Good places in England to go for a weekend, near the sea

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Just don't order a taxi whatever you do

tom d: he did what he had to do now he is dead (Tom D.), Tuesday, 20 July 2010 13:36 (fifteen years ago)

oooooooooooooooooooo

Everytime I hit 'submit post' the internet gets dumber (darraghmac), Tuesday, 20 July 2010 13:37 (fifteen years ago)

Oh, and Lulworth Cove is glorious of course, though pretty full even off season.

ithappens, Tuesday, 20 July 2010 13:37 (fifteen years ago)

this is a timely thread for me - i'm trying to arrange a seaside weekend for a group of dudes, one of whom may or may not be getting married shortly after. i'm struggling not to use the S word, here. can anyone suggest a good seaside town with a few decent pubs and some surfy/outdoorsy-activity potential? somewhere that isn't Newquay, preferably.

Woolacombe was my first thought, but i'm struggling to get the accomodation. what's Croyde like?

gnarly sceptre, Tuesday, 20 July 2010 13:49 (fifteen years ago)

Went on a stag weekend to Croyde about four years ago. The place we stayed was ideal as it was detached from the main pub/B&B, they didn't have to suffer the 'high sprits' of our group. I think it was called the Thatched Barn, from looking at google maps, I can't remember a great deal. It was a fairly short walk from the beach (can't remember that either). The locals were fairly accommodating, they put up with us which was very nice of them.

mmmm, Tuesday, 20 July 2010 14:30 (fifteen years ago)

is cromer staggable?

gnarly sceptre, Wednesday, 21 July 2010 11:41 (fifteen years ago)

Not been to Cromer. Anyone know if Brancaster on the Norfolk coast is nice? I'm going there soon.

mmmm, Wednesday, 21 July 2010 11:54 (fifteen years ago)

I am thinking about one of the following

Hunsanton . Aldeburgh . Southwold . Wells-next-the-Sea

cherry blossom, Wednesday, 21 July 2010 13:01 (fifteen years ago)

i like those north norfolk ones... when it's sunny. trying to remember which one i liked most. had kind of a crescent thing going on.

I’ll put you in a f *ckin Weingarten you c*nt! (history mayne), Wednesday, 21 July 2010 13:07 (fifteen years ago)

I've been to Hunstanton and liked it, but it's a real old-fashioned seaside resort: sticks of rock and Kiss Me Quick hats, and a splintering helter skelter. It's got nothing in common with Aldeburgh, Southwold or Wells-next-the-Sea. You will not get a good meal out in Hunstanton.

ithappens, Wednesday, 21 July 2010 13:10 (fifteen years ago)

I have visited Aldeburgh, Southwold and Wells-next-the-Sea. My top recommendations would be Southwold or Wells-next-the-Sea with the latter perhaps edging it. Southwold is very picturesque and fairly genteel. Wells-next-the-Sea is a bit rougher round the edges, as I recall, and has a lovely beach with sand dunes (this extends along to the beach at Holkham, which I also like). I didn't much like Aldeburgh - picturesque but a bit twee and characterless. I have only driven through Hunstanton so can't really comment on it.

dubmill, Wednesday, 21 July 2010 13:52 (fifteen years ago)

i think it's holkham i like. not really attached to a village iirc.

I’ll put you in a f *ckin Weingarten you c*nt! (history mayne), Wednesday, 21 July 2010 14:06 (fifteen years ago)

There is a very small village but it's a little bit inland and adjacent to Holkham Hall.

http://www.multimap.com/s/SlOvYCLW

dubmill, Wednesday, 21 July 2010 14:17 (fifteen years ago)

I quite love Aldeburgh but I've only ever gone there when there was something at the festival to see in the evening (as a twee teenager making daisy chains for b britten and p pears' graves) - I imagine it would get a bit wearying if you didn't have something to do.

