London, the Countryside & Edinburgh

with optional Highlands Extension

Length: 10 - 13 days  
Guaranteed Dates Available
 

London, the Countryside & Edinburgh Educational Tour | Big Ben
 
Map of London, The Countryside & Edinburgh Educational Tour
 
English Highlights Educational Tour | Houses
 
  • Day 1 Start Tour
  • Day 2 Hello London
    Meet your Tour Director and check into hotel
    London City Walk 
    Thames RiverTrafalgar SquareNational Gallery Visit Piccadilly CircusCovent GardenLeicester SquareSoho
    Details: London City Walk
    Step outside your hotel, for a stroll through the streets of the heart of the English-speaking world. In this city of nearly seven million, you'll see everything from 12th-century fortifications to modern skyscrapers, formal parks to punk rockers. Your Tour Director will lead you to some of the most famous sites. Walk along the Thames River. Cross Trafalgar Square. See bustling Piccadilly Circus. Pass trendy shops and cafés in Bohemian Soho on your way to Covent Garden, a 13th-century fruit and vegetable garden transformed into a maze of narrow streets and pedestrian walkways burgeoning with street performers, open-air markets and boutiques.
    Details: National Gallery Visit
    Located in an impressive domed building right in Trafalgar Square, the National Gallery houses a rich collection of over 2,000 works of art dating from the mid 13th century to 1900. Explore the beautiful marble hallways to see famous paintings by van Eyck, Turner and Van Gogh.
    Details: Fish & chips dinner
    Nothing’s more British than fish and chips—there are eight fish and chip shops (“chippies”) for every McDonald’s in the country. Head to an authentic pub with your Tour Director for a taste of this national food, generally served with malt vinegar.
  • Day 3 London Landmarks
    London Guided Sightseeing Tour 
    Buckingham PalaceBig BenHouses of ParliamentWestminster AbbeyTower BridgeHyde ParkSt. Paul’s Cathedral
    Details: London Guided Sightseeing Tour
    Join a licensed local guide for an in-depth look at London, from the royal haunt of Buckingham Palace (the official London residence of Queen Elizabeth II) to the slightly more democratic Speakers’ Corner of Hyde Park, where anyone can pull up a soapbox and orate to his heart’s content. You’ll see the changing of the guard (season permitting), the clock tower of Big Ben with its 14-ton bell, and Westminster Abbey, where almost every English king and queen since William the Conqueror has been crowned. After a stop at the Houses of Parliament, continue on to the magnificent St. Paul’s Cathedral, the masterpiece of London architect Christopher Wren.
  • Day 4 London--Bath
    Travel to Bath via Stonehenge
    Chippenham visit
    Details: Stonehenge visit
    Visit prehistoric Stonehenge, built in 3,000 BC, a mysterious monument of four concentric rings of hefty stones, believed to be a sacred place of worship or some type of calendar.
    Details: Lacock Abbey visit
    Evocative Lacock Abbey, rebuilt in the 18th century, was used as the setting for many of the classroom scenes in the Harry Potter films.
  • Day 5 Bath--Stratford
    Bath Guided Sightseeing Tour 
    Pulteney BridgeRoman Baths visitAbbey
    Travel to Stratford via Oxford
    Details: Bath Guided Sightseeing Tour
    England's most fashionable spa town in the 18th century, beautiful, Georgian-style Bath was where the society set headed to "take the waters" and attend the theaters. But the spa scene began bubbling long before then. The Romans built baths here between the 1st and 5th centuries to capitalize on the area's natural hot springs. A professional, local tour guide will lead you to the Roman ruins, some of the best in Europe. But keep your clothes on! Your tour continues to the remains of the Medieval abbey church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul (built on the site of a nunnery from the 670s). Look up at the fan-vaulted ceiling. Step back outside to see the ornate west front featuring relief sculptures of Jacob's ladder. Continue to Pulteney Bridge, built in the 18th century after the style of Florence's Ponte Vecchio. As in Florence, shops line the span.
    Details: Oxford Tour Director-Led Sightseeing Tour
    Explore the oldest English-speaking university in the world. Founded in 1096, Oxford got a big attendance boost in 1167, when a tiff between the English and French kings caused all English students to be expelled from the University of Paris. Many came back to Oxford, and since then the university has been home to many of England's most illustrious thinkers and writers, including Sir Walter Raleigh, Roger Bacon -- and Dr. Seuss.
    Details: Christ Church College visit
    Envision flying candelabra, floating school crests, and swooping owls all hovering over the deafening din of a typical school cafeteria. Now step into Christ Church College, and see the location for Hogwart's dining hall. Don't forget to check out Bodleian Library, which was used as Hogwarts library, and the Divinity School, which was transformed into the hospital wing!
  • Day 6 Stratford Landmarks
    Stratford Tour Director-Led Sightseeing Tour 
    Anne Hathaway’s Cottage visitShakespeare's birthplace visit
    Details: Stratford Tour Director-Led Sightseeing Tour
    See William Shakespeare's childhood home, furnished in a style typical to the Elizabethan period. Then tour the thatched cottage where his wife, Anne Hathaway, lived before her marriage. The adjoining Shakespeare Tree Garden is planted with trees and flowers mentioned in Shakespeare's plays.
    Details: Warwick Castle visit
    Take a trip to the banks of the River Avon and explore the rich history of this 1,100 year old castle. Wander through its grand interior, meet Henry VII and his wives, and experience the re-creation of the dark and grisly past of the castle’s dungeons.
  • Day 7 Stratford--Yorkshire
    Travel to Yorkshire
    Details: York Tour-Director Led Sightseeing Tour
    Charming York combines medieval mysteries with modern flair. Gothic buildings and cobblestone streets lead to bustling shopping districts; ancient stones make up the now-picturesque city walls. Explore the birthplace of Guy Fawkes with your Tour Director.
    Details: York Minster visit
    Spectacular York Minster has the largest medieval stained-glass window in the world, and holds half of all of England's medieval stained glass. The largest Gothic building in the country dazzles visitors with these intricate works, from the silvery Five Sisters Window to the apocalyptic East Window, which depicts both the beginning and the end of the world.
  • Day 8 Yorkshire--Edinburgh
    Details: Travel to Edinburgh
    Travel through the heather-covered hills of Yorkshire, a wild, rugged landscape that looks like the setting for Wuthering Heights. Stop at York Minster, the largest Gothic church in England. "Large" is not a big enough word to describe this 534-foot-long cathedral. Step inside and gaze up at the 90-foot soaring ceilings, gargantuan pillars, and stained-glass windows so intensely coloured, they look like jewels. Bring binoculars to get a good look at the cobalt and garnet glass in the church's 128 stained-glass windows.
    Details: Alnwick Castle visit
    Magnificent Alnwick Castle, the second largest in the country, has been a favorite setting for movies, with several Harry Potter and Robin Hood films to its credit. The Hogwarts crew used Alnwick when they learned to fly their brooms, and for several of the Quidditch game sequences.
  • Day 9 Edinburgh Landmarks
    Edinburgh Guided Sightseeing Tour 
    Royal MileOld TownSir Walter Scott MonumentEdinburgh Castle
    See the Elephant House coffee shop
    Optional  Scottish folklore show   $100
    Details: Edinburgh Guided Sightseeing Tour
    Edinburgh Castle, the historical and emotional heart of the city, is just one of the many sights you will see on this tour, led by a licensed professional guide. Make your way along the Royal Mile, the main thoroughfare of the 16th and 17th centuries. (It's actually one mile and 107 yards long--from Edinburgh Castle to the Palace of Holyrood House). As you make your way along cobbled streets, you'll see a handful of the several thousand buildings officially protected in Edinburgh because of their architectural or historic importance. The 200-foot spire of the Sir Walter Scott monument soars above the East Princes Street Gardens. Grand figures from Scottish history adorn its heights, make sure you also look down -- the figure below the marble statue is Scott's favorite dog, Maida.
  • Day 10 End Tour

