Scotney Castle
Scotney Castle is a Victorian country house and 14th-century ruined castle with a romantic garden and over 770 acres of woodland and parkland to explore.
Tea-room serves sandwiches, hot and cold lunches, dogs welcome on short leads around the garden and estate.
Planning your visit to Scotney Castle
Scotney Castle, Lamberhurst, Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent TN3 8JN, United Kingdom
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Scotney Castle 7 Day Weather Forecast
Royal Tunbridge Wells 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 Scotney Castle? 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.
Opera House is a Wetherspoon pub in Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Our pub offers a range of real ales, craft beers and freshly ground Lavazza coffee. Breakfast is served until noon, with our full food menu available until 11 pm.
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The John Logie Baird is a Wetherspoon pub in Hastings, East Sussex. Our pub offers a range of real ales, craft beers and freshly ground Lavazza coffee. Breakfast is served until noon, with our full food menu available until 11 pm.
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Beach: Hastings Beach View: Located just above Hastings Fish Market What’s on the menu?: Fish & chips, seafood And something else…. Maggie’s opens at 5am to serve the fishermen and closes just after lunch. Hailed far and wide as the best ever fish and chip shop!
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Beach: Camber Sands View: Part of the Gallivant Hotel, the Beach Bistro can be found opposite the dunes of Camber, overlooking 5 miles of pristine sandy beach. What’s on the menu?: A New England style bistro with a menu centred around freshly caught, local fish. And something else… When the sun shines, they open a marquee on their driftwood decking,
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Bulverhythe beach is pebbles and sand at low tide. The wreck of the Amsterdam is a feature of the Bulverhythe beach. The tops of its ribs being exposed in the sands. The Amsterdam was a large Dutch East Indian and ran ashore in a gales January 1749. A viewing platform and information boards give directions but care must be taken
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St. Leonards beach, also known as Marina beach, runs westwards from the Hastings Pier. The beach is shingle and has large sandy areas as the tide goes out. The town of St. Leonards-on-Sea is often thought to be Hastings but although they are joined together, is a different town being full of Regency terraces and squares that back away from
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Bexhill is perfect for a day out at the seaside, with two miles of promenade running behind a long, gently shelving shingle beach with stretches of sand when the tide goes out. Bexhill is thought to be the first UK beach to allow mixed bathing; where men and women could swim at the same beach. Food options available in Bexhill
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Cooden Beach has a long sandy foreshore and is popular with walkers and kitesurfers and windsurfers that have a separate area to the main swimming area. Toilets, parking. We have no dog information for Cooden beach.
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Beach Hut on Tankerton beach just a few minutes walk from public toilets, cafes and local shops. Facilities include: balcony table/chairs, deck chairs, rugs, kettle, cutlery, crockery and books. Daily hire is from 9am to 10pm. Special rates available for longer hire periods including weekends and weekly hire. Sorry but we don’t allow pets.
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Bayham Abbey, ruins of an abbey of Premonstratensian ‘white canons’, on the Kent-Sussex border. They include much of the 13th to 15th-century church, the chapter house, and a picturesque 14th-century gatehouse.
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The Pantiles is a Georgian colonnade in the town of Royal Tunbridge Wells. Formerly known as The Walks and the (Royal) Parade, it leads from the well that gave the town its name. The area was created following the discovery of a chalybeate spring in the early 17th century. The Pantiles today includes a variety of specialist shops, cafes, restaurants
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Bateman’s is a Jacobean house, home of Rudyard Kipling. A 17th-century house surrounded by a wooded landscape. Now a National Trust property and remains much as Rudyard Kipling would have seen it, with oriental rugs and artefacts reflecting his strong links with the East.
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Sissinghurst Castle Gardens designed by poet and novelist Vita Sackville-West and her husband Harold Nicolson is set on the grounds of an Elizabethan mansion. The gardens consist of many enclosed areas and lakeside and woodland walk open all year in unspoilt Wealden countryside.
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