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Edison
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It depends where you are going. Although we are a small country there are lots of areas all with their own attractions and scenery.
I will try to give you a few ideas. The Lake District is in Cumbria, an area of outstanding natural beauty.
http://www.golakes.co.uk/
http://www.wordsworth.org.uk/
Dove cottage was the home of William Wordsworth, one of our greatest poets and is in the Lake District.
We have loads of castles and historical buildings.
http://www.castles-of-britain.com/
If you want fun then come to the North of England, and visit Blackpool is a seaside town, and it is a bit like Coney Island.
http://www.visitblackpool.com/
Another place is a theme park. Alton Towers.
http://www.altontowers.com/pages/home
As well as all this there lots of real old English villages.
The Cotswolds are particularly pretty and quaint,
http://www.the-cotswolds.org/
I hope all this gives you some ideas of what we have here.
Hope you enjoy your visit.
Wyla xx
P.S. Did you know? Wherever you are in Britain you are never more than 75 miles from the coast, and our coastline is spectacular.!!! :-D |
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bty81216349
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I live in Scotland where we have lots of lovely places.
The Western Isles, The Borders, The Moray Coast on the east side of the country.
The large cities of Glasgow, Edinburgh have fantastic shops and restaurants and great night clubs.
England also has lots of beautiful parts, Yorkshire Dales and Moors, East Anglia, Devon, Somerset I could go on all day. Our little island is very beautiful and I hope you get to see lots of it while you are here.
Bon Voyage. |
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jamesdean2002uk
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lake district is a must - and london - |
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Janet G
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Try the brecons. Oh that's the brecon beacons in the midlands. Try London as well Big Ben, the London Eye, and not so much for beauty but a great day out is the V&A museum in London. |
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Beechy
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Yeah, Lake District as mentioned above more than once. It's stunning. Only tip I'd give is to not stay in the really busy places (Windermere, Ambleside) as they are super super pricey and mega rammed at peak season. If you want to be in a town with restaurants etc, no harm in basing yourself just outside the national park in Kendal, but again, that's still not that cheap. Keswick is always an option, but it's a btich to get to. |
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guitar girl
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defiantely London, the Cotswolds are nice, York, Edinburgh, lake district |
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murphywingedspur
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Well, it depends on what part of the u.K. you're going to visit.
Scotland has some stunning scenery, as does The Lake District....then moving South, its worth visiting Stratford upon Avon, and, of course, the pretty Cotswold villages, and then, further south; Clovelly in North Devon, Port Isaac, Padstow, Boscastle, Tintagel, St Ives, Lands End,and Polperro in Cornwall, then, on to South Devon; Dartmouth, Brixham Torquay, Babbacombe......so many pretty villages and beautiful, countyside....its so hard to choose. |
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Luce84
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Yup, definitely the Lake District, and the Peak District for that matter. Stratford upon Avon is nice, and seeped in Shakespeare. Cambridge is a mix of beautiful architecture and bicycles! Maybe Birmingham, Liverpool or Manchester for some city culture too. And probably some British coastline, so maybe Devon! Quite a trip! |
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kearjojo
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Temby and saundersfoot! honestly! lovely place the south east of Wales. enjoy, oh yeah, try thr donuts at Saundersfoot by the front. |
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gypsy
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I have travelled extensively throughout the UK and the west coast of Scotland is undoubtedly the most beautiful. |
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Carrie S
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It takes a long time to travel around the UK. If you drive from the North of Scotland to the South of England it would take you about 24 hours with stops. So you need to work out where you want to have a base otherwise you'll spend all week on a train or in a car and seeing nothing but service stations on the motorway. Edinburgh is beautiful as is York. The Lake District is beautiful, the penines, The Islands of Scotland are stark and gorgeous. As for cities then the most vibrant are London, Manchester, Birmingham, Edinburgh and Liverpool. For shows and museums, it has to be London. For scenery, Gloucestershire and the Cotswolds has an olde worlde feel about it with stone houses and country pubs and Dorset and Devon have cream teas, country lanes and thatched roof houses. Depends what you're into really. |
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allatsea
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The Lake District is lovely as is Wales - particularly Anglesey. But if you want unabashed scenery I suggest the north of Scotland. It does rain quite a bit and if it's sunny there are lots of midges. But these are minor irritations because you'll remember the majesty of it forever. And the Scots are very welcoming. |
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Debbie C
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Loch Lommond is the most beautiful place on the planet |
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olliedog
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The Gower peninsular to the west of Swansea. |
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Tony
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cornwall,the whole county is beautiful. |
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kicking_qt
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Travel all over lots of places are great but not quite beautiful - But i personally would have to say there are places in Scotland and Ireland that are so beautiful that they make you stop in your footsteps. You could spend a whole day watching/staring at the scenery.
I hope you have a great holiday & welcome to the UK, try and ignore the bad bits;-) |
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Elliot Rulz RAW
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Scotland! kidding! well not really..... i recommend Aviemore
http://images.google.co.uk/images?hl=en&q=Aviemore&gbv=2 looking at those pics are alredy cool! i nice place is dalfaber (in Aviemore)
have a nice stay =D |
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chimp
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either scotland or cornwall |
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Angel
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I only know England,
Lake District,
Cotswold's,
Yorkshire Dales,
Peak District,
Cornwall,
Devon,
Dorset,
North Yorkshire Moors,
Northumberland,
South Downs,
Warwickshire,
Sussex,
Englands Garden, Kent, etc.
Hertfordshire,
Ribble Valley,
Cumbria,
Englands Coastlines, beautiful.
Somerset,
Bath,
York,
Cambridge,
Oxford,
Strafford upon Avon,
London, English Capital,
Gloucestershire,
And many, many, more, enjoy. |
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Nick S
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Is there any good places in Britian (; |
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