What to do in the Winter in Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate
Transcription
What to do in the Winter in Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate Londoners have been escaping to the Isle of Thanet – Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate – for more than 200 years, for the laidback seaside vibe, breathtaking sandy beaches, fresh sea air and romantic Turner skies. But in winter? All the more reason to visit for a day or short break! Go to a gallery Be one of the first to see what happens when art and risk collide at Turner Contemporary, Margate. Their new exhibition ‘Risk’ opened on 10 October. Francis Alÿs repeatedly runs into the eye of a tornado; Bas Jan Ader sails out to sea in search of the miraculous, tragically never to return; ORLAN undergoes plastic surgery; Marina Abramović points a bow and arrow at her own heart; Pedro Reyes creates musical instruments out of firearms and Ruth Proctor free-falls in the gallery…… Risk runs through to 17 January, 2016 and admission is free. www.turnercontemporary.org Simon Faithfull, still from EZY1899 Reenactment for a Future Scenario HD video, 12min, 2012. Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Polaris Paris There are many other galleries in the area worth viewing, from the prestigious UpDown Gallery in Ramsgate, which exhibits the best of modern and contemporary British, European and American art, to the smaller, family run The Broadstairs Gallery which showcases work from local and internationally renowned artists as well as stocking limited edition prints. www.visitthanet.co.uk/galleries Explore the delights of Quex Park Estate Yes, a whole day at one venue. Explore one of the most unique, private natural history collections in the UK, including oriental fine arts and porcelain, at the Powell-Cotton Museum, Quex House and Gardens. Be sure to visit Gallery 6, which is a new handling gallery, so you can get up close and personal to the exhibits. Have a stroll around the beautiful gardens before lunching at either Mama Feelgoods or Quex Barn, an indoor farmer’s market, café and restaurant. In the afternoon take a walk around the Secret Garden plant centre and the Quex Craft Village. Also on site is Jungle Jim’s children’s soft play area, Quex Paintballing and Lazer Rush. www.quexpark.co.uk Discover a hidden gem (or two) Go underground and marvel at Margate’s Shell Grotto. Discovered in 1835 there’s 70ft of winding underground passages decorated with 4.6 million shells. Is it an ancient pagan temple or a meeting place for a secret cult? Or one of the worlds unsolved mysteries? www.shellgrotto.co.uk Discover Margate’s magnificent past at Margate Museum, which in its time has served as police cells, a Town Hall and Magistrates Court, many of these original features are still here. Make the most of the joint ticket option with the Tudor House, thought to be one of the oldest building in Kent, built around 1525. www.margatemuseum.wordpress.com and www.margatemuseum.wordpress.com/tudor-house And for something quirky, go to the Walpole Bay Hotel and Museum. There are exhibits to view all around the hotel, an Otis Trellis Gated lift to get from floor to floor, plus a napery to view – artworks by guests (some famous) all on linen napkins. www.walpolebayhotel.co.uk Visit Bleak House, Charles Dickens’ favourite holiday home and where he wrote David Copperfield. Stand in the atmospheric study with his writing desk and enjoy the same views over Viking Bay and the English Channel that Dickens would have enjoyed all those years ago. There’s also a Smuggling Museum and tea room. www.bleakhousebroadstairs.co.uk On to Ramsgate and another underground adventure, this time on a tour of Ramsgate Tunnels, two miles of bomb-proof, deep shelter tunnels built to protect civilians during WWII. During the darkest days of the war, the tunnels evolved into an underground city with over 1,000 permanent residents. www.ramsgatetunnels.org Credit Kane Guy If you plan to visit on a Wednesday, make an appointment to visit Pugin’s, The Grange, this is when you will get to see the main rooms on the ground floor – they have been restored in amazing detail by The Landmark Trust. www.landmarktrust.org.uk Then in the villages there’s Monkton Nature reserve, which offers 16 acres, a bat cave, rare orchids, butterflies and birds and it is also home to the Thanet Observatory. www.monkton-reserve.org All things planes, trains and automobiles Take flight to the Spitfire and Hurricane Museum at Manston and see