Isles of Scilly
The Isles of Scilly are a 28-mile boat ride from Penzance, 2,200 people across five inhabited islands, and the best week of weather you'll get in the UK. If you're going for the first time, here's what saves the trip.
How to actually get there
The Scillonian III is the boat. It's slow (2 hours 45), it rolls, and people who think they don't get seasick get seasick. The right answer is the helicopter from Penzance — 15 minutes, twice the price, ten times the experience. The fixed-wing flight from Land's End is the middle option.
If you're taking the boat, the inside cabin is the worst seat. Get an outside deck spot at the back and stare at the horizon. A pair of Sea-Band wristbands at £8 actually work better than the pills. Bring a windproof — even in July the wind on deck cuts through a fleece.
What to pack
You will get wet. A proper Rab Downpour waterproof jacket at £80 is the boring correct answer for Scilly weather. Don't rely on a fashion raincoat — it'll soak through in 20 minutes of horizontal Atlantic rain.
Walking shoes that handle wet rock. Salomon X Ultra 4 at around £120 are the right call. The coast paths on Bryher and St Agnes are the highlight of the trip and sneakers won't cut it.
A 22L Osprey daypack at £100 fits the layers, lunch, and a swim kit. You will use it every day.
Where to stay
Don't camp on St Mary's. The campsite is fine but you came for the small islands. Stay on Bryher (Hell Bay Hotel is the boutique choice, eye-watering price) or Tresco (Flying Boat Cottages is more sensible). St Martin's is the quiet pick. St Agnes is small and there's a pub.
If you're flying back from Land's End the same day, stay one night in Penzance either side. The Artist Residence is great. The Premier Inn is a Premier Inn.
Books to bring
A walking guide to the Isles of Scilly is essential — the paths are well-marked but the timing between boat departures matters and a printed map beats a phone in salty wind. The Pevsner's Cornwall section on Scilly is the best architecture/history reference if that's your thing.
For the boat ride, a Kindle Paperwhite is the move — it survives the spray better than a paperback and reads fine on the deck.
Food
The seafood is genuinely excellent. The crab sandwich at the Turk's Head on St Agnes is the trip in one item. The Atlantic Inn on St Mary's does fine fish-and-chips at sensible prices. Skip the high-end restaurant scene unless someone else is paying — the islands' best food is in pubs.
Bring snacks. Most islands have one shop that closes at five. A refillable water bottle is essential — bottled water on the islands is genuinely expensive.
The thing nobody mentions
The inter-island boats run on the tide, not a schedule. The day you planned to go to Bryher might be a "Tresco only" day depending on what the sea is doing. Build in slack. Don't book a connecting flight back tight to the last Scillonian — it will be late once a year and that's the year you booked it.
Go for at least four nights. Three is not enough. Five is right.
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