Easter getaway guide
This Easter is expected to be one of the busiest on road and rail, as millions make the most of the four-day break
Summer holidays: 10 of the best trips for couples
You may only have eyes for each other, but stupendous views and fantastic food and wine will only make things better. Here are our experts' tips for romantic breaks à deux
Keep it simple, Umbria, ItalyTuscany and Umbria have a reputation for being stuffed to the salami-hung rafters with braying, posh types in raspberry chinos, but it's easy to steer clear of the Chianti-quaffing crowds. The solar-powered Locanda della Quercia Calante on the Umbria/Tuscany border is a peaceful, eco-friendly agriturismo. The emphasis is on the simple things in life: good food (home cooked and mainly organic); wellbeing (Iyengar yoga in the onsite studio), and chilling. Even the wine is biodynamic, which must be good for you, surely? Owner Fausto makes much of the fact that the property is built on leylines and the rooms are free of magnetic fields, which he claims makes for a better night's rest. We were sceptical until my insomniac partner slept longer and deeper than he had in years. By day you can mooch around nearby towns – historic Orvieto is 18km away – and spookily quiet medieval villages. Evenings are for wining and dining in the cosy restaurant. We made the mistake on the first day of accepting second helpings of the fantastic meat-free lasagne, only to realise it was just a starter. Perhaps it's not the leylines that ensure a good night's kip.
• Doubles from €60B&B; +39 0763 627199, querciacalante.com
Isabel Choat, Guardian online travel editor
Unless you're the kind of person who precision-plans their leisure time, you probably won't book a holiday in Copenhagen sufficiently far in advance to get a table at Noma, named Best Restaurant in the World for the second year running. But at Relæ (restaurant-relae.dk), former Noma head chef Christian Puglisi cooks in a way that's just as surprising and inventive, and a good deal cheaper. And Geranium (geranium.dk; this year singled out by Michelin as a rising star) is equally brilliant, in more of a polished, big-night-out way. Aamaan's Etablissement (aamanns.dk) was our favourite lunch spot, mainly for its steak tartare and citrus-and-spice marinated salmon. And for mornings after, the great coffee and the brunch menu (plus the cosy sheepskin-covered chairs) at café/deli Gourmandiet (gourmandiet.dk) made our hangovers almost pleasurable.
• Doubles at 71 Nyhavn, a converted, canal-side spice warehouse, cost from £110 (+45 3343 6200, 71nyhavnhotel.com)
Jenny McIvor, food writer
Arrive in daylight and wear sensible shoes, the instructions from Carswell Farm advised. We pulled up after midnight after the long drive to south Devon. The directions from the farmhouse to the impossibly secluded Beach Hut were clear, but scrambling across cliff tops with bags and very unsensible footwear, we had only an inadequate torch and the alarming sound of crashing waves to make sure our romantic holiday didn't start with the wrong sort of splash. Once there we just climbed the little ladder to our bed in the eaves, so the next morning, we were unprepared for the picture-book adorableness of our surroundings. The Beach Hut is fairly basic, but no less lovely for that: there's no electricity, but a woodburner and gas hob – and a wood-burning hot tub outside (everything is eco, including the loo)! And then there's the view – this beach hut gives new meaning to the idea of a private beach. Nestled in a cove, unreachable except by that rocky footpath, this is as hidden-away a hideaway as you could dream of. It isn't cheap, but you could travel the world and not find such a romantic retreat. If the sun shines it is bliss, and if it rains it is bliss too.
• Two nights at the Beach Hut costs £450 (optional organic dinner hamper £45); +44 (0)1752 830020, carswellcottages.com/thebeachhut
Lisa Allardice, editor of Guardian Review
"Why've we stopped?" whined our eldest, then 14. "There's nothing here!" "Here" was a quaint Italian riverside village with a bar with Prosecco on tap, but this was when we realised we'd have to put more effort into holidays with teens. So for a few years it was activities (rafting, canyoning) and cities (they loved Amsterdam). But teenagers grow up, go to university, and suddenly mooching around Europe is possible again. And cheap. Term time in Sicily and not only were hotel rooms almost half the summer price, half-board was sometimes thrown in. We stayed at friendly Pensione Tranchina in Scopello, an hour from Palermo, and ticked off all the things our offspring would have moaned about. No pool, tiny rocky beach, no shops, nothing to do after dinner except sit chatting with the owner over a digestivo. Worst of all, the rugged Zingaro natural park stretches for 7km up the coast, with footpaths for long bracing walks. There were even – horror! – wild flowers. Some things the youngsters would have liked: the fantastic food, and especially our cute black hired Fiat Cinquecento. But that's the sort of iconic vehicle only the child-free can bomb around Italy in. No room in the back for long teenage legs. Shucks, kids.
