Chalets in Skegness
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Best Chalets in Skegness
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Chalets in Skegness
Fall in love with the radiant nature you'll find in Skegness, an old-school English seaside resort with a beach featuring a blue flag, a Victorian pier, fairground attractions, and a line-up of nostalgic family fun. Most of the attraction is near Grand Parade, along a stretch of beach that intersects the pier and is lined with gardens. A place to enjoy alone or with the family. You will not regret visiting them!
Spectacular chalets with all the comfortsYou will be drawn to the natural landscapes that surround the chalets in Skegness. You can find a lake as a porch and charming gardens on the sides. The rustic style will allow you to be in contact with nature, and although you will be away from the bustle of the city, here you will have all the comforts such as internet, television, heating, washing machine. Don't you think this is the destination you need? Go ahead, come and enjoy!
Travellers and activities
Skegness Beach is an annual Blue Flag winner, and has also received the “Quality Coast Award”. The gap is a gigantic, flawless belt of flax sand, and it can take a couple of minutes to hike just to get your feet wet. On the horizon, eight kilometres from the coast are the 75 turbines of the Lincs wind farm, with a capacity of 750 MW. At low tide there is a long lagoon where children can search for wildlife on the beach.
Skegness for familiesThe pier in Skegness has been here since 1881. It was opened thanks to the Duke of Edinburgh and in its glory days received 100,000 visitors a year, and was the base of a steamship company that offered cruises down the coast to the Wash. You can walk through these remaining boards to gaze out at the North Sea and examine the huge sandy carpet of Skegness Beach. The pier has a soft play area, trampolines for children, and an amusement arcade where children can win tickets to prizes.
Skegness was the fourth most popular holiday destination in England for UK residents.
Top 7 travel tips in Skegness
this place is an animal attraction that has existed since 1965. Above all, it is a rescue centre for injured harbour seals and lost puppies found on the beaches of Lincolnshire. You can see the rehabilitation in progress as the seals are set to be released back into the North Sea. The park has a variety of other animals such as alpacas, penguins, meerkats, and farm animals, along with a tropical home for crocodiles, snakes, and scorpions.
2. Meet The Diamond Jubilee Clock TowerThis tower has helped put Skegness on the map, it has blind arches flanked by pinnacles below an octagonal axis covered with a four-sided clock under a roof of blackboard and a weather vane. With entertainment and resort attractions on all sides, the tower sits at the intersection of Grand Parade and Lumley Road.
3. The Village Church FarmClose to Skegness train station is the only open air farm museum in Lincolnshire. You will find it on the site of a former farm, preserving its 18th century farm. These buildings hold exhibits on agriculture and rural domestic life from the 19th and 20th centuries, with house interiors, machinery and hand tools, as well as details of regional breeds such as long-wool sheep and red cattle.
4. Visit the National Nature ReserveThis reserve is made up of two parallel ridges of sand dunes that frame a valuable stretch of marshland. Gibraltar Point is a wintering nest for arctic waterfowl and shorebirds where you can see red knots, grey plovers, bar-tailed godchildren and Eurasian oystercatchers, you can also see the small terns that breed in this environment.
5. Don't miss Tower GardensNear the Clock Tower in Grand Parade, you'll find the Grade II listed Tower Gardens that were drawn up in the 1870s as part of the new 1868 plans. Initially, this land belonged to Lord Scarborough, and at its introduction in 1878 they were shown to the people of Skegness as a place to relax.
6. Tour Gunby Estate, Hall and GardensGunby Hall is a Grade I listed country house built around 1700. You'll find it at the end of a half-mile long drive, and both the hall and its spacious grounds are run by the National Trust. On one visit you will learn about the Massingberd family, who lived here from 1700 to 1967, and will make their way through three floors of the house: you will climb a 300-year-old oak staircase and enter bedrooms, a dining room, a wonderful library, bathrooms and a study
7. A relaxing stroll at Pleasure BeachPleasure Beach is a fairground-style attraction for people of all ages. You will be able to enjoy arcades, carousels, dodgems, a giant wheel with 18 gondolas, a rocking pirate boat, along with a safari train, an adventure golf course and a ten-pin bowling alley. For older kids and braver adults with strong builds, there's the fast-paced Freak out ride.