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20 family nature holidays in the UK – from kayaking to stargazing and whale watching

20 family nature holidays in the UK – from kayaking to stargazing and whale watching

The Guardian20-07-2025
There's no escaping sea and sky on Tiree, as the Inner Hebridean island is only 12 miles long and 3 miles wide. Shallow seas provide rich feeding grounds for marine life, and it is one of the UK's best spots for whale watching. Tiree Sea Tours – a member of the WiSe national training scheme for minimising disturbance to marine wildlife – offers half-day and full-day sea-faris (from £75). Visitors can also try to spot basking sharks circling the island in the plankton-rich waters at viewing spots in Hynish Bay or Caoles, or from the deck of the CalMac ferry over to nearby Coll. Sunset Pods' two cabins (from £700 a week, one week minimum stay in July-August) sleep four and offer views over Balevullin beach, a Dark Sky discovery site and home to Blackhouse Watersports.
Dipping its toes in the Thames Estuary, the Isle of Sheppey is visited by thousands of migrating shore birds every year. Visitors of all ages can get twitching by staying at Elmley nature reserve in pop-up summer bell tents for four (from £170 a night, two nights minimum), and joining a Wildlife Wander Walk (£25) to spot species such as egrets, lapwings, avocets and marsh harriers. You can also jump in a Land Rover for an off-road adventure with an ecologist (from £20). To view it all from the water, Jet Stream Tours offers a four-hour around-the-island trip (£90 per family) that passes by Elmley and the cliffs of Eastchurch.
On the Llŷn Peninsula, Bert's Kitchen Garden campsite (from £44 a pitch) always has something new to offer. Last year, the husband-and-wife team who run it opened Beachside, a cafe on wheels offering local produce, including Heartland Coffee Roasters, and supper clubs with chefs from the area. A new sauna provides warmth after bracing sea swims. The site's private beach is ideal for families who love to be on the water, with paddleboards and kayaks for hire.
Further inland, in the heart of Eryri national park, Llyn Gwynant campsite (from £16pp; day visitors welcome from £5pp plus £5 per car) offers access to a river, mountain and lake, with boat hire on the doorstep. Glanllyn Lakeside caravan and camping park (from £27 a pitch) has a pebbled beach, ideal for launching kayaks and paddleboards, on the shore of Bala lake.
Coombeshead is a 162-hectare (400-acre) rewilding site just north of the Tamar Valley, owned and run by Derek Gow, an author and campaigner specialising in species reintroduction and nature recovery. This summer, families who book a stay in a shepherd's hut will receive a complimentary animal encounter to learn more about the reintroduction of white storks, water voles, wild cats, and Coombeshead's newest arrival, the European lynx. The off-grid shepherd's hut and campsite (from £12 a night) share the kitchen, shower and toilet block, and a rewilding garden. You can also book a two-hour wild walk or dusk beaver-watching experience (from £28 a person).
Once derelict, Northwich Woodlands is now home to more than 2,000 plant and animal species, offering families ample opportunity for nature immersion. Across more than 323 hectares, nine distinct habitats include wildflower meadows, wetlands and two canals: the Weaver Navigation and the Trent and Mersey. This summer, kids can get stuck in on guided pond-dipping and bug-hunting days throughout July and August.
Two- to five-berth canal boats are available to hire from nearby Anderton Marina through ABC Boat Hire (from £431 a night, two nights minimum) and feature several overnight itineraries, including along the recently refurbished Huddersfield Narrow canal across the Pennines.
Outdoor specialist Millets recently ranked Epping Forest as the third most family-friendly forest in the UK, after the New Forest and the Forest of Dean. Maps of more than 30 child-friendly trails, including the Willow and Holly trails, are available at the Epping Forest visitor centre at High Beach. You can also find 20 walks for all abilities on the Epping Forest Walks app. Events over the summer include crafting at the Toot Hill Country Show, as well as a 90-minute obstacle course for kids of all ages at Wild Forest (from £22). The Lee Valley Almost Wild campsite (from £30 a pitch), a short walk from Broxbourne station, has 20 basic pitches for those aged over 12.
Heggs Farm, a 55-hectare rewilding project just north of the Yorkshire Dales national park, prides itself on being wild. Members of the CampWild platform, which helps landowners and farmers open sections of land to campers, can book a stay at Heggs in two camping spots (from £15), or a camping bothy (from £45) for up to four people. Families are invited to participate in several conservation activities during their stay, including caring for newly planted trees, plugging dams to create new wetland areas, and recording wildlife sightings.