• Pensione Tranchina (+39 0924 541099, pensionetranchina.com) offers half-board from €55pp per night
Liz Boulter, travel writer
Forget the sun, sand and sex-on-the-beach stereotype; there's another side to Lanzarote. Away from the big resorts, the easternmost of the Canaries is a heady mix of wild volcanic landscapes, surfer-friendly beaches, theatrical modernist architecture and vineyards made up of volcanic stone circles that could have been designed by Andy Goldsworthy. You can reach them all easily enough from the coastal resorts with a hire car, but a much better idea is to base yourself at Caserío de Mozaga, an 18th-century country house in the centre of the island that's been turned into a very stylish boutique B&B with restaurant. Or you could book into a luxury yurt and cosy up under canvas at Finca de Arrieta on the north-east coast.
• Doubles at Caserío de Mozaga cost from €63 (+34 92 852 0060, caseriodemozaga.com). Yurts at Finca de Arrieta cost from £385 a week (lanzaroteretreats.com)
Rhiannon Batten, travel writer
Along a rambling road near Fiscardo in the north of Kefalonia lay our cottage, Villa Trizoni. It had all the ingredients for a romantic break – the bare minimum, but done in style. We had three gorgeous bedrooms at our disposal, an airy open plan living space of white sofas, and an infinity pool surrounded by funky day beds. There was almost nothing to do, but that was fine by us – all we wanted was to loll around in the sunshine and spend time together. Then it poured with rain all week. Instead of languorous afternoons in the pool our memories are of drinking Mythos beer behind a rain-splashed plastic awning, paddling in the drizzle at beautiful Daf Noudi beach, and getting caught in a dramatic storm while half-way across to the neighbouring island of Ithaca in our rented motorboat. There, we were revived at the magical Polyphemus restaurant by an inebriated communist chef who fed us Che Guevara rum and sun-dried octopus for hours, then insisted he drive us back to the harbour. We even made up a silly song about Polyphemus which make us feel like teenagers recalling their first kiss when we sing it now.
• Villa Trizoni has weeks available in May, July and August, from £1,239 a week, with holidaylettings.co.uk. Villa Zouzouni, next door, sleeps two from £885 a week, and has weeks left in August
Gemma Bowes, Guardian Travel editor
We'd seen photos of the Soca Valley, and read reviews about the chic mountain retreat called Nebesa. But nothing prepared us for the staggering Alpine beauty of the region – flower-filled meadows, crystal-clear rivers and lakes – nor the views from Nebesa's chalets; snow-capped mountains to the east, endless valleys to the west, trailing down to the Adriatic. Four glass-fronted chalets are the base from which to soak up these views. From our terrace, we watched a storm come in, then get chased away by glorious sunshine. We hiked up the mountain one day and white-water rafted down the turquoise Soca the next. In the evening we took at taxi to Hisa Franko, Slovenia's answer to The Fat Duck, for a sublime gourmet feast. The X factor at Nebesa isn't the luxuriousness of the hotel – it's actually fairly simple. What makes it so special is the setting and the isolation: it's a perfect place to hole up with a partner.
• Two-night stays from €255 for two including breakfast and use of bikes (i-escape.com/nebesa.php)
Liz Simpson, deputy editor, i-escape
I thought a trip to Biarritz would be ironically glam: pink cocktails and discotheques, that kind of thing. But at some point since the 1980s, it had morphed into a quietly hip surfing mecca. My then-boyfriend suddenly looked interested. We camped under the pines in the main surfie site at Anglet and walked down to the beach every morning. Compensating for the lack of kitsch, the boyfriend even serenaded me with Elvis Presley on the sand. Surf by day, cosmopolitan comforts by night: we ate outside at pretty old clifftop restaurants, drank wine from Gérard Dépardieu's nearby vineyards, and wandered along the pier that juts from the spectacular coastline out through the breakers. A little black dress and a surfboard are all you need in this town where la bonne vie meets Endless Summer.
