Having looked around at Places to visit I came across Berwick-upon-Tweed having been there on a Pontins/Butlins £9.50 family getaway many years ago I thought I would tell some interesting facts. Berwick-upon-Tweed is situated in the county of Northumberland, is the northernmost town in England, on the east coast at the mouth of the River Tweed. It is situated 2.5 miles south of the Scottish border.
Actually when driving from Manchester to Berwick via the M6, you cross the Scottish / English Border about 4 times. That just reminds me it was when the foot and mouth was at its peak in 2001.
Berwick Rangers F.C. are the only English football club to playing the Scottish League.
A little further down the A1 coastal road you get to a really picturesque Island Called Holy Island, Also known by its Celtic name as Lindisfarne, Holy Island is accessible only at low tide, twice daily, by a three mile long causeway, built in 1954.
Holy Island was one of the principle centres of Christianity during the Dark Ages and was given to St Aidan in AD635 by the King of Northumbria.
Even more famous and influential was St Cuthbert, whose life and teaching was a magnet for pilgrims.
He died in AD 687 and was initially buried in the church, but later his remains were moved to Durham Cathedral.
Hotels near Holy Island
Sitting atop Beblowe Crag is the most prominent feature on the island, Holy Island Castle, built as a defence in Tudor times. Purchased in 1901 by Edward Hudson, the founder of Country Life magazine, Hudson commissioned the architect Edward Lutyens to transform the castle into a home, with much of the original fabric of the castle remaining to this day.
A short walk from the castle is a walled garden, planned by the famous designer Gertrude Jekyll in 1911, and was recreated by the National Trust in 2003.
Hotels near Berwick-upon-Tweed
Friday, 5 December 2008
Thursday, 4 December 2008
Hotels in Lincoln
Having checked the statistics on Pandarooms.com of what people search for we have come across Lincoln being near the top. So what are people going to Lincoln for? What are the nearby attractions to Lincoln? Why would people want to visit and stop in Lincoln.
I will try find out about the fascination in Lincoln. (If you live in Lincoln this is not meant to be offensive).
Lincoln is a charming city on the River Witham, the old part of which rises steeply up a hill to the wonderful cathedral, the third largest in Britain, which dates from the 11th century. Its fine towers can be seen from all over the county. The 12th century Angel Choir, rose windows in the Great Transepts, and the Great Town Bell, are the main features of a building that is altogether of outstanding interest. In the Norman castle nearby, built by the command of William the Conqueror, Henry II was crowned for the second time. Also crowning the hill is the Newport Arch, a 3rd century Roman archway still used by traffic today.
A short walk down Steep Hill (a very apt name!) is the pedestrianised High Street, with major department stores and markets which complement the many specialist shops to be found up and crowning the hill. However Lincoln has a lot more to offer than shopping facilities. Whether you want an evening out at the cinema, or to watch the wildlife at Boultham Mere, there is always something to do.
So People visit Lincoln for the History. Living within 40 miles of York and Chester which are really famous historical places in the UK, I thought that I have visited the popular historical place but I NOW ALSO want to visit Lincoln.
If you live in Lincoln, you are very lucky to live in a city that is 'steeped' in history (like the pun). I will be visiting Lincoln in 2009 as a tourist so here are a few Hotels in Lincoln
I will try find out about the fascination in Lincoln. (If you live in Lincoln this is not meant to be offensive).
Lincoln is a charming city on the River Witham, the old part of which rises steeply up a hill to the wonderful cathedral, the third largest in Britain, which dates from the 11th century. Its fine towers can be seen from all over the county. The 12th century Angel Choir, rose windows in the Great Transepts, and the Great Town Bell, are the main features of a building that is altogether of outstanding interest. In the Norman castle nearby, built by the command of William the Conqueror, Henry II was crowned for the second time. Also crowning the hill is the Newport Arch, a 3rd century Roman archway still used by traffic today.A short walk down Steep Hill (a very apt name!) is the pedestrianised High Street, with major department stores and markets which complement the many specialist shops to be found up and crowning the hill. However Lincoln has a lot more to offer than shopping facilities. Whether you want an evening out at the cinema, or to watch the wildlife at Boultham Mere, there is always something to do.
So People visit Lincoln for the History. Living within 40 miles of York and Chester which are really famous historical places in the UK, I thought that I have visited the popular historical place but I NOW ALSO want to visit Lincoln.
If you live in Lincoln, you are very lucky to live in a city that is 'steeped' in history (like the pun). I will be visiting Lincoln in 2009 as a tourist so here are a few Hotels in Lincoln
Tuesday, 21 October 2008
Hotels in Aviemore

Noticing it getting colder this week and even thoughts of snow have driven me to write about the UK's top skiing resort. I think its the only skiing resort (don't quote me).
