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A TRIP AROUND OUR BACKYARD

Ford and Etal

Etal has a 14th Century Etal Castle and within walking distance, is the Heatherslaw light railway which takes you from Etal into Heatherslaw - a great day out for young and old alike. You might explore the 19th century water powered corn mill. Here, traditional methods and original machinery are used to grind locally grown wheat into flour.


After which, you’ll no doubt feel tempted to buy some of the bakery’s cake or bread from the Heatherslaw Mill gift shop. There is a tea room too, which offers traditional home baking. Cycles can also be hired at Heatherslaw, this is a good area for walking .

In the picturesque Etal Village, there is a post office with shop and tea room, a nursery selling alpines, heathers and shrubs etc., and the BLACK BULL, Northumberland’s only thatched roof pub offering real ale.

Northumbria Nurseries with over 1600 different types of shrubs etc. and for the  artists, Lady Waterford Hall with large murals depicting the children of the village and their families.   Phone: 01890 820 338


St. Mary Magdalene's Church

During the Millennium year every household in the village of Whalton near Morpeth, was given a camera to record what 2000 and the village meant to them. The prints were made into 2850 mosaic squares from which the Whalton Christ was created, it remains on display in the church.

Woodhorn Colliery Museum

The Woodhorn colliery was opened in 1894 and remained operational extracting coal from beneath the ground until 1981. It was opened as a Museum in 1989 depicting the life and times of the Ashington Pitmen in the original Pith Head Buildings.  It has become a centre of local activities in Ashington the home of the famous footballers Bobby & Jack Charlton and Jackie Millburn who worked in the Woodhorn Pit. Click images or Phone 01670 856 968 for further info


Tynemouth Rail Station

The Italian Patriot of the early 1800s stayed in Tynemouth during a Political visit to England, in a home now part of King's School noted by an English Heritage Blue Plaque on a wall as you leave the Historic Rail Station where a Craft & Flea Market is Held each Saturday &  Sunday. 

The name Garibaldi was later given to the traditional fruity wafer biscuit and he also has a Restaurant & Bistro named after him within the Platform Buildings of the Station, there is a Bofi in the station for passing Cyclists on the Coast to Coast Route along Hadrian's Wall to Carlisle.


Alnwick Castle

Alnwick Castle has been in the Percy family since1309 and is the home of the Duke of Northumberland. Open from April to October it is in the centre of the town with fine gardens landscaped by Capability Brown, have a pre visit at www.alnwickcastle.com 


         Warkworth Castle     English Heritage  
Web Sitewww.english-heritage.org.uk 
Warkworth Castle is one of the many ruined remains on the Northumberland coast which boasts the finest sandy beaches in the British Isles. The magnificent eight-towered keep of Warkworth Castle stands on its hill above the River Coquet, dominating all around it. A large and complex stronghold, it was home to the Percy family who at times wielded more power in the North than the King himself. Most famous of them all was Harry Hotspur (Sir Henry Percy), immortalised in Northumbrian ballads and Shakespeare's Henry IV.

St Aidan's Winery

On Holy Island which can only be reach at low tide over the causeway are the makers of Lindisfarne Mead, a sweet, honey based alcoholic drink which is traditional to Northumberland, which was once made by the monks  of Lindisfarne Priory.

Barter Books

Britain's Largest Second Hand Books with Tea or coffee, at Alnwick Rail Station on the main road into the Market Place

www.barterbooks.co.uk    Tel:    01665-604-888


The Northumbria Tourist Board welcomes you to the historic border country of North-East England, lying between Yorkshire and Scotland and comprising the areas of Durham, Tyne & Wear, Northumberland and the Tees Valley.

Web Site:  www.ntb.org.uk                       E.Mail:  feedback@ntb.org.uk 

      Bamburgh Castle   Ivan Lindsay


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Last modified: March 11, 2007

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