• Biarritz Camping (+33 5 5923 0012, biarritz-camping.fr) charges from €23 for a pitch in summer. Hotel Alcyon (+33 5 5922 6460, hotel-alcyon-biarritz.com) has doubles from €105 in summer
Sophie Cooke, novelist
We took the Eurostar to Paris and the sleeper train to Hendaye. When we woke, it was a short hop over the border to San Sebastián – or Donostia, as it is known by its Basque inhabitants. We chose from one of scores of affordable pensions in the beguiling parte vieja (old town). We spent lazy days on the city's beautiful beaches, and late nights bar-hopping. The city specialises in pintxos, simple Basque tapas: we wandered from tavern to tavern, greedily sampling as many as we could. For a once-in-lifetime meal, try to get a table at legendary restaurant Arzak (arzak.info), ranked eighth in the world. We relaxed at La Perla (la-perla.net), a beachside spa; visited Eduardo Chillida's wave-lashed sculptures in La Concha Bay; and climbed Mount Urgull for the castle, enormous Jesus Christ statue and panoramic views. We bought a couple of beers just as the basic hilltop bar was closing and sat alone by the fig trees, watching the sun set over the bay.
• For travel details see seat61.com/Spain.htm
Rachel Dixon, travel writer
I'd been obsessed by San Francisco since reading Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City series – the rolling hills, the smell of marijuana, the glamorous casualties of a life lived as though every day was 1969 – but it wasn't until my 27th birthday that I finally visited, a surprise present from my boyfriend, who'd been choking on the secret for months. It was San Francisco I'd had in mind when I chose to move to Brighton for university, where the lovely gayness and scattered vintage shops charmed me, briefly. But it took a week in a budget downtown hotel – queuing for breakfasts at Dottie's True Blue cafe, taking shy photos outside the house Maupin was inspired by – an afternoon in Alcatraz, and various second-hand clothing purchases along Haight Street, for me to convince my boyfriend that this, one day, should be our home. Plans are in motion ...
• Hotel Majestic (+1 415 441 1100, thehotelmajestic.com) has period styling and doubles from $115; at the other end of the aesthetic spectrum Hotel Tomo (+1 415 921 4000, jdvhotels.com/tomo) offers brightly coloured Japanese pop art and doubles from $129
Eva Wiseman, columnist, Observer magazine
Ask Tom – your travel dilemmas
Lonely Planet's Tom Hall has tips on how to see the world by yacht to where to find a small, family-friendly campsite in France
I am looking into working on boats/yachts as a deckhand as a way of seeing the world. Can you or any of the readers recommend any websites/forums. I was looking to take the STCW 95 course as this seems like it may lead to paid employment rather than just volunteering in exchange for travel.
Peepeeheenaz
The idea of working on a yacht as a way to travel is, happily, still possible. As you might imagine it is highly competitive and you need a few breaks to get started and a strong work ethic to keep getting jobs.
Getting started is still, in time-honoured fashion, a case of "dockwalking" – going boat to boat – in resorts such as Cannes, Nice and Monaco, but the best spots, according to Bethany Silcox, writer of the Fun Sized Adventures blog (funsizedadventures.wordpress.com) who has several years of crewing on superyachts under her belt, are Antibes and Palma de Mallorca. These are, she says, "the two Mediterranean superyacht hubs. You will find plenty of crew agents who help you to tweak your CV, perfect your 'yachtie look' and help you to find a position. Both superyacht hubs are equipped with crew houses (hostels for yachties) and plenty of bars for 'networking'." Should you be daunted by the cost of taking a course to get started, consider also Bethany's advice: "Monetary investment in your career is recuperated relatively quickly with competitive salaries and expenses covered by the boat."
The STCW 95 you mention (Standards of Training, Certification and Watchkeeping certificate (stcw.org), the qualification that is legally required to work on board a sail or motor yacht over 24 metres in length, and is increasingly being asked for by owners of smaller vessels) may be enough to get you started, but you may also find that your rivals for crewing jobs also have diving, powerboat or waterspouts qualifications that can give them an edge.
You can take the basic STCW 95 seafaring course at centres around Britain. It costs around £800 and takes five days.
Once you get a job, you can expect to work hard and sleep little when guests are on board, but enjoy normal working hours and the perks of working on a very fancy boat and calling at plenty of different, interesting places at quieter times.
