Camberley Guest House
Travel Blogs from Sheringham
Windy North Norfolk
... are abundant here and where the larks are most likely to be found where between six and eight inches tall which meant that a scan of the area revealed no birds at all and there wasn't much in evidence, so we set off to walk around. The ground was very wet and there are a number of small creeks that needed to be negotiated with care if we were to avoid getting muddy and wet. As we walked we flushed a number of Rock and Meadow Pipits, a few Linnets and many Sky Larks but ...
Just wind (except for the rain)
... still take orders up until 9 p.m., which they confirmed, so we resisted the temptation to stop somewhere en route.
It was almost exactly 8:30 when we arrived at Hunstanton’s Golden Lion Hotel (apparently the town’s oldest building) and although the weather in the Midlands had been OK (for late October) when we had set off and it had been reasonable for most of the drive, 100 yards from the cliff tops and overlooking The Wash ...
The start of the start.
... summer. On the plus side my mum made me a mean bacon sandwich, done my washing and I witnessed Ben malardho eat some food without safari watch filming him. Don't worry there will be more specials live from nandos on animal planet very soon. Let's hope tomorrow will be more successful. But in true Mark Pitt style I will still be running the airport shops with my head up my **** and a pocket full of money trying to get ...
Oh Jays
... to put a waterproof jacket on look a bit stupid had brought out numerous dragonflies and several butterflies too. At the end of the trail is a screen with slots for watching the birds through. There were plenty and the Spoonbills, being large birds related to storks, were very easy to spot, with four in reasonably close proximity to the screen. Amongst the numerous waders were a couple of tiny Little Stints.
We were down to t-shirts because ...
We're off to see the seals
... got our gear together – even on a day with good weather, doing this trip in October is always going to mean wrapping up warm. The boat goes down one of the deeper creeks on the land-side of Blakeney Harbour before setting out across the broad but shallow natural harbour in order to get to the end of Blakeney Point, where the seals congregate. Blakeney Point is a long shingle spit that almost parallels the coast and over millennia has created a large sheltered harbour which ...
Location
Amenities
- Free parking