Have done some awesome day-trip walks in the seven sisters country park - I second whoever recced Beachy Head, it's glorious (if sort of tainted by the suicide spot aspect).

b flat minor (c sharp major), Wednesday, 21 July 2010 14:18 (fifteen years ago)

I've been to Hunstanton or "Sunny Hunny". Had a pint in the Mariner's pub, not sure I'd eat there.

mmmm, Wednesday, 21 July 2010 16:53 (fifteen years ago)

four weeks pass...

admrl, this is the thread I was talking about. Lots of good advice on here IIRC.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 17:50 (fifteen years ago)

Also meant to say, about country retreats, if you don't mind self catering the National Trust does some excellent deals on short break cottages (which can mean anything from a medieval tithe barn to a wing of a mansion in Cornwall) - that might give you remoteness and quaintness but not sure about luxury, mind you.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 17:53 (fifteen years ago)

Thanks!

.. help? (admrl), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 18:00 (fifteen years ago)

I have to say I'm being tempted by Broadstairs, even though it scared someone on another thread!

.. help? (admrl), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 18:46 (fifteen years ago)

Ah, but that was Matt DC, he scares easily. Besides, he said up this thread that it was nice, so he's changed his tune. Clearly.

Broadstairs is really pretty and quaint - in a way that is really quite unspoiled for somewhere so close to London. The town curves around this little tiny bay - there's a big hotel called The Albion right in the centre, overlooking the beach, which is supposed to be really nice. I stayed in an itty bitty little fisherman's cottage called Barnaby's Lodge which was just perfect, it was literally a few steps from the big arch that lets out onto the seafront. Plus, lovely ice cream parlours up on the clifftop promenade. Fantastic sea walks in both directions, you can walk all the way to Ramsgate at low tide (I didn't quite get all the way to Margate going the other way because I was waylaid by that sea arch with the pub on top of it.)

I'd go there again myself! But, erm, I'm taking my mum back to Cornwall for my holiday.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 19:33 (fifteen years ago)

That sounds perfect!

.. help? (admrl), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 19:34 (fifteen years ago)

Rye in Sussex is nice and near Dungeness which is kind of unmissable imo.

Not been to Cromer. Anyone know if Brancaster on the Norfolk coast is nice? I'm going there soon

Cromer is like Hunstanton but more so. I love it but food v. hit and miss.

Brancaster lovely with good food at the White Horse (although even there it's hit and miss). Really if you're going to North Norfolk for food get fish and chips from Wells and sit on the harbour wall watching the crabbers. It's a cliche, but it's lovely.
(or get a coolbag to keep yr chips warm and drive down to the beach and sit on one of beach huts verandahs looking out to sea...classic)

Duncan Donuts (Ned Trifle II), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:03 (fifteen years ago)

Oh yeah, and we had a week in Southwold at the end of July (which is why I missed this thread I bet) and it was one of the best weeks I've had in the UK. Terrific food everywhere, lovely beer, house next to the beach, great pier. However I did hear a woman say "Are you going for a power walk later Samantha?" and a man say "It's a Chardonnay, but don't think of it as a Chardonnay", both v. loudly, so you know, that's the price you pay for having a decent deli...

Duncan Donuts (Ned Trifle II), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:09 (fifteen years ago)

Yes I wanna see Dungeness

Both of us went to UEA so Norfolk is maybe a little too familiar (though I would love to go back some time)

.. help? (admrl), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:10 (fifteen years ago)

arrrrgggh no chardonnay convos

.. help? (admrl), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:12 (fifteen years ago)

This thread is amazing to me. I've hardly heard of any of these places.

Ismael Klata, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:14 (fifteen years ago)

I probably need to do a revive of some "things to do in St. Ives with a 60-something mum in tow" thread at some point. I think we're missing the September Festival - or will be in town for only one day of it. Tate St.Ives is small, IIRC but there's still the Barbara Hepworth museum and you can't swing a cat without hitting some hippie artsy craftsy stuff or other. (The Shire Horse is long gone and closed so no rave pilgrimages I guess.)

Karen D. Tregaskin, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:19 (fifteen years ago)

amazed at the broadstairs love here but i suppose my views might be coloured by the fact it's the place the G family go to die

former moderator, please give generously (DG), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:22 (fifteen years ago)

Haha (sorry maybe that isn't funny)

.. help? (admrl), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:23 (fifteen years ago)

I am mystified at the state of the "domestic" "tourism" "industy" in the UK. Having spent so much time away there's so many places I am interested in seeing when I go back but nobody seems to know shit about them/ have much to say!

