A 48 Hour Guide to North Wales
North Wales should be on everyone's bucket list. Join @HavenHelen for a whirlwind tour of why North Wales is famous, as well as some hidden treasures.
Rhyl Tourist Attractions: 15 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Rhyl? Check out our Rhyl Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Rhyl.
Top Places to visit in Rhyl:
St. Margaret's Church, Bodelwyddan Castle & Park, Marine Lake, Rhyl Pavilion Theatre, SeaQuarium Rhyl, Brickfield Pond, Rhyl Town Hall, Botanical Gardens, Rhyl Events Arena, Pont-y-Ddraig Harbour Bridge, St. Thomas's Church, Marsh Tracks, Sussex Street Christian Centre, St. Mary's Church, Corbett Sports Stadium
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5 Reasons To Visit North East Wales
I give you 5 reasons why you should visit North East Wales in the United Kingdom. The things that surprised me, as I had not expected them, and make the area worth a trip. It has amazing natural beauty, World Heritage Site, Castles and Stately Houses, Beaches and heritage and unusual transport to try out. Find out all in the video. If you want to get more information about the area I recommend you visit: northeastwales.wales
Note: I travelled as a guest of the local tourist board
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Touring around the beaches in Wales, uk
Day 4 of 6 of our tour of the South Wales coastline
Places visited;
Tenby
Manorbier Beach
Freshwater East
Newgale
Solva
Caerfai Bay
Whitesands
Abereiddy Bay
Music;
Antarctica - Audionautrix – YouTube Audio Library
Clear Air – Somewhere Sunny - Kevin Macleod – YouTube Audio Library
Calypso Beach Walk - YouTube Audio Library
Redwood Trail - Audionautrix – YouTube Audio Library
8 Best Things To Do In North East Wales
Join me on a trip around North East Wales in the United Kingdom as I explore and reveal the 8 best things to do. I found amazing and epic scenery, fascinating and stunning waterways and canals, World Heritage Site, heritage steam railway, remarkable and historic castles and stately houses and spectacular beaches. In this video I talk about the 8 very best and must-do sights and attractions I recommend you do. If you want to get more information about the area I recommend you visit: northeastwales.wales
Every week Gary Bembridge's Tips For Travellers Channel posts a video to help you make the most of your precious travel time and money on both land and at sea. First-hand travel inspiration, advice and tips based on the over 20 years I have been travelling every month.
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Best places to visit
Best places to visit - Rhyl (United Kingdom) Best places to visit - Slideshows from all over the world - City trips, nature pictures, etc.
What to do and see in North Wales - Anglesey
Another video giving great ideas on what to do and see in North Wales! Here we visit Anglesey and venture to a beautiful lighthouse and then stop off at the village of Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch!!!
Music: Calm - Silent Partner
Places to see in ( Abergele - UK )
Places to see in ( Abergele - UK )
Abergele is a community and small market town, situated on the north coast of Wales between the holiday resorts of Colwyn Bay and Rhyl, in Conwy County Borough. Abergele northern suburb of Pensarn lies on the Irish Sea coast and is known for its beach, where it is claimed by some that a ghost ship has been sighted. Abergele and Pensarn railway station serves both resorts. Abergele is often overlooked due to the popularity of nearby Rhyl, Prestatyn, Colwyn Bay, Llandudno and Conwy.
The meaning of the name Abergele can be deduced by aber being the Welsh word for estuary, river mouth or confluence and 'Gele' the name of the river which flows through the town. Gele is a dialectal form of gelau, which means spear, describing the action of the river cutting through the land. It has also been suggested this river is named because its waters flash brightly.
The town itself lies on the A55 road and is known for Gwrych Castle. The town is surrounded by woodland covered hillsides, which contain caves with rare lesser horseshoe bat. The highest hill is Moelfre Isaf (1040 ft) to the south of the town. There are also outstanding views from Cefn-yr-Ogof (669 ft), Tower Hill (587 ft) and Castell Cawr (known locally as Tan-y-Gopa) which is 189 metres (620 feet). Castell Cawr is an Iron age hillfort, one of several in the area. Dinorben hillfort to the east of town was destroyed in the 1980s.
