From Culross in
the South to Newburgh in the North of Fife.
Best B&B's & Self-Catering Holiday Accommodation in "The Kingdom of Fife"
Scotland.
Are you searching for that special
Scottish Bed and Breakfast or Self Catering holiday accommodation
in Fife ? Here, in "The Best Accommodation in Fife,
Scotland", you will discover Bed & Breakfasts and Self Catering
accommodation with reputations for great hospitality! (Staying in a B&B Explained) All our
B&B's and Self Catering accommodation are privately owned,
personally run businesses and are listed by invitation only; some
are quality assured by Visitscotland (the former Scottish Tourist
Board).
Find our B&B's & Self
Catering properties in: Culross, Carnock, Saline, Rosyth, Dunfermline,
Inverkeithing, North Queensferry, Dalgety Bay, Burntisland, Anstruther, Crail,
Cupar, Freuchie, Falkland, Newton of Falkland, Gateside, Radernie, Lindores,Strathmiglo,
Newburgh & St.
Andrews. Click
on the boxes to the left and locate the accommodation to suit your needs.
It's surprising that so many
visitors see only a glimpse of what Fife has to offer. Many come
just for the golf at St. Andrews and the other 50 or so courses in
the county, but miss the hidden gems of "The Kingdom that is
Fife".
In the south there's Culross a village maintained by the National Trust for
Scotland. It is as though it is caught in time where the 17th
Century Houses allow you a peek into the past.
Saline is a picturesque village with whitewashed houses; another pretty village
is Carnock on
the outskirts of Dunfermline. Once the Capitol of Scotland and the burial place
of the Kings and Queens of Scotland.
Dunfermline
is also birth place of the great industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie.
One of the great wonders of the industrial age is the Forth
Railway Bridge in North Queensferry, straddling the banks of
the Firth of Forth, connecting Fife to Edinburgh and beyond
Burntisland is a popular seaside town, once favourite with
Glaswegian workers and their families, further along the coast are
the picturesque East Neuk villages of Anstruther & Crail.
Onto St.
Andrews famous for its golf courses, but also for it's
University (Scotland's oldest), and Cathedral. which dates back to
Medieval times.
Formerly the County Administrative town, Cupar is
a thriving market town with easy access to all parts of Fife. South east
of Cupar lies the traditional village of Pitscottie &
Blebo Craigs Falkland is
famous for it's Royal Palace frequented by Mary Queen of Scots. Strathmiglo
lies on the upper
reaches of the river Eden, which flows through the village green.The river valley
is rich agricultural land, with the Lomond
Hills rising to 522 metres (1,706 feet) in the south and the eastern end
of the Ochil Hills in the north. It is three miles north-west of Falkland In the surrounding countryside there is evidence
of bronze age, iron age and Roman occupation.
Newburgh which
sits on the Firth of Tay looking North, is just 8 miles from Perth.