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North Norfolk District

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    • Sheringham to Weybourne

      17 mei 2021, Engeland ⋅ ⛅ 10 °C

      Sheringham is another seaside resort and we enjoy our walk along the promenade; we see more beach huts, as well as fishing boats and lots of groynes along the beach front (physical barriers to limit the tidal movement of sand and sediment moving along the shore).

      We climb up to The Leas Garden and Shelter and then rejoin the clifftop path along the top of Weybourne Cliffs; Sheringham Golf Club is on our left and it is a long course! Further on we see Weybourne Windmill and then reach Weybourne Hope, heading up to the village here to visit Weybourne Priory - the standing remains are Grade II listed and attached to Weybourne All Saints Church.
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    • Dag 13

      Blakeney Town Beach

      13 augustus 2018, Engeland ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

      So what’s Blakeney?
      Well it isn’t the Riviera of Norfolk.
      No ocean, that appears to be a couple of K away.
      There’s a winding mud flat to the sea where local and imported English children go crabbing with nets or slosh around in the mud. Forget the days of going home with sand, we are talking mud, mud, mud.
      Full of people renting cottages, God alone knows what they do after crabbing.
      Sit by your car and read the paper or line up for ice cream is the answer.

      Is is however a great town.
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    • Dag 14

      Blakenely Beach, the Day After.

      14 augustus 2018, Engeland ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

      Well there’s more to the Riviera of Norfolk than we thought.

      There is swimming water.
      There is also car drowning.
      We think all vehicles survived the tide. A fellow turned up and sheepishly moved his Audi, by reversing even further into the water.
      Was very confident of his 4 wheel drive?
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    • Mundesley Circular Walk

      19 oktober 2021, Engeland ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

      The coastal village of Mundesley is well known for its firm, golden sand beach. In the cliff top gardens above this is the memorial to the Bomb Disposal teams that cleared the Norfolk coast of landmines post WW2, which is next to the smallest maritime museum in the world (formerly a coast guard lookout station).

      Many of the coastal villages around here have circular walks, and the Mundesley circular walk heads inland, past the golf course and follows the Paston Way as far as Gimlingham. From here, we head towards Trunch; the village is known for its 14th century, Grade I listed parish church of St Botolph as it contains a magnificent carved and painted wood font canopy (one of 4 in tbe UK), as well as a decorative hammerbeam roof.

      We follow "quiet roads" as they are known here, back to Mundesley and enjoy a view of the Stow Hill tower windmill in the neighbouring village of Paston on the way.

      Back in Mundesley, The Ship Inn beckons.
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    • Dag 14

      Blinkling Estate Gardens

      14 augustus 2018, Engeland ⋅ ⛅ 20 °C

      A short 4 kilometre walk around the gardens.
      What’s not to like.
      Enormous walk, walled garden, English young folk frolicking including an 18mth dragging a croquet mallet, a Temple at the end of a walk and 4 painters doing up the Orangery and laughing outrageously.
      Also has a 400 set of yew hegdes that are a joy so long as you don't have to trim them.
      The cuttings go to makeTomoxifil the anti breast cancer drug. Amazing.
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    • Dag 14

      Blinkling House

      14 augustus 2018, Engeland ⋅ ⛅ 22 °C

      Anne Boleyn could have been born here. It's that sort of story. The original house did belong to her family.

      A very, very rich lawyer Henry Hobart bought it, tore it done and built himself a Jacobean country house.

      It’s had a few owners before ending up with the National Trust in 1940, opened to visitors in 1960.

      It was leased to someone during that period. What sort of person leases an enormous, old, old house with a garden that needs a morning to see.

      Would you like to see the attics they asked, what could you say but yes. Mark’s Fitbit says that we climbed the equivalent of 19 stories but who counts these things. Great house with the biggest Library eat of the Pennines.

      They were having an art installation around the risk to books in the 21 century, quite interesting in parts. Better than the “Surrealism Experience” at Peckover House we did not discuss with you.

      Many K’s walk, much gawking and good time had by all.

      Bernadette had a wasp incident in the courtyard but a true tourist takes these things in their stride.
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    • Cromer to Sheringham

      17 mei 2021, Engeland ⋅ ☁️ 9 °C

      We're stopping in Cromer for a couple of nights with a view to do some walking along the Norfolk Coastal Path. The route from Cromer to Weybourne is part of the Sea Palling to Weybourne section of the England Coast Path, which is opening in sections around the UK.

      Starting at Cromer lighthouse - now automated, so the lighthouse keeper's cottage alongside the tower is now let out as holiday apartments - we descend down the East Cliff to the town of Cromer, enjoying wonderful views of the pier and church tower. It is a lovely town, although very much a tourist resort now, and we see the church and explore some of the streets.