Aviemore is a town and tourist resort, situated within the Cairngorms National Park in the Highlands of Scotland. It is in the Badenoch and Strathspey committee area, within the Highland council area. Prior to 1890 it was in an exclave of the county of Moray and from 1890 to 1975 it was in the county of Inverness-shire, until the latter date being within the Civil Parish of Duthil and Rothiemurchus.
The town is popular for skiing and other winter sports, and for hill-walking in the Cairngorm Mountains. The main reason for Aviemore's recent development lies in the Cairn Gorm Ski Area, eight miles into the mountains that form the south east skyline for the town.
This certainly helps explain the very large choice of accommodation available, from the large and traditional to the large and modern, and taking in a wide range of littleer hotels, guest houses, B& Bs, hostels and camping and caravan facilities.
The Cairn Gorm ski area has recently seen major developments with the building of the Cairn Gorm Mountain Railway, a replacement for the old chairlifts that promises over time to bring about improvements to the mountain's environment to parallel those taking place in Aviemore itself.
Aviemore also offers plenty of shopping opportunities, many in recently facelifted and refreshed shops. If you are looking for a supermarket you will find one. If you want outdoor or skiing clothing or equipment, you will find plenty to choose from. And you will also find no shortage of shops appealing to passing tourists.
Find Hotels in Aviemore
If you are coming to ski or snowboard in Aviemore and the Cairngorms area this site will link you to loads of information on accommodation.
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Monday, 20 October 2008
Hotels in Windermere
Getting closer to Christmas why don't you take a relaxing weekend break to the Lake district especially Lake Windermere. There are many thing to do there here are just a few.
Windermere is 10.5 miles long stretching from Newby Bridge To Ambleside and varies from a quarter of a mile to one mile wide at Millerground. The lake covers an area of 14.7 square kilometres. It reaches a depth of about 220 feet near its northern end and has an elevation above sea level of 130 feet. The lake is drained from its southernmost point by the River Leven. It is replenished by the rivers Brathay, Rothay, Trout Beck, Cunsey Beck and several other lesser streams.
There are two towns on the lake, Ambleside and Bowness-on-Windermere. The town of Windermere, confusingly, does not directly touch the lake. Known as Birthwaite prior to the arrival of the railway, it is about a fifteen-minute walk from the lakefront, and has now grown together with Bowness. Windermere railway station is a hub for train and bus connections to the surrounding areas, Manchester, Manchester Airport, and the West Coast Main Line. The lake was originally known as Winandermere but the railway company thought this too long and called the station Windermere, which has since attached itself to both the town and the lake.
Find Weekend Getaway hotels in Ambleside
The lake is largely surrounded by foothills of the Lake District which provide pleasant low-level walks; to the north and north-east are the higher fells of central Lakeland.
Enjoy a Christmas Weekend in the Lakes at Bowness on Windermere
Windermere is one of a very few lakes in Britain which has a perceptible diurnal tide.
Windermere is a ribbon lake, which are long, narrow and finger-like. Ribbon lakes were formed thousands of years ago during the ice age through glaciation: as the glacier bulldozed through a valley (glacial trough), it met bands of harder and softer rock. Erosion (mainly through abrasion: the process of rocks simply being scraped across the bedrock) was greater at the soft rock than the hard rock and so a dip was created. When the glacier melted the lake filled with the meltwater, which was held in by moraine (rock material) deposited by the glacier. A dam can also be created by the bands of harder rock either side of the softer rock. There is usually a river at both ends of a ribbon lake.
Find Hotels in the Lake District at Pandarooms.com
Windermere is 10.5 miles long stretching from Newby Bridge To Ambleside and varies from a quarter of a mile to one mile wide at Millerground. The lake covers an area of 14.7 square kilometres. It reaches a depth of about 220 feet near its northern end and has an elevation above sea level of 130 feet. The lake is drained from its southernmost point by the River Leven. It is replenished by the rivers Brathay, Rothay, Trout Beck, Cunsey Beck and several other lesser streams.
There are two towns on the lake, Ambleside and Bowness-on-Windermere. The town of Windermere, confusingly, does not directly touch the lake. Known as Birthwaite prior to the arrival of the railway, it is about a fifteen-minute walk from the lakefront, and has now grown together with Bowness. Windermere railway station is a hub for train and bus connections to the surrounding areas, Manchester, Manchester Airport, and the West Coast Main Line. The lake was originally known as Winandermere but the railway company thought this too long and called the station Windermere, which has since attached itself to both the town and the lake.
