Your guide to Suffolk and its surrounding attractions

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Aldeburgh - Constable Country - Dunwich - Framlingham - Halesworth - Orford - Snape - Southwold

Villages around Woodbridge
Sutton Hoo
Deben Estuary
Woodbridge Mills

Thomas Seckford

Thomas Churchyard

Suffolk's Sea Battles
Suffolk's Naval Heroes

Bawdsey Radar

Eating Out

Around the town

Woodbridge Town Trail

Suffolk beach guide

Cycling on the Suffolk coast

Fishing on the Suffolk Coast

Woodbridge Villages
Woodbridge Churches
Suffolk Cottage Holidays
Big House Holidays
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Things to do

Things to do in Aldeburgh

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Thingsto do in Snape

Things to do in Southwold

Things to do in Woodbridge

Eating Out

Eating Out in Aldeburgh

Eating Out in Orford

Eating Out in Snape

Eating Out in Southwold

Eating Out in Woodbridge

Accommodation

Accommodation in Aldeburgh

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Accommodation in Woodbridge

Cottages

Holiday Cottages in Aldeburgh

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Holiday Cottages in Woodbridge

Local Producers

Local Producers in Aldeburgh

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Local Producers in Woodbridge

 

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Villages around Woodbridge

Lower Ufford

The River Deben, Lower Ufford, Woodbridge
The River Deben at Lower Ufford

A village on the Deben, which gave its name to the family of Robert de Ufford, who fought at Poictiers and was made Earl of Suffolk.

Driving into the village over the narrow bridge which crosses the river and water meadows you might imagine that you were travelling back in time.  Cattle and Suffolk Punch ~ a rare breed of enormous working horses, originally bred in Ufford ~ graze the marsh grass by the river bank, children fish the shallows of the Deben river, while the traditional and well kept village houses and village church are a joy to behold. Stay in Lower Ufford

Bawdsey Quay

Bawdsey Quay from Felixstowe Ferry
Looking back to Bawdsey Quay from the ferry

Woodbridge 10 miles. Standing sentinel over the coast and the entrance to the Deben Estuary, Bawdsey Quay is nothing more than a row of cottages and a big house, Bawdsey Manor, a Victorian 'pile' created by Sir Cuthbert Quilter and later taken over by the government as the centre for radar development. Here you can join the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Path which takes you to Lowestoft in the north, Felixstowe and the Essex border in the south, by way of the foot ferry which runs across the mouth of the Deben estuary throughout the summer and at weekends in spring and autumn.

Bawdsey Quay has a lovely little sandy beach, a cafe and spectacular views up and down the estuary and out to sea. 

There is a car park about 200 yards from the Quay. Stay in Bawdsey Quay

Alderton

Alderton Fields
Small woodland copses around Alderton are favourite roosts for nightingales and barn owls

Alderton is really little more than a street of traditional cottages set in the coastal strip just a mile from the sea at Bawdsey. The church tower collapsed several hundred years ago, and yet the remainder of the church remains intact and has been home to Summer on the Peninsula, a season of summer concerts for several years.  Despite its relative obscurity today it has had its fare share of famous inhabitants including the poet Giles Fletcher  who was rector here in the early part of the 17th century, Robert Naunton, who lived at Alderton Hall, a member of the Court of James II. Stay in Alderton

Hollesley and Shingle Street

The Deben and the Ore turn this part of Suffolk into a virtual peninsula and on the seaward side lie Hollesley and Shingle Street.  Overlooking a shingle bank at the entrace to the Ore (known as the Alde Estuary elsewhere), Shingle Street comprises a row of little houses, the coastguard cottages and a Martello Tower.  Its very isolation is an attraction, and the sight of the sea rushing into and out of the river is worth a journey. Stay in Shingle Street

Shingle Street, Nr Woodbridge, Suffolk
Shingle Street - Overlooking the longest shingle bank in England, this is a strange and wonderful piece of coast

East Lane - a disappearing coastline

Whilst the shingle bank at Shingle Street is still growing the cliffs to the south and north are gradually disappearing into the sea. This has affected the route of the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Path. Rocks have been shipped in from as far afield as Norway and some fascinating looking breakwaters installed to reduce the effect of the waves, so you should keep to designated paths and avoid climbing on the rocks. Stay in Bawdsey

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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