Lizzie May - Circumnavigate Mull - SAVE £50 last 2 places


Voyage from Classic Sailing
Voyage Number LM1022
Voyage price £675
Voyage Dates 28/08/2010 - 10:00 - 02/09/2010 - 15:00
Depart from Oban
Finishing Port Oban
Voyage area Scotland , UK
Voyage type Adventure Voyage , Wildlife Voyages
Vessel Lizzie May
Availability Limited places
BOOKING FORM >>>

Voyage Description

 

Explore Mull under Sail

There is no finer way to see the West Coast of Scotland than from a boat and this activity based holiday gives you a wider range of experiences and scenery than from any other way. Sailing an eye catching wooden pilot cutter will usually introduce you to some interesting characters in ports and anchorages. No sailing experience is necessary as you will be given full training so you can be an active part of the crew.

 

Large enough to leave under sail if you keep clear of the island ferries, Oban harbour takes you straight out into unmistakeably Scottish scenery. Duart Castle guards the entrance to the Sound of Mull, but if the weather is fine Lizzie May will sail down the Firth of Lorne where there is plenty of room to practice tacking, or gybing. The mountains of Mull make a great backdrop and occasionally you see seals swimming across, or dolphins and whales in this major deep water routeway. The beauty of sailing in Scotland amongst the islands is that there are nearly always several deep water routes you can chose, and an infinite number of anchorages where you may be the only boat. For the first night you might shelter in the deep inlet called Puilladobhrain. Impossible to pronounce but it means home of the otter, so keep an eye out at dawn or dusk.

 

See itinerary fro more details of the route. 

The Birdlife of Western scotland

Manx Shearwater
Around 61,000 pairs (23% of world population) breed on the west coast of Scotland, digging nesting burrows in the soft ground. You will often see huge rafts of them gathering near the shore where they congregate before going ashore at night.

Merlin
A typical raptor of heather moor land found on the Western Isles of Scotland, they nest on the ground in long heather and can be seen in a very fast dashing flight style chasing smaller birds..

Guillemots
Guillemots are the biggest breeding bird on Rum with 2,680 pairs and are an excellent example of high density colonial nesting.

Kittiwakes
With 1,500 pairs, these birds are also major part of the seabird cities . The sight of several hundred birds gathering inland at freshwater to collect mud for plastering their nests cliff side is spectacular.

Oban
The voyage ends in Oban and unfortunately you have to leave Lizzie May to get ready for her next crew.

Mull Exploration

 

See Voyage Description for Typical Itinerary

The Voyage Description section (see tab above)  includes typical destinations and highlights for each Pacific Adventure leg on brigantine Soren Larsen as she follows the trade winds around the South Seas. Some voyages are adventurous island hopping and a few are pure Ocean passages. The most popular are those that involve a mix of Pacific blue water passages and shorter sails between island groups with lots of anchoring and meeting the locals. 

Wind Powered Travel

If you want to travel around the Pacific for several months powered only by the wind and your own efforts as crew, then spending a few pacific ocean legs living on Soren Larsen is one of the most environmentally friendly ways to travel.

Vessel Details

See the tab above for a full description of this historic wooden ship

 

 

Photo cuortesy Fr Paul Hackett

 

Oban
 

Oban has been described as one of the most scenic travel destinations. The sheltered port of Oban (“little bay” in Gaelic) is surrounded by views of earth, sea and sky, which have enthralled artists, authors, composers, and poets for centuries.

Known as the gateway to Argyll and the Western Isles, Oban is the perfect origin for your own journey to discover the enchantment of the west coast of Scotland.

Oban has always been known as the traveller’s rest. As a small town with a resident population of 8,500 this unofficial capital of the West Highlands often swells with large numbers of visitors.

Oban is renowned for its glorious gardens, its fabulous views, the ocean promenade, islands all around, ancient monuments and castles, and outdoor activities such as diving, hiking, fishing, bird-watching – even whale spotting - especially from pilot cutters and tall ships.

Queen Victoria visited the town and gave it the royal seal of approval when she described it as "one of the finest spots we have seen".
 

 

Getting to Oban

By Road
Head up the A82 from Glasgow and keep going all the way past Loch Lomond and its steam ships. When you get to Tyndrum turn to port (left) onto the A85 for Oban. Find the North Quay and then further into Town and near Tesco you will find secure paid for parking at Oban Car Hire which does have to be paid for.