Find Weekend Getaway hotels in Ambleside
The lake is largely surrounded by foothills of the Lake District which provide pleasant low-level walks; to the north and north-east are the higher fells of central Lakeland.
Enjoy a Christmas Weekend in the Lakes at Bowness on Windermere
Windermere is one of a very few lakes in Britain which has a perceptible diurnal tide.
Windermere is a ribbon lake, which are long, narrow and finger-like. Ribbon lakes were formed thousands of years ago during the ice age through glaciation: as the glacier bulldozed through a valley (glacial trough), it met bands of harder and softer rock. Erosion (mainly through abrasion: the process of rocks simply being scraped across the bedrock) was greater at the soft rock than the hard rock and so a dip was created. When the glacier melted the lake filled with the meltwater, which was held in by moraine (rock material) deposited by the glacier. A dam can also be created by the bands of harder rock either side of the softer rock. There is usually a river at both ends of a ribbon lake.
Find Hotels in the Lake District at Pandarooms.com
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Wednesday, 8 October 2008
Hotels near Leicester Square - London
Leicester Square was originally set out in 1670. The site was south of Leicester House a former royal building that has since disappeared.
Leicester square was once a very fashionable place to live and boasted among its residents Sir Isaac Newton, the scientist who theorized the idea of gravity. The famous artist Hogarth was also a resident here and painted many of his society portraits from his studio at number sixty-eight. In 1801 Hogarth's house was converted into the areas first restaurant; named Hotel de la Sablionere. Several hotels grew up around the square making it popular with visitors to London.
Hotels in Leicester Square at Pandarooms.com
They Include
"The ideal hideaway boutique hotel in the heart of the West End, tucked between the National Gallery and Leicester Square. The newly refurbished Radisson Edwardian Leicester Square Hotel is cool, minimalist and clutter free, with beautifully designed furniture, pale leathers and original art throughout."
The Empire Cinema on Leicester square was formerly a popular music hall with the same name. Towards the end of the twentieth century the Leicester square area had become a somewhat undesirable location until Westminster Council invested heavily in the area during the 1990s."
"From its dazzling location at the hub of Covent Garden, West End theatres and Trafalgar Square, St Martins Lane is a dramatic and daring reinvention of the urban resort. Smart, witty and sophisticated, Philippe Starck’s design is a brilliant collision of influences from the modern to the baroque, which suffuses the hotel with energy, vitality and magic. Unique features include the acclaimed Asia de Cuba restaurant, wildly popular Light Bar, and interactive light displays in every guest room that encourage guests to personalise their own individual space, and help to turn the hotel into a beautiful and ever changing mosaic of colour."
Leicester Square is the centre of London's cinema land, where four of leading United kingdom cinemas are located at.U K film and Royal premieres are regularly hosted at one of the Leicester Suare's four cinemas. The movie influence is apparent from the statue of Charlie Chaplin. Similar to the Hollywood Walk of Fame, the Square is surrounded by floor mounted plaques with film stars names and cast handprints on display.
To the North of the square is the Swiss Centre famed for its hourly chiming clock. The Society of West End Theatre's ‘half-priced ticket booth is located in the Clock tower buildings and sells reduced tickets to many of London’s shows on the same day as the performance.
Leicester square was once a very fashionable place to live and boasted among its residents Sir Isaac Newton, the scientist who theorized the idea of gravity. The famous artist Hogarth was also a resident here and painted many of his society portraits from his studio at number sixty-eight. In 1801 Hogarth's house was converted into the areas first restaurant; named Hotel de la Sablionere. Several hotels grew up around the square making it popular with visitors to London.
Hotels in Leicester Square at Pandarooms.com
They Include
Radisson Edwardian Leicester Square
"The ideal hideaway boutique hotel in the heart of the West End, tucked between the National Gallery and Leicester Square. The newly refurbished Radisson Edwardian Leicester Square Hotel is cool, minimalist and clutter free, with beautifully designed furniture, pale leathers and original art throughout."
The Empire Cinema on Leicester square was formerly a popular music hall with the same name. Towards the end of the twentieth century the Leicester square area had become a somewhat undesirable location until Westminster Council invested heavily in the area during the 1990s."
St Martins Lane
"From its dazzling location at the hub of Covent Garden, West End theatres and Trafalgar Square, St Martins Lane is a dramatic and daring reinvention of the urban resort. Smart, witty and sophisticated, Philippe Starck’s design is a brilliant collision of influences from the modern to the baroque, which suffuses the hotel with energy, vitality and magic. Unique features include the acclaimed Asia de Cuba restaurant, wildly popular Light Bar, and interactive light displays in every guest room that encourage guests to personalise their own individual space, and help to turn the hotel into a beautiful and ever changing mosaic of colour."