  • Or
  • Day 10 Start Extension to the Highlands
    Travel to Highlands via Stirling
    Stirling Castle visit
  • Day 11 Glencoe and Loch Ness
    Glencoe and Loch Ness Excursion 
    Loch Ness Monster Exhibition visitCulloden Moor
    Glenfinnin Viaduct & Visitor Centre
    Details: Glencoe and Loch Ness Excursion
    The idea that Loch Ness is inhabited by some sort of mysterious aquatic beast has been around for more than 1,500 years. If the monster does exist, the misty Loch, which is 24 miles long and as deep as 700 feet, would be the perfect place for Nessie to hide.
  • Day 12 Highlands--Glasgow
    Glasgow City Walk 
    Strathclyde UniversityCity ChambersGeorge Square
    Details: Travel to Glasgow via Loch Lomond
    Head for Glasgow. On the way, you'll pass the largest expanse of fresh water in Britain. Loch Lomond is five miles wide at its broadest point and has more than 30 islands in the middle of it, three of which are inhabited. It's a favorite recreational spot for the Scots and is full of native wildlife.
    Details: Glasgow City Walk
    Home of Scottish Opera, Scottish Ballet, the Royal Scottish National Orchestra, and the Royal Concert Hall, Glasgow is the center of contemporary Scottish culture-and a hotbed of trendy restaurants, boutiques and pubs. Glasgow grew around a church built in the mid-6th century, but many of its most impressive buildings are from the 19th century, when an industrial boom led to a building frenzy. Your Tour Director will lead you to some of the city's most famous sites, passing Glasgow's blend of modern and traditional architecture. See the Venetian-style colonnaded façade of the city chambers, take in the statuary at George Square, and peek into the academic world of Strathclyde University. Glasgow has more than just buildings. It's often referred to as "The dear green place," because of its many parks.
  • Day 13 End Tour
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    Tour Includes:
    • Round-trip airfare
    • Full European breakfast daily
    • Dinner daily
    • Full-time services of a professional Tour Director
    • Guided sightseeing tours and city walks as per itinerary
    • Visits to select attractions as per itinerary
    • Tour Diary™
    • Note: On arrival day only dinner is provided; on departure day, only breakfast is provided