on the Ross of Mull.

This is either in carefully selected Bed & Breakfast accommodation or Guest Houses. You can rely on the quality of the accommodation that we find for you – its comfort, its food and the professionalism and welcoming nature of those who run it. The B&Bs and guest houses we use are more personal and the quality of the accommodation is as good or even better than of hotels in the same category. Double and twin rooms that are occupied by two people always have an en suite or private bathroom.
Details of where you will be staying will be sent to you well in advance of your holiday.

Dinner is not included in the price, but your guide will take you out for supper every evening. We usually eat in a different place each evening, giving you the opportunity to try a range of Scottish dishes.

Day-to-Day Itinerary

DAY 1 - Arrival and travel to Mull

Glasgow – Oban – Mull

The tour begins in Glasgow. We will drive in our minibus to Oban – a 2 hr 30min journey – where we catch a car ferry to the Isle of Mull. The ferry takes 45 minutes. Upon arrival, we will check into our accommodation, our base for four nights.

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DAY 2 - Treshnish Coast

Treshnish

Today, we head to the north-western corner of Mull to do a circular walk along the Treshnish Coast. Most of Mull is covered in black basalt: lava extruded from successive volcanic eruptions, 60 million years ago. This has created a landscape with lots of stepped terraces. Added to this, the coastline has rebounded upwards as the tremendous weight of glaciers melted away. We can see all of these interesting landscape features as we walk around the Treshnish coastline: raised beaches and cliffs, dry caves and arches. Out at sea, one can see lots of islands, and if you’re lucky, you might see the dorsal fin of a basking shark. The area is also great for raptors like peregrine falcons and sea eagles. The coastline has a rich history with Iron Age forts, abandoned crofting townships and a whisky still, hidden away in a secret cave. On our way back to Tobermory, we will make a stop at Calgary Beach.

Hiking distances: 11km (7 miles), 300m ascent

DAY 3 - Ulva

Ulva

Today we visit the island of Ulva, about a 45min drive from Tobermory. We get a small passenger ferry across to the island that takes just a few minutes. Ulva means “wolf island,” coming from the Norse word Ulvoy. The island is tremendously rugged and hilly, but its eastern end is flatter and wooded. The entire population of the island today is six people. In the past, however, before the clearances in the 19th century, over 800 people lived on the island, in 16 villages. Our walk takes us through the wooded, more populous side of the island, around the coast, past some basalt columns to one of these abandoned villages. The walk has lots of interest in terms of geology, landscape, views, history, and wildlife.

Hiking distance: 8km, 5 miles, and 200m ascent. 

DAY 4 - Crater Loch and Tobermory Lighthouse

Tobermory

Today we’ll do two walks. The first starts and finishes in Tobermory, a circular walk out to Tobermory lighthouse. The route takes you through some lovely deciduous woodland to the lighthouse, with great views across to Ardnamurchan and the mountainous island of Rum. Afterwards, we shall drive a short distance west to do the Crater Loch walk. The walk takes us to a small but conspicuous rock-girt hill called ‘S Airde Beinn with a central depression occupied by a lochan. The hill is carved from a doleritic volcanic plug which rises through the flat-lying, trap-featured lavas of the Mull Plateau.

Hiking distances: Lighthouse walk 6km (4 miles), 200m ascent; Crater loch walk 3km (2 miles) and 150m ascent.

DAY 5 - Loch Buie

Loch Buie

Today, we check out of our accommodation and head to our second base at Fionnphort on the Ross of Mull (1 hr 30min). On the way, we will make a stop at Loch Buie to do a walk. Loch Buie is a fascinating area, with great scenery, castles, stone circles, an old chapel and a super little cafe. The area was and remains the ancestral home of the Clan Maclaine. The walk takes us past two impressive castles, a towerhouse built in the fourteenth century, and a Georgian country house. The history of the Clan Maclaine is full of colour, with stories of headless horsemen and clan battles. Walking around the coastline, with great views to the south, brings us to the clan mausoleum, the Chapel of Remembrance, dating to 1500. On our return, our walk takes us to some Neolithic standing stones.

