logo
#

Latest news with #IsleofArran

Beach cocktail bar where you can sit right on the sand named one of the best in the UK
Beach cocktail bar where you can sit right on the sand named one of the best in the UK

The Sun

time31-07-2025

  • The Sun

Beach cocktail bar where you can sit right on the sand named one of the best in the UK

SCOTLAND'S only cocktail beach bar has been named one of the best in the UK. The Times revealed its top seven beach bars in the UK, and this one on the Isle of Arran came in at number six. 5 Cladach Beach House is on the Isle of Arran in Scotland and was described by The Times as being "the most beautifully situated cocktail bar in Scotland." Its island location means it has incredible views across the Firth of Clyde, and visitors can enjoy a drink at a picnic table on the sand. The bar is about two miles outside of the village of Brodick. To get there will take around 40 minutes if you're walking, or under 10 minutes in the car. According to Google, the bar is open Thursday to Monday from 12pm to 6pm. The cocktail bar has said that depending on the weather it can feel like you're in the Mediterranean - some guests have even likened it to being in the Caribbean. Or in the winter when you can have a drink wrapped up in a coat and underneath a cosy blanket, it's more like a ski lodge. There are classic cocktails, but unique ones too as the bar turns local plants and flowers into delicious drinks. Some drinks contain hogweed seed, sea lettuce, fuchsia, lemon balm, meadow sweet and blackcurrants. It's a popular spot with locals and tourists who grab a drink and sip it on picnic tables set up on the sand. 5 5 One visitor wrote on Tripadvisor: "Cocktails, good vibes & sand between your toes. A little off the beaten track, this gem of a bar is quite unique. "A stunning location with great vibes - we could have been in the Caribbean." Another who went in winter described it as being a "unique little beach bar, cosy with log burner, dog friendly and great position at beach. Staff very friendly and make delicious cocktails." During the winter months, some enjoy a dip in the sea before or after their drink. According to Facebook, the stretch of sand often has Stonesthrow Sauna, a mobile sauna, parked up to warm the punters up afterwards. To get to the nearby village of Brodick, visitors can take a direct ferry from Ardrossan which takes around 55 minutes. In top spot for the best UK beach bars was The Watering Hole in Cornwall, which sits on the long sandy stretch. It's been run by the same family since the 1970s, it has a big sports screen, live music and a recently added rooftop set up too. Take a look at our UK's best beach bars – with DJ sets, sunset views and signature cocktails. And the UK's most popular seaside towns with a California-like beach bar named one of the best in the country. 5

Ratify ocean treaty and ban destructive fishing in protected areas, PM urged
Ratify ocean treaty and ban destructive fishing in protected areas, PM urged

The Independent

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

Ratify ocean treaty and ban destructive fishing in protected areas, PM urged

The Prime Minister is being urged to take 'decisive action' to protect the seas in the wake of Sir David Attenborough's new film on the oceans. The heads of Greenpeace UK, Oceana UK and Blue Marine Foundation have written to Sir Keir Starmer urging him to prioritise ratifying the Global Ocean Treaty to conserve the high seas and help protect 30% of the world's oceans. And he must implement a full ban on bottom trawling and other forms of destructive fishing in all UK marine protected areas to deliver conservation efforts domestically, they say. Ocean with David Attenborough, released in cinemas to mark the renowned naturalist and TV presenter's 99th birthday, highlights the need to protect nearly a third of the oceans so they can recover from overfishing and habitat destruction, secure food for billions of people and tackle climate change. The film includes dramatic footage of the devastation fishing practices such as bottom trawling wreak on the seabed and its wildlife, including before and after footage of scallop dredging off Scotland's Isle of Arran. And in one sequence the camera follows a bottom trawl – where nets are dragged with a metal beam across the seabed to catch fish – as it travels over the ocean floor, destroying the habitat, stirring up silt which releases carbon, and scooping up species indiscriminately. But the film, narrated by Sir David, also offers a message of hope that if protected from damage such as intensive and destructive fishing, the oceans can recover, and backs the call to protect 30% of the world's marine areas by 2030, known as 30X30. In the letter to the PM, the conservationists point to the footage in the film and say: 'Britain's marine life is under huge threat from bottom trawling, the most destructive form of fishing, that has had a devastating impact on marine ecosystems in UK domestic waters for decades. 'Fully banning bottom trawling in English MPAs (marine protected areas) would mean these areas could recover and tangibly deliver on our 30×30 goal in practice, not just on paper,' they urge. The letter to the PM from Will McCallum, co-executive director of Greenpeace UK, Hugo Tagholm, executive director of Oceana UK and Clare Brook, chief executive of Blue Marine Foundation, comes ahead of a key UN ocean conference in France next month. The letter argues the conference is a 'key opportunity for the UK to be a global leader on ocean protection'. And the conservationists point towards Foreign Secretary David Lammy's speech eight months ago in which he said the UK was 'completely committed' to ratifying the high seas treaty, as part of global efforts on 30X30. But no parliamentary progress on ratifying the treaty has been made, and continued delay 'risks embarrassment' at the conference, as well as the opportunity to have a voice and proactively shape the deal's implementation, they argue. They urge the PM: 'The story we tell about the world's ocean could be very different by the end of this Parliament if you and the Government seize on opportunities now to push for and implement real marine protection, both here in the UK and across the world. 'As Sir David says, 'The ocean can recover faster than we can ever imagine: it can bounce back to life' and you have a chance to be part of that recovery. 'Act now to ban catastrophic practices like bottom trawling from UK waters and around the world, and ensure we have the protection the world's ocean needs,' the conservationists write.

