Tulach Ard Scottish Highlands

Tulach Ard

Scottish Highlands

Tulach Ard

Scottish Highlands

Tulach Ard

Scottish Highlands

A Hebridean Heaven

Book This Home

Scottish Highlands – West

This lovingly restored and extended 18th Century country rectory overlooks Loch Alsh which separates mainland Scotland from the Isle of Skye.
The listed house sits within thirty acres of private farm and woodland, just metres from the secluded seashore, and with nature on the doorstep, it is a stunning location for hikers and anglers alike.
 

A Manse for all Seasons

The generous main living space spans the full width of the house and encompasses a dining area and a comfortable seating section warmed by a toasty open fireplace.
Window seats surround the room with spectacular sea and mountain views.

In a nod to modernist design walls are lined with broad boards of native timber.
Double doors open out to directly to the front garden which borders the foreshore of the Loch.

AT A GLANCE

  • Sleeps
    Up to 14 guests
    From €7,800 per week
  • Bedrooms
    Three double bedrooms – 2 ensuite
    Four twin bedrooms with shared bathrooms
    Family bathroom
  • Other Rooms
    Open plan Living / Dining room
    Annex sitting room
    Family Kitchen
    Utility rooms
  • Features
    Open Fire place
    Bothy Sauna available
    Big Green Egg Barbecue
    Kitchen garden
  • Contempo
    Smart TV, WiFi internet
    DAB Radio
    Poor Cell phone reception
  • Availability
    Weekly only – Sat to Sat
  • Restrictions
    Children over 12 are welcome
    Obedient dogs are welcome
  • CHECK HERE

Bespoke Scottish oak furniture, flat woven wool carpets and the natural materials of the interior, are inspired by the landscape and colours that surround the house.

The family farmhouse kitchen has a rustic warm ambience, an electric AGA range, and more of those wonderful oak and tartan flourishes.

FIREWOOD
We have supplied you with a large basket of firewood however, if you go through it don’t worry, there is more. We charge £20 per large basket of extra wood.


 

Bedrooms

An impressive semi-spiral stairwell leads to three king size double rooms on the first floor, two of which have ensuite bathrooms.

Each bedroom is unique, impeccably decorated, and offers a different aspect and connection to the surrounding landscape. All enjoy particular views of the ancient woodlands, misty Skye Munros and the private foreshore.

The luxury and character of this home is exemplified by the colourful family bathroom with an exquisite free-standing slipper-bath.

On the top floor there are two elegant, understated twin rooms, separated by a shared bathroom.

Outside

Sitting on a raised beach, ten yards from the salty Loch Alsh, the house is reached via half a mile of private track that winds through farmland from the main road.

There are traditional farm buildings, a large lawn and garden on the grounds. At the back of the house is a native Scottish woodland where deer and native wildlife can be spotted.

Dogs are very welcome at Tulach Ard. We ask though that when outside they are kept in sight. Please when outside the garden keep them on a lead, there are sheep grazing on the farm and wildlife surrounding the house – we cannot have them distressed.

There is also a kitchen garden with seasonal herbs, fruit and vegetables.

If you plan on enjoying some wild sea swimming off the rocks right in front of the house, there is a self-contained Bothy Sauna available for a small additional charge. Please let us know if you would like to book use of the sauna a day in advance.

Provisional Booking Form

Bookings are weekly only, running from Saturday to Saturday

A refundable breakages deposit payable with the rental amount will be refunded within seven days of departure.

 

Rates Table

Per week
€7800.

Select your Dates

AVAILABLE BOOKED

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  • Please note all booking requests are subject to 24 hour approval.
  • Once your provisional booking has been placed, the UIH team will verify it, answer any specific queries you may have, and request a deposit to lock in your dates.
  • Please note if your provisional booking is not confirmed and the deposit paid within 3 days it will expire.
  • If your preferred dates are not available, click here to review alternate options.
  • For additional information please contact us on +353 85 860 0027
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Out & About

 

Fantastic fish, wonderful walks, invigorating swims and mesmerising scenery, and then there’s the restaurants…

Here are some of our favourites…

 

The Locality

 

 

Balmacara up on the main road, has a small Spar with all the essentials, however for a greater choice, Kyle of Lochalsh is just over 5 minutes away and features the bridge link to the Island of Skye. The town has a good butcher, fishmonger, supermarket and railway station.

If you are visiting Eilean Donan Castle at the other end of the sea loch – and you should – there is a wee bakery as you pass through Ardelve. The picturesque lake castle which frequently appears in the media has a long history of re-building and is connected to the mainland by a 20th century footbridge addition.

photo: Diliff

The chain of islands to the West of Scotland are known as the Hebrides – 79 of them make up the Inner Hebrides of which under half are currently inhabited.
Skye is the second-largest island in Scotland after Lewis and Harris which are in the Outer Hebrides.

photo Cuillin Munros: Stefan Krause, License: LAL

The centre of the island is dominated by the mountainous Cuillin Munros, whose rocky slopes of provide some of the most dramatic mountain scenery in the country.
Scottish mountains with summits greater than 900 metres are often referred to as Munros after Sir Hugh Munro, who compiled a list towards the end of the 19th century.
12 of the 283 Scottish Munros are on Skye and are renowned by climbers for their difficulty and danger.

There are about 4,000 Gaelic speakers in the Inner Hebrides, equal to 20% of the population of the archipelago, and a relatively high proportion of them live on Skye.
Students of Scottish Gaelic travel from all over the world to attend its Sabhal Mòr Ostaig school.

Skye has a strong folk music tradition and Jethro Tull singer Ian Anderson owned an estate at on the island at one time. The Hebrides, also known as Fingal’s Cave, is a famous overture written by Felix Mendelssohn inspired by his visit to Staffa.

Scotland is known for its ubiquitous castles, and both Clan MacDonald and Clan MacLeod have theirs on the Island and should be on your list of places to visit.
Dunvegan Castle is the oldest inhabited castle in Scotland, and always by the same family, the chiefs of the Clan MacLeod.

There is also an abundance of ruined and abandoned houses on Skye. These date from a difficult 100-year period from mid 1700s know as the Highland Clearances, when attempts at agricultural improvements, landlord evictions, enterprise failure and eventually famine caused emigration on a massive scale.

Skye’s history stretches back to the age of the dinosaurs. Dinosaur’s footprints can be found on the shore at Staffin and there are more dinosaur fossils from Skye on display in the Dinosaur Museum near Staffin.

photo: Christoph Müller

Persecuted to extinction in Britain, the largest bird of prey the huge white-tailed eagle has been successfully reintroduced in the west coast of Scotland, and is now top of the bird watcher attractions in this region.

The main commercial activities of the Hebrides include fishing and whisky distilling.
The infamous Scotch Whiskey, originally derived from malted barley, can be made from wheat and rye and must be aged in oak barrels for a minimum of three years before bottling.
There are 17 whiskey distilleries on the islands, which is more than a third of Scotland’s total.

How to get there – Car advised..

By Air: International Flights to Glasgow, Aberdeen and Edinburgh airports, which are all under 4 hours from the house.
Inverness Airport – is under 2 hours from the house.

There is also a terrific 3 hour rail trip from Inverness to Kyle of Lochalsh only 7 minutes from the house.

Map