A Second Chance At A First Impression

Fair Isle Adventure - Ed & Sarah's Remote Island Journey

Fair Isle Adventure

Ed & Sarah's Journey to Britain's Most Remote Inhabited Island

🏝️ Fair Isle Location - Where Scotland Meets Scandinavia

Between Great Britain, Faroe Islands & Norway • 24 miles from Shetland Mainland

Explore the subarctic archipelago where the North Sea meets the Atlantic Ocean
Where Scotland meets Scandinavia and the North Sea meets the Atlantic Ocean, lies the Shetland Archipelago...

Britain's most remote inhabited island. We flew in December 2020, and it feels like we are walking into a painting. Think Norway meets Hawaiian islands where Father Time and Mother Nature have a field day. Of all the 115 islands in the archipelago, just 15 are inhabited ones. We are at Britain's most remote island, Fair Isle - population 55, now 57!
115 Total Islands in Archipelago
15 Inhabited Islands
55 Fair Isle Population
24 Miles from Mainland

🚁 Getting to Fair Isle - Take It or Leave It

There are two choices for transport to reach the island...

✈️ Option 1: Puddle Jumper

20-minute straight run aboard a 7-seater twin engine prop plane from Shetland mainland. Heart-in-the-mouth flight, up-close and personal with the pilot and control dashboard.

⛵ Option 2: Good Shepherd IV

2-hour rough crossing aboard the island's ferry - a converted fishing vessel. Sometimes the North Sea is even too rough for the ferry. Weather dependent!

Day 1 - December 2020

✈️ Edinburgh to Lerwick

First, Sarah and I flew into Lerwick, Shetland's mainland via Edinburgh, Scotland. Next, we got a PCR test for Covid (Think Positive Test Negative). The Shetland Isles are located in the North Atlantic, closer to Norway than to Aberdeen. Go Vikings! At first I thought Fair Isle was the Faroe Islands (that's Danish and in the sub Arctic Circle).

COVID Testing in Lerwick
Getting PCR tested in Lerwick - pandemic travel protocols
Day 2

πŸ›©️ The Puddle Jumper Experience

Thankfully, our flight link was not cancelled due to fog, wind or just plain bad weather. The 20-minute straight run aboard a 7-seater fixed-wing plane from the mainland of Shetland - a twin engine prop plane, heart-in-the-mouth flight, up-close and personal with the pilot and his control dashboard. We followed-on to Fair Isle, population 55, now 57! What a place to self-isolate during the global pandemic!

Fair Isle Landing
Landing on Fair Isle - walking into a painting
Week 1

🎨 Walking Into a Painting

It feels like we are walking into a painting. Think Norway meets Hawaiian islands and Father Time and Mother Nature have a field day. No man is an island, as John Donne wrote, but north of the border, you can live on one. Scotland's Shetland's is good like that. It feels like we are moving through paintings as the ever-changing weather lights the landscape in unique and splendid ways.

Sarah on Fair Isle
Sarah exploring the dramatic Fair Isle landscape
Daily Life

πŸ”‹ Living Off The Grid

Fair Isle is not connected to the National Grid. Energy is generated on the island by the Fair Isle Electricity Company (FIEC) using wind turbines and solar, stored in a battery backup system. We brought torches (flashlights), as there is zero light pollution or street lights. Living off the grid and living on the edges - this is what true remoteness feels like.

Fair Isle Wind Turbines
Wind turbines and solar power - completely off the National Grid
Exploration

πŸ—Ό South Lighthouse Discovery

We discovered the South Lighthouse - Josie and Dave's place. These historic lighthouses have guided ships through these treacherous waters for generations. The lighthouse keepers and their families form the backbone of Fair Isle's small but resilient community. Every building, every person has a story that connects to the island's maritime heritage.

South Lighthouse
South Lighthouse - Josie and Dave's place
Extended Stay

🀝 Becoming Islanders

Thanks to the popularity of the TV Series Shetland, we had it on our radar as places to visit this year. But visiting became living, observing became participating. In a community of 55 people, every person matters, every contribution counts. We became part of the fabric of Fair Isle life, understanding what it truly means to live at the edge of the world.

Ed and Sarah 2020 Pandemic Travel
Ed and Sarah - 2020 Pandemic Travel to Britain's Most Remote Island
Fair Isle taught us that the most remote places on Earth often hold the most profound connections - to nature, to community, and to ourselves. In a world of 7 billion people, sometimes you need to find a place with just 55 to remember what truly matters.

Ready for Your Own Remote Adventure?

Where Scotland meets Scandinavia and the North Sea meets the Atlantic Ocean, extraordinary journeys await those brave enough to venture to the edge of the world. Fair Isle is calling - will you answer?

"Some places change you not by what they show you, but by what they strip away - until only what matters most remains."

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