Explore the Isles of Scilly with a Cicerone guidebook
Walking in the Isles of Scilly
A guide to exploring the islands by Paddy Dillon
A handy pocked sized guidebook describing 11 easy day walks and 4 boat trips in the Scilly Isles. With its mild climate and relaxing atmosphere, the Scilly Isles make an ideal holiday destination. The walks included allow an exploration of the coastlines of the five inhabited islands, as well as some of the smaller Scilly Isles. More...
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Activities
Walking, boat trips, birdwatchingSeasons
Mild climate all year round. You should pre-book accommodation in August, as it gets busy.Centres
Hugh Town, St Agnes, Bryher, Tresco, St Martin’sDifficulty
All easy, low-level walksMust See
Wildflowers, Hugh Town Garrison, Tresco Abbey Garden, boat trips (including the ‘Seabird Read More... Specials’), Bird LifeThe Isles of Scilly could be explored easily enough without using maps, as the total land area is only 16 km2 (61⁄4 square miles), but mapless visitors would miss a great deal along the way. Detailed maps reveal alternative routes and other options to the walks in this book. Dozens of near and distant features can be identified in view, and access to all the relevant placenames is literally at your fingertips.
The following maps of the islands are available in a variety of scales and styles. Ordnance Survey grid references indicate the starting point of each walk throughout this guidebook.
- Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 Explorer 101 – Isles of Scilly This map gives the most accurate depiction of the Isles of Scilly on one large sheet, including all the rocks and reefs that make up this complex group, along with a wealth of interesting and amazing placenames.
- Ordnance Survey 1:50,000 Landranger 203 – Land’s End, The Lizard & Isles of Scilly This map shows the Isles of Scilly as an inset. The map offers little detail of the islands and is not particularly recommended detailed exploration, though it is a useful general map and worth having if you are also considering walking around neighbouring Land’s End and The Lizard in Cornwall.
- A Precious Heritage – Visitors Companion Maps to the Five Inhabited Islands, published by the Isles of Scilly Wildlife Trust. These maps show almost all the roads, tracks and walking paths. The unfarmed wilderness land managed by the Trust is distinguished from other tenanted land. This is a most useful series of maps, but best used alongside the Ordnance Survey Explorer map.
- McAulay Map of the Isles of Scilly This detailed and colourful map, published by Cormorant Design, is at a generous scale of 1:16,500. It includes additional details not found on other maps. The locations of ancient monuments, shipwreck sites and practical facilities are clearly marked. Unfortunately, many footpaths are shown as white lines that are often on very pale backgrounds.
Free leaflets containing maps of all or some of the islands can be collected from the Tourist Information Centre or picked up from other locations. Some will prove useful, others less useful, and many of them exist to highlight a variety of services and attractions around the islands. Marine navigation charts are for those who sail as well as walk, or for serious marine studies.
The maps in this guidebook are extracted from the Ordnance Survey 1:25,000 map and an overlay shows the walking routes. A few of the maps aren’t of walking routes, but show groups of small islands and rocks that can be visited on boat trips and are covered by short descriptive chapters. There are also a few small-scale plans, showing greater detail of Hugh Town, The Garrison and the amazing Tresco Abbey Garden.








