Whatever the pace you want to set for your holiday we have inspiration for what to do.

From Quad bikes and Trike Tours, to golf and fishing. From nights out and shopping in Edinburgh to beach walking and picnics.

Things To Do
  • For all the family

    We boast five of Scotland’s six ‘Blue Flag Beaches’ and plenty of other award winning beaches as well.

    Other Fun Attractions To Have A Look At Are:

    Please click on the links below:

    St Andrews Aquarium

    Boat trips to the Isle of May

    Golf Courses

    Golf Tuition

    Watersports / Bicycle Hire

    Fishing

    Indoor Karting

    Scotland’s Secret Bunker

     

  • Local Golf Courses

    Welcome To The Kingdom of Golf!

    St. Andrews and the surrounding area has been referred to as ’A GOLF THEME PARK’. We boast some of the best Links Courses in the U.K. There are Parkland courses as well. Courses to suit all abilities.

    1) The Old Course, St Andrews

    It all started around 1400AD and six centuries later the Old Course will host its 27th Open (not the British Open as BskyB would have it) – it’s THE Open, in 2005. You’ll need a handicap certificate (max 24 for men, 36 for women), £110 (£50 in winter) and a bit of luck to be successful in the daily ballot.

    2) The New Course, St Andrews

    It’s new but only in comparison to the Old as it was laid out in 1895. Owing to its undulating terrain it’s generally regarded as a tougher challenge than the Old. Green fee £55.

    3) Jubilee Course, St Andrews

    Two years younger than the New, the Jubilee, opened in honour of Queen Victoria’s Silver Jubilee in 1897, is right next to the sea and, being partly laid out on the sand dunes, is the roughest of the 3 championship courses Hosts the amateur Championship in 2004. Green fee £50

    4) Eden Course, St Andrews

    Designed by the legendary Harry S Colt and opened at the start of the Great War, the Eden has the most testing undulating greens of all the links courses. Green fee £30

    5) The Castle Course, St Andrews

    Following the coastline east of St Andrews, The Castle Course is two miles from the town centre. Work on the ground began early in 2005.
    The designer, David McLay Kidd, creator of Bandon Dunes on the West Coast of America, has created a typical Scottish golf experience. Each hole has a choice of five tees and the course will be playable between about 5300-7200 yards.
    There is also a clubhouse warm-up area and practice putting green.

    6) The Torrance and Devlin Courses, St Andrews

    The Torrance is a championship links course while the Devlin is built on top of cliffs. Both were co-designed by the late Gene Sarazen and the dramatic terrain makes them probably the most visually stunning courses in this part of the world. Green fees are £70 for the Torrance and £80 for the Devlin. They also offer a great fourball deal (£99) until the end of March.

    7) Dukes Course, St Andrews

    Designed by 5 times Open Champion, Peter Thomson and run by the Old Course Hotel Golf Resort, the Duke’s championship course is set on a hill above the town, enjoying panoramic views of the town , the bay and the Angus coastline up to Carnoustie and Arbroath. Green fee £30 (fairway mats) until the end of March, rising to £75 in high season.

    8) Strathtyrum Course, St Andrews

    It opened in 1993 and although it’s built on sand, it’s essentially a parkland course. Green fee £20

    9) Kingsbarns Golf Links

    The championship course opened in 2000 and is similar in style and challenge to the

    European in Ireland. Scene of my personal Waterloo when on my first outing with St Andrews GC I amassed a grand total 13 Stableford points. Green fee about £135

    10) Crail Golfing Society

    The 7th oldest golf club in the world has two courses; the Balcomie laid out in 1895 by Old Tom Morris and incorporating the original 8 holes laid out in 1786; and the newer Craighead with USGA spec greens. Fabulous location at Fife Ness with sea views at every hole and serious risk of OB into the sea at several. Green fee from £35. (winter rate £20 until 31st March).

    11) Charleton Golf Course

    Privately owned pay and play parkland course with great views over the firth.. Popular with tourists and golfing societies. Green fee from about £25.

    12) Anstruther Golf Course

    Fun 9 hole course running along the sea between Anstruther and Pittenweem. Green fee for 9/18 holes £10/£14 weekday and £12/£16 at weekends.

