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Apartment 7, Lowestoft

Apartment 7, Lowestoft

Apartment 7, Flat 7, Marquis House, 38 Carlton Road, Lowestoft, NR33 0FB, United Kingdom

Save £30 on spring breaks with the code SPRING30

Property details

Ground-floor apartment. One double bedroom with TV. Bathroom with bath, shower over with handrail, basin, heated towel rail and WC. Open-plan living space with kitchen, dining area and sitting area with Sofa Bed for additional 2 guests

Key features & notes

Bath
Beach
Bed linen
Broadband/wifi
Dishwasher
Fridge/freezer
Ground floor accommodation
Ground floor bedroom
Heating
Hob
Microwave
Off road parking
Oven
Pub
Shop
Shower
Towels
TV

About where you'll be staying

Lowestoft is the most easterly point in the United Kingdom, and is located on the Suffolk Sunrise coast at the Norfolk/Suffolk border with some of the best sandy beaches in the area, as well as a variety of family attractions. From the old Victorian Seafront Gardens and beach donkey rides to the modern Claremont Pier roller skating rink and Pleasurewood Hills Leisure Park’s thrilling attractions, there’s something for everyone. The town has something for everyone, with two theatres, shops, restaurants, cafes, and bars, while its maritime heritage is celebrated with a number of attractions such as the floating ‘Mincarlo’ museum on Heritage Quay or the Lowestoft & East Suffolk Maritime Museum, plus The Transport Museum, a 15-minute drive away, with its collection of old buses, trams, and other transport in which they give local excursions.
See More Holiday Cottages In Suffolk

Bird watching in Suffolk

With large swathes of arable land, wetlands, sandy beaches, low rolling hills, and woodland, Suffolk offers a rich diversity of habitats that support a multitude of birds.

It is also home to RSPB Minsmere located on the coast, where amongst the reedbeds, lagoons, grasslands, and heathlands, you can find some of the UK’s rarest wildlife. More than 350 species of birds have been recorded here including bitterns, avocets, long-eared owls, and spoonbills. During spring and summer migration looks out for spotted redshanks, arctic terns, and ruffs, while breeding birds include nightingales, redstarts, and turtle doves. Otters, water voles, and red deer can also be spotted.

Further down the coast is another RSPB reserve, North Warren situated just north of Aldeburgh, which is much smaller and less crowded. During winter thousands of ducks, geese, and swans, arrive to use the marshes, and huge roosts of starlings gather above the reedbeds before putting on impressive displays.

Another RSPB reserve that’s well worth a visit is Wolves Wood near Ipswich, an ancient woodland that’s home to plenty of nesting birds such as dunnocks, blackcaps, and warblers. Ideal for some early morning bird watching, great-spotted woodpeckers can also be heard drumming amongst the trees and birds of prey such as kestrels can be seen overhead.

Managed by Suffolk Wildlife Trust, Carlton Marshes Nature Reserve, located near Lowestoft at the southern end of the Broads National Park, comprises a mix of grazing marshes, fens, peat pools, and scrubland. It’s one of the best sites in East Anglia to see grasshopper warblers as well as bearded tits, Cetti’s warblers, and marsh harriers. During winter, large numbers of wildfowl arrive. Look out for wigeon, teal, and snipe.

For more wildfowl spotting opportunities, Hen Reedbeds Nature Reserve is a relatively new site again owned by the Suffolk Wildlife Trust where herons, little grebes, and sandpipers can regularly be found. And look out for kingfishers and little egrets around the pools.

Havergate Island in the River Ore is Suffolk’s only island and only accessible by ferry. The coastal habitats of saline lagoons, salt marshes, shingle vegetation, and mudflats are home to a variety of waders including oystercatchers, dunlin, turnstones, and dunlins, while it’s also a great place to find brown hares.

Walberswick National Nature Reserve is one of the most accessible and popular wildlife sites in Suffolk with shingle beaches, reedbeds, hay meadows, and woodland. Spring is a fantastic time to visit when the skies are full of birds calling and displaying to attract mates. In summer, the heather turns the heath bright purple, while in winter the bird hide by the Blyth Estuary is a great spot for viewing pintails, goldeneyes, and black-tailed godwits.

Nature on your doorstep

RSPB Berney Marshes And Breydon Water
9.4 miles
Minsmere RSPB Reserve
15.9 miles
Barton Broad And Marshes
21.5 miles

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