Malvern Town Guide ~ Tourist Information
- Tourist information and guide for Great Malvern Town.
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Top 10 Best Things to Do in Ross on Wye, United Kingdom UK
Ross-on-Wye Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top 10 things you have to do in Ross-on-Wye . We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Ross-on-Wye for You. Discover Ross-on-Wye as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Ross-on-Wye .
This Video has covered top 10 Best Things to do in Ross-on-Wye .
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List of Best Things to do in Ross-on-Wye, United Kingdom (UK)
In The Footsteps Battlefield Tours
Canoe the Wye
Ross on Wye Canoe Hire - Day Trips
Goodrich Castle
Briery Hill Llamas
The International Centre for Birds of Prey
Symonds Yat Rock
Symonds Yat Canoe Hire
Hillside Brewery
Wye Valley Butterfly Zoo
Little Malvern and Great Malvern - Worcestershire #TravelBlog #Vlog
#Vlog video and story of the day. Musings about a trip to Malvern to include Littler Malvern, Great Malvern and Little Malvern Priory. Then a rude woman with a quiff. Click on the link to see the full story. More soon ... I'm still roaming.
Solihull Tourist Attractions: 8 Top Places to Visit
Planning to visit Solihull? Check out our Solihull Travel Guide video and see top most Tourist Attractions in Solihull.
Top Places to visit in Solihull:
Malvern and Brueton Park, Elmdon Park, Shirley Park, Umberslade Farm Park, St John the Baptist Church, Knowle Parish Church, Elmdon Parish Church, Tudor Grange Park
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Worcester (Worcestershire, England, UK)
Worcester is a city and the county town of Worcestershire in the West Midlands of England. Worcester is situated some 17 miles (27 km) southwest of the southern suburbs of Birmingham and 23 miles (37 km) north of Gloucester, and has an approximate population of 100,000 people.
The River Severn flanks the western side of the city centre, overlooked by the 12th-century Worcester Cathedral. The site of the final battle of the Civil War, Worcester was where Oliver Cromwell's New Model Army defeated King Charles II's Cavaliers, cementing the English Interregnum, the eleven-year period during which England and Wales became a republic.
Filmed 21.02.2016
Great Malvern!
Malvern City Centre, julho de 2014.
Blog:
Driving On The A449 From Worcester Through Malvern To Ledbury, England 26th July 2018
Driving along the A449 from Powick, Worcester, Worcestershire through Malvern to Ledbury, Herefordshire, England
Route; Starting at the A4440/A449 Powick traffic Island & driving along the A449 through or near Powick (Malvern Road), Bastonford (Malvern Road), Newland (Worcester Road), Malvern Link (Worcester Road), Great Malvern (Worcester Road, Bellevue Terrace & Wells Road), Malvern Wells, Little Malvern, British Camp, Chances Pitch & Massington.
Videoed on Friday, 6th July 2018
To watch all of the day's journey please click on the link below
Playlist:
© Mike Fairman 2019
Best places to visit
Best places to visit - Southampton (United Kingdom) Best places to visit - Slideshows from all over the world - City trips, nature pictures, etc.
Christchurch Food Festival - 20th Anniversary
Christchurch Food Festival, 20th Anniversary on the 11th and 12th days of May 2019 which I combined into this video vlog, also taking a look at the magnificent Christchurch Priory church, high street and the quay known as the quomps, taking place South coast UK in Dorset, the not-for-profit event, which attracts more than 70,000 visitors each year, features the Market on the High Street, as well as a Festival Village at Christchurch Quay, with a host of activities including demonstrations from ambassadors Lesley Waters and Dean Edwards.
Saxon Square will be transformed into a Vegan and Vegetarian market.
Young visitors can get hands on with the return of the Kids Kitchen and the introduction of a new Learning Zone, which has been designed especially for children and family cooking.
Before the main event kicks off, a Party Night is taking place in the demonstration theatre and the celebrations continue with a Gala Dinner at the Captain's Club Hotel on June 9.
FESTIVAL STREET MARKET AND FESTIVAL VILLAGE
The Street Market is in Christchurch High Street and town centre with over 100 stalls, many of them local producers of top quality products, selling a huge range of everything to do with food whether it is ingredients, cookware, food to eat at home or a takeaway to enjoy whilst browsing.
