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"Scottish Highlands. Scandi feel. Looks amazing. "
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"CN GOLD LIST 2024 Getting there: Inverness airport or station is a two-hour drive away – but what a drive. Consider it very much a part of the reason you’re going, not a chore The rooms A former clergy house, Lundies was built in 1842 (Reverend Lundie was an early resident). The walls are as solid as Scottish solid gets: and each bedroom feels gorgeously bolstered. Just a handful upstairs in the main house, all painted in a supremely lulling colour palette, adding to the sensation of being properly swaddled from the temperature shifts of Scotland’s rocky Highland coastline. A few more rooms are situated in what were steadings in a courtyard (the whole place sleeps 16) with a more contemporary feel, more iron and brick, but still plenty of wool throws and sheepskin rugs: you won’t walk anywhere without toes quickly encountering something supremely soft. Ground floor of the main house are four warm, communal areas in which there’s nothing that isn’t gorgeous or interesting; equipped for restoration and relaxation. Tranquil Scandinavian design and bespoke Scottish cabinetry typify the various Wildland properties but there’s something about the paints and fabrics here that compliment not just the silver, north-west Highland light but the sound of Lundies too - the wind in the garden and curlews (curlews!) across the Kyle of Tongue below. No spa as such but bespoke in-room massages and morning exercise yoga classes with a visiting therapist can be arranged"
@nchavotier
"Les Échos Série Limitée 2025 Ancien presbytère "
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"Luxushotel, absolut nach unserem Geschmack, haben spektakuläre Ferienhäuser zu vermieten Www.Kyle.scot"
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"The latest addition to the portfolio of Wildland properties owned by Anders Hoch Povisen, an extremely rich Dane, and his wife Anne, is a Victorian manse in the tiny town of Tongue, near the top of mainland Scotland, two-and-a-bit hours from Inverness. The town comprises a couple of pubs, a post office, a doctor's surgery, a handful of bungalows and not much else. There are four double rooms in the manse, three in an adjoining building, and a self-catering, two-bedroom bothan suitable for families. The style throughout is muted, pared-down and a little woolly-bobbly-scratchy - yet utterly sumptuous in that way that northern Europeans do better than anyone else. Rustic, yes, but only if your definition of rustic includes museum-quality furniture, collectable art and piles of coffee-table books. Lundies House is perhaps the most versatile of the various Wildland properties, equally good for families and solo recluses, daydreamers/layabouts and sporty/outdoorsy types - nearby Kinloch Lodge (also Wildland) is a fully equipped sporting estate. Povlsen has made no secret of his desire to rewild great tracts of the Highlands. This is a fascinating, complicated and, in Scotland, sensitive subject. A visit to a Wildland property could easily become something more than a spoiling mini-break in agreeable surroundings. It might change the way you think about the world around you. LUNDIES HOUSE 2024 Off the Kay of Lairg, Lundies House is owned by Wildland, the conservation organisation that also operates a growing number of superb hotels, many with Scandinavian interiors. At Lundies you're more likely to see a restored Danish midcentury chair than a taxidermy stag head. It's high-level hospitality with great attention to detail. We sat at a table in the kitchen and watched the chefs work their magic on local venison and simple greens from the garden. There are fires in the many fireplaces, flower arrangements everywhere. The hygge ideal in a distinctly Scottish setting. "
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"Denmark comes to Northern Scotland"
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