That should be enough to get you started. The RYA (rya.org.uk) has plenty of information about training. Have a look also at The Crew Report (thecrewreport.com/superyacht_crew_homepage.asp) and crew agency sites such as Luxury Yacht Group (luxyachts.com/default.aspx). Should you find yourself crewing in Bora Bora of somewhere equally idyllic then be sure to drop me a line and let me know.
I'm planning to go to Namibia in May/June and then on to Victoria Falls and I have a couple of questions. 1.) How safe is the Zimbabwe side of the Falls these days? 2.) Would you recommend Lüderitz in southern Namibia or going somewhere in the Zambia area after the falls? We have a spare two days in our schedule and are not sure where to use them.
Dasaidanglo
The Zimbabwe side of Victoria Falls is safe to visit and tourists are starting to return to what was originally the main visitor area for the natural wonder. If you're going over the next few months you should certainly book ahead, though you will find the Zambian side substantially busier. Visas for Zimbabwe can be obtained at the border (£35/US$55, bring cash) and it is certainly worth seeing the Falls from both sides. This must be one of the world's most astonishing border crossings. I did it by bicycle two years ago and it was the noisiest, most spectacular bridge crossing I have ever made. The Falls should be very full of water at this time of year, at the start of winter after the end of the rainy season.
I spent a few days around Chobe national park in Botswana on my visit, which is close to the Falls and offers a fun border crossing over the Zambezi on a rusty ferry. Lüderitz would be a much longer journey and as super as this part of Namibia is, you'll have seen much of the country already so may wish to pause in somewhere green and pleasant, which this part of Botswana certainly is.
My partner and I are hoping to do a fly-drive in Portugal in September. We're hoping to spend a week or so travelling the Douro area and hope that it will be round about the time of the grape harvest. How advanced is vino-tourism in Portugal? Are we likely to be able to explore and enjoy any of the vineyards – and is there anywhere we can go for more information?
Silverandroid
As you might expect from one of the world's oldest wine regions the answer to your second question is an emphatic yes. You'll find no shortage of vintners offering you a tasting, often with a fine meal to go with it. The back roads which hug the steep contours of the Alto Douro wine country are pretty wonderful too.
Driving up the river from Porto you'll find plenty of quintas (wineries) to pause at along the way. The best place to look is at Rota do Vinho do Porto (rvp.pt), which lists dozens of vineyards which accept visitors. There's more than just fine port and wine here. The hilltop town of Vila Nova de Foz Côa – one end of the superb drive from Pinhão is close to a superb collection of Palaeolithic cave art. Do deviate along the road, too, even unpromising spots like São João da Pesqueira have beautiful historic centres and leave the package tours behind.
Here's a thought: as you explore such a beautiful place and enjoy great wines and excellent food you're also helping the Portuguese economy. It's almost your duty to go. Visit Portugal (visitportugal.com) can help with planning too.
I am going to France camping with my family (two girls, six and three, myself and hubby) for three weeks (looking around Nantes area). We can go any time from July to August. Any recommendations in terms of price?
We would love a simple, "French" campsite in easy reach of the area's beaches but seem to only find huge complexes on Google or very "English" sites.
KassieB
This is a common question – where in France can you find the kind of fun, informal, smaller campsites that have become much more commonplace in the UK over recent years. While France is still the world's best camping destination, with a very canvas-friendly culture, proximity to the UK and friendly atmospheres at sites across the country it can be tricky to find sites that offer a little intimacy. Cool Camping France (Punk Publishing) has just published a second edition and is a good place to start, with 100 campsites on a variety of budgets. The sites ran by Camping Indigo (camping-indigo.com) should also fit the bill for what you're looking for. Of course, camping buffs will be way ahead of me, offering suggestions at Rural Camping in France (rural-camping.com) and the Dutch site Kleine Campings Frankrijk (kleinecampingsinfrankrijk.nl; in English). Readers suggestions are most welcome.
Boating holidaysWorking holidaysNamibiaZimbabweZambiaCampingFranceguardian.co.ukNoma world’s best restaurant – again
Copenhagen eatery retains accolade from Restaurant magazine while chefs from Russia and Peru make list for first time
• Get the full list
Read Jay Rayner's blog on the world's 50 top restaurants
The celebrated Copenhagen restaurant Noma has retained its status as the world's best place to eat, according to the annual list compiled on behalf of Restaurant magazine, a distinction which arguably draws in more diners than Michelin stars.
