But Good Friday was a lovely day and maybe lots of children went to the seaside instead. |
|
The seaside town of Old Haven sits proudly on this beautiful part of the British coastline. |
|
There is also much to be said in favour of reviving the seaside holiday in our local resorts which, despite unpredictable weather, can be fun. |
|
But tourist operators at countryside and seaside destinations admitted they had suffered from the deluges of the past few weeks. |
|
Her announcement of a coastal tourism initiative to help seaside resorts apply for grants to improve facilities and boost jobs is also welcome. |
|
There's an unmarked route between the front bar and the back bar which is like a seaside promenade. |
|
Children will have an all-expenses paid trip to the seaside resort, and enjoy treats, meals, the amusements, and even a magic show. |
|
They launched the inshore boat and hovercraft to rescue the un-named man with scores of day-trippers, enjoying the sun and seaside, looking on. |
|
A legal wrangle over a seaside town's plans to honour one of its most famous sons with a commemorative plaque is set to be resolved today. |
|
For instance, one of the shots of the Juno II death spiral is taken from seaside, near the pad. |
|
The seaside town was more than 70 miles away and they did not arrive until the early hours. |
|
Next thing, them going get up one morning and go to the seaside and want to full up the basket and empty the sea. |
|
When you camp by the seaside, you will catch cunners and other fish that need skinning. |
|
We were in Blackpool for a silly day trip, a tacky, idiotic day out to the seaside to frisk on the sands in mid-July. |
|
A youth club set up for children in a deprived seaside resort has been closed after cruel thieves stole a haul of their equipment. |
|
Volunteers who went to the aid of a seaside carnival have claimed they were frozen out. |
|
The veteran broadcaster was unusually lost for words yesterday over moves to grant him the freedom of the seaside town he has made his home. |
|
Crazy golf, the eccentric relative of the real thing, claims to be Britain's most popular seaside sport. |
|
Lytham is dead posh, with lovely seaside cottages and a wide grassy prom facing the Southport straits. |
|
We were surrounded by the old-fashioned glamor of the lobby of the grandest hotel in this posh French seaside resort. |
|
|
When they weren't directing their energies against their seaside rivals, the Richmond students sometimes flummoxed their own teachers. |
|
A family from Yorkshire was reunited yesterday, 24 hours after they were separated by floodwaters in the Cornish seaside disaster. |
|
As glorious Tramore yet again defied the dismal weather forecasts the fans flocked to the seaside venue. |
|
In 1979, he settled in Saudi Arabia, where he was fixed up with a splendid seaside villa in the Red Sea port of Jiddah. |
|
It was a cute seaside place that boasted the best fish and chips in all of California. |
|
The narrator and Anne take a seaside holiday, during which the prospect of sexual congress is anticipated. |
|
Britain's biggest seaside resort is putting its faith in the great indoors to secure its future. |
|
Yet from our plane window, we can see idyllic seaside villages seemingly impervious to the devastation that has swept the region. |
|
Kilkee is a fair-sized seaside town in which four out of five houses are holiday homes. |
|
After all, a swimming pool and a fairground are the ingredients of every good seaside resort, while those who want good shops go to Manchester. |
|
At the seaside, the coastguard reported a number of false alarms when ships mistook fireworks for distress flares. |
|
It includes a series of neighbouring clifftop seaside sections flowing down to north-facing, private golden beaches. |
|
There were parties and picnics, visits to one another's homes, holidays in the country or at the seaside, and game hunts. |
|
So whether you are at home, or in your summerhouse on the seaside, you can always watch the programs you want. |
|
The family lived at first in prosperous circumstances, wintering in Smyrna and summering at the seaside village called Skala. |
|
The mountains, for the most part, had been ignored by the tiny seaside town that barely managed to subsist on the fish it caught each year. |
|
The problem stems from big cities dumping all their problem families on the old seaside resorts. |
|
And on a summer day, the seaside pines give off a scent as intoxicating as a carafe of ouzo. |
|
Then, end the day at a downtown hotel in one of our world-class cities or tucked away in a chateau, chalet, or a cosy seaside inn! |
