Top 10 Best Things to Do in Nuneaton, United Kingdom UK
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List of Best Things to do in Nuneaton, United Kingdom (UK)
Hartshill Hayes Country Park
Nuneaton Museum and Art Gallery
Ashby Boat Company Limited
Hoar Park Craft Village & Children's Farm
Richard Golding at Station Glass
Arbury Hall
Bosworth Water Park
Ace Karting & Segway
Astley Castle
Bermuda Adventure Soft Play World
Travel Guide Nuneaton Town Warwickshire UK Pros And Cons Review
Travel Guide Nuneaton Town Warwickshire UK Pros And Cons Review
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Pro's
* Some attractions to visit in the daytime
* Some entertainment at night with a range of pubs and night clubs
* A range of shops to choose from
* Some public transport
* Some hotel's to choose from
* Some eating places to choose from
Con's
* It can get busy
Things To Do
* Nuneaton Museum and Art Gallery
* George Eliot Statue
* Nuneaton Shopping Centre
* Nuneaton Market
* Abbey Theatre
* Escapism - Live Escape Game
* Soft Play
* Cineama
* Bars And Clubs
* Bowling Allays
* Parks
* Leisure Centre
Best Places To Eat Cheap Eats
* Tracey's Cafe
* Rhubarb & Mustard Cafe
* Jims Fish Bar
Moderate Eating
* Anthony`s Cafe Bistro
* Crossed Khukris Gurkha Restaurant
* The Nook at The Royal Oak
The Best Hotels
* Millers Hotel
* Holiday Inn Express Nuneaton
* Premier Inn Nuneaton/Coventry Hotel
Weather
The weather in the UK can vary from day to day. Warmer and hotter months are between April to September. Colder months with snow,sleet and rain are between October and March. You can get some humidity and pollen is highest, between June and August for hayfever suffers. You can also get rain in between, April and September.
Currency
Britain’s currency is the pound sterling (£), which is divided into 100 pence (p).
Scotland has its own pound sterling notes. These represent the same value as an English note and can be used elsewhere in Britain. The Scottish £1 note is not accepted outside Scotland.
There are lots of bureaux de change in Britain – often located inside:
• banks
• travel agents
• Post Offices
• airports
• major train stations.
It's worth shopping around to get the best deal and remember to ask how much commission is charged.
Britain’s currency is the pound sterling (£), which is divided into 100 pence (p).
Scotland has its own pound sterling notes. These represent the same value as an English note and can be used elsewhere in Britain. The Scottish £1 note is not accepted outside Scotland.
There are lots of bureaux de change in Britain – often located inside:
• banks
• travel agents
• Post Offices
• airports
• major train stations.
It's worth shopping around to get the best deal and remember to ask how much commission is charged.
Time Difference
During the winter months, Britain is on Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), which is 5 hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time and 10 hours behind Sydney. Western standard time is five hours behind.
From late March until late October, the clocks go forward one hour to British Summer Time (BST).
To check the correct time, contact the Speaking Clock service by dialling 123.
Weight And Measurements
Britain is officially metric, in line with the rest of Europe. However, imperial measures are still in use, especially for road distances, which are measured in miles. Imperial pints and gallons are 20 per cent larger than US measures.
Imperial to Metric
1 inch = 2.5 centimetres
1 foot = 30 centimetres
1 mile = 1.6 kilometres
1 ounce = 28 grams
1 pound = 454 grams
1 pint = 0.6 litres
1 gallon = 4.6 litres
Metric to Imperial
1 millimetre = 0.04 inch
1 centimetre = 0.4 inch
1 metre = 3 feet 3 inches
1 kilometre = 0.6 mile
1 gram = 0.04 ounce
1 kilogram = 2.2 pounds
Passport And Visas Requirements To Enter The UK
Please note: Following the recent referendum vote for the UK to leave the European Union (EU), there are currently no changes in the way people travel to Britain. The following guidelines still apply:
If you're planning an adventure to the UK, depending on your nationality and your reason for visiting, you may need to organise a visa.
If you're an American, Canadian or Australian tourist, you'll be able to travel visa-free throughout the UK, providing you have a valid passport and your reason for visiting meets the immigration rules (link is external).
Citizens from some South American and Caribbean countries as well as Japan are also able to travel visa-free around the UK.
European Union citizens, non-EU member states of the EEA (Norway, Liechtenstein and Iceland), Switzerland, and members of the Overseas Countries and Territories (OCT) do not need a visa to enter the UK.
If you have any further visa questions visit the official UK government website.
Anyone that has any questions, please feel free the comment below and I will answer them for you.
You can dial 999 to reach either the police, fire and ambulance departments.
Nuneaton Tourist Attractions: 8 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Nuneaton? Check out our Nuneaton Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Nuneaton.
Top Places to visit in Nuneaton:
Hartshill Hayes Country Park, Nuneaton Museum and Art Gallery, Arbury Hall, Abbey Theatre, Bosworth Water Park, Bermuda Adventure Soft Play World, George Eliot Statue, Astley Castle
Visit our website:
Coventry Town Centre. West Midlands
Coventry is an ancient city which predates Birmingham and Leicester. It is likely that Coventry grew from a settlement of the Bronze Age near the present-day city centre where Coventry's bowl-shaped topography and, at that time large flowing river and lakes, created the ideal settlement area, with mild weather and thick woods: food, water and shelter would have been easily found. The people of the area may have been the Corieltauvi, a largely agricultural people who had few strongly-defended sites of signs of centralised government.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, Coventry became one of the three man British centres of watch and clock manufacture and ranked alongside Prescot, in Lancashire and Clerkenwell in London. As the industry declined, due mainly to competition from Swiss Made clock and watch manufacturers, the skilled pool of workers proved crucial to the setting up of bicycle manufacture and eventually the motorbike, car, machine tool and aircraft industries. In the late 19th century, Coventry became a major centre of bicycle manufacture. The industry energised by the invention by James Starley and his nephew John Kemp Starley of the Rover safety bicycle, which was safer and more popular than the pioneering penny-farthing.