.. help? (admrl), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:23 (fifteen years ago)

Like, even when I want to drive out to Bumfuck, Arizona, I can find a friend with cool tips on things to see close by and some gem of a motel on Tripadvisor

.. help? (admrl), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:24 (fifteen years ago)

ilx does suffer a tad from london autism

former moderator, please give generously (DG), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:27 (fifteen years ago)

I will stan for the English seaside any day of the year.

It's probably just sheer perversity, given that half my family lives in glamourous locations known for their beaches, like California and South Africa, yet I persist in loving Broadstairs and Cornwall and Norfolk and even sodding Eastbourne because I've canonised mine own childhood memories.

Last week or the week before there was a whole Guardian Travel section about the British seaside which I read cover to cover, going "hrmmm, Lincolnshire... Skegness is so very bracing, must try it... oooh, Llandudno, I quite fancy walking around The Orme..." etc. etc.

I fully plan on going to die in Broadstairs (though I think former generations of Tregaskins used to have a habit of doing so on the Isle of Wight) so this is part of its appeal.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:28 (fifteen years ago)

"things to do in St. Ives with a 60-something mum in tow"

I do believe my 60-something mum went to St Ives last year, will try to remember to ask her what she liked next time I phone, though the answer will prob just be "pottering around"

vampire headphase (a passing spacecadet), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:31 (fifteen years ago)

we're on first name terms with the crematorium xp

anyway the ice cream place in broadstairs is Morelli's

former moderator, please give generously (DG), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:34 (fifteen years ago)

"things to do in St. Ives with a 60-something mum in tow"

Take your camera to the beach and take lots of photos cos the light is AMAZING and when the tide is just right, it looks like the sand all around is sealed under a thin veneer of glass. Take your walking boots, take the bus or something to witchy old Zennor and walk back along the coastal path. Lots of standing stones nearby if you're into that sort of thing. Get a seat outside the Sloop and watch tourists get mugged by the seagulls. Boat trips out to seal island or wherever. Eat pasties, drink beer and be merry.

Chaim Poutine (NickB), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:36 (fifteen years ago)

I am terrified that my mum is going to try to turn it into some kind of busman's holiday and potter round visiting every single church in the town and making the acquaintances of all the vicars.

OMG Morelli's, I had their Tiramisu ice cream om nom nom nom.

I took photos with my iPhone back in April during the 4 hours I was there, and they just came out *incredible* - I thought they were kidding on Coast about the quality of the light but they so weren't. I would be perfectly happy to sit around and sketch tin mines like I did last time but I think my mum would get bored. And thing is, standing stones and hiking around would be *brilliant* for me, but my mum's mobility is not great. Our cottage is, like 50 yards from the Sloop so that should be great.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:40 (fifteen years ago)

The Sloop is a bit shit really, but the location is great. The churches are alright, there's always the graveyards to have a bit of a wander around in. Oh, there's the Leach pottery too, amongst all the other studios.

Chaim Poutine (NickB), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:47 (fifteen years ago)

And yeah, if your mum's not that agile, don't take her on the coastal path cos it's pretty tricky in places.

Chaim Poutine (NickB), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:51 (fifteen years ago)

broadstairs' western esplanade on google street view looks like when you reach the edge of the map in a FPS game

former moderator, please give generously (DG), Wednesday, 18 August 2010 21:53 (fifteen years ago)

Yeah, I have walked enough of the coastal path to know that this is not something my mum could handle. She's getting shot up with steroids or something to make her more mobile before she travels but I'm aware that hiking is out of the question. This is why we are not staying in a miner's cottage on Carn Marth boo hoo ::sad Aphex Twin fan phace:: - but we did look at several villages for mobility options and even though St. Ives is hilly, it's quite compact - hence why I got a cottage 50 yards from the seafront.