|
The leader and his entire coterie are a study in relaxation and resilience going into what should be a trying week at the seaside. |
|
|
Investors interested in Bulgaria can see offers in mountain and seaside resorts, as well as towns with a rich cultural and historical heritage. |
|
A five-storey building under construction caved in on Saturday at the seaside town of Canacona, trapping workers on the site. |
|
Trouble also broke out at the Orange parade in the seaside town of Ballycastle on the north Antrim coast. |
|
It's not something you'd casually toss into a backpack for some light seaside computing. |
|
They built a promenade, bandstand, open-air swimming pool and all the other trappings of a genteel seaside resort. |
|
Philip Franks's production is set on a deserted seaside pier haunted by the ghosts of circus clowns. |
|
The photographs are far from romantic evocations of the seaside and have a disengaged quality about them, lifeless without being sterile. |
|
Meanwhile, a picture of Cayton Bay, taken at about the same time, shows line after line of caravans as the seaside holiday enjoyed its heyday. |
|
In seaside towns and villages, tourism and fishing are important parts of the economy. |
|
In written Roman sources a villa is usually the seaside or country estate of a wealthy member of the urban elite. |
|
I live in the south-west of England in a small seaside town of approximately 12,000 people. |
|
Set in a soi-disant boarding house in a seaside town, The Birthday Party has the feel, off the top, of a slightly absurdist comedy. |
|
Anti-aircraft missiles were on standby and the Spanish navy was also patrolling the seaside city. |
|
Some friends of mine bought a villa in a smallish seaside resort on the southern coast of Spain. |
|
The road that led out of Cassais had led him down a mountainside towards the seaside. |
|
When you think of seaside hotels, moth-eaten candlewick bedspreads and ferocious landladies usually come to mind. |
|
New homes overlook the seafront, and there are hundreds of boats moored in the marina that is the envy of every other seaside resort in Britain. |
|
For now, some of Bulgaria's seaside resorts have already twinned with towns in Hungary. |
|
The Old Course wasn't built, it simply evolved, a combination of scrubby seaside turf, wispy grasses, prickly gorse and rolling dunes. |
|
Sometimes I add extra leaf mould for heath or moisture-loving plants, or seaside sand for coastal plants in a trough. |
|
|
In the 1980s this was a pleasant seaside town where surfers, sailors and biotechnologists co-existed quite peacefully. |
|
The family never takes holidays abroad, though they do go to the seaside in a shooting brake. |
|
The hilt of the rapier was unadorned, wrapped with plain sharkskin, like so many weapons were that are from seaside towns. |
|
A touch of the seaside was even brought to the show with a debut appearance from the Southport donkeys. |
|
Twelve seaside belles are risking blushes to raise vital cash for two good causes. |
|
Youngsters' needs in a deprived seaside resort are being put to the top of the agenda. |
|
Earlier this year police warned that tombstoning was becoming increasingly popular at British seaside towns. |
|
There were beetle drives, ginger beer and iced biscuits for the choir in the big house, and seaside outings to Walton-on-the-Naze. |
|
Their seaside conference was pencilled in as merely a stroll towards a second term. |
|
By the summer of 1906, toy bears attracted crowds of little boys and their parents along boardwalks at the seaside resorts of the Jersey Shore. |
|
His wife and children, who he dotes on, were at the seaside so he was having a couple of days of selfish fun. |
|
This is an expense you might not have considered when thinking about moving to the seaside. |
|
Blackpool out of season, like most seaside resorts, is a town not at its best. |
|
In the few towns and along the seaside, the languages heard were Russian or Georgian. |
|
Slightly out of the centre of town is the smart seaside resort area of Camps Bay. |
|
In Scotland, the seaside towns tarted up their piers and decked out their main streets good and gaudy. |
|
Her plans for the bank holiday weekend included a possible trip to the seaside. |
|
In the best of British traditions, I found myself in the seaside resort of Newquay. |
|
Even more remarkable was the growth of the resorts as the habit of seaside holidays caught on. |
|
The early Easter bank holiday wet weather failed to dampen the spirits of the seaside tourist trade. |
|
|
