Glenthorne Guest House - Tenby - United Kingdom
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Glenthorne Guest House hotel city: Tenby - Country: United Kingdom
Address: 9 Deer Park, Tenby, Pembs; zip code: SA70 7LE
Featuring free WiFi throughout the property, Glenthorne Guest House offers accommodation in Tenby. Guests can enjoy the on-site bar. Private parking is available on site. All rooms have a flat-screen TV. You will find a kettle in the room.
-- Doté d'un bar, le Glenthorne Guest House propose un hébergement à Tenby. Vous pourrez profiter d'un parking privé sur place et d'une connexion Wi-Fi disponible gratuitement dans l'ensemble de l'établissement.
-- Die Unterkunft Glenthorne Guest House begrüßt Sie in Tenby mit kostenlosem WLAN in allen Bereichen und einer hauseigenen Bar. Die Privatparkplätze an der Unterkunft stehen Ihnen kostenlos zur Verfügung.
-- Glenthorne Guest House旅馆位于滕比(Tenby),提供覆盖各处的免费WiFi、内部酒吧和内部私人停车场。 所有客房均配有平板电视、水壶、免费洗浴用品以及吹风机。 Glenthorne Guest House旅馆距离滕比高尔夫俱乐部(Tenby Golf Club)仅有不到10分钟路程,距离Trefloyne Golf Course高尔夫球场2英里(3.2公里),距离最近的机场 - 加的夫机场(Cardiff Airport)仅90多英里(144公里)。
-- Гостевой дом Glenthorne расположен в городе Тенби. К услугам гостей бесплатный Wi-Fi. На территории работает бар и обустроена бесплатная частная парковка. В каждом номере есть чайник и телевизор с плоским экраном.
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British Seaside Special: Top 7 Reasons Why It's Just So Good To Be Beside The Sea
Head to Porthmeor Beach in St Ives, Cornwall, for clean air and shimmering sea and sand.
It’s hardly surprising that this is an award winner – and just for good measure the Tate Modern art gallery is just up the road for a dose of culture.
Along the south coast, Bournemouth revels in a microclimate with seven miles of glorious beach and some of the warmest sea temperatures in the UK.
A national treasure. Other countries may do it well, but Britain does it best and it’s the classic seaside treat with crisp golden batter, flaky white fish and fresh chunky chips doused in salt and vinegar.
From chic hotels to world-class sports and cultural facilities, there’s loads of super stuff beside the seaside.
Sumburgh Head Lighthouse in Shetland is a world-class tourist attraction, offering a range of indoor installations and spaces, where you can view cliffs teeming with wildlife.
Right at the other end of the country, Brighton’s new British Airways i360 tower is taking visitors 450ft above the seafront in its observation pod, which turns into a trendy bar at night.
Who wants boring old normal? Britain’s got some great quirky things to see by the sea.
The Shell Grotto in Margate, Kent, is certainly one of them. ‘Shellhenge’ is a 70ft-long passage decorated with 4.6 million shells which show mosaics of gods, patterns and symbols.
It was discovered in 1835 but nobody knows its age or purpose.
Ayrshire’s Electric Brae is on the A719, south of Dunure, and a legendary ‘gravity hill’ by the coast where cars appear to roll up a slope.
It’s an optical illusion and you really won’t believe your eyes.
Culture thrives by the coast and nowhere more so than the marvellous Minack Theatre at Porthcurno, Cornwall.
It’s an open-air auditorium on rocky outcrop above the sea and a unique theatrical experience where audiences soak up opera, dramas and musicals in the sunshine or under the stars.
Another Place at Crosby beach in Merseyside is an art installation by Angel of the North sculptor Antony Gormley, which consists of 100 cast-iron life-sized figures dotted around the wide sands, gazing out to Liverpool Bay, that are increasingly submerged as the tide comes in.
OK, we know the British weather doesn’t always play (beach) ball. Not a problem.There’s all sorts of under-cover action around the coast.
One of the best is Anglesey Sea Zoo, which displays the best of British marine wildlife, showcasing fascinating creatures, such as octopus, lobsters, seahorses, conger eels and catsharks.
If you like a good smuggling story, Gunsgreen House in Eyemouth, Berwickshire, is perfect.
Built with a plethora of fascinating secrets in the 1750s, it’s been described as a “splendid palace built by a smuggler”.
Don’t miss the unique ‘tea chute’, where smuggled tea was hidden from the prying eyes of the exciseman.
There’s probably a suitable place to stay at Britain’s seaside for everyone – friendly, great-value B&Bs, cool cottages, chic glamping, hip hotels and all sorts in between.
Pembrokeshire’s award-winning Trefloyne Manor is a magical boutique B&B just outside Tenby with an 18-hole golf course and in-room picnics.
The Blue Cabin by the Sea in Berwickshire is a cosy, hideaway cottage nestled in privately-owned Cove Harbour and is only accessible through a smuggling tunnel and across a beach by foot, or by sea. Worry not, it does have wi-fi!
For the Hang Ten types, how about the glamping Surf Pods in Bude, Cornwall?
The front of each pod opens up fully to look out onto perfectly manicured lawns, in the middle of 26 acres of farmland. Even if you don’t surf on the five beaches close by, they’re pretty cool.
For an upmarket seaside splurge, The Pig on the Beach at ¥Studland Bay in Dorset is a shabby-chic delight with uninterrupted views of the coast, a greenhouse restaurant, two treatment rooms and a menu which changes depending on what the forager finds or what’s in the kitchen garden.