The Northumberland coast is an award-winning coastline spanning 40 miles from Berwick-upon-Tweed to the River Coquet in the North East. Filled with castle ruins, forts and fortresses it has the most castles than any other county in England. Whether you’re a local or passing through to take in the idyllic views, we’ve put together our top 3 places to visit on the Northumberland coast. Come rain or shine, you’ll be sure to be blown away by the fresh sea air.
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Located on the Northumberland coast, Beadnell is the only West Facing Harbour on the East Coast of England. With harbour walls built in the 1790’s the horse-shaped coastline also offers views of the ruins of Dunstanburgh castle in the background.
With waves reaching a swell of up to 15 feet, Beadnell Bay is popular with windsurfers. The village is also well equipped for a range of watersports such as sailing, kitesurfing and surfing making it a popular attraction for sporty tourists.
Surrounded by sand dunes the beach stretches miles towards the South offering plenty of walking routes across the coastline for walkers and ramblers alike.
Found a few miles South from Seahouses the village is easily accessible by the A1. Use the postcode NE76 5BW to locate this stunning coastline.
Fun fact: the historic St Ebba's Church is named after the sister of Saint Oswald, King of Northumbria and contains memorials to several local families.
Craster is located on the Northumberland coast and is named after the Craster family who held the estate since approximately 1272.
The small village features quarries, scenic walking trails and views of Dunstanburgh castle that can be reached after a one-and-a-half-mile walk across the scenic Northumberland Coast Path.
But despite its close proximity to the castle, Craster is well known for its fish smokehouses. In the late Edwardian period boats would supply four smokehouses with kippers where up to 25,000 fish were salted and processed a day before being shipped throughout Britain. The women lived in basic accommodation titled ‘kip houses’ that were only suitable for having a brief sleep which is where the phrase ‘having a kip’ is thought to have originated.
You can visit the last remaining smokehouse; Robson’s smokehouse today where fish is smoked and cured in the traditional way.
Craster is located on a minor road off the B1339, two miles South of Embleton.
Fun fact: As well as helping to export stone, the harbour was built in memory of Captain Craster who died in Tibet in 1904. You can see the remains of the memorial on the harbour wall.
Amble is a working port and tourist-friendly town located at the mouth of the river Coquet on the Northumberland coast. The town was built on a point of land that sticks out onto the coast offering stunning views of the coastline.
The town offers an authentic fishing harbour filled with shacks, seafood eateries and even an annual puffin festival for eager birdwatchers. Studded with pastel-coloured beach huts the town also prides itself on being the ‘friendliest port in England’.
Fun fact: Take a boat trip around Coquet Island from Amble to catch sight of 90% of the UK’s rarest seabird population. The Roseate Tern is a white, slender bird with a forked wing.
As well as discovering new places on the Northumberland coast,
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