Ramsey Queens Pier
Ramsey Queens pier was built in 1886 and is 2241 feet long.
The pier is being restored in sections by the Queen’s Pier Restoration Trust that has a long fight to keep this Victorian pier from being demolished and to enable to be accessed by future generations, please check their website for current progress and to support them.
Planning your visit to Ramsey Queens Pier
Ramsey Queens Pier, Ramsey, Ramsey, Ayre , Isle of Man
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Ramsey Queens Pier 7 Day Weather Forecast
Ramsey weather forecast from Yr, delivered by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute and NRK
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In this 'you may also like' section we attempt to answer what else can do near Ramsey Queens Pier? Here you have a list by order of being the closest some more beaches, things to see and do, places to eat and upcoming events.
Little Shed at The Glen is situated alongside the Manx Electric Railway track at the popular Dhoon Glen. A great place to stop off when you have worked up an appetite by walking down Dhoon Glen, viewing the Big Girl waterfall, or spending some time on Dhoon Bay Beach with its rock pools and pebble beach. We have freshly prepared
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Victory Cafe is an old Cold War Rotor radar Station overlooking the 31st Milestone of the TT Race course serving homemade British-style canteen food. The cafe is also based just by the Bungalow Station, the only intermediate station on the Snaefell Mountain Railway. This is a popular spot to park and walk up Snaefell. The cafe is a popular viewpoint
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The Shed is an award-winning Artisan beachside eatery. Located overlooking Laxey Bay, offering a wide range of freshly made locally sourced food, snacks, fresh coffee and homemade fresh cold-pressed juices. The Shed has uninterrupted sea views and is dog friendly.
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The Tea Junction is a licensed cafe on Castle Street in Douglas that offers a constantly changing menu of great homemade cakes, pastries, sandwiches, salads and soup. The Tea Junction offers over twenty varieties of loose leaf tea.
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Ramsey beach is a large stretch of sand that spans either side of the breakwaters and river mouth. The main stretch runs north of the harbour and runs away from the town. The south stretch has the large Queens Pier running out to see from the middle of the beach. The town is the second largest on the Isle of
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Port Lewaigue Beach is a small rocky beach with pebbles backed by a sea wall with views across the bay towards Ramsey. The beach is one of the Isle of Man Dark Sky Discovery Sites. Facilities at the beach include a small car park.
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Port Cornaa Beach is a pebble beach within a small cove at the end of a valley that has Gob ny How to one side. If you choose to visit you may well get this beach to yourself. You have a freshwater lagoon just alongside the beach which is fed by the Cornaa river and at high tide this often
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The Dhoon Glen Beach is an isolated rocky cove with pebbles and we recommend not to visit the beach in isolation but take in the whole of Dhoon Glen. Dhoon Glen is a wooded valley that follows a stream with a waterfall halfway down the valley, known as the “Big Girl” and is one of the highest on the Island falling
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Ramsey lifeboat station was established in the late 1820s and now has an offshore lifeboat. The station is open Monday to Friday and an RNLI shop can be found in the town.
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The Grove Museum of Victorian Life was built by the Gibbs family, a wealthy shipping merchant family from Liverpool, in the mid-19th century as a summer retreat. Later, it became the family’s permanent residence. You’ll find period rooms, containing original furnishings and fittings, and displays of the possessions of three Gibbs generations. Some of these are thought to have been
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Milntown Estate & Gardens, you have 15 acres of gardens and woodland which include a magnificent mansion with a vehicle collection and café. The café offers a variety of hot meals, light bites, cakes and coffees. Set in a purpose-built conservatory with wonderful views of the walled garden. Note that the estate is often used for private functions which may
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Maughold Church is one of the oldest churches on the Isle of Man, founded approximately 447 A.D. by Celtic St Maughold who was expelled from Ireland by St Patrick and landed on the coast here towards the end of the 5th century, bringing Christianity with him. An unanswered question in our mind when we visited is why he would have
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