They told me before they died that they were born by the seaside, on the far side of the Ox mountains. |
|
Do the Croats have more chance of having holidays and going to the seaside than the Serbs? |
|
This in part also relates to the quaint antiquation of the seaside area where Gayfield is situated. |
|
It is one where for most people a holiday means a week in a caravan at the seaside or, at best, a package holiday abroad. |
|
The hard work of recent years paid off on the double when the seaside club took not one but two titles on the day. |
|
Parents should be able to take the family to the seaside without worrying about potential health risks. |
|
Glasgow children from the slums enjoying a fortnight's holiday at the seaside. |
|
Foreign tourists may still be flocking to the seaside, but the future is pretty grim. |
|
On the surface there might not be much in common between a large seaside tourist resort and a market town on the edge of the Dales. |
|
Bacon demand from seaside towns is terrific, because Mr and Mrs John Bull will have bacon and eggs for breakfast when on holiday. |
|
If this was party policy based on the attractiveness of a summer tease, it was a poor joke unworthy of even the worst seaside comic. |
|
The seaside baches have become a lot bigger and more posh in the last 50 years than they used to be, and cost a lot more to buy. |
|
If, however, you like your comedy no more postmodern than a saucy seaside postcard, read on. |
|
On to Carmel, another morbidly cute seaside town with a manicured main street. |
|
And talking of holidays, it's time I signed off and set off for a week at the seaside. |
|
Youngsters at a Trowbridge church have been taking part in a season of seaside activities. |
|
In contrast to this seaside scene, on which the sun smiles, the illustration on the right depicts ignorance, ruination, and mob rule. |
|
Nora and Amanda made their way to the loggia, a large patio at ground level on the seaside of the house. |
|
A brief journey down the southeastern side of the lough and we arrived in the bustling seaside town of Bangor, Co.Down. |
|
Take the sight that greeted visitors to the seaside town of Largs last weekend, of the official Scotland team bus in all its splendid livery. |
|
|
The Barcelona Wotan of Struckmann, with dark glasses and pigtail, looks hardly more divine than anyone on a well-earned break at the seaside. |
|
The searing heat of the morning gave way to a windswept evening, with the water as ripply as an English seaside fun pool. |
|
When dolphins beach themselves, entire seaside towns drop everything to whisk them back into the water. |
|
Shehadeh's family live in the embattled town of Ramallah after being forcibly removed from their original seaside home in Jaffa. |
|
I am on the Malecon, Havana's seaside drive, where it is getting very windy, but the eye of the hurricane has already hit land. |
|
The ride will take them along the coast of Port Philip Bay and past seaside villages along the Morning Peninsula. |
|
Fans of the cards are being warned to watch out after two York youngsters bought cards on a trip to the seaside which turned out to be fakes. |
|
A number of shops are dressing their windows with a nautical theme and some local pubs and restaurants are offering seaside specials. |
|
Brighton, on the south coast and one hour by train from London, is the most raffish, louche and exciting of British seaside towns. |
|
In seaside towns, they are putting up boards along the seafront, ready for the big waves. |
|
Lytham is a classic seaside links, nine flattish holes out, nine flattish holes in. |
|
No seaside holiday area such as Evans Head would be safe without the services of our surf lifesavers and coast guard. |
|
After much leisurely rambling, we made tracks for Provincetown, a charming seaside town. |
|
The set, ingeniously I thought, used several different levels and angles to give a real sense of the hills and depths of the fictional seaside town. |
|
A more macabre inspiration surfaced in 1890 when an obscure author called Bram Stoker stayed at the seaside resort of Whitby. |
|
In the tiny seaside town of Yacahts, Oregon, buck Henderson is ready to die. |
|
So he learns a siren song on the Hammond upright, woos wanton waitresses to his seaside flat and then tickles their ivories with the help of a love drug. |
|
It was constructed from prefabricated timber panels, shipped out from England, and was soon very popular with sailors, quarrymen and seaside visitors. |
|
Anyone who lives in either Rosses Point or Strandhill knows that there was always a bit of friendly rivalry between the seaside villages down through the years. |