Hiking distances: 8km (5 miles), no ascent

DAY 6 - Iona

Iona

The day begins with a short walk to the harbour to catch the ferry to Iona. Iona is one of the most important historical sites in Scotland. In the sixth century, a young man of noble birth called Columba was overzealous in his enthusiasm to make a copy of the Psalms. A quarrel with Finnian of Molville, keeper of the Psalter, led to blood being spilt, and Columba, in penance, committed his life to spreading the gospels in Pictland, far to the north. He landed on Iona in 563 and established a mission of profound significance to the British Isles. Our visit to the island takes in the ruins of an Augustinian Nunnery and a restored Benedictine Abbey, housing the best collection of medieval carved stones in Britain. Our walk takes us to the highest hill on Iona and to St Columba’s Bay at the south end of the island, believed to be the site of Columba’s landing place. The geology of Iona is markedly different from the rest of Mull. Rather than basalt,  pink granites predominate, carved smooth by glaciation. Together with white sand beaches, dunes, and verdant pastures, the landscape is really beautiful and delightful to walk through.

Hiking distances: 13km (8 miles), 300m ascent

 

DAY 7 - Erraid or Ben More

Erraid

On our last full day on Mull, we have two options: a hike up Ben More, the highest hill on Mull, or a walk on the tidal island of Erraid. The ascent of Ben More starts at sea level and involves 945m of ascent, and 10km (6 miles) distance. The views in all directions are amazing. Looking west, you can see Glencoe and Lochaber on the Mainland; to the north are the islands of Rum, Skye, Eigg, Coll, and Tiree; and to the south are Islay, Colonsay, and Jura.

Erraid is a tidal island a short distance from Fionnphort. Like Iona, the rocks here are pink granite. The highlight of the walk is getting to a beach called Traigh Gheal, one of the most beautiful places in Scotland, with white sand and turquoise water. The colour, texture and shape of the rock are beautiful and a mecca for climbers.

In the past, the island was home to lighthouse keepers and their families. For nearly 50 years, the island was cared for by the Findhorn Foundation. Then in 2025, the stewardship of the island passed to a newly formed charity. The residents of the island are committed to sustainable living.

Erraid features in Robert Louis Stevenson’s novel Kidnapped. Davie Balfour is shipwrecked on the island and despairs in his misfortune, not realising he could just walk off the island at low tide!

Erraid hiking distance: 10km (6 miles), 250m ascent

DAy 8 - Travel to Glasgow

Glasgow

On our last morning, there will be an opportunity for some sightseeing and shopping in Tobermory, before driving to Craignure and catching the ferry back to Oban. Back on the mainland, the drive to Glasgow takes 2 and a half hours.

The Hebrides, Scotland

The Hebrides are a large group the islands off the West Coast of the Scottish mainland. The inner Hebrides comprise the islands closest to the mainland: Skye, Mull, Islay, Jura, Coll, Tiree, Rum and Eigg. The Outer Hebrides – also referred to as the Western Isles – are further West, separated from the Inner Hebrides by a stretch of sea called the Minch. The main islands comprising the Outer Hebrides are Barra, South Uist, Benbecula, North Uist, and Harris and Lewis.

People have lived in the Hebrides since the last glaciers retreated: first Mesolithic hunter-gatherers drawn to the shellfish, hazelnuts and red deer; then Neolithic farmers and pastoralists; before a third migration of Bronze Age people crossed the Minch with the capability to smelt and forge Bronze swords and axe heads. In the Iron Age, the Gaelic language and Celtic Christianity became established. In the medieval period, the Vikings invaded and settled, giving rise to Norse placenames and a new seafaring capability. The medieval period was also characterized by a prolonged power struggle between the Scottish Crown and the semi-independent Lordship of the Isles, with attendant war and conflict. The rich history and culture of the islands feature largely in the tour, through storytelling and with visits to ancient and historic sites.

