Most visitors to the Isle of Skye follow the same path: the Old Man of Storr, the Quiraing, Kilt Rock. They drive past a small turning near Uig, miss a sign that barely mentions it, and never know what they’ve skipped. The Fairy Glen is one of the most surreal landscapes in all of Scotland — and it’s barely on the map.

A Valley That Stops People in Their Tracks
When you drop into the Fairy Glen for the first time, the effect is immediate. The land rolls in smooth green mounds, perfectly shaped, as if someone arranged them by hand. The hills look like something from a children’s book — too neat, too deliberate, too beautiful to be real.
But it is real. Every gentle slope, every winding path, every hummock of vivid grass is entirely natural.
The glen sits near the village of Uig, in the north of Skye, just off the main road. It takes ten minutes to reach from the ferry terminal. Most visitors heading to Portree or the Trotternish Peninsula drive straight past it.
The “Castle” That Was Never Built
The most striking feature of the Fairy Glen is a jagged rock formation at the far end of the valley. It rises from the hillside like the ruins of a medieval tower. Locals call it Castle Ewen.
It has no doors, no floors, no history of habitation. It was never built by human hands.
Castle Ewen is a volcanic basalt plug — a column of igneous rock pushed up through softer stone millions of years ago. The surrounding rock eroded away over time. What was left behind looks exactly like a ruined fortification.
Stand beneath it at sunset and it is almost impossible to convince yourself it’s natural.
The Stones Someone Left Behind
At the bottom of the glen, visitors have arranged small stones into spirals and circles over the years. Nobody organised this. Nobody planned it. It simply grew, one stone at a time, left by people who felt the landscape demanded some kind of response.
These arrangements are entirely modern. But they look ancient. And in the half-light of a Scottish evening, they feel like something far older than they are.
The Old Gaelic Stories
In Gaelic tradition, Scotland’s fairy folk — the sìth — lived inside hollow hills. They did not fly with wings or carry wands. They were dangerous, unpredictable, and utterly beautiful. Their world existed just beneath the surface of the human one.
The Fairy Glen looks exactly like the landscape those old stories described. Rolling hills with hidden interiors. Paths that seem to lead somewhere. The feeling, always, that something is just out of sight.
Nobody named the glen after the old legends because they believed in them. They named it because the place itself demands that kind of language.
When to Go — and How to Find It
The glen is at its best at sunrise and sunset. The low light catches the rolling hills and Castle Ewen in a way that flat daytime sun cannot replicate.
From Uig, take the single-track road towards Balnaknock. There is a small lay-by for parking. The walk into the glen takes about five minutes. Wear sturdy shoes — the grass can be slippery after rain.
There are no facilities, no café, no visitor centre. That is entirely the point.
If you’re exploring the north of Skye, the crystal pools beneath the Cuillin mountains are worth the detour. And if you’re planning a wider Scotland trip, our 7-day Scottish itinerary covers the island and much more.
Why It Stays With You
The Fairy Glen is not dramatic in the way the Highlands are dramatic. It won’t make you feel small. It will make you feel like you’ve walked into a memory you don’t quite have.
Visitors who find it tend not to rush. They sit on the hillsides. They trace the stone spirals with their eyes. They take photographs that never quite capture what it feels like to be there.
Scotland has no shortage of beautiful places. The Fairy Glen is something different: a beautiful place that doesn’t try to explain itself.
Come early. Come on a weekday. And take the turning near Uig that most people miss. You’ll understand, once you’re standing in the valley, exactly why it’s called what it’s called.
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