Near Skipton, on the southern edge of the Dales, Broughton Sanctuary also offers conservation activities for families. Weekly tree-planting events with ranger Joel Batchelor are free to attend, and kids can enjoy its Wild Explorers forest school (£35 a day).
Scotland's first marine protected area visitor centre, the Coast discovery centre in Lamlash, has been thrown into the spotlight after appearing in David Attenborough's hard-hitting new documentary, Ocean. With a summer of events lined up, there's no better place for kids to learn about our fragile marine environments. Activities include gentle shore scrambles with wildlife experts; snorkel taster sessions (from £40); and a two-hour boat ride on Coast's research vessel involving everything from habitat mapping to plankton sampling (from £30).
Some of the UK's best surfing spots, including Rest Bay and Woolacombe, are less than three hours' drive from Bristol, so it's no surprise that many campervan hire companies are setting up shop in the city. Roadsurfer's vans include the Surfer Suite, which sleeps four with an outdoor shower and pop-up roof (from £65). Alternatively, Shaka, from Camplify is a thoughtfully converted baker's van kitted out with luxuries including a composting toilet and hot shower, as well as quirkier additions such as stained-glass windows and a record collection. It's available to rent for up to five people (from £110) and can be delivered within a 100-mile radius of Bristol.
When it comes to pitching up, Porthcawl Surf School, between Swansea and Cardiff, recommends Sandy Bay campsite near Rest Bay, while back in north Devon, Little Roadway Farm offers electric hook‑ups for campervans (from £30) and pitches (from £15pp) just moments from Woolacombe's sweeping sands.
Three Cliffs Bay's constantly shifting landscape - the tide sweeps in and out across soft sand to dunes, a salt marsh and the Pennard Pill stream - provides never-ending fun for kids of all ages. Rising out of the bay are the famous three limestone cliffs, one of Wales's most accessible climbing spots. Gower Adventures offers the best way to give it a try; families can join full-day climbing adventures with expert tuition from local guides (£210 for a family of four). Spend the night pitched up at Nicholaston Farm (from £29 a pitch) – a sheltered campsite with big sea views, good washrooms, and a farm shop.
Aberdeenshire has more hours of sunshine a year than a lot of places in Scotland, which also means more clear nights for stargazing. On the eastern edge of the Cairngorms national park in an area with particularly low light pollution, Cairngorm Bothies is an ideal base to view celestial events such as the Perseid meteor shower in August. Its 12 self-catering bothies sleep either two or four (from £125 a night, two nights minimum), and several are fully accessible. Thanks to a partnership with hiking guides Hillgoers, families staying here can book stargazing excursions with a certified 'star ranger' this summer. Alternatively, head to the Glen Tanar visitor centre, a designated Dark Sky discovery site some 15 minutes down the road by car.
The North York Moors national park's Sutton Bank centre, which sits on an escarpment over the Vale of York, has launched three new gravel biking routes this summer. Part-created by cycling journalist Guy Kesteven, the routes are accessible from the Sutton Bank Bikes hire station (from £40 a day). The 15-mile (25km) Moorland Meander has an 'easy' rating, taking in the open plateaus of the moors with only 200 metres of climbing. Also new this year is an Edge of Empire accessible trail at archaeological site Cawthorn Roman Camps. On a working farm, a shepherd's hut on Stonebeck Gate Farm (from £110 a night) sleeps four.
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The River Ouse has become the first river in the UK to gain legal rights — a big step forward in the campaign for cleaner waterways. The Kayak Coach runs trips here to suit all abilities and ages, including a two and a half hour adventure for beginners, which paddles along the Ouse from the middle of Lewes (£60).
Further east, the River Rother meanders through The Original Hut Company's campsite (shepherd's hut for five, from £150) near Bodiam Castle. The company's partnership with adventure provider Epic Life makes it easy to rent kayaks or paddleboards (from £6) directly from the campsite, or you can join a session on giant paddleboards for up to eight people (from £95.40). Nearby, the Pop-Up campsite on regenerative Hop and Hare farm (from £15 a night per person, two nights minimum) will keep kids busy with egg collecting, a nature trail, den building and paddleboards.
Follow in the footsteps of Chris Packham and Anita Rani to spot wildlife on the former site of BBC Springwatch, Pensthorpe nature reserve. Activities include a Poo Trail for younger children and evening activities such as badger watching (£20.95) and a Creatures of the Night (£16.95) bat and owl-watching adventure. There's a pop-up campsite now too, with grass pitches from £30 a night, or bell tents for four from £130 a night (both two nights minimum).