    13) Elie Golf House Club

    Ancient course laid out in the 16th century but they didn’t get round to forming a club until the 1870s. Green fee £40, £50 at weekends. Incredible views.

    14) Dumbarnie Links

    At an investment of around £11 million, Dumbarnie Links is the newest addition to the Scottish premium golf scene, and opened on 16th May 2020. Laid out across 350 acres, and designed by Mr Clive Clark, this is a par 72 with five different sets of tee options. The Green Fee is £235. Fife residents will pay £94, and those affiliated to Scottish Golf will pay £115.

    15) Lundin Golf Club
    The most southerly of the East Neuk courses. Voted one of the top UK links courses by Golf Monthly and used as a qualifier for the Open. Green fee £15 until mid March (fairway mats)High season rate expected to be £40 weekdays and £50 weekends

     

  • Shopping and more...

    If you enjoy shopping then Edinburgh is just a 40 minute drive and boasts some of the finest shopping experiences in the UK. Harvey Nichols has a fab restaurant on the top floor overlooking Princes Street in Edinburgh.

    All shops are within walking distance of each other interspersed with plenty of restaurants, bistros, coffee shops and bars.

    For the less hardy there is St. Andrews which also has some lovely shops.

    Finish the day off with a trip to the theatre and dinner.

    Also there are many art galleries, museums and theatres to choose from.

    There are also plenty of outdoor activities with the Fife Coastal Path being a great way to visit the East Neuk’s fishing villages.

  • The Great Outdoors

    We have an abundance of energetic activities for you to sample in the area. They are all within a short drive of your accommodation.

    Please click on the links below:

    Archery / Clay Pigeon Shooting

    Flying Lessons

    Sailing / Windsurfing / Waterskiing / Inflatable Rides

    Orienteering

    Abseiling / Canoeing / Kayaking

     

     

  • Things to do for Free

    Twenty one things to do for buttons or even for free in the East Neuk

    1) Watch the fishing boats leave from Pittenweem harbour, or watch them return and land their catch.

    2) Visit the walled organic garden at Kellie Castle.

    3) Spend the day in Tentsmuir Nature Reserve and Sands. Take bicycles and barbecue makings or picnic hamper/coolbox.

    4) On alternative Thursdays and Fridays pick up a bargain at Macgregors Auction in St Andrews (Thursdays for bric-a-brac, ceramics, pictures, boxed lots, Friday for furniture).

    5) Stand behind the 18th Green and 1st tee at the Old Course and jeer at the poor unfortunate whose golfing career has been leading up to this moment and who then makes a complete cods of the first drive and clap appreciatively for any good drives or chips landing on the green at the 18th. When you are tired of this (or if the unfortunate becomes threatening), go play the Himalayas, the 18 hole putting green next to the R & A (70p).

    6) Walk around the East Neuk villages, taking in Pittenweem’s Wynds, St Fillan’s cave, Crail Harbour, the village and loch at Kilconquhar and St Monans Kirk and windmill.

    7) Walk part of the Fife Coastal path every day.

    8) Do the Chain Walk south of Earlsferry.

    9) Go to the Crail Car Boot Sale (alternate Sundays).

    10) Visit a museum with free entry – Crail Museum and Heritage Centre, St Monans Heritage Museum, St Andrews Museum and St Andrews Preservation Trust and Garden.

    11) Visit the spot where 24 year old student, Patrick Hamilton, was burnt at the stake in November 1528. Apparenbtly he’d gone off to Germany for his third year and came back worried about his ’kreishlauf’, demanding a ’Platz an der sonne’ and spouting National

    Socialist propaganda. They knew a thing or two about how to deal with bolshie students in those days.

    12) Admire the aeronautic skills of the fulmar as they swoop across the cliffs behind St Andrews cathedral then (on Sunday) to the pier walk. Wear a red cloak if you want to be taken for a student.

    13) Visit an art gallery – many in Pittenweem, Crail or St Andrews

    14) Visit Crail Pottery.

    15) Get a copy of the weekly ’What’s On’ guide from any of the Tourist Information Centres and do something unusual like going to an inaugural lecture by a University Professor.

    16) Do a trawl of St Andrews classy charity shops (located in South St., Bell St and Greyfriars Garden).

