Ardenbeg Bunkhouse & Outdoor Centre
The centre is open to everyone, whether touring Scotland or participating in a course and is ideal for individuals, families and groups. The purpose built bunkhouse is located in the scenic Spey Valley in the Highland town of Grantown-on-Spey. The centre is an ideal base for all outdoor activities - close to the stunning Cairngorm mountains which offer skiing, snowboarding, winter and summer mountaineering, a short distance from numerous forest tracks for mountain biking and rambling and just a mile from the River Spey which is excellent for canoeing, kayaking and fishing and walking
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Grantown Bunkhouse
Grantown bunkhouse is a traditional stone croft set in a peaceful location. It has one large bedroom with five bunkbeds which can sleep 10 people. It has one bathroom with shower toilet sink and a seperate bathroom with toilet and sink. It has a kitchen sitting area with cooker fridge and table. There is a woodburning stove outside garden with bbq and area for campfire. Food can be orderd from glenbeg house internet access drying room can also be used in the house. We are also a small outdoor centre so lessons can be booked in climbing archery kayaking and lots of other
sports ...
Grantown-on-Spey is a town in the Highland Council Area in Scotland. It was founded in 1765 as a planned settlement on a low plateau at Freuchie beside the river Spey at the northern edge of the Cairngorm mountains, about twenty miles south east of Inverness.
It is the main town in what was the ecclesiastical (and later civil) parish of "Cromdale, Inverallan and Advie" formed by the union of the same-named parishes in the 16th century. It was formerly in the county of Moray, until the 1860s being partly within a detached portion of Inverness-shire. From 1898 to 1975 it was a burgh in Morayshire before being subsumed into the Badenoch and Strathspey district of the Highland Region until District and Regions were abolished in 1996. Originally simply "Grantown" (after Sir James Grant), the addition of "on Spey" was one of the first actions of the newly-created burgh in 1898.