If you'd rather do it yourself, pick up a four-mile section of the Norfolk coast path from Morston Quay through Blakeney national nature reserve to pretty Cley-next-the-Sea and catch the Coasthopper bus service back. If you can time the tides right, a ferry service from Morston Quay heads out to Blakeney Point, which is home to England's largest grey seal colony.
Families looking to try mountain biking will love Old Bob's, the newest trail at the Forest of Dean Cycle Centre, named after a pumping engine from a nearby former coal mine. Weaving just over a mile through the forest, the trail features three areas designed for practising off-road riding skills. It's also one of the UK's most accessible mountain bike trails, suitable for bikes with up to four wheels as well as adaptive bikes.
More gentle activities nearby include woodland fun in Puzzlewood's rare temperate rainforest, where you can stay in a cottage sleeping four plus an infant (from £240 a night, minimum three nights), and the Forest of Dean Sculpture Trail just across the road from the cycle centre.
In the middle of the Causeway Coast, Portrush's sheltered harbour and sweeping beach is an excellent spot to try paddleboarding and surfing. Portrush Surf School, run by pro surfer Martin 'TK' Kelly, has availability on a four-day VIP Surf Camp for nine- to 16-year-olds (£140) throughout the summer holidays, or you can book a three-hour family surf or paddleboard lesson (£160 for four; over-nines only).
Visitors can get a little further off-the-beaten-track with Free Dive Northern Ireland, which takes groups from Portrush to coastal locations on half-day paddleboard and cave-snorkelling adventures (from £50pp) throughout July and August.
As water temperatures creep above 20C, it's a great time to take older kids to try more serious wild swimming. In Godstone, Surrey, a sand-extraction site has been converted into a natural swimming lake known as Divers Cove. Circuits of up to 650 metres are marked out around the lake, and all sessions are overseen by lifeguards (£10.99; over-sevens only).
Younger kids might prefer the nearby green flag-awarded Frensham Great Pond, which has a roped-off swimming area and gentle shelving beach. And at Box Hill, visitors can experience one of Nature Calling's six new art projects. Dawn After Night, Spring After Winter is a free digital adventure game designed to help more people connect with their local landscapes.
The Supreme Court recently upheld the legal right to wild camp on Dartmoor, providing an excellent opportunity to educate the next generation about the joys and responsibilities of wild camping. Before embarking on an adventure, read up on the code of conduct – which includes rules on travelling light, leaving no trace and staying out of sight – and find out where you're allowed to camp using the national park's backpack camping map. The Dartmoor Preservation Association has also created a handy guide to the 3Ps (pees, poos and periods) when wild camping. If the idea of pitching up alone is too much, try booking a spot at Beardown Farm, which has two wild campsites on a 450-hectare working farm on the high moor. Pitches (from £5 per adult; £2.50 per child) include communal tap and fire pits, plus a composting toilet in summer.
In just two years, brothers Giacomo and Matteo have transformed Higher Farm near Castle Cary from a traditional dairy farm into a biodynamic hub. In May this year, the 20-hectare site – with 2,000 newly planted trees, a swimming lake, orchards, and two friendly pigs named Clover and Pumpkin – opened for the summer season. Day visitors can join in 'farmtivities' throughout the summer, including self-guided farm tours, pick-your-own and feeding the animals. A pizza van is open on Saturdays, and there's a play area for kids. Guests can also spend the night in a secluded spot, tucked into two heated yurt cabins, each sleeping three people (£130 a night, two nights minimum).
The Horse and Pony Protection Association (Happa) is offering children the chance to own a pony for a day (£35) at its site overlooking Thursden Valley near Burnley this summer, helping six to 16-year-olds understand what it takes to look after a horse, including mucking out, grooming, walking with the ponies and riding. There's also a cafe, education trail and outdoor park.
Meanwhile, near Preston, Alpaca Fold is running an alpaca walking experience (£20 per adult; £15 for 16s and under) on its 14-hectare site close to Samlesbury village, this summer. Sandwiched between the two on the edge of the Forest of Bowland, Little Oakhurst Boutique Glamping has shepherd's huts and yurts (from £130 a night for four).
Prices are correct at the time of going to press, based on July stays and per person unless otherwise specified
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21 freebies and discounts for parents this summer holiday including food and childcare
21 freebies and discounts for parents this summer holiday including food and childcare

