WHERE LEGEND IS WRITTEN IN LAND AND WATER
the story of borradill
A thousand years ago, a Viking prince was brought home by boat.
He was called Borradill.
Seven feet tall.
Killed on Morvern by the Celtic warrior Somerled. His body was buried on the moor above the cabins.
Which mound marks his grave is still debated. A burial mound? A standing stone?
No one knows for sure.
You are invited to wonder…
HOW THE CABINS CAME TO BE HERE
The Highlands have a long tradition of prefabricated buildings.
Short building seasons and remote landscapes shaped a practical approach: buildings made elsewhere, then transported north – low-impact, efficient, and respectful of land and materials.
The cabins at Borradill continue this tradition.
Crafted in Sweden and brought here by sea and road – echoing the journey of the Viking prince Borradill – they draw on Sweden’s deep heritage of timber construction and skilled craft. Inside, this northern craftsmanship meets the simplicity of traditional Highland bothies.
The result is a Scandi-Hebridean style:
thoughtfully made, sustainable by design,
and rooted in craftsmanship and place.
The Norse settlers lived by the elements.
Cold water.
Fire.
Breath.
Ritual.
Plunges into frigid seas.
Fires lit on the shore.
Birch tapping and chanting in between.
Wellness was not an indulgence – it was a way of life. At Borradill, this continues.
Fires burn indoors and out.
Wood baskets are provided for beach fires after icy swims.
Kelp baths are available for guests.
Simple rituals. Deeply restorative.
viking wellness
The Norse were not the beginning of the story here.
Across Loch Sunart, the small islands visible from Borradill hold evidence of human life over 6,000 years old — traces of ritual, gathering, and early community.
Standing stones.
Viking sites.
Layer upon layer of Highland history.
As Scottish writer Naomi Mitchison wrote of the West Coast:
“Here the past is not dead. It is not even past.”
From Borradill, looking towards the conservation island of Càrna and across to Morvern, the land appears much as it always has – open, elemental, unchanged.
an ancient land
generations of creators
For centuries, the West Coast of Scotland has drawn artists, writers, and thinkers.
Darwin, Ruskin, Turner, Mendelssohn, Coleridge.
Many first encountered this landscape in childhood — and returned to it again and again in imagination.
The tradition continues.
Katherine Rundell’s Impossible Creatures.
Cressida Cowell’s How to Train Your Dragon.
Stories shaped by island summers and wild coastlines.
Borradill belongs to this lineage.
Join the tradition.
the next 100 years .
woodland restoration
Borradill sits within 25 acres of woodland.
Within it lies a rare fragment of Ancient Celtic Rainforest — one of the UK’s most precious habitats.
Once widespread along the West Coast, this rainforest now survives only in small remnants. Ardnamurchan and Morvern are among its final strongholds.
Our intention is long-term and patient.
To restore indigenous woodland.
To remove commercial planting over time.
To manage invasive rhododendron.
To allow native oak, hazel, and birch to return.
This work is measured in decades, not years.
A commitment to stewardship.
To restoration.
To the next hundred years…
Four seasons of inspiration, adventure, renewal and rest.
Join the tradition.
Discover the West Coast of Scotland at Borradill.