Abergele (including Pensarn) has a population of around 10,000 and is part of the Abergele/Rhyl/Prestatyn urban area with a population of 64,000. Approximately 29% of Abergele has a significant knowledge of Welsh. The town also has satellite villages such as Saint George, Betws yn Rhos, Rhyd-y-foel, Belgrano, Llanddulas and Llanfair Talhaearn.
Abergele was the site of an important clas (Celtic monastery) and remained settled into the 13th century. A Prince Jonathan of Abergeleu is listed by the B text of the Annals of Wales as dying during the 9th century reign of Rhodri the Great. Gwrych Castle was built between 1819-25 at the behest of Lloyd Hesketh Bamford-Hesketh. From 1894 until 1946 it was the residence of the Dundonald family.
A sanatorium was built just outside Abergele in 1910. In 1914 this was acquired by Manchester City Council. A children's sanatorium was built on the same site. The sanatorium was taken over by the newly formed NHS in 1948 and was closed later, when the introduction of antibiotics made the building redundant.
( Abergele - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Abergele . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Abergele - UK
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Places to see in ( Hucknall - UK )
Places to see in ( Hucknall - UK )
Hucknall, formerly known as Hucknall Torkard, is a town in Nottinghamshire, England, in the district of Ashfield. The town was historically a centre for framework knitting and then for mining, but is now a focus for other industries as well as providing housing for workers in Nottingham.
The town is notable as the site where Rolls-Royce made the first demonstration of a vertical take-off plane. It is also the final resting place of Lord Byron and his estranged daughter, the mathematician and pioneer computer programmer Ada Lovelace.
Hucknall is 7 miles (11 km) northwest of Nottingham on the west bank of the Leen Valley, on land which rises from the Trent Valley in the south to the hills of the county north of Kirkby-in-Ashfield. The Whyburn or 'Town Brook' flows through the town centre, and Farleys Brook marks its southern boundary.
The town’s highest point is Long Hill, (although Beauvale estate has a higher elevation and is situated at the base of Leivers Hill, commonly mistaken for Misk Hill) at 460 ft (140 m) above sea-level, with views over the city and Trent Valley, which descends to between 22 and 24 metres AOD, flowing just beyond most of the city centre.
The town is surrounded by farmland or parkland. To the north-west lie Misk Hills and Annesley. To the north-east town are the villages of Linby and Papplewick beyond these two is Newstead Abbey and its grounds, once the residence of Lord Byron. To the west lies Eastwood, birthplace of D. H. Lawrence, and the inspiration for many of his novels. To the east of the town is Bestwood Country Park.
The contiguous settlements of Butler's Hill and Westville often appear as distinct entities on maps, but are generally regarded as part of Hucknall, and are part of its historic and present-day Church of England parish, although the town itself has no civil parish council, however the identity is reinforced by being part of the post town and by being shared wards of Hucknall.
Hucknall was once a thriving market town. Its focal point is the parish church of St. Mary Magdalene, next to the town’s market square. The church was built by the Anglo-Saxons and completed after the Norman Conquest, though much of it has been restored during the Victorian era. The medieval church consisted only of a chancel, nave, north aisle and tower but it was considerably enlarged in the Victorian period. In 1872 the south aisle was added and in 1887 the unusually long transepts, while the rest of the building apart from the tower was thoroughly restored.
The town is the northern terminus for the Nottingham Express Transit tram system as well as sharing a station on the Robin Hood Line. There is also a stop at Butler's Hill/Broomhill. The town used to be on the A611 but this has now bypassed the town to the west with a single-carriageway road with roundabouts, with access to junction 27 of the M1, some 3 miles away. The tram line was built from 2002–2004 and currently runs from Hucknall to the Station Street terminus next to Nottingham railway station.
( Hucknall - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Hucknall . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Hucknall - UK
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Places to Visit in North Wales | Events, Things To Do | Conwy Coverd
Discover North Wales’s attractions and places to visit in the North Wales area. Coverd is the best website to find events, things to do, places and attractions to visit in Conwy County, North Wales. Visit