The Sun

time14 minutes ago

  • The Sun

21 freebies and discounts for parents this summer holiday including food and childcare

Scroll to see how to get free food if you qualify for free school meals CHILD'S PLAY 21 freebies and discounts for parents this summer holiday including food and childcare PARENTS can get thousands of pounds worth of free support to ease some of the cost pressures during the summer holidays. From free childcare hours to food vouchers, as well as summer clubs and extra benefits, there is plenty of help available. 1 Parents can get free food among other perks over the holidays Credit: Getty Images Here is a round-up of what you can get... 1. Free tennis Families can play tennis for free at tennis courts in London, Manchester, Glasgow and many other towns and cities across Britain thanks to Barclays Free Park Tennis. Find your nearest at Whatever your age or ability, Barclays Free Park Tennis is open to anyone looking to get started, improve their skills and enjoy free tennis. 2. Free football Kellogg's are also offering 30,000 free places at football camps across the UK. To secure their place, parents need buy a box of Kellogg's cereal and use the on-pack QR code to sign up. Head to to find a full list of over 150 camp locations. Parkplay is a nationwide scheme offering two hours of free community ball play Saturday mornings in a park or public space 3. Free exercise classes Nuffield Health offers free girls fitness classes run by expert instructors. Book at if you have a Nuffield gym near you. 4. Free run clubs Junior Parkruns are a series of 2km jogs held all over the country for ages four to 14. They are free to join and a great way to get kids moving. 5. Free clubs and food Families who receive free school meals can access the Holiday Activities and Food (HAF) programme. This is offered by most councils in England to help provide childcare, activities and healthy meals to children from low-income families. It can be used to sign up children to sports, music and arts clubs, as well as enjoy a nutritious meal each day for free. The help on offer varies by council. For example, in some areas you could be offered holiday club places for the equivalent of at least four hours a day. Others may run a standard 8am-3pm day for free. Contact your local authority to see exactly what is available and how to apply. 6. Free food eating out A number of restaurants run 'kids eat free' schemes over the holidays including summer. The exact terms of each scheme varies and some are better value than others so check the small print. Often, you'll need to buy an adult meal of spend a certain amount. But it's a great way to save on enjoying a meal out with the family at venues including Ask Italian, Asda, Tesco, Bills and Bella Italia. 7. Free vouchers for healthy food The Healthy Start scheme supports pregnant people and families with young children to help them afford healthy groceries, including fruit, vegetables, and milk. The scheme is a weekly allowance of £4.25 for people over 10 weeks pregnant, £8.50 for the first year of a child's life, and £4.25 a week for children aged one to four. That's as much as £442 worth of essentials over the year for each child Eligibility is based on income levels and entitlement to means-tested benefits such as Universal Credit or: Child tax credits (only if your family's annual income is £16,190 or less) Income support Income-based jobseeker's allowance Pension credit (which includes the child addition) Universal Credit (only if your family's take-home pay is £408 or less per month from employment) For more information or to apply, visit 8. Free nappies Parents can get free nappies by signing up and testing nappies for Pampers. Head to the Pampers' website to sign up, you'll have to fill in your personal details, including your home address. Once you've registered, you can use your Pampers Squad membership and apply for all projects. 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Dates and events vary by store look up your neatest at John Lewis is another store that has free events for members, some of which can be suitable for kids. 16. Free farm visits You can visit farms across the country for cheap or free entry. Check out Swansea Community Farm, Bath City Farm, Heeley City Farm in Sheffield and Balsall City Farm in Birmingham, as well as different farms in London. 17. Free childcare Parents in England can get free childcare of up to 30 hours as week for children aged between nine months and four years old. However, this is limited to 38 weeks of the year to coincide with term times. But if you need childcare during the school holidays, you can often stretch out the help by taking fewer hours over more weeks. This means summer holidays costs won't come as such a shock. Ask your childcare provider about stretching out the help. Currently, the exact amount you can get depends on your child's age and circumstances, whether you're working and your income. 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Breathtaking £4.5m estate with turret & ‘party barn' once owned by King Charles is on sale – and he can still pop in
Breathtaking £4.5m estate with turret & ‘party barn' once owned by King Charles is on sale – and he can still pop in