|
Why, exactly did I think moving to a seaside resort would be a good thing? |
|
|
The vibrant palette of beach paraphernalia, stripes on windbreaks and seaside rock translates with ease into kaleidoscopic designs in fused glass. |
|
Dublin's extensive public seaside access makes it a real rarity. |
|
The seaside region of Thanjavur is the setting of the novel. |
|
Tallinn feels palpably Scandinavian with its polished old-town brick, seaside positioning and glut of cool cafes. |
|
Two hundred girls are weaving in and out of dirty alleys in the seaside slum of West Point, Liberia. |
|
The glamour of the seaside resort has long since been eclipsed by spectacular violence. |
|
Set a year after the rest of the season, the staff takes an outing to the seaside. |
|
Unsurprisingly, his first job entailed scampering around the dreamland Fun Fairground at the seaside town of Margate. |
|
With his own family, including his two-and-a-half year-old son in residence during his four month stay in the town, Billy is enjoying the seaside atmosphere. |
|
But the development of seaside resorts had begun long before. |
|
However for the last forty-odd years they have inexplicably kept on singing semi-amusing songs in low-rent nightclubs and entertaining old ladies at the seaside. |
|
The 28-year-old filmmaker was born in the genteel English seaside town of Hastings to a Libyan father and British mother. |
|
He goes on holiday to the beach in an odd little car that is constantly backfiring, and we follow him as he interacts with the other vacationers at a seaside hotel. |
|
Then bed down in the seaside town of Mystic, Connecticut, with views of the wharf from your private room at the steamboat Inn. |
|
Cooper always seems to bring a little bit of the seaside along with him. |
|
It is everything you envisage the seaside to be when you are growing up. |
|
As the time ticks by, you find yourself becoming heavier and drowsier, like you felt as a kid after one of those hundred-hour days on holiday by the seaside. |
|
In homage to the location, the 37 bedrooms feature many seaside touches. |
|
Special excursion trains took millworkers to the seaside for a week. |
|
Scarborough's seaside chalets and miniature railway are being granted a reprieve under changes to controversial proposals to redevelop the resort's North side. |
|
|
Sunday we went to the seaside, as we are only 20 minutes from the coast. |
|
Then, in 2010, bones thought to be his were found in a seaside church grave in Porto Ercole on the Tuscan coast. |
|
They also go on mystery trips, weekends away and holidays at the seaside. |
|
A seaside town needs to ditch its comic postcard image as a faded resort for trippers and become a vibrant community where people want to live and invest. |
|
The loss of 550 jobs in the down-at-heel Kent seaside town, reducing Hornby to a suite of administrative offices and an echoingly empty factory shed, was a bitter blow. |
|
I remember on a rare trip to the seaside gazing at a long-empty slot machine that had once held chocolate bars and now appeared as a rusting icon from outer space. |
|
Where people live is the key to a long-lasting marriage, according to a new survey on divorce rates in Britain, and the seaside resort is up there at the top of the list. |
|
In summer, beaches along the Baltic Sea, seaside resort towns, and lakes, forests, and campgrounds in the countryside are visited by vacationing Lithuanians. |
|
However, unknown to her friends and neighbours, she was running a seaside syndicate of burglars who stole to order and used her shop to fence the goods. |
|
And many might like to hear tales of the political classes decamping to the seaside for a week of fervent backstabbing, orgiastic networking and roaring drunkenness. |
|
Donned with its matching pareo, this suit can stray far from the seaside. |
|
A pier and hotels were built and Byron declared itself to be a seaside resort, although tourism was somewhat hindered by the stink of the town's abattoir. |
|
This Saturday the inlanders will travel to the seaside to play Ballina in the second and final round of the Bardwell-Ellis trophy, with a single stableford at home. |
|
But if it all gets too tranquil for your taste, you can always head back to the bright lights of Palma or the seaside resorts which flank it on both sides. |
|
The exiled militants were flown by British military transport to the Mediterranean island of Cyprus were they were put up at a seaside hotel under police guard. |
|
And though much of the Peruvian seaside is often chilly, treacherous and fogbound, the country's ruling class has seen dollars in a wave swept shore. |