René Redzepi's influential cooking, with a heavy reliance on seasonal and foraged Scandinavian ingredients, ousted Spain's El Bulli in 2010 from four consecutive years of dominance, a feat which Redzepi said prompted 100,000 overnight booking requests.
El Bulli itself, which has never been out of the top three since the list was created in 2002, is entirely absent this year; this is not because Catalan chef Ferran Adrià's cooking has waned, merely that he has decided to close the restaurant later this year.
Spanish gastronomy remains prominent in the views of the 837 judges worldwide – a mixture of chefs, writers and restaurateurs – with second spot taken by El Celler de Can Roca, the three Michelin-starred Girona restaurant run by three brothers. Behind this was Mugaritz, in the Basque country.
It's a more mixed picture for UK dining. The Spanish pair's ascent helped push Heston Blumenthal's Fat Duck in Bray, Berkshire, from third to fifth on a list it topped in 2005. Last year's lowest-ever tally of just three British restaurants in the top 50 is now four, with London's Ledbury – the highest new entry at no. 34 – joining the Fat Duck, Hibiscus and St John.
The 2011 list is also notable for the geographical spread, with the first sighting in the top 50 of restaurants in Russia – Moscow's Vavravy, famed for its £160-a-head tasting menu – and Peru, where Lima's Astrid Y Gastón serves up haute cuisine incarnations of traditional South American dishes such as "chupe" stews. Perhaps more notable still is a Brazilian eatery, DOM in Sao Paulo, at seven, while Mexico has two restaurants on the list.
"We do have a global reach," said William Drew, editor of Restaurant magazine. "It shouldn't be a surprise to anyone. In places like Sao Paolo, Mexico City and Lima, the best restaurants are as good as anywhere in the world."
Nonetheless, some traditional cookery powerhouses predominate, with almost half the list comprising restaurants in France, Italy, Spain and the US. Following last year's Gallic anguish, when only six French outlets made the list, there are now eight, with Parisian super-bistro Le Chateaubriand rising to reach the top 10.
However entertaining the list, many food critics doubt the validity of such arbitrary rankings. "My worry is that I don't see how you can compare such different types of restaurant, doing such different things," said Charles Campion, who writes about food for London's Evening Standard. "If something stimulates debate and interest about food and gastronomy then it's a good thing, but it shouldn't be taken seriously at all. You can't take a great experience and just put a number on it."
The gradual slippage down the list of the Fat Duck did not mean it was becoming a worse restaurant, said the food writer William Sitwell, editor of Waitrose Food Monthly.
"I believe Heston's at the top of his game," he said. "A lot this is simply about novelty. This list isn't about the dining most people do. It's food couture. These are places you save up to go to. These are not the sort of places you go to when you're hungry, it's food as an event, as theatre."
What isn't in doubt is the economic impact getting a high place, as shown by Noma, which went from having regular free tables at lunch to an queue of would-be diners that would fill the restaurant for 15 years. This has brought concern at open lobbying, for example tourist boards flying judges to sample free meals at their city's top dining spots.
"We're not in a position to say to tourist boards that they can't lobby, or tell critics they can't take press trips, but we devolve a level of trust," said Drew. "Judging restaurants is a fundamentally subjective activity but they realise when they are being lobbied and should take this into account."
RestaurantsFood & drinkRestaurantsPeter Walkerguardian.co.ukSalman Rushdie’s hotel books pick
In honour of PEN World Voices festival in New York, which he is chairing, novelist selects books for the city's high-end Standard Hotel
Guests staying at New York's luxury Standard hotel next week will not have to resort to copies of the Gideon Bible if they find themselves short of reading material. Instead, their bedside tables are being furnished with a selection of books picked by a somewhat unlikely maid: Salman Rushdie.
As founder of the PEN World Voices festival and chair of this year's event, which takes place in New York next week, Rushdie has selected a series of American classics for the rooms at The Standard, which is hosting many of the festival's events. The Booker prize-winning author has come up with a wide-ranging line-up for guests, from Walt Whitman's 1855 poetry collection Leaves of Grass to Philip Roth's 1969 tale of the sex-obsessed Alexander Portnoy, Portnoy's Complaint.
Other titles picked by Rushdie range from William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury to F Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, while a more modern perspective is provided by Toni Morrison's Beloved, Saul Bellow's Humboldt's Gift, Thomas Pynchon's V, Michael Chabon's The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay and Joseph Heller's Catch-22.