By Coach
CityLink offer connections from Glasgow Buchanan Street train and Bus Station and Glasgow Airport.

By Train
ScotRail has trains for Oban that also leave from Buchanan Street Station.

By Plane
You can fly from Central Glasgow to Oban on Loch Lomond Seaplanes - probably the most dramatic way to arrive - certainly the quickest from Glasgow.
 

Accommodation
There are lots of places to stay in Oban, The Official Oban Tourist Office has the best local directory.
 

Photo cuortesy Fr Paul Hackett

 

Oban
 

Oban has been described as one of the most scenic travel destinations. The sheltered port of Oban (“little bay” in Gaelic) is surrounded by views of earth, sea and sky, which have enthralled artists, authors, composers, and poets for centuries.

Known as the gateway to Argyll and the Western Isles, Oban is the perfect origin for your own journey to discover the enchantment of the west coast of Scotland.

Oban has always been known as the traveller’s rest. As a small town with a resident population of 8,500 this unofficial capital of the West Highlands often swells with large numbers of visitors.

Oban is renowned for its glorious gardens, its fabulous views, the ocean promenade, islands all around, ancient monuments and castles, and outdoor activities such as diving, hiking, fishing, bird-watching – even whale spotting - especially from pilot cutters and tall ships.

Queen Victoria visited the town and gave it the royal seal of approval when she described it as "one of the finest spots we have seen".
 

 

Getting to Oban

By Road
Head up the A82 from Glasgow and keep going all the way past Loch Lomond and its steam ships. When you get to Tyndrum turn to port (left) onto the A85 for Oban. Find the North Quay and then further into Town and near Tesco you will find secure paid for parking at Oban Car Hire which does have to be paid for.

By Coach
CityLink offer connections from Glasgow Buchanan Street train and Bus Station and Glasgow Airport.

By Train
ScotRail has trains for Oban that also leave from Buchanan Street Station.

By Plane
You can fly from Central Glasgow to Oban on Loch Lomond Seaplanes - probably the most dramatic way to arrive - certainly the quickest from Glasgow.
 

Accommodation
There are lots of places to stay in Oban, The Official Oban Tourist Office has the best local directory.
 

Lizzie May sister ship to Eve of St Mawes sailing together in the Fal with St Mawes in the background.

 

Click here for all Lizzie May Voyages 2010

 

Lizzie May—Specifications

Lizzie May was built new in 1999 by Luke Powell of Working Sail using traditional construction techniques to create a wooden pilot cutter with real character. Her frames are oak with larch planking and hardwood deck. Lizzie is 42ft on deck with a long 13ft bowsprit and lofty topmast. Her beam of 12ft gives her plenty of flat deck space and her low profile coach house is barely visible so all onlookers see is a traditional boat with lovely sheer lines.

The coach house also provides outward facing seating so you wont miss the scenery. All the rigging is ash blocks and tackles so you wont be sitting down for long.

There are no winches on board so everybody keeps warm and active pulling together. Sailing in Scotland requires a good anchor and true to her working boat origins Lizzie May has a barrel windlass to raise the anchor.

The vessel weighs 18 ton with a long deep keel—ideal for open sea sailing. The large mainsail can be slab reefed and even the staysail can be reefed in strong winds, so with a storm jib too she can make the most of the wilder days.. On light wind days she can glide up the lochs and narrows with a large flying jib and gaff topsail. 

Below Decks

Below decks is very light with loads of character and varnished wood. There are two single berths in the forepeak, three berths in the saloon and a double berth in the starboard quarter with limited headroom (back of the boat). Please remember this is only a 42ft boat with an elegant raked stern so spaces are communal, there are a few low beams and limited storage.

Lizzie has a lovely oak table, a small heater in the saloon, hot and cold water and WC, galley and modern navigational equipment. She carries all safety equipment required for her commercial coding under the MCA (Marine Coastguard Agency) and licensed to sail offshore up to 60 miles from a safe haven.