|
The creaky sound of the blocks rubbing together and the icy, stale air that surrounded the seaside still remain a vague childhood memory in my head. |
|
After a training session on the beach at Filey the players also enjoyed their now customary pre-FA Cup match meal of fish and chips at the Three Tuns pub in the seaside town. |
|
More than 10,000 pro-hunt campaigners from all over the country decamped to the seaside resort, which was hosting the Labour Party's annual conference. |
|
This is the pub crawl along a seaside stretch of watering holes in Wales, near Swansea, that apparently used to be a regular night out for Dylan Thomas. |
|
|
Sitting in front of their seaside cottage, he elaborates his theory. |
|
This intimate seaside village was built in the 1800s to be a resort for wealthy San Diegans, yet it emanates a feeling of relaxed welcome to all who visit. |
|
And it is doubtful whether the beach will ever regain its Blue Flag status unless the sewerage facility in the seaside town is brought up to standard. |
|
The new seat is almost completely coastal, comprising seaside resorts along the Tendring peninsula. |
|
Other seaside bathing areas couldn't really get going until the railways were built some years later. |
|
The town grew in size as a seaside resort after the villages of Upper Ryde and Lower Ryde were merged in the 19th century. |
|
Ryde is an English seaside town and civil parish on the Isle of Wight, with a population of 23,999 at the 2011 Census. |
|
Ted Hankey, James Wade, Ronnie Baxter and Gary Anderson played each other and members of the 500-capacity audience at the seaside venue. |
|
Rosemary and sage also look good with silver foliage perennials in the seaside garden, while cistus and helianthemums do well if sheltered. |
|
Sandown Pier hosts a large amusement centre with arcade games and children's play areas, typical of a seaside resort. |
|
He worked as a EUR5-an-hour attendant on the Ejection Seat ride in the seaside resort of Tramore, Co Waterford. |
|
The Voice coach then high-fived her photographer, before getting back to the seaside shoot. |
|
The design concept at Amari Hua Hin, whilst focused on style and comfort, also reflects the seaside locale of the property. |
|
Industry leaders say the move undermines David Cameron's preelection pledge to help seaside firms. |
|
Closely related is erigeron glaucus Sea Breeze, one of the best salt resistant perennials for seaside gardens. |
|
In the Rio Grande valley, Texas seaside sparrows were found nesting in black mangroves, saltmeadow cordgrass, and saltwort. |
|
Sandown is a typical Victorian seaside town, but is surrounded by a wealth of natural features. |
|
Southsea is a seaside resort and geographic area, located in Portsmouth at the southern end of Portsea Island, Hampshire, England. |
|
There are many seaside resorts, including some of the finest British beaches, such as those at Great Yarmouth, Cromer and Holkham. |
|
In the 19th Century a pleasure pier was built in an effort to establish a seaside resort to rival nearby Ramsgate. |
|
|
Ramsgate is a seaside town in the district of Thanet in east Kent, England. |
|
Southsea is a seaside resort and residential area that lies at the southern end of Portsea Island. |
|
In 1906, Joseph Conrad gave a brief description of Amsterdam as seen from the seaside, in The Mirror of the Sea. |
|
The French seaside resort of Cancale in Brittany is noted for its oysters, which also date from Roman times. |
|
Many of the islands have been popular seaside resorts since the 19th century. |
|
The towns of Torquay and Paignton are the principal seaside resorts on the south coast. |
|
Since the rise of seaside resorts with the arrival of the railways in the 19th century, Devon's economy has been heavily reliant on tourism. |
|
At the same time, other developers imagined developing Biggar into a larger seaside resort. |
|
South of the harbour is Scotsman's Bay, where there was a Victorian seaside amusement area, with walks, shelters and baths. |
|
The seaside resort of Southsea is situated to the south of Portsea Island, and to the east lies the area known as Eastney. |
|
The opening of the railway from Dublin saw Kingstown become a Victorian era seaside resort. |
|
Jones was born in the seaside town of Colwyn Bay, on the north coast of Wales. |
|
The village was founded around the harbour and shipbuilding industry, but is now best known as a seaside resort with a high quality beach. |
|
I have never seen a seaside course possess such magnificent sand craters, as those at Royal Adelaide. |
