Turners View
Turners View
Wraik Hill
WHITSTABLE
Kent
CT5 3BY
Tel: 01227 281 789
Fax:
Description
Jean and John welcome you to Turners View where a warm welcome and homely atmosphere is extended to all guests fortunate enough to spend time here.
Panoramic views of both sea and countryside enrich the environment. The rural setting is idyllic creating a feeling of peace and comfort, whilst being within easy reach of the delights of Whitstable, world famous for its sailing and its oysters and fantastic sunsets for which the town is famed.
Bed and Breakfast is of the highest quality. Facilities for the disabled to accommodate every need, with rooms available on the ground floor.
We have four rooms available, including 3 double rooms and 1 family room with 3 of our rooms having panoramic sea views. Rates from only £35 per person pn including full English breakfast.
Each room is luxuriously furnished with a king size bed and every room boasts a bath and shower en-suite, central heating, tea and coffee facility and colour T.V.
STOP PRESS:
From May 2008 we will be able to offer a further 2 Single En-Suite Rooms on the ground floor, making 6 rooms in total.
We look forward to welcoming you!
Hot Offer
Fantastic rates all year round!
Attractions
Kent is known as the "Garden of England" with plentiful orchards and extensive woodland where deer still graze - this is wonderful walking country.
In this corner of England you are never far from the coast and you will discover many quaint and historic towns and villages, places such as...
Whitstable. In the early 19th century, Whitstable played a big part with travellers who came by coach from Canterbury to embark there for a sea journey to London. Then in 1830, the world's first passenger train took over this route: you can see its locomotive (Robert Stephenson's "Invicta") in Canterbury.
But it was only in this century that Whitstable prospered as a seaside resort. It still has rows of black and white weatherboarded fishermen's cottages to give it character, and such seafood restaurants as the Oyster House (where you can eat well). Eastwards lies Herne Bay, an old-fashioned Victorian resort, and Reculver's twin towers - Norman, but within the remains of a great Roman fort.
Canterbury with the most important cathedral in the land and its wealth of antiquity. Canterbury sits in one of the most attractive corners of rural Kent and has been welcoming visitors for over 2000 years. The city is easy to reach by road, rail, air and sea. With part of the city designated by UNESCO as a World Heritage site; Canterbury today is a delightful mixture of architecture, history, arts and culture, museums of every description, visitor attractions and good restaurants and pubs.
North of us just six miles is the little known town of...
Faversham with street after street of medieval houses and its waterway out into the Swale. The Swale marshes are home to many rare birds.
London being only 50 miles away is easily reached by train or car on the M2 for a day trip.