Karen D. Tregaskin, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 22:00 (fifteen years ago)

Lots of great tips on this thread. In 8 years of living in England I've only been to Ilfracombe/Woolacombe and some of the North Norfolk coast (Brancaster/Burnhams/Wells) in terms of seaside holliers. Brighton is an obvious next destination but Southwold and Broadstairs are now also on the list.

seandalai, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 23:06 (fifteen years ago)

broadstairs' western esplanade on google street view looks like when you reach the edge of the map in a FPS game

Ha, so it does.

Coming from Herne Bay I am disappointed but unsurprised to see no mention of it alongside all these other north Kent coast towns.

if, Wednesday, 18 August 2010 23:11 (fifteen years ago)

eleven months pass...

Going to Broadstairs this weekend, just for a day, and I have a lazy question. If you were going to walk in one direction along the coast, which is better -- west to Thanet, or south to Deal? Thanks!

Chuck_Tatum, Friday, 12 August 2011 15:39 (fourteen years ago)

Better for what? For sea arches and beautiful beaches and stunning views? Probably head West.

If you want to walk to a destination eat a meal and come back, walk South/East along to Ramsgate, sit and have a nice meal overlooking the marina.

Aphex Twin … in my vagina? (Karen D. Tregaskin), Friday, 12 August 2011 15:46 (fourteen years ago)

blargh, directions are so confusing in that part of the country. I forget how it sticks out. For sea arches and views, turn left, towards Margate. For marina side dining, turn right towards Ramsgate.

Aphex Twin … in my vagina? (Karen D. Tregaskin), Friday, 12 August 2011 15:59 (fourteen years ago)

Got it. Thanks!

Chuck_Tatum, Friday, 12 August 2011 17:05 (fourteen years ago)

(Was looking for the sea arch direction, so that's great.)

Chuck_Tatum, Friday, 12 August 2011 17:07 (fourteen years ago)

That walk to Kingsgate Bay is great, lighthouses, sweeping vistas, castles (ancient and modern) AND a sea arch. And I forgot, there is actually a pub along that way, the Captain Digby, with amazing views. Highly recommend it, personally.

Aphex Twin … in my vagina? (Karen D. Tregaskin), Friday, 12 August 2011 17:09 (fourteen years ago)

Took the kids on a day trip to Broadstairs last week. Exciting news: it now has mobile phone reception. Not so exciting news: your mobile phone thinks it's in Belgium, so the roaming charges militate against using the phone.

Trudi Styler, the Creator (ithappens), Friday, 12 August 2011 17:13 (fourteen years ago)

haha i love the idea of a country slyly annexing territory via mobile phone reception

lex pretend, Friday, 12 August 2011 17:17 (fourteen years ago)

Damn. The utter lack of mobile reception in Broadstairs was an important plot point in a horror story I was writing... (though actually you always could get Ramsgate reception if you went up the ridge by the bandstand)

Aphex Twin … in my vagina? (Karen D. Tregaskin), Friday, 12 August 2011 17:19 (fourteen years ago)

Thanks for the recommendation! We made it past the Captain Digby, somehow. Enjoyed the more secluded parts of the walk; Margate also had more to it than I was expecting.

Chuck_Tatum, Monday, 15 August 2011 14:21 (fourteen years ago)

Coming from Herne Bay I am disappointed but unsurprised to see no mention of it alongside all these other north Kent coast towns.

spent a late autumn afternoon in 1998 staring out to sea there, then wandering around what seemed to be the ultimate dilapidated seaside town. It was the tired & melancholy tail of a fun holiday, and it seemed fortuitously suited to our mood. For all that I remember that day fondly, I've got no idea what it would be like to stay there, or visit it in season.

you don't exist in the database (woof), Monday, 15 August 2011 14:37 (fourteen years ago)

hope "Chuck_Tatum" liberated the viking boat and went on the fucking rampage

Once Were Moderators (DG), Monday, 15 August 2011 16:24 (fourteen years ago)

thirteen years pass...

I'm amazed I haven't contributed to this thread or the Kent one (thought prompted by checking ILXOR's coastal Kent recommendations).

djh, Monday, 2 September 2024 20:13 (one year ago)


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