|
A light breeze filled the rooms of our seaside cottage with ozone. |
|
Nearby Southsea is a seaside resort with a pier amusement park and medieval castle. |
|
The rose hip puree is made from locally foraged rose hips-a New England seaside delicacy. |
|
Made using langoustines fished from Scottish waters, you are hit with a beautiful seaside smell when you open the bag. |
|
We want to explore ways of reinvigorating our coastal towns and breathing fresh life into our seaside resorts. |
|
The region has by far the longest coastline in England and many seaside fishing towns. |
|
|
Thrift, or Armeria maritima, is another seaside classic that you'll recognise immediately. |
|
Raw sewage at the Cleveland seaside RAW sewage was still contaminating Cleveland''s holiday beaches, a shock report revealed. |
|
Last week, Winston, played by the fantastic Paul Riley, flitted out of the schemie slums of Craiglang for a life by the seaside in Finport. |
|
Around 200,000 visitors descended on the Co Antrim seaside town for the 10th annual air display. |
|
Two waterfront land parcels bounded by the beach to the east and Seagirt Avenue to the west in the seaside community of Far Rockaway, Queens. |
|
A blue and white theme is complemented by driftwood and beach pebbles, combined with some seaside planting of agapanthus and sea hollies. |
|
Classically, it makes a very crisp light, refreshing and bone dry white, with almost a seaside tang. |
|
The Category 3 storm whipped up water levels, generating storm surges that swept over seawalls and flooded seaside and inland communities. |
|
It seems odd, given Ron McAnally's record-setting success at the seaside, that the trainer's greatest horse never won a race at Del Mar. |
|
Developers have been forced to go back to the drawing board after plans to build flats in a busy seaside town were rejected. |
|
There is a hint at seaside in the light, shiplap boarding and bright, plain render, surprisingly comfortable in the landlocked Midlands. |
|
Other seaside homes in the top five list include Glan Y Mor at Criccieth and The Boatyard and Shipway at Pwllheli. |
|
Today, its port still operates and the town remains a popular seaside holiday location. |
|
Matt's Mum decides they'll go to a seaside camping ground for a holiday for six weeks of sun, surf and sand. |
|
Hornsea is a small seaside resort, town and civil parish in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. |
|
However, the town kept afloat with people coming to spend the day by the seaside on bank holidays and weekends. |
|
As a seaside town Southport has a long history of leisure and recreation and is still heavily dependent on tourism. |
|
The seaside village of Mumbles has a Victorian pier, small, independent shops and boutiques, restaurants and cafes. |
|
To further complicate things, my own birthplace is the town of Scheveningen, a seaside area in the province of South Holland. |
|
The city was 850 fathoms in length while the seaside town was 400 fathoms in length. |
|
|
It is a popular spot among tourists and natives looking to lounge by the seaside. |
|
Many seaside resorts in Florida and California however, see travelers all year. |
|
In the modern era, hundreds of seaside resorts now string the Gulf, Atlantic, and Pacific coasts of the United States. |
|
In the United States, early seaside resorts in the late 1800's catered to the wealthy class and city businessmen. |
|
In the 1920's, Carl Fisher was the main promoter of Miami Beach, and helped to develop the city as a seaside resort. |
|
By 1888, Galveston, TX was a wealthy city and booming seaside playground for wealthy New Orleans businessmen. |
|
American seaside resorts first developed near the big industrial cities on the upper East Coast like New York City, Philadelphia, and Boston. |
|
Many American seaside resorts are popular destination across the world, known for their climates, culture, and entertainment opportunities. |
|
Many seaside towns boast large shopping centres which also attract people from a wide area. |
|
A lot of people can also afford more time off and 'second holidays' and short breaks, resulting in increased tourism in British seaside towns. |
|
Many seaside towns have turned to other entertainment industries, and some of them have a good deal of nightlife. |
|
Stag parties visiting the North East's most famous seaside party resort will be logged in order to catch those caught up in drunken violence. |
|
Installed in a stark London gallery, Emin's work symbolized the beach hut as icon of the seaside. |
|