Those wishing to dip into a book of short stories of an evening might be tempted by Flannery O'Connor's Everything That Rises Must Converge, or collections by Eudora Welty and Bernard Malamud, while science fiction comes from Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five.
The PEN festival, which is intended to "celebrate the power of the writer's voice as a bold and vital element of public discourse", runs from 25 April to 1 May in New York, featuring more than 100 writers from 40 nations, from Harold Bloom to Hanif Kureishi, Amélie Nothomb, Elif Shafak and Irvine Welsh. Nobel Prize-winner Wole Soyinka will deliver the Arthur Miller freedom to write lecture on the closing night.
Announcing the festival earlier this year, Rushdie said it would enable visitors "to hear from writers from every corner of the globe". He added that: "What becomes clear is that the role of the intellectual varies tremendously from country to country. In tyrannical or authoritarian regimes, people turn to writers and intellectuals to serve as the conscience of those countries. On the other hand, in free societies, you have a country like France, in which the voice of the writer is at the centre of politics – or a country like the US, in which the role of the intellectual has steadily declined. We now call on the public intellectual to have a much louder and more potent voice in American political life."
Salman RushdieAlison Floodguardian.co.ukPlanning a bank holiday day trip?
Been there readers recommend the best places of historical interest to visit around the UK, from Ilfracombe's hand-carved 19th-century tunnels to Rye's fairytale castle
WINNING TIP: Tunnels Beaches, IlfracombeTunnels dug by Welsh miners in the 1820s lead from the town to rockpools and blue flag beaches. Go when the tide is low, giving you a better chance to see a huge variety of sea life, such as some rare corals. Close by is Watermouth Castle, with a dungeon, theme park, gardens and a maze.
Tunnels Beaches: adults £2.25, children £1.75, 01271 879123, tunnelsbeaches.co.uk; Watermouth Castle: adults £13, children £11, 01271 867474, watermouthcastle.com
Traveller4550
Walking down into the steep-sided valley that houses Robert Owen's Utopian mill town is like walking into Brigadoon. The town has been painstakingly restored to its 19th-century appearance. Don't miss the Annie McLeod Experience, which gives an overview of village life and manages to be both informative and pretty darn creepy. Part museum, part living history attraction and part beauty spot, New Lanark tells a rare uplifting history of industrial Britain.
Adults £8.50, children £6, family of four £24.50; 01555 661345, newlanark.org
TheQs
This is the most evocative ruin in England – an almost complete shell, with shadowed corridors and an exquisite, intact white chamber. This was the prison of the She-Wolf of France, Isabella, confined by her son for conspiring to murder her husband, Edward II. Let your children belt up and down the vast surrounding earthwork, and dart past the grooves where the old portcullis fell.
Adults £4, children £2.50; 01553 631330, castlerising.co.uk
Intheshed
Tucked away in the most unexpected location is the former Archbishops's Palace, now a school. The building dates from the 12th century and on appointed days in the school holidays or in September you can take a tour of the 15th-century Great Hall and Chapel and see Queen Elizabeth I's bedroom. This beautiful building, which is in Old Palace Road, is a relatively unknown treasure, except for those of us fortunate enough to have spent our schooldays there.
020-8680 0467, oldpalaceofjohnwhitgift.org
BuntyB
Set amid sprawling greenery and a flower-splashed moat, Bodiam Castle could be straight out of a fairy tale. The ruins have spiralling steps and picturesque archways that lead between the ramparts. Built in 1385, the castle was both a defence against French invaders and a family home. During the peak season there are costumed actors on hand to provide further insight.
Adults £6.80, children £3.40, near Robertsbridge; 01580 830196, nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-bodiamcastle
Clareharwood
Forming part of the Llangollen canal, the aqueduct spans 307 metres. It is used by canal boats year round, and the workmanship of Thomas Telford and William Jessop's early 19th-century engineering feat can also be enjoyed by pedestrians on the adjacent towpath, towering above the river Dee – traversing this canal is likened to being suspended in mid-air.
The Llangollen Wharf centre runs boat trips across the aqueduct, adults from £12, children from £10; 01978 860702, horsedrawnboats.co.uk
Arros
The Orkneys are one big historic site – a treasure trove spanning the centuries from the stone age to the second world war. Visit magical stone circles, atmospheric tombs, quaint fishing villages and one of the oldest surviving dwellings in Europe. My favourite is Noltland Castle on the small island of Westray. No tickets or stewards – simply knock on the door of the nearby farmhouse for the key. You'll most likely be the king or queen of your castle and have it all to yourself.