      We walk along the shingle beach as far as East Runton Gap and divert along the A149 for a few minutes before cutting down to the West Runton Cliffs and walking along these; the fossil remains of the "West Runton Elephant" were discovered here in 1990 - it was the skeleton of the best preserved specimen of a 4m tall steppe mammoth ever found and put the town on the map.

      We continue along the cliff walk past Beeston Regis and reach the "Beeston Bump", an isolated hill above this village, and descend down the other side to Sheringham.
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    • Blakeney to Wells

      19 mei 2021, Engeland ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

      We leave Blakeney with the Morston Salt Marshes on our right to reach Morston village - like Blakeney, this used to be a major port 400 years ago but is now used by a small number of fishing boats, leisure craft and seal watching trips to Blakeney Point. There are distant views of the Watch House (formerly used as a lookout for sailors in distress and for smugglers) and the blue Blakeney Point visitor centre (formerly a lifeboat station).

      The coastal path now skirts the Stiffkey Saltmarshes, part of the National Trust, and then the Warham Saltmarshes; there are good views of the marshes themselves and the birdlife on them as we approach port the town of Wells-next-the-Sea. The distinctive landmark of the seafront is the granary with its overhanging gantry on the quay; this has now been converted into luxury flats (it ceased operating as a granary in 1990).
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    • Dag 30

      Seals and birds and boats oh my!

      22 september 2016, Engeland ⋅ 🌙 13 °C

      I started the day at Morston with a seal tour.
      We went out in what looked and felt like a massive lifeboat, but with a motor.
      It took us our to Blakeney point were we could get with about 2m of the shore where the seals were lolling about.
      There are two types of seals - grey and common. One type (common?) had their pups about 2 months ago so we saw babies!

      Blakeney point is a spit and the other side is the north sea. After viewing the seals we were able to land/beach/pull up/whatever it is called when a boat comes up on the beach on Blakeney point (not near the seals) and have a wander around for 45 mins. The beach is shale (smooth small stones) and I had a nice wander around although really there wasn't much there.

      From Morston I made my way around the coast to Horsey. It was such a beautiful drive, mostly on B roads I think. I hadn't gone far when I came across "Cookies", a seafood cafe/store.
      My crayfish tail salad had everything - cockles, prawns, smoked fish and tiny crayfish tails. The crayfish are about 15cm here and so the tails a bit smaller than I was expecting, although still delicious.
      The view was gorgeous with wind turbines in the distance (possibly in the ocean).

      At Horsey I went on another boat tour, of the Horsey mere and broads (I think, the terminology is a bit confusing). I saw a lot of rare birds such as marsh harrier, common crane, bitterns as well as heron, egyptian geese and swans.

      I didn't take a lot of photos as you needed a much more powerful lens than I had and I preferred to just look, use the binoculars and listen to the guide rather than wait for the perfect photo.

      From Horsey I made my way to Great Yarmouth, just because. I had a look around, the beach front is very holiday park touristy with arcades and other attractions. I did stop just north of Great Yarmouth and got to see the beach there.

      I'm currently in Drayton, just out of Norwich where I stopped for tea at a random pub. It's curry night so I had an english curry (tikka masala), another food item to check off the list.

      It's been a good day, to add local flavour I've been listening to "The Big Six" by Arthur Ransome, set in this area. I've still got about an hour to drive back to the hotel so I'll upload this while I have good wifi.

      Morston/Blakeney harbour is tidal, the cruise times depended on the tide.
      Lifeboad style tour boat
      Seals
      On Horsey mere
      Geese in flight
      Wind turbines north of Great Yarmouth
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    • Weybourne to Blakeney

      18 mei 2021, Engeland ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

      Weybourne Hope is a two-mile stretch of land between Weybourne and Cley and was regarded as particularly vulnerable to invasion from the sea due to the deep inshore water that would allow ships to unload troops and stores here in the event of an invasion; for this reason a military camp was established here. This is now the site of the privately owned Muckleborough Collection, a military museum and we see many pillboxes and some guns as we take the coastal path around the outside edge.

      We walk along the edge of the Salthouse Marshes, a popular bird-watching site, and espy the Parish Church of St Nicholas in the village of Salthouse itself. The beach becomes more sandy as we approach the Cley Marshes Nature Reserve at Cley Eye, and then turn south to Cley next the Sea; there are great views of the iconic Cley Windmill, a five storey tower mill that has now been converted to a guesthouse and licensed wedding ceremony venue. We cross the River Craven and head north on this side back up the coastline to skirt round the edges of Blakeney Eye and down to the coastal village of Blakeney and its welcoming Quay area.
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    North Norfolk District

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