The United Kingdom saw the popularisation of seaside resorts, and nowhere was this more seen than in Blackpool. |
|
Many seaside resorts are located in Gyeongsang, Jeolla, Chungcheong, Gangwon, Gyeonggi, Incheon, Ulsan and Busan. |
|
Italy is known for its seaside resorts, visited both by Italian and North European tourists. |
|
Like British resorts, many seaside towns in Ireland have turned to other entertainment industries. |
|
Other seaside resorts include Courtown and Rosslare Strand in County Wexford. |
|
After the seaside resort brawls, the media began to associate Italian scooters with violent mods. |
|
On February 25 and 26 visitors can make a sun visor while on March 24 and 25 there will be the chance to make a seaside collage. |
|
|
The vacationers could choose between a trip by boat or by coach along the serpentine, switchbacked seaside highway. |
|
Other South Dublin towns and villages such as Sandycove, Dalkey and Killiney grew as seaside resorts when the rail network was expanded. |
|
In the summer of that year, Keats went with Clarke to the seaside town of Margate to write. |
|
Fish and chips is a popular lunch meal eaten by families travelling to seaside resorts for day trips who do not bring their own picnic meals. |
|
Dungarvan is a seaside market town beneath the mountains in the centre of the Irish south coast. |
|
Heiligendamm in Mecklenburg, established in 1793, is the oldest seaside resort in Germany and continental Europe. |
|
The Boy was going to the seaside to-morrow. Everything was arranged, and now it only remained to carry out the doctor's orders. |
|
So we bounced along the beachside path past scores of little guest inns, vacation homes and seaside cafes. |
|
We are really excited to bring a seaside variety show back to the town, but one with a modern twist. |
|
Germany is famous for its traditional seaside resorts on the Baltic Sea and the North Sea coasts, mainly established in the 19th century. |
|
There are many seaside resorts on the jagged coastline of Croatia, including several on its islands, which have been popular for many years. |
|
The development of the seaside resort abroad was stimulated by the well developed English love of the beach. |
|
In particular, the completion of a branch line to the small seaside town Blackpool from Poulton led to a sustained economic and demographic boom. |
|
The seaside resort of Bognor Regis and market town Horsham are both large towns. |
|
The most popular areas for investment, normally in rural or seaside destinations, can be turned into virtually ghost towns in the winter. |
|
In the United States, the first seaside resorts in the European style were at Atlantic City, New Jersey and Long Island, New York. |
|
It was the last new seaside pier to be built in the United Kingdom. |
|
It was one of the great English seaside towns of the 19th century. |
|
Timpanist did not enjoy the rub of the green at the seaside venue last month but compensation awaits in the Ricky Hatton Here 9th November Handicap. |
|
Providing a walkway out to sea, the seaside pier is regarded as among the finest Victorian architecture, and is an iconic symbol of the British seaside holiday. |
|
|
A CRAZY cop has banned balaclavas from a freezing seaside town. |
|
A variety of seabirds can be seen close to the seaside, which is home to colonies of cormorants, gulls, razorbills, northern gannets, common murres and Atlantic puffins. |
|
The expansion of the railway network in Britain allowed the less affluent for the first time to take weekend trips to the seaside or to rivers for fishing. |
|
The need for a pier was obvious, especially if the town was to attract the wealthy and fashionable visitors who were beginning to patronise other seaside resorts. |
|
Fortunately for the noncampers, half of the hotel rooms overlook the seaside stage, making attendance almost automatic, and very convenient in bad weather. |
|
A year later in 1932, Dylan talked at length with his mentor and friend Bert Trick, 'The socialist grocer of Brynmill', about creating a play about a Welsh seaside town. |
|
Hornsea was promoted as a seaside resort from around 1800, with early attractions including bathing machines, horse races on the beach and a chalybeate spring near the mere. |
|
By the 1950s with increasing auto travel, more seaside resorts grew along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, while small, declining industrial ports were being rebuilt. |
|
The aim is to stamp out the seaside late-night lager lout image. |
|
On the Pacific coast in California, in April 1886, Babcock and Story created the Coronado Beach Company, which sought to develop Coronado as a seaside resort. |