Down on Christchurch Quay (or the Quomps as it is known) is the Festival Village, which will be in its fifth year. The Demonstration Theatre provides the focal point, with a full schedule of chefs, both celebrity and local, demonstrating all sorts of great dishes.
Saxon Square plays host to the Vegan and Vegetarian Quarter showcasing some incredible foods, be sure to walk that they on your way to the Festival Village.
Last but definitely not least is Alley Market (opposite Marks & Spencers) which includes a number of fabulous artisan stalls.
DEMONSTRATION THEATRE
The Saxe Coburg Demonstration Theatre, on Christchurch Quay at the Festival Village is home to free-to-watch demonstrations from both celebrity and local chefs. The Demonstration Theatre is the festival’s opportunity to showcase some brilliant, award-winning chefs from local restaurants, gastro-pubs and hotels as well as celebrity chefs.
KIDS KITCHEN AND LEARNING ZONE
The Fun Kids Kitchen is sponsored by Christchurch Rotary in association with Christchurch Food Festival Education Trust, promoting a passion for learning about where food comes from and hands-on cookery. Children can enjoy making fruity scone bread twists, Italian meatballs and a curry during this year's range of sessions.
p.s not forgetting that wonderful Chucklehead cider of which I had a couple of pints! well it would be rude not too!
Places Tourist Might Miss on Their Visit to Margate, Kent, England?
The Lighter Side of Margate; usually when people think of Margate they think of a typical British town seaside resort and of Dreamland. Dreamland is still undergoing renovation, and there is little doubt that when it does reopen it’s going to be the major tourist attraction that in its heyday it once was.
We only made a flying visit to Margate so didn’t have the time to soak up the traditional side of such a place, although we did wander along the tourist town seaside resort pass all the restaurants, pubs and cafes looking for somewhere to have an evening meal; in the end settling on the Brewers Fayre restaurant close to the train station.
Tacked onto the end of our French holiday, and before finally making our way home, we made an overnight stop at Margate specifically to see the marvel of the Shell Grotto (made with 4.6 million sea shells); part of its fascination being who, why and when the grotto was built being a complete mystery to the experts.
We booked in at the Smiths Court Hotel, 21-27 Eastern Esplanade, Cliftonville; located just a short distance from the main sea front, in a quieter area of Margate but still with rooms with a sea view. The hotel was excellent, but what caught my attention was ‘The Blues Grill, at The Malvern Hotel just two doors up which had an unusual and fascinating frontage featuring the Blues Brothers.
The Shell Grotto, which we visited at 10:00 sharp the following morning, when it opened, was well worth the visit; such an unusual curiosity. Right opposite the Shell Grotto is R.G. Scott, Furniture Mart, the most fascinating reclamation yard we’ve ever seen; and consequently (after spending an hour there) we came away with a bell which we subsequently fitted to the outside of our conservatory and a grand 8 foot high Victorian style street lamp with three lamp holders wired for electrics; which we shall secure to the corner of our conservatory decking and get it wired into the mains and controlled from a switch in the conservatory itself.
The other place my wife specifically wanted to visit while we were in Margate was the famous ‘Cup Cake Café’; so before continuing our journey (after our visit to the Shell Grotto) we stopped there for a rest bite and took in the delights of their cupcakes washed down with a nice hot drink.
And finally, after leaving Margate and making our journey home to Bristol we made a pit stop at Pegwell Bay in Ramsgate, Kent, England (just a few miles from Margate) for the Viking ship that my son specifically wanted to see (The Hugin), a replica of a Viking longship built by Denmark in 1949 as a gift from the Danish government to Kent to mark the 1500th hundred year anniversary of when the Jutes settled in Kent as part of the Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain in the 5th century.
So when visiting Margate there are more things to see than just sand, sea and tourists shops, amusement arcades and cafes and restaurants along the sea front.
Official website:
Background soundtrack (license free music automatically generated by Pinnacle Studio ScoreFitter):- Roadhouse Blues, Sweet Mama Blues.