Episodes

  • Beyond the Royal Mile: Edinburgh's Hidden Gems That Insiders Actually Visit
    May 3 2026
    If your Edinburgh itinerary starts and ends on the Royal Mile, you're seeing only half the city. This episode opens with a sharp lesson from two Strictly Come Dancing professionals — Gorka Marquez and Julian Caillon — who skipped the castle crowds entirely and queued at Lannan Bakery in Stockbridge instead. That choice tells you everything about where Edinburgh's real culture lives.

    Lannan Bakery opened in 2023, went globally viral within months, and now enforces a two-pastry-per-person limit just to manage demand. It sits a ten-minute walk from the city centre in Stockbridge — a neighbourhood most first-time visitors never reach. This episode explains why that gap exists, and how to close it.

    Beyond the bakery, three significant developments shape Edinburgh this week. Palestine Museum Scotland marked its one-year anniversary on 2 May — a volunteer-run institution in a Georgian New Town townhouse that has become the only museum of its kind in Europe. Its cultural reach now extends to the Venice Biennale, where Palestine Museum US is presenting Gaza – No Words, featuring five and a half million embroidered stitches, through November. Dundas Street is worth your afternoon.

    Also launching this week: Beltane Fire Festival, the Celtic fire celebration on Calton Hill that marks the true opening of Edinburgh's outdoor cultural season. If you're timing a visit, the city's summer schedule is now active.

    Taken together — a viral neighbourhood bakery, a grassroots museum with international reach, and a fire festival reopening the summer calendar — this episode maps the Edinburgh that locals actually inhabit. Essential listening before your first day in the city.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    6 mins
  • Beltane, Britannia & Edinburgh's Best Views: Don't Miss What Locals Know
    May 2 2026
    If you visited Edinburgh last week without knowing Beltane was happening on Calton Hill, this episode was made for you. Ten thousand people, fire rituals rooted in Iron Age Celtic tradition, a May Queen, a Green Man, and theatrical pageantry that rivals any ticketed event in Europe — all for twenty-five pounds, every first of May. Miss it by a week and it's gone until next year. That single piece of timing intelligence is the difference between an ordinary Edinburgh trip and one you'll talk about for years.

    This episode also covers the Royal Yacht Britannia's newly earned TripAdvisor Best of the Best award — and why it quietly outranks Edinburgh Castle in visitor satisfaction. Five decks, royal apartments, a 42-language audio guide, a VR component, and a guest list that includes Churchill, Eisenhower, and Sinatra across nearly a thousand state visits. It's an attraction that rewards visitors who look past the obvious.

    For timeless picks, this episode recommends four Edinburgh essentials: the Oxford Bar on Young Street — Ian Rankin's Rebus local, no frills, pure Edinburgh character; the Writers' Museum near the Royal Mile, a free and intimate look at Scott, Burns, and Stevenson; Calton Hill itself, a fifteen-minute walk from Princes Street with arguably the best panoramic view in the city; and the underrated Inverleith Park, offering open green space with unobstructed skyline views toward the castle.

    The consistent thread: Edinburgh's best experiences reward timing and planning. This episode gives you the framework — whether you're visiting next week or building your itinerary months out.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    7 mins
  • Beyond the Royal Mile: Edinburgh's Hidden Gems, Best Pubs & Secret Viewpoints
    Apr 30 2026
    Most first-time visitors to Edinburgh follow the same route: castle to Holyrood, Royal Mile in between, done. But the real Edinburgh is layered, strange, and full of corners that most people walk straight past. This episode is your corrective — a guide to the city worth finding.

    On the current events front, two unmissable anchors define Edinburgh's summer calendar. The Edinburgh Jazz and Blues Festival runs 17–26 July, with over a hundred concerts, outdoor stages on the Grassmarket, and the Edinburgh Festival Carnival on 19 July — one of the most energetic weeks the city produces all year. Then the Edinburgh Art Festival fills the city from 14–30 August with gallery shows, outdoor installations, and major institution programming. Together, they make Edinburgh's summer one of the strongest in Europe.

    For timeless picks, this episode covers four essentials. Victoria Street — Edinburgh's famous curved, colourful street — earns its reputation, especially on a quiet midweek morning. Calton Hill delivers a panoramic view over Princes Street, the castle, and the Firth of Forth in about ten minutes of walking, with the unfinished National Monument adding genuine drama. The Bow Bar on West Bow is the antidote to tourist pubs: cask ales, a deep whisky list, and an interior that hasn't been renovated into blandness. The Museum of Edinburgh on the Canongate is free, set in a sixteenth-century building, and tells the city's story with real depth. And Greyfriars Kirkyard — beyond the famous Bobby statue — holds some of the finest Baroque funerary carving in Scotland and one of Edinburgh's darkest historical chapters.

    This is Edinburgh at its best. Start here.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    6 mins