    17) Go to Dunino Church, go through the blue gate at the side of the church and enter the mystical dell – dependent on your mood, it’s somewhere between the Hobbit and the Blair Witch Project.

    18) Look in estate agents windows and marvel at the high cost of property in the East Neuk.

    19) Go the Cellar Bar at Aikmans and listen to some live rock or folk (join in if yu brought an instrument as Tuesdays are folk sessions).

    20) Go to magus Muir and stand at the spot where Archbishop Sharp was murdered in front of his daughter Isabel in May 1679 and a few yards away visit the gravestone of the Covenanters dispatched 6 months later in a revenge execution.

    21) Go the Lower Largo and see the house where Alexander Selkirk, who was marooned on an island off Chile for 4 years, was born. Selkirk was the inspiration for Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe. Then lunch at the Robinson Crusoe pub.

  • 21 things to do

    Twenty one things to do for money in the East Neuk

    1) Visit the Isle of May on board the May Princess. Take binoculars as the island is a breeding ground for puffins, guillemots and razorbills. You’ll also see plenty of grey seals which pup here in October.

    2) Do some form of watersports in Elie or St Andrews (East Sands).

    3) Take in some live theatre at the Byre in St Andrews.

    4) Find something you’d like to see at the New Picture House Cinema in St Andrews (3 screens).

    5) Too cool for swimming? Visit the East Sands Leisure Centre in St Andrws or if you want waves and rapids then go to the Olympia Centre in Dundee.

    6) Go into the ballot for a round on the Old Course.

    7) Do the historical walking tour of St Andrews town and university.

    8) Do the historical open top bus tour of St Andrews town and University if your feet are killing you or you’re just feeling lazy.

    9) Spend an hour at the Secret Bunker. Maggie had her nuclear des res in a hole at Box near Bath. This places was where the Scots powers that be were going to scurry when the balloon went up. From here they would be in a position to offer helpful advice to their fellow countrymen on matters such as how to build your personal nuclear shelter under the stairs using cardboard cartons.

    10) Go for lunch at the Links Clubhouse in St Andrews. Try to grap the corner table which gives a great view of the 18th green of the New Course.

    1) Go horseriding in Tentsmuir Forest.

    12) Buy a kite from Wind & Water and fly it on the West Sands.

    13) Visit a museum – there’s the Scottish Fisheries Museum in Anstruther, and the British Golf Museum in St Andrews.

    14) Go down the mines and counter-mines, early examples of siege techniques at St Andrews Castle.

    15) Take the kids to Craigtoun Country Park for a fabulous day out with adventure playground, trampolines, miniature railway, aviary, putting, crazy golf, boating and the like. Entrance ticket pays for all facilities.

    16) Visit Deep Sea World in North Queensferry.

    17) Visit Sensation – Scientific discovery Centre in Dundee. Kids won’t want to leave.

    18) Visit Discovery Point in Dundee where Captain Scott’s famous polar exploration ship, Discovery, returned home. Then go over the road and have lunch in the Jute Café Bar at the DCA (Dundee Contemporary Arts).

    19) Visit the Scottish Deer Centre and feed the beasts by hand, watch the wolves being fed (not by hand) and be amazed by the falconry displays.

    20) Spend time wandering around the St Andrews Botanic Garden.

    21) Enjoy some light exercise at Elie Sports Club where golf (ideal for juniors, seniors and improvers), driving range, putting, tennis and bowling are on offer.

  • Trike Tours

    Premium Chauffeur Driven Trike Tours available 1600cc as per Billy Connolly tour

    Trike Tours Scotland give you one of the hippest ways to see the famously breathtaking scenery Scotland has on offer.

    Our trips bring you closer to the mountains, Lochs and Glens of the Highlands via Perthshire, Stirling & the Trossachs National Park, Loch Lomond, Inverness and Mull.

    We also bring you a fabulous city tour of Edinburgh our nation’s capital, with a whirl round the historic Grassmarket and onto the famous volcanic plug ‘Arthur’s Seat’.

    Our trikes have a 1600cc muscle engine, this will definitely put the ‘R back in to Roar’.

    Please click on the links below:

    Trike Tours