Lizzie May Skipper Jerry & Skipper- Chef Laurie

Jerry Headley bought Lizzie May in 2007- with the intention of setting up his own charter company, after a rather life changing voyage to Paimpol Shanty Festival on 'Eve of St Mawes.' He was not the only Eve crew on that voyage to find themselves owning a classic wooden boat. (Classical Guitarist James Boyd bought classic yacht Concord - currently nominated for Classic Boat Magazine Restoration of the Year)
 

Jerry's enthusiasm for pilot cutters shone through and it was evident he would make a sociable and relaxed charter skipper. Classic Sailing were thrilled to work with Jerry to establish Eve's  'sister ship' on the West Coast of Scotland, near Jerry's home.  Either Jerry or Laurie Mills will usually be your skipper on Lizzie May.

Skipper Laurie is also a chef. When he is not on Lizzie May he has his own company cooking private dinner parties and performing chef cooking demonstrations at farmers markets with fresh organic produce. Laurie is a former restauranteur and made his name running an award winning restaurant in Royal Deeside.

Photo: Jerry - mid English Channel on Eve's bowsprit  2007

 

Voyage No.  From  To    Ports  Description  Price 
LM1009 28 May 31 May 3 Largs-Largs Seafood & Sailing £390
LM1010 4 Jun 7 Jun  Largs-Largs  Exploration of SW Scotland £350
LM1011  11 Jun  16 Jun  5 Largs-Largs Traditional gaff sailing in SW Scotland  £495 
LM1012  18 Jun  20 Jun  Largs-Largs  Spend midsummer weekend sailing £295 
LM1013  25 Jun  28 Jun  Largs-Largs  Midsummer gastronomic cruise  £460 
LM1014  1 July  4 July  Largs-Largs  Taster cruise in SW Scotland  £395 
LM1015  9 July  12 July  Largs-Largs  Taster cruise in SW Scotland  £395 
LM1016  16 July  22 July  Largs-Largs  Traditional gaff sailing to Ireland  £795 
LM1017  23 July  26 July  Largs-Largs  Taster cruise in SW Scotland  £435 
LM1018  30 July  1 Aug  Largs-Largs  Long Scottish weekend   £295 
LM1019  6 Aug  9 Aug  Largs-Oban  Summer expedition to the Highlands  £395 
LM1020  13 Aug  20 Aug  Oban-Mallaig  3 pilot cutters in the Western Isles  £945 
LM1021  21 Aug  26 Aug  Mallaig-Oban  Skye & Rhum looking for widlife  £795 
LM1022  28 Aug  2 Sept  Oban-Oban  Beautiful sailing around Mull  £675 
LM1023  3 Sept  5 Sept   2 Oban-Oban  Seafood & Sailing £295 
LM1024  10 Sept  14 Sept   4 Oban-Fort William  Gourmet exploration of Sound of Mull and Firth of Lome  £495
LM1025   17 Sept 20 Sept   3 Fort William-Inverness  The classic Scottish passage £375
LM1026  24 Sept  30 Sept   6 Inverness-Leith  Traditional gaff sailing to Edinburgh  £695 

 

What to bring

Boats have very limited stowage space so please limit yourself to one soft collapsible bag or rucksack (not a suitcase).
Bring a sleeping bag (we provide pillows and pillow cases).
We can supply waterproof jackets and trousers but you may prefer to bring your own if you have them.
A hat for sun or cold weather.
Swimsuit, towel and sun cream.
Flat shoes with a good grip e.g. trainers or deck shoes. Sailing boots or wellies as the sea can wash over the deck (an alternative to boots in the summer is another pair of trainers in case the first pair get wet).
A small rucksack is useful for going ashore.
Camera, binoculars, sketchbook and a good read.
Any medication, spare spectacles, seasick tablets (check which brand with your doctor if you are on any medication)

RYA Cruising Logbook if you are keeping a record of your experience for qualification purposes.

Musical instruments are most welcome.
 

Click here for all Lizzie May Voyages 2010

Join up for our e-newsletter and we will enter you in our free competition to win a three day  sailing holiday for two on a tall ship or pilot cutter.+
Name*
email*
Please tell us your particular sailing interest.*
What type of vessel would you like to sail on?* Tall Ship
Classic Yacht - Pilot Cutter

Both 

How much sailing have you done?* None Some Quite a bit
+ Click here for details and  Competition Terms and Conditions     * Indicates field is required.

Search for Voyages

Format: 2010-09-09

Call a Skipper 01872 580022

Skippers Adam and Debbie Purser of Classic SailingSkippers Adam and Debbie Purser of Classic Sailing

Flickr random photos

Eve looking greatE805 windless of Cornwallyes we were dodging under sailEve anchored in golden light