Coventry became home to one of Britain's first local ambulance services in 1902. The local entertainment business received a boost in 1910 when the city's first cinema opened. Public transport was enhanced in 1914 when motorbuses took to local roads.
Coventry suffered severe bomb damage during World Ward 11, most notoriously from a massive Luftwaffe air raid known as the Coventry Blitz on 14th November 1940. Firebombing on this date led to severe damage to large areas of the city centre and to Coventry's historic cathedral, leaving only a shell and the spire. Moe than 4,000 were damaged or destroyed, along with around three-quarters of the city's industrial plants. More than 800 people were killed, with thousands injured and homeless. The Germans coined the term Coventrate to describe the tactics of complete urban devastation developed for the raid.
Kenilworth, Warwickshire
A short tourism video about Kenilworth in Warwickshire.
In centuries gone by, Kenilworth was at the centre of English power and politics due to the dominance of Kenilworth Castle.
Its believed that one of the first English Parliaments was held here.
Mentioned in the Doomsday book, the Castle was built soon after the Norman conquest of 1066.
It was later destroyed in 1649 by Oliver Cromwells forces to ensure it could not be used as a fortress again.
Today it is cared for by English Heritage and is regarding as one of the finest ruined castles in England.
The town also has some significant local landmarks including The Abbey Barn, St Nicholas Church and Abbey Fields.
See for more details.
Places to see in ( Southam - UK )
Places to see in ( Southam - UK )
Southam is a small market town and civil parish in the Stratford-on-Avon district of Warwickshire, England. Southam is on the River Stowe (called 'The Brook' by many locals), which flows from Napton-on-the-Hill and joins Warwickshire's River Itchen at Stoneythorpe, just outside the town. The town is about 7.5 miles (12 km) east of Leamington Spa, about 10 miles (16 km) from Rugby and Daventry, 13 miles (21 km) south of Coventry and 14 miles (23 km) north of Banbury.
Southam was a Royal manor until AD 998, when Ethelred the Unready granted it to Earl Leofwine. When Coventry Priory was founded in 1043, Leofwine's son Leofric, Earl of Mercia granted Southam to it. The Domesday Book records the manor as Sucham. The Priory, which in the 12th century became the first Coventry Cathedral, kept Southam until the 16th century when it surrendered all its estates to the Crown in the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The current Manor House is Grade II * listed and dates from the early 17th century.
Southam's Holy Well, in the picturesque Stowe river valley, is a Grade II listed building and scheduled Ancient Monument, and was first recorded in the year 998. The Well was used in medieval times by local monks and for hundreds of years as the town's principal water supply. Water from a natural mineral spring feeds the semi-circular Well and pours through the mouths of carved stone gargoyles into the river. The water from the Well was said to cure eye complaints.
The London and North Western Railway completed its Weedon to Marton Junction Line in 1895 and opened Southam and Long Itchington station on it 2 miles (3 km) north of Southam. British Railways closed the station to passengers in 1958 and goods in 1965. Southam was the seat of Southam Rural District from 1894 until 1974, when under the Local Government Act 1972 it was made part of Stratford-on-Avon District.
Southam was in the parliamentary constituency of Stratford-on-Avon until the boundary changes approved by Parliament in June 2007 when it became part of the new constituency of Kenilworth and Southam. The constituency was first contested in the United Kingdom general election, 2010. RAF Southam, about 0.6 miles (1 km) east of the town, was a World War II airfield. It was opened in 1940 and closed at the end of 1944. It was a training base and a relief landing ground. Southam's history is commemorated in Southam's Cardall Collection.
Southam is between Leamington Spa and Daventry on the A425 road and between Coventry and Banbury on the A423 road. The A426 road connects it to Rugby. Southam is about 15 miles (24 km) from Stratford-upon-Avon, birthplace of William Shakespeare. About 8 miles (13 km) from Southam is the M40 motorway, though the town is surprisingly not indicated. The nearest railway stations are Leamington Spa, Rugby and Banbury.
( Southam - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Southam . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Southam - UK
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CITY OF COVENTRY
another one of my dodgy video, but this time its the City of Coventry in 2010.
I still like to visit coventry after all these years, it always seems ever changing and there is lots of places to see.
The Blackpool Trip | Leicester to Blackpool | 2018 | England
This video is a short trip to Blackpool which is about 180 miles north of England. We started from Leicester, and took almost 3 hours to reach our destination.
Blackpool Beach was very windy and climate wasn't too pleasant. First trip to this beautiful place, Hope to visit soon in the summers.
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A Walk Through Nuneaton On A Sunny Saturday
2nd Feb, 2019
The sunshine is back!
Nuneaton Market is situated in the main pedestrian area of the town centre, with over 80 stalls trading every Wednesday and Saturday. The Market has an eclectic mix of produce from clothing, homewares, to crafts and fresh fruit and vegetables.
Here's a quick walk through the Nuneaton town centre in the February chill, although with the sun shining bright.
Kenilworth Road, Coventry - Fine & Country Coventry
Property for sale:
Sitting on the last and the only 2 acre plot on the highly regarded Kenilworth Road is this rare opportunity to buy an exclusive detached residence with a building plot offering the opportunity to build a separate dwelling adjacent to the current property.
Price:
£1,300,000
Find out more:
Fine & Country Coventry
T: 02476 500015
What do you like about this house? Let us know in the comments.