01856 872856, visitorkney.com
OurVin
I'm not a great one for the whole "spa experience" thing. And I baulked at the £12 admission. But my fiancée wanted to have a look round and we'd got a discount ticket as part of the city bus tour. I would have gladly handed over double the admission for the enormous privilege of viewing what the curators of this marvellous exhibit have done. We spent an absorbing three hours looking around the fabulously presented ancient Roman baths. Technical wizardry allows you to see the ruins as they really were, projected right on to the remains as they are now; complete with spectral, be-toga'd Romans wandering about the place, taking the waters. Various recorded tour guides are available pitched at brainy, history-fanatical adults, less demanding but keen-to-know adults, and children. Go there now, and don't forget to taste the sulphurous waters on the way out through the Pump House!
Adults £12 (£12.50 July/August), children £7.80, Stall Street, Bath, 01225 477785, romanbaths.co.uk
BrianStoat
This atmospheric graveyard in north London is full of architectural gems, and it paints a fascinating portrait of Victorian times. If you take the tour of the West Cemetery (book in advance), your guide will reveal intriguing stories behind the lives and deaths of the eminent and ordinary Victorians who are buried here. Enchanting paths wind through woodland, amid ivy-clad angels and jumbled headstones, leading to the Lebanon Circle Vaults, where you'll find a 300-year-old Cedar of Lebanon tree. Other highlights are the Egyptian Avenue, the Terrace Catacombs, and the enormous Julius Beer Mausoleum. In the East Cemetery you can wander at will, and here you will find the tomb of the most famous Highgate inhabitant, Karl Marx.
West Cemetery tours: Adults £7, children (8-16 years, no under-eights) £3; East Cemetery: adults £3, children £1. Swain's Lane, 020-8340 1834, highgate-cemetery.org
Troutiemcfish
Even the kids will be awestruck by these atmospheric ruins, still standing after more than 1,400 years of worship, and possibly more. The legendary burial place of Arthur and Guinevere, it's the perfect place to play kings and queens and summon up the mysteries of the past. With plenty of space for picnics in 36 acres of tranquil parkland, this is an oasis of calm for stressed-out parents seeking spiritual sanctuary. Did Joseph of Arimathea, by some accounts the Virgin Mary's uncle, come to the abbey? Did he plant the Holy Thorn Tree, which has a flourishing sapling in the abbey's grounds? Lively costumed guides and intriguing relics help you make up your own mind. Modern marvels include cafe, museum, shop.
Adults, £6, children £4, family of 4 £16, 01458 832267, glastonburyabbey.com
Emilyfromweymouth
It is so easy to imagine this 2,500-year-old hill site as a fort – it's an energetic climb to the top, then the children can storm the gates. It's an easy walk round the perimeter ring among the trees, and you can see for miles around and picture the people inside.
01962 860948, tinyurl.com/693gnqv
Hypnodendron
This is a half-ruined castle with civil war and Jacobite history in an epic coastal setting. Unlike some castles, it isn't a show home.
Adults £5, children £2, Stonehaven, Aberdeenshire, 01569 762173, dunnottarcastle.co.uk
JonA1966
This moated castle set in luscious north Oxfordshire parkland was the site of civil war sieges and battles, and the setting for the film Shakespeare in Love. Broughton Castle is still occupied by the Saye-Sele family and lowers its drawbridge on selected days from Easter onwards. June and July always promise events, from corricle racing on the moat to Shakespeare productions in the parkland, and this is also the time when the walled garden is in full rose-scented bloom.
Adults £7, children £3, 01295 276070, broughtoncastle.com
Welshlyn
The site of Tre'r Ceiri is a sprawling settlement on the peak of Yr Eifl, with significant stone ramparts, one of the most dramatic and impressive iron age hill forts in Britain. Around 150 iron age huts can be explored. This site is ideal for those who enjoy combining a walk with an interesting goal: there's a not-too-strenuous hill walk along fairly easy terrain, through hills covered with heather and gorse. The summit offers views of Snowdonia to the north, the Irish sea to the west and at your feet a bird's eye view of the beautiful Llyn peninsula.
museumwales.ac.uk/en/2373/
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