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We can help you book your perfect break to Tresco. We all live here, so it's our specialist subject!

Call us on +44 (0)1720 422 849 or email us.

By Helicopter - Direct to Tresco

By Helicopter - Direct to Tresco

Fly direct to Tresco with Penzance Helicopters - making the flight to the Isles of Scilly as memorable as the destination

Before you Arrive

Before you Arrive

Our pre-arrival checklist - from letting us know your travel plans to ordering your wine and groceries

Tresco Islandshare

Tresco Islandshare

Own a piece of this unique island, with 40 years of holidays on Tresco as more than just a visitor. Discover Islandshares for sale...

Tresco Offers & Breaks

Tresco Offers & Breaks

From seasonal escapes to wellness and creative breaks and last-minute offers, discover our latest offers & breaks on Tresco Island

Eating

Eating

From beachfront dining to our cosy inn, get a taste for island-inspired dining with a Tresco twist

Grocery

Grocery

Place a pre-arrival grocery order and we'll deliver to your accommodation on your arrival

Events & Experiences

Events & Experiences

From the Low Tide Event to live music, Abbey Garden Theatre and more, discover extraordinary events on the Isles of Scilly

Day Trips to Tresco

Day Trips to Tresco

Whether you're coming from elsewhere on Scilly, or further afield in Devon or Cornwall, a day trip to Tresco is the perfect day out

Pit-Fired Pottery by Fiona Hufton

By day, Fiona Hufton works in Tresco’s busy accounts department. But by night, you’ll find her at an unusual and rather exciting fireside…

“My day job is in accounts, so it’s very methodical and quite prescribed; with numbers, there’s always a correct answer. In contrast to that, the pottery is very random!”

Fiona Hufton is in her fourth year on Tresco and describes the island as “an amazing place to live”. Though she works in accounts now, she originally went to art college and spent 15 years as a potter’s technician.

During any downtime, Fiona was given her chance at the wheel. “I’d start with about 20 balls of clay and try to throw a straight cylinder. I’d be quite proud of them, and the potter would come along and squash them one by one, going, ‘Nope, nope, nope – you can keep that one.’ He was such a great teacher. I hadn’t realised how much I’d learned until I came back to doing pottery.”

However, when she became a single parent, Fiona decided she needed a “proper job”, training as an accountant. This career has taken her to many different locations and, ultimately, to Tresco. But the fortuitous arrival of a potter’s wheel really set her creative wheels in motion once again.

Now, working in her quayside studio – where she’s perfectly placed to observe its comings and goings – Fiona creates pottery for sale through Gallery Tresco and the island’s Makers Market.

When it comes to her creative work, her sense of fun is evident. She has a kiln, but also works with a fire pit, replicating a traditional form of pottery that’s been dated back to around 3,500 BC. It’s a process that’s not without its quirks, however.

“They used to explode a lot! Anna at the gallery would ask, ‘Why do you keep doing this?’ and I’d say, ‘Because there is a way to make it work! I will find it!’ These days, it seems to be more successful.”

Living and working on Tresco has a clear impact on Fiona’s craft. In a place where everything has to be brought in by boat, and waste taken back off again, the community has learned to be resourceful. None more so than Fiona. Wood offcuts, old storage heater bricks, laundry powder buckets – all have found a second purpose.

“I’m a proper scavenger! We have to send all the broken electrical things off-island, so I go down with a pair of secateurs and cut the flex off them, then strip this down to copper wire that I can wrap around the pots.” This she does to create interesting colour effects; copper normally causes things to turn green, but because oxygen is stolen in the pit, the wire instead leaves a band of “copper red”.

The weather is another factor – at the mercy of boat sailings, Fiona’s clay has to be ordered well in advance for winter – as is the island power supply, which curiously means that her kiln can’t reach the high temperatures required to produce the colour purple. But Fiona wouldn’t have it any other way.

“When I’m at the wheel, I completely lose myself to what I’m doing. It’s a huge meditation for me. You forget everything else, and get zoned in. If, at the end of it, I produce something I’m proud of, that’s even better.”

Stay on Tresco

Winter and Festive breaks are not always available to book online - for cottage stays or New Inn breaks over the winter months please go to Winter on Tresco or call 01720 422849.

Or call +44 (0)1720 422 849