Some blogs:

Terms and Conditions

General Information

  • Aspen Outdoors Ltd Aspen is a Scottish limited company. We are VAT registered and hold an Adventure Activities Licence. Either Alastair Ewen or Jen Brooke will correspond with you about your tour. If you have any questions, please email or call.
  • Participant Pack – Well before the tour starts, we shall email you a participant pack that provides detailed information on the itinerary, where to meet, what to bring, details of your accommodation, and information about your guide/s.
  • Hiking equipment and clothing – You will need to bring walking boots, a waterproof jacket, and trousers, warm layers, and a hat and gloves. A more comprehensive kit list will be set out in the participant pack.
  • Deposit – A 20% deposit is payable at the time of booking. If a booking is made within 56 days (8 weeks) of the tour starting, the entire sum shall be sought at the time of booking.
  • Balance of payments – The balance must be paid 56 days (8 weeks) prior to departure.
  • Participant Travel Insurance – You are strongly encouraged to take out travel insurance to cover personal accident, medical expenses, lost luggage, etc.
  • Company insurance – Aspen Outdoors Ltd holds insurance for the activities it provides. Its insurance policy is through HISCOX Insurance Company Limited. The insurance cover includes public and products liability insurance (up to £5 million), employers’ liability insurance (£10 million) and professional indemnity insurance (up to £5 million). If you would like to see a copy of our insurance documents, please get in touch.
  • Safeguarding your payments – The Association of Bonded Travel Organisers Trust Limited (ABTOT) provides financial protection under The Package Travel and Linked Travel Arrangements Regulations 2018 for Aspen Outdoors Ltd, and in the event of their insolvency, protection is provided for: Non-flight packages. ABTOT cover provides for a refund in the event you have not yet travelled or repatriation if transportation was included in your package. Please note that bookings made outside the UK are only protected by ABTOT when purchased directly with Aspen Outdoors Ltd. In the unlikely event that you require assistance whilst abroad due to our financial failure, please call our 24/7 helpline on 01702 811397 and advise that you are a customer of an ABTOT-protected travel company. You can access The Package Travel and Linked Travel Arrangements Regulations 2018 here. You can find out more about ABTOT here.
  • Minimum number of participants – Four clients is the minimum number for our guided holidays to go ahead. In the event of us having to cancel through insufficient numbers, we will let you know at least 42 days before the start, and we will offer you an alternative holiday. If the alternative does not suit you, we will refund in full all money paid.
    There is no minimum number for private guided itineraries.
  • Single Rooms – A limited number of single rooms is available on all our holidays at a supplement. In some places, if you are staying in a single room, you will share the bathroom with one other person.
    There will be no supplement if you are willing to share a twin room – with two single beds – with another member of the group of the same gender. This will always be a room with an en suite bathroom.

Terms and Conditions

  • Participants must disclose information on any relevant medical condition or treatment that may have a bearing on their ability to take part.
  • Participants must provide information to Aspen Outdoors Ltd on their skills and experience in the activity (winter hillwalking, summer hillwalking, multi-day treks, bushcraft activities) to help determine their competence and suitability for the activity.
  • Participants must read the information about the activity with particular attention to the grade/difficulty of the hike, the length of day, the distance to be covered and the height gained.
  • The objectives of the event, for example, the ascent of one or more peaks, are not guaranteed being subject to weather conditions, snow conditions and the capability and competence of participants in the group.
  • The objectives of the event may be modified or abandoned, subject to weather and snow conditions and the capability and competence of the participants in the group.
  • The event may be postponed or cancelled, subject to adverse weather and snow conditions. Should this happen, the company shall either provide a full refund or rearrange the event.
  • Participants must consult the equipment list provided by the company and follow other instructions provided to them before the activity to ensure that they are appropriately prepared for the activity.
  • During the activity, the participants must follow the instructions of the instructors to ensure their safety.
  • Should you wish to cancel your holiday after your booking has been confirmed you should write to us. The date of cancellation is the date on which we receive your letter or e-mail. A sliding scale of cancellation charges applies as follows:
    • Greater than 56 days (8 weeks): the deposit only
    • 28-56 days prior to departure: 50% of the full price of the tour
    • less than 28 days: full fee.