Leicester Square is the centre of London's cinema land, where four of leading United kingdom cinemas are located at.U K film and Royal premieres are regularly hosted at one of the Leicester Suare's four cinemas. The movie influence is apparent from the statue of Charlie Chaplin. Similar to the Hollywood Walk of Fame, the Square is surrounded by floor mounted plaques with film stars names and cast handprints on display.
To the North of the square is the Swiss Centre famed for its hourly chiming clock. The Society of West End Theatre's ‘half-priced ticket booth is located in the Clock tower buildings and sells reduced tickets to many of London’s shows on the same day as the performance.
Monday, 6 October 2008
Destination Birmingham and Hotels
It has the equivalent of over 26 football pitches worth of shops, boutiques and restaurants including the new Selfridges store, housed in one of the most striking and unique buildings anywhere in the world.
Find Hotels near Bullring Shopping Centre
Birmingham has developed its reputation as ‘ Europe’s Meeting Place’, attracting over 40% of the U K’s total conference trade, and over 25 million visitors a year. Festivals and Events The city hosts many festivals including an International Jazz Festival in the summer, a Film and Television Festival, Comedy Festival and ‘ Arts Fest’ in the autumn.
Broad Street is regularly used as a backdrop for street parades and other lively spectacles and throughout the year the Arcadian Centre in Chinatown is the setting for a variety of street entertainment and themed weekends.
The NEC and NIA host many of the country’s major events and exhibitions including The Motor Show, Clothes Show Live, Crufts and the B B C Good Food Show.
Hotels near the NEC
All Hotels in Birmingham
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Thursday, 2 October 2008
Destination Glasgow & Hotels in Glasgow
Glasgow is the largest city in Scotland. Glasgow is situated on the River Clyde in the country's west central lowlands. A person from Glasgow is known as a Glaswegian, which is also the name of the local dialect. Today it is one of Europe's top twenty financial centres and is home to many of Scotland's leading businesses.
The present site of Glasgow has been used since prehistoric times for settlement due to it being the forded point of the River Clyde furthest downstream, which also provided a natural area for salmon fishing.
The city centre is home to most of Glasgow's main cultural venues: The Theatre Royal (home of Scottish Opera and Scottish Ballet), The Pavilion, The King's Theatre, Glasgow Royal Concert Hall, Glasgow Film Theatre, RSAMD, Gallery of Modern Art (GoMA), Mitchell Library, the Centre for Contemporary Arts, McLellan Galleries and The Lighthouse Museum of Architecture, Design and the City. The world's tallest cinema, the eighteen-screen Cineworld is sited on Renfrew Street.
Football plays a big part in Glasgow. Glasgow has three professional football clubs: Celtic F.C. and Rangers F.C., together known by some as the Old Firm, and Partick Thistle F.C.. A fourth club, Queen's Park F.C., is an amateur club that plays in the Scottish professional league system.
Find Hotels near Celtic FC on Pandarooms.com
Celtic have a historic association with the people of Ireland and Scots of Irish extraction, who are both predominantly Catholic. Fans of rivals Rangers tended to come from Protestant backgrounds and were supporters of Anti-Catholicism and of British Unionism.
If you are visiting Glasgow in the next few months why not book a hotel.
Below is a list of hotels in Glasgow
Find Hotels in Glasgow at Pandarooms.com
The present site of Glasgow has been used since prehistoric times for settlement due to it being the forded point of the River Clyde furthest downstream, which also provided a natural area for salmon fishing.
The city centre is home to most of Glasgow's main cultural venues: The Theatre Royal (home of Scottish Opera and Scottish Ballet), The Pavilion, The King's Theatre, Glasgow Royal Concert Hall, Glasgow Film Theatre, RSAMD, Gallery of Modern Art (GoMA), Mitchell Library, the Centre for Contemporary Arts, McLellan Galleries and The Lighthouse Museum of Architecture, Design and the City. The world's tallest cinema, the eighteen-screen Cineworld is sited on Renfrew Street.
Football plays a big part in Glasgow. Glasgow has three professional football clubs: Celtic F.C. and Rangers F.C., together known by some as the Old Firm, and Partick Thistle F.C.. A fourth club, Queen's Park F.C., is an amateur club that plays in the Scottish professional league system.
Find Hotels near Celtic FC on Pandarooms.com
Celtic have a historic association with the people of Ireland and Scots of Irish extraction, who are both predominantly Catholic. Fans of rivals Rangers tended to come from Protestant backgrounds and were supporters of Anti-Catholicism and of British Unionism.
If you are visiting Glasgow in the next few months why not book a hotel.
Below is a list of hotels in Glasgow
Find Hotels in Glasgow at Pandarooms.com
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