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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Travel

‘You couldn’t get closer to spring if you tried’: readers’ favourite Easter day trips for families

Coalhouse Fort, built to protect the north (Essex) side of the Thames estuary.
Coalhouse Fort was built to protect the north (Essex) side of the Thames estuary. Photograph: Heritage/Alamy

Winning tip: Crabbing on the Thames estuary

Have a free day out with the kids at Coalhouse Fort in East Tilbury in Essex. If you take bikes, start with a ride around the fort, then spend time in the playground, followed by a picnic on the green overlooking the fort (in the summer the ice-cream man is there, too). In the afternoon comes the best bit: crabbing! The fort has open days throughout the year (pay to enter), but the car park is free. There’s also a lovely family pub just before the fort, which does a great Sunday roast.
Holly Saddington

All beach bases covered, East Lothian

People walking across bridge to nowhere, Belhaven Bay.
People walking across bridge to nowhere, Belhaven Bay. Photograph: Sally Anderson/Alamy

Home to the famous bridge to nowhere, Belhaven Bay is an unspoilt beach popular for surfing and paddleboarding. Situated at the start of the John Muir Way walking trail, it is also a nature reserve, teeming with birdlife. Add an adventure playpark, picnic spots and toilets, and there’s everything you could possibly need. And it’s all free, bar a £2.50 all-day parking charge.
Paul Gillon

Guardian Travel readers' tips

Every week we ask our readers for recommendations from their travels. A selection of tips will be featured online and may appear in print. To enter the latest competition visit the readers' tips homepage

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A slice of the Med in Devon

Salcombe North Sands, Devon – ‘just like being in the Med’
Salcombe North Sands, Devon – ‘just like being in the Med.’ Photograph: Nick Maslen/Alamy

Salcombe North Sands in Devon is a beautiful cove with great rock pools and a sandy beach – and lots of pretty shells to adorn sandcastles. For a bite to eat, head to The Winking Prawn right near the beach. On a hot summer’s day, it’s just like being in the Med, but even on a blustery spring day it’s fun.
Sharon

Robin Hood’s Cave, Peak District

Robin Hood’s Cave at Stanage Edge
Robin Hood’s Cave at Stanage Edge in the Peak District. Photograph: Chris Craggs/Alamy

Craggy Stanage Edge is a natural parkour course offering unlimited adventure along the escarpment. Clamber down to Robin Hood’s Cave, hidden away in the cliff face, for the perfect side trip, and bring it to life with folklore tales of Robin of Loxley and Little John from nearby Hathersage.
Lindsay Allen

Lamb birthing in Sussex

Ewe with four tiny lambs
Newborn lambs at Coombes Farm in Sussex. Photograph: Betty Finney/Alamy

Perched on the sloping chalk shoulders of the South Downs above Shoreham lies the authentic working Coombes Farm (£5 adults, £4 children), which opens its doors every spring. Picnic among the daffodils while sun reflects off the channel and walk freely through the lambing sheds – if the timing’s right, children can marvel at a live birth. For £4 each, take a tractor ride over the Downs for crystal-clear views of the national park and sea. My one-year-old shook with excitement with every gear change. You couldn’t get closer to spring if you tried.
Oliver Holbrook

Tram rides and ferris wheels in Llandudno

The Great Orme Tramway
The Great Orme Tramway overlooking Llandudno bay. Photograph: eye35.pix/Alamy

The Victorian town of Llandudno offers one of my favourite days out. Escape the crowds by taking the tram up the Great Orme, then hike around the nature trail to be rewarded with beautiful heather and butterflies, and gorgeous views of Anglesey and the Isle of Man. After, take the tram, or cable car, back down and have an ice-cream on the pier while watching Punch and Judy slog it out. There’s also a giant ferris wheel that lights up at night. For food, head to the Cottage Loaf in Llandudno, or the Queens Head in nearby Glanwydden.
Bethan Patfield

Gloucestershire’s magical woodland

Puzzlewood in the Forest of Dean
The fairytale Puzzlewood in the Forest of Dean. Photograph: Robin Weaver/Alamy

With moss- and lichen-coated trees and rocks, winding pathways and fairytale bridges, it’s no puzzle why Puzzlewood (adult £8.50, child £7) has been used as a location for film and TV shows including Doctor Who, Merlin and Star Wars. A trip to this otherworldly wood in the Forest of Dean, Coleford, is perfect for triggering imaginations of any age. There’s also a cafe, a willow maze and farm animals.
Sharon Pinner

Red squirrels and Wordsworth in the Lake District

Allan Bank in Grasmere
The art room at Allan Bank house in Grasmere. Photograph: The National Trust Photolibrary/Alamy

Allan Bank in Grasmere, Cumbria, is among the most welcoming and family-friendly of National Trust houses – no teasels on chairs here! Daydream about Wordsworth and his family, who once lived here, or curl up with a book and a cup of tea while your kids get messy in the art room overlooking the lake, or explore the playroom. Watch red squirrels through binoculars, picnic in the deckchairs and take a trail through the beech woods. There’s a YHA just across the road for those wanting to make a weekend of it.
Jenny Lunnon

Tree houses and tulips, North Yorkshire

RHS Harlow Carr near Harrogate
A show garden RHS Harlow Carr near Harrogate. Photograph: Christopher Nicholson/Alamy

RHS Harlow Carr (family ticket, £32) near Harrogate, bursts into life with vibrant daffodils, tulips, hyacinths and Easter egg hunts. Woods offer bluebells, early rhododendrons, magnolia and space to run. Children are spoiled for choice: they can walk the Log Ness Monster, climb into Craggle Top Tree House, swing in the playground, spot birds and ducks, admire stream-side statues, wonder at the giant bee and say hello to the BFG. Refuel with Yorkshire ice-cream in the gardens or visit Betty’s tea rooms.
Debbie Rolls

Orange rolling, Bedfordshire

Though the tradition came to an end some years ago, my favourite family Easter outing combined British eccentricity with religious roots. We would go to Dunstable’s Pascombe Pit to enjoy the Good Friday Orange Rolling, when locals and tourists gathered at the top of the hill, rolled oranges down the slopes and tried to catch them. The oranges represented the rolling away of the stone of Christ’s tomb and anyone who caught one would have a long – or even a second – life, according to folklore. Oranges replaced the more symbolic eggs as they didn’t break and could still be eaten after their downward journey.
Greta

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