splendid examples of the two WWII fighter aircraft which served the RAF so well – the Spitfire and Hurricane - complemented by a vast array of other artefacts from this time. Then step next door to the RAF Manston History Museum and discover the history of Manston airfield from 1916. www.spitfiremuseum.org.uk www.rafmanston.co.uk Then it’s all aboard to the Hornby Visitor Centre and a chance to see and interact with Britain’s best-loved toys including Hornby, Scalextric, Airfix and Corgi. www.hornby.com/hornby-visitor-centre. Put on your walking shoes and take to the trails Put on your walking shoes, get out into the fresh air and take to the trails – that is the dedicated themed walking trails that will lead you on a route of discovery around the resorts. From exploring the history, buildings and famous residents of Broadstairs on the Broadstairs Town Trail to discovering some of Margate’s heritage places and landmarks on the Discover Margate route. Active Ramsgate has three different themed routes to explore – The Contra Trail from Ramsgate to Pegwell Bay taking in the nature reserve; Sea it All from Ramsgate to Broadstairs, and Ramsgate Town Rounders Regency, Royal and Riviera. Also in Ramsgate is the Pugin Town Trail, a walk from the East Cliff to the West Cliff highlighting the architecture of the Pugin family. And last but not least, there is the 4 mile Turner and Dickens walk, much of which follows an ancient footpath between Turner’s Margate and Dickens’ Broadstairs. www.visitthanet.co.uk/things-to-do/walking-cycling Alternatively, book a Kent Greeter and discover the area with a friendly local for free. Kent Greeters are a band of helpful and passionate volunteers, ready and waiting to share the local area they know and love so well. They will take you on a short 2-4 hour personalised walk and introduce you to the local highlights and hidden gems – great if you are new to the area. www.kentgreeters.co.uk Bag a bargain Shopping may not be front of mind when you think of a trip to the coast, but that doesn’t mean we can’t satisfy the ‘shop till you drop’ urge, but in our own, individual way. Take Margate Old Town for instance, it now has an amazing array of retro clothing and furniture stores to browse and some great contemporary offerings too. In Ramsgate, you will find the Petticoat Lane Emporium an absolute delight with 175 stalls, 2 shops and a vintage tea room – offering vintage, retro, craft, art and antique merchandise all under one roof. Also worth a look in Ramsgate is Addington Street and the waterfront arches. And if mall-style shopping with big names is more your cup of tea, head to Westwood Cross, which is sure to satisfy your fashion, food, household and gadgetry needs. www.visitthanet.co.uk/things-to-do/shopping-markets Learn something new Give release to your inner creative and book onto a craft course. From paper-making and batique work at Crafted Naturally, making your own glass artworks at A Touch of Glass, upcycling at Paramor Boorman, to multiple-day mosaic courses run by internationally-renowned artist Martin Cheek. And Turner Contemporary doesn’t just deliver amazing exhibitions, they also run family and adult workshops, spanning topics such as film making, drawing and sculpture. If baking, sugarcraft and patisserie are more your thing, then East Kent College is the place to look, they also run courses on pottery and floristry. www.visitthanet.co.uk/things-to-do/creative-activities Resort Studios in Cliftonville is the place to go if you want to try jewellery making, black and white film photography and linocut and screen printing – www.resortstudios.co.uk, whilst Roy Eastland offers life drawing classes from the Adult Education Centre in Hawley Square Margate, built as an art college in the 1930s it has big tall windows and pools of light, making it the perfect setting. Eat Drink and Be Merry Drink your fill of micropubs - Thanet is known as having the highest concentration of micro pubs, with more opening all the time. Each has its own individual style and atmosphere but all are friendly local watering holes where you can try, and even take away, specialist ales and ciders. www.visitthanet.co.uk/micropubs Now we are not suggesting that you spend all day drinking - but you could combine a trip around the Isle on the loop bus, with regular stop-offs to take in our amazing towns and villages and the odd pint or two. Ah, somebody has already had this idea - www.micropubcrawl.co.uk Food, glorious food - Where to start? How about getting fresh (produce that is) at one of our Farmers’ Markets, we have three in the area. Cliftonville Farmers Market takes place on the clifftops near the Oval Bandstand on the last Sunday of each month, whilst Thanet Farmers Market takes place on the second Sunday of the month, both mornings only. Quex Barn is open every day and is an indoor farmers’ market with café and restaurant attached. All offer a mouth-watering array of local goodies to purchase such as vegetables, meat, cheese, bread, jams, pickles, juices and ciders, the list goes on. Look out for Kent Crisps, made in Birchington and produce from Margate Smokehouse, their smoked Brie is amazing. A must at the seaside is ice cream. From single cones to super cool sundaes, from traditional vanilla to wild berry or Earl Grey, there are flavours to tickle everybody’s taste buds. There’s also a choice of venues, including the famous 1950s Morellis and Chiappinis in Broadstairs, Sorbettos in Ramsgate and Melt in Margate – as much of a treat in the winter as they are in the summer. www.visitthanet.co.uk/things-to-do/ice-cream And last, but by no means least, there is a veritable feast to be had in the Isles cosy cafes, and quality restaurants, including the The Ambrette in Margate, Wyatt and Jones and Albariἢos in Broadstairs, and The Corner House in Minster, who all appear in the Michelin Guide 2016 www.visitthanet.co.uk/things-to-do/eatingand-drinking or www.visitthanet.co.uk/culinarycoast Check out a church.. ..or an Abbey, or a Mausoleum – we have them all. Minster Abbey is one of England’s oldest religious buildings, founded in 670 AD and currently occupied by Benedictine nuns. Also in Minster, St. Mary the Virgin Church has one of the best collections of misericords (monk stalls) in south east England. Tours are available at both. Minster Abbey Montefiore Mausoleum in Ramsgate contains the tombs of both Sir Moses and Lady Montefiore. Sir Moses was a towering and prominent figure of Victorian England, who was passionate in both his beliefs as a Jew and an Englishman. His philanthropic projects and activism earned him a Knighthood by Queen Victoria. The Mausoleum and the nearby Synagogue were designed by David Mocatta. Visitors are welcome by prior appointment. The Six Churches Ride is a 9.5 mile (15.25 km) cycle route which takes in the ancient churches of St. Nicholasat-Wade, St. Mary Magdalene in Monkton, St. Mary the Virgin and Minster Abbey in Minster, St. Augustine’s Cross, St. Augustine’s Church (designed by Gothic revivalist architect Augustus Pugin) and the small Sailor’s Church, both in Ramsgate. www.vikingcoastaltrail.co.uk Get on your bike Talking of cycle routes, why not spend a day on the Viking Coastal Trail? This is a 32 mile circular cycle route which takes in the stunning coastline of Margate, Broadstairs and Ramsgate before heading back across the countryside villages. And because most of it is around the coastline, much is along traffic-free promenades, with lots of coastal cafes and restaurants on route for refreshment stops. Don’t be deterred if 32 miles seems a lot, the route can easily be broken down into more manageable chunks, plus there are shorter themed routes that can be explored too, such as History, Art and Architecture; Historic Broadstairs; The Path of St. Augustine’s; Smugglers’ Haunts Ride and Beaches and Bays. Find out more about these and cycle hire opportunities at www.vikingcoastaltrail.co.uk Visit an event or see a show The great thing about being on the coast is that there is always something going on and the winter months are no exception. Key annual events include Blues Bash and GEEK (February), Margate Beach Cross (March) and Broadstairs Food Festival (October). Plus there’s always a variety of things going on around Halloween, Bonfire Night, Christmas and New Year. www.visitthanet.co.uk/whats-on Broadstairs Food Festival Theatre goers are well served too, with three in Margate alone. The Theatre Royal is the country’s second oldest and the tiny Tom Thumb Theatre is one of the smallest with only 50 seats. Then there is the prestigious Winter Gardens, right on the seafront. Ramsgate and Broadstairs are not to be left out; they have the Granville Theatre and the Sarah Thorne Theatre Company providing quality entertainment. All in all, the offering is interesting, fun and varied with traditional pantomimes, contemporary shows, gigs, concerts and so much more. www.visitthanet.co.uk/things-to-do/cinemas-and-theatres www.visitthanet.co.uk
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