Leyline Travel’s upcoming journeys are not scheduled trips, they are carefully curated pilgrimages, each designed in conversation with the land, the lineage, and the readiness of the group.
Leyline Travel journeys to global energy points; cathedrals, stone circles, pyramids, mountains, and vortex sites. Here, spiritual practice feels amplified, synchronicities increase, and inner shifts become tangible.
Each pilgrimage blends meditation, energy healing, and sacred sound toning. Since each of our journeys are limited in size, you have time for inner reflection at sacred sites. We often book private viewings to allow time and space for reflection, journaling and integration so insights can become embodied change.
Below you’ll find the journeys currently open or preparing to open. Additional destinations are shaped through listening to the Earth, to timing, and to the collective call.
September 10-24th, 2026
Hear the bodhrán drums and bagpipes echo through the Highlands, rolling down the glens and out across the misty isles of Scotland, calling your spirit home to the old songs of the land.
Let’s spend 14 days, walking, ferrying and journeying through Scotland’s most powerful ceremonial landscapes, stone circles, islands, monasteries, and ancestral sites shaped by centuries of devotion and ritual.
Guided by Abby Lynn and Maher Hagagg, this journey is designed for those drawn to depth rather than spectacle. Days unfold through a careful balance of movement and stillness, sacred sound and historical context, shared experience and personal integration.
Participants are invited into quiet listening, embodied presence, and reflection as the journey progresses through Scotland’s elemental terrain. This is a journey of remembrance, offering space for insight, reconnection, and a deeper relationship with self and lineage.
May 2027
Connect with the Oracles! An immersive journey through ancient temples, mythic landscapes, and island sanctuaries. This pilgrimage explores Greece as a living archive of philosophy, myth, and embodied knowledge, where sacred sites were designed not only for worship, but for transformation through beauty, proportion, and presence.
Moving between land and sea, the journey invites participants to experience history as something felt and lived rather than observed from a distance. This pilgrimage supports reflection on archetype, meaning, and the enduring dialogue between place and human consciousness.