Ratify ocean treaty and ban destructive fishing in protected areas, PM urged
Ratify ocean treaty and ban destructive fishing in protected areas, PM urged

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Ratify ocean treaty and ban destructive fishing in protected areas, PM urged

The Prime Minister is being urged to take 'decisive action' to protect the seas in the wake of Sir David Attenborough's new film on the oceans. The heads of Greenpeace UK, Oceana UK and Blue Marine Foundation have written to Sir Keir Starmer urging him to prioritise ratifying the Global Ocean Treaty to conserve the high seas and help protect 30% of the world's oceans. And he must implement a full ban on bottom trawling and other forms of destructive fishing in all UK marine protected areas to deliver conservation efforts domestically, they say. Ocean with David Attenborough, released in cinemas to mark the renowned naturalist and TV presenter's 99th birthday, highlights the need to protect nearly a third of the oceans so they can recover from overfishing and habitat destruction, secure food for billions of people and tackle climate change. The film includes dramatic footage of the devastation fishing practices such as bottom trawling wreak on the seabed and its wildlife, including before and after footage of scallop dredging off Scotland's Isle of Arran. And in one sequence the camera follows a bottom trawl – where nets are dragged with a metal beam across the seabed to catch fish – as it travels over the ocean floor, destroying the habitat, stirring up silt which releases carbon, and scooping up species indiscriminately. But the film, narrated by Sir David, also offers a message of hope that if protected from damage such as intensive and destructive fishing, the oceans can recover, and backs the call to protect 30% of the world's marine areas by 2030, known as 30X30. In the letter to the PM, the conservationists point to the footage in the film and say: 'Britain's marine life is under huge threat from bottom trawling, the most destructive form of fishing, that has had a devastating impact on marine ecosystems in UK domestic waters for decades. 'Fully banning bottom trawling in English MPAs (marine protected areas) would mean these areas could recover and tangibly deliver on our 30×30 goal in practice, not just on paper,' they urge. The letter to the PM from Will McCallum, co-executive director of Greenpeace UK, Hugo Tagholm, executive director of Oceana UK and Clare Brook, chief executive of Blue Marine Foundation, comes ahead of a key UN ocean conference in France next month. The letter argues the conference is a 'key opportunity for the UK to be a global leader on ocean protection'. And the conservationists point towards Foreign Secretary David Lammy's speech eight months ago in which he said the UK was 'completely committed' to ratifying the high seas treaty, as part of global efforts on 30X30. But no parliamentary progress on ratifying the treaty has been made, and continued delay 'risks embarrassment' at the conference, as well as the opportunity to have a voice and proactively shape the deal's implementation, they argue. They urge the PM: 'The story we tell about the world's ocean could be very different by the end of this Parliament if you and the Government seize on opportunities now to push for and implement real marine protection, both here in the UK and across the world. 'As Sir David says, 'The ocean can recover faster than we can ever imagine: it can bounce back to life' and you have a chance to be part of that recovery. 'Act now to ban catastrophic practices like bottom trawling from UK waters and around the world, and ensure we have the protection the world's ocean needs,' the conservationists write.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store