|
He set up residence and an immense redbrick seaside studio, a converted industrial workspace, in the seaside town of Bridlington, about 75 miles from where he was born. |
|
Cape May, New Jersey, and Provincetown, MA, were two of the first seaside resorts in the 1800's that catered to city workers in Philadelphia, New York and Boston. |
|
Gwent Police referred the matter to the IPCC after starting an internal investigation amid claims officers used police cars to go on trips to the seaside. |
|
Redundant carriages were converted to camp coaches and placed at country or seaside stations such as Blue Anchor and Marazion and hired to holidaymakers who arrived by train. |
|
Unlike in many smaller countries, the seaside resorts in the USA are located in various climate zones, with great differences in topography and environment. |
|
The other two major settlements in the county are Dorchester, which has been the county town since at least 1305, and Weymouth, a major seaside resort since the 18th century. |
|
The north and south coasts of Devon each have both cliffs and sandy shores, and the county's bays contain seaside resorts, fishing towns, and ports. |
|
It consists of the seaside resort of Bournemouth, the historic port and borough of Poole, the towns of Christchurch and Ferndown plus many surrounding villages. |
|
There, seaside tavernas grilled the day's catch of fish and octopus. |
|
Other plants aren't all quite as tough as coastal natives, but several, including shrubs such as Natal plum and euonymus, can tolerate seaside challenges. |
|
|
The report, Turning the Tide, called for action to revive the fortunes of seaside towns like Rhyl, Margate, Clacton-on-Sea, Great Yarmouth and Blackpool. |
|
In the 1790s, the King and his family took holidays at Weymouth, Dorset, which he thus popularised as one of the first seaside resorts in England. |
|
The south coast has many seaside towns, the most being in Sussex. |
|
Sandown has been a seaside resort town since the Victorian age thanks to its sands and the sunny weather on the Isle of Wight compared to other parts of the United Kingdom. |
|
There are many seaside resorts on the Dutch coast, chiefly in the provinces of North Holland, South Holland and Zeeland, as well as on the West Frisian Islands. |
|
Rapid population growth of the seaside communities in the late 19th century and the birth of tourism required a significant improvement in quality and quantity of fresh water. |
|
Many seaside resorts are located in Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu. |
|
She has begun a LookUp campaign in her English seaside home, where she believes the architectural gems just above people's usual gaze are equally ignored. |
|
The competition gets more than 100 people taking part building sandcastles and sculptures on the North Shore beach in the picturesque Welsh seaside resort. |
|
She took over at the large Elmwood Primary School in Chelmsford, Essex, on January 1, 2004, and moved to the plush seaside town of Burnham-on-Crouch. |
|
Erin Michelle Hollingshead and John Matthew Clinard were united in a seaside ceremony at five o'clock on the evening of September 29, 2012, at Holiday Isle in Destin, Florida. |
|
Our long-bar also offers a perfect informal area to enjoy an after-work drink and light meal, or head out to the terrace for sundowners with a seaside view. |
|
Even popular Nags Head, with its nest of hotels and obligatory honky-tonks, is a sparse seaside town compared to resorts such as Virginia Beach and Myrtle Beach. |
|
Since the opening of Bray Daly Station in 1852, the County Wicklow coastal town of Bray has become the largest seaside resort on the East Coast of Ireland. |
|
By contrast, at the top end of the seaside price league sits Sandbanks, followed by Padstow, Fowey on the south Cornwall coast,, Milford-on-Sea and St Mawes. |
|
To support himself during his studies Holst played the trombone professionally, at seaside resorts in the summer and in London theatres in the winter. |
|
Also flowing into Cardiff Docks is the River Ely, which separates Cardiff from the headland and seaside resort of Penarth in the Vale of Glamorgan. |
|
They moved for the autumn months to the newly fashionable seaside resort of Worthing, on the Sussex coast, where they resided at Stanford Cottage. |
|
Stretch you legs in this low-key seaside town, then take Hwy. |
|
Located on Cardigan Bay with a harbour and large sandy beaches, it lies on the Ceredigion Coast Path, and remains a popular seaside resort and traditional fishing town. |
|