The Sun

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  • The Sun

Breathtaking £4.5m estate with turret & ‘party barn' once owned by King Charles is on sale – and he can still pop in

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‘Overheads have gone up': Britain's hospitality sector faces tough time this summer
‘Overheads have gone up': Britain's hospitality sector faces tough time this summer

The Guardian

time44 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

‘Overheads have gone up': Britain's hospitality sector faces tough time this summer

On a sunny weekday in Norfolk, the lunchtime rush is getting under way at the White Horse in Brancaster Staithe. On the large terrace at the back of the pub overlooking the coast, families and groups of holidaymakers are tucking in to local lobsters, plates of crab and fish and chips. 'This is our Christmas,' says James Nye, the managing director of Anglian Country Inns, the hospitality business started by his father, Cliff, 30 years ago which owns the White Horse and nine other venues across Norfolk and Hertfordshire, stressing the importance of the key summer season. 'We've had a strong start to the year with three months of sunshine,' he says. 'But I think that has masked the challenges the sector is facing. When the rain comes you can see how overheads have gone up.' Nye reels off a list of soaring costs facing the White Horse that will resonate with pubs, cafes, restaurants and hotels across the UK, underlining additional pressures facing the sector this summer season. 'Since April we have had a lot of increase in overheads, pretty much across the board. We've got food price inflation, the big one is labour, with the NICs [employer national insurance contributions] and national minimum wage, and everything is getting more expensive,' he says. Nye says his business, like many others, has been unable to absorb all the extra costs and passed some on to customers. But he and others are aware they have to tread a fine line at a time when many households are watching their spending. Holidaymakers Brian and Ann Hart, visiting from neighbouring Suffolk, are enjoying a glass of prosecco while waiting to check in to their room at the White Horse. They have found accommodation and meals in North Norfolk 'definitely more expensive' than during their last visit, says Brian. 'We would still come away, but maybe only a couple of times a year now because of the cost,' adds Ann. Tax rises and extra employment costs announced in last October's budget came into force in April, raising employer national insurance contributions (NICs) and lowering the threshold at which contributions are due. The minimum wage was also raised by 6.7% to £12.21 an hour. These measures are ultimately expected to raise £25bn a year, which the government has said is needed to restore crumbling public services. However, the trade body UKHospitality, which represents thousands of restaurants, hotels, pubs, cafes and nightclubs, has warned the changes will cost the industry an extra £1bn, forcing some to cut jobs or slash investment, while others are struggling to stay afloat. 'This is the toughest trading environment I've ever experienced in 30 years in the sector,' says Kate Nicholls, the chair of UKHospitality, calling it even tougher than the pandemic. 'It is that perfect storm of soaring costs, a cost of living crisis happening at the same time, which means you can't pass all of those costs on to customers, and a really intense squeeze on margins. Coming on the back of closures and losses during Covid, businesses are really lacking in resilience.' Hospitality has shed 84,000 jobs since last October's budget, according to figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), making it the worst affected sector. UKHospitality predicts this figure could hit 200,000 by the time the financial year ends in March 2026. Meanwhile, warnings from the sector now appear to be becoming reality. The Italian casual dining chain Gusto and the Thai restaurant chain Busaba both collapsed into administration in recent days. Seven of Gusto's 13 sites were bought in a pre-pack administration resulting in 200 job losses, while Busaba was also bought in a pre-pack deal, saving about 240 jobs at seven sites across London and Essex. Nye also knows several pub operators who have had to call last orders for the final time, amid industry warnings that one pub will close down every day this year across Britain. Anglian Country Inns employs about 100 people at the White Horse, a third of whom are seasonal staff, and a further 400 across the rest of the business. Nye says they have worked hard to retain staff by treating them well, but amid current pressures they are trying to make teams more efficient in a bid to cut costs. They have 5% fewer full-time staff than last year and have hired fewer seasonal workers than in the past. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion This reduction in seasonal hiring is being repeated across the sector, and job postings for temporary hospitality jobs are 25% lower than this time last year, according to figures from the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC). The knock-on effect is a cut in job opportunities for students or those looking for flexible work, who have traditionally relied on hospitality jobs to get their first taste of employment. It has resulted in a summer of disappointment and frustration for 19-year-old Jeremy Nunn from Hertfordshire, who planned to work in hospitality over the summer after finishing his first year studying history and French at the University of Leeds. Despite sending off about 100 applications for seasonal roles, he still hasn't found a job. 'It's a bit disheartening when you spend a lot of time on applications and then send them off online, it can feel like shouting into the void,' he says. 'On most of my applications I've received nothing back.' A few miles down the road from Brancaster in fashionable Burnham Market – nicknamed Chelsea-on-sea – the ice-cream van is doing a roaring trade and visitors are browsing in the town's boutique and homeware shops. The final customers are finishing their coffees and paying their bills after eating lunch at Socius, an award-winning restaurant known for its small plates featuring locally sourced produce, opened in 2018 by the husband and wife team of Dan and Natalie Lawrence. Dan Lawrence says challenging times are forcing kitchens to get creative. 'We have to be smarter, cleverer and try to make better profit to cover those costs,' he says, sitting next to the counter where his staff are preparing ingredients for the evening's dinner service. 'We change our menu every week, sometimes throughout the week, so we have close conversations with suppliers and they tell us what's good, what they've got plenty of, what's a good price or what not to go anywhere near.' Lawrence believes, like many others in hospitality, that the government could do more to help businesses struggling with high costs, such as the temporary reduction in value added tax (VAT) from 20% to 5% introduced by the then chancellor Rishi Sunak to kickstart hospitality after the first national Covid lockdown. For now, Labour ministers have announced plans to 'breathe new life into the high street' by overhauling planning and licensing rules, to make it easier for new hospitality venues to open in empty premises, as well making it easier for restaurants and pubs to get permission to allow customers to dine alfresco or enjoy a pint on the pavement. While many in the industry would welcome such a move, others found it 'galling' at a time of higher taxes and costs, says Jonathan Lawson, the chief executive of Butcombe Group, which runs 120 pubs and inns across the UK and Channel Islands, many of which are in rural locations. 'Most in the industry would say, because of the pain the government inflicted on the hospitality sector, why would new businesses choose to actually be starting up in some of those locations?' he asks. Lawson says Butcombe Group has grown well since the pandemic, partly through diversifying its business, including opening its pubs earlier for breakfast, while promoting its venues as places for couples to celebrate their weddings. 'In hospitality, our job is to provide what customers want,' he says. 'Hospitality is the third-highest employer in the UK, it can drive growth, it wants to invest. It's almost in spite of the government, rather than because of it.' Back in Norfolk, the sun is still shining, but Nye worries what will happen when the summer ends and the visitors leave. 'Our big fear is what happens when trade dies down, when the season gets a bit quieter. Carrying those extra overheads is going to really hurt us,' he says.

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