The East Midlands (Rough Guides Snapshot England)
eBook - ePub

The East Midlands (Rough Guides Snapshot England)

  1. 76 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

The East Midlands (Rough Guides Snapshot England)

About this book

The Rough Guide Snapshot to The East Midlands is the ultimate travel guide to this underrated part of England. It guides you through the region with reliable information and comprehensive coverage of all the sights and attractions, from historic Lincoln to the spruced-up, go-ahead cities of Nottingham and Leicester. Detailed maps and up-to-date listings pinpoint the best cafés, restaurants, hotels, bars and nightlife, ensuring you have the best trip possible, whether passing through, staying for the weekend or longer. Also included is the Basics section from the Rough Guide to England, with all the practical information you need for travelling in and around England, including transport, food, drink, costs, festivals, sports and outdoor activities.

Also published as part of the Rough Guide to England.

Full coverage: Nottingham, Eastwood, Newstead Abbey, Sherwood Forest National Nature Reserve, Clumber Park, Welbeck Abbey's Harley Art Gallery, Hardwick Hall, Southwell, Newark, Leicester, Market Bosworth, Ashby-de-la-Zouch, Calke Abbey, Staunton Harold Church, Breedon-on-the-Hill, Oakham, Uppingham, Lyddington, Northampton, Althorp, Ashby St Ledgers, Stoke Bruerne, Fotheringay, Lincoln, Louth, Woodhall Spa, Tattershall Castle, Skegness, Boston, Gedney, Sutton and Stamford.

(Equivalent printed page extent 76 pages).

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Yes, you can access The East Midlands (Rough Guides Snapshot England) by Jules Brown in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Personal Development & Travel. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

England Basics

Getting there >

Getting around >

Accommodation >

Food and drink >

The media >

Festivals and events >

Sports and outdoor activities >

Shopping >

Travel essentials >

This section has all the practical details you’ll need on The East Midlands as a whole, including information on getting there, advice on getting around if the region is one stop on a longer trip, overviews of the accommodation and eating scenes and guidance on everything from shopping to tipping.

Getting there

Flights from the US and Canada >
Flights from Australia and New Zealand >
Flights from South Africa >
From Ireland >
From mainland Europe >
Airports in England >

London is one of the world’s busiest transport hubs. Stiff competition among airlines around the world on routings into the British capital ensures good deals on international travel.
Most long-haul flights come into London Heathrow or London Gatwick, although it’s also worth exploring options into less crowded hubs outside London – notably Manchester, Birmingham or Newcastle. European short-haul flights also arrive at all these airports, and at a host of others including London Stansted, London Luton, London City, Bristol, Liverpool, East Midlands Airport near Nottingham, Leeds-Bradford, and many more around the country. Since routes and carriers can change at short notice, to get the latest up-to-date information the best advice is to check the website of your preferred arrival airport for details of who flies there, and from where.
Overland routes from neighbouring countries include high-speed trains into London through the Channel Tunnel – passenger-only services as well as special car-carrying trains for those on a self-drive tour – as well as a range of ferry routes.
Package tours of England, where all flights, accommodation and ground transport are arranged for you, can sometimes be cheaper than organizing things yourself. All-inclusive city breaks from North America can provide a good introduction to England, though many cover limited ground outside London. Many companies at home and in the UK offer tours of England’s historic highlights by coach (bus), or help you explore some aspect of the country’s heritage, such as art and architecture, or gardens and stately homes. Some companies offer budget versions of their holidays, staying in hostels or B&Bs. Further details are available on activity holidays in this guide.

Flights from the US and Canada

Many airlines fly nonstop to London and other English hubs. Flight time from the east coast is around seven hours, nearer ten hours from the west.
From the US take your pick of dozens of scheduled and charter flights out of New York, Washington DC, Boston, Chicago, Atlanta, Miami, Las Vegas, San Francisco and Los Angeles, among other cities. The route between New York JFK and London Heathrow, for example, is the busiest air corridor in the world, with somewhere between twenty and thirty flights a day in each direction. This level of competition pushes prices down: low-season return fares from New York start around US$400, from Los Angeles US$500–600.
From Canada, look for nonstop scheduled and charter routings to London and other English cities, mainly from Toronto, Montréal, Calgary and Vancouver, with return fares roughly covering the range Can$500–900.
As well as checking for deals on all the usual airlines, look out for low fares on unusual carriers. Air India, for instance, flies nonstop Toronto–London at bargain rates, as does Kuwait Airways out of JFK.
< Back to Getting there

Flights from Australia and New Zealand

Routes from Australia and New Zealand to London are highly competitive, with return fares out of Sydney, Melbourne or Perth usually Aus$1500–2500, or NZ$2000–3000 out of Auckland. Check out the obvious carriers first, such as Qantas, British Airways and Air New Zealand – but then explore options on, for instance, Emirates, Etihad or Qatar Airways via the Gulf, Air Asia via Kuala Lumpur, or even taking a low-cost hop on a budget airline to, say, Bangkok or Singapore from where you can pick up super-cheap deals on scheduled carriers to London. Travel time is over twenty hours, even with the best connections; most airlines will let you stop over for no extra charge, and many of the cheaper flights involve a change of planes in any case.
< Back to Getting there

Flights from South Africa

From South Africa direct flights – mostly from Johannesburg – cost roughly ZAR6000–8000 return, though you might find lower rates on, for instance, Emirates via Dubai. Flight time is eleven hours nonstop. Cape Town has fewer direct flights; they take slightly longer and cost a bit more.
< Back to Getting there

From Ireland

Stiff competition on flights between Ireland and England keeps fares low. It’s easy to find a seat for €30–50 on routes out of Dublin, Cork, Kerry, Knock or Shannon to any of a dozen English airports, on airlines such as Ryanair, bmibaby, Flybe, Aer Lingus and others.
If you’re driving, your best bet is a ferry from Dublin to Liverpool. Other routes, such as to Holyhead, Fishguard or Pembroke, leave you a long drive from the English border.
You can buy a train ticket from almost any station in Ireland to any station in England for €36–40 one way, including the ferry crossing. Dublin–London takes under seven hours. The bus/ferry options offered by Bus Éireann/Eurolines cost about the same but take roughly twice as long.
< Back to Getting there

From mainland Europe

Numerous airlines fly from cities across Europe to airports all over England. The best advice when researching routes and options is to check the website of your preferred arrival airport, to find out who flies there from your country.
Trains to London St Pancras run roughly hourly from Lille (1hr 20min), Paris (2hr 15min) and Brussels (2hr), with connections coming into those cities from all around Europe. Some trains include a stop before London at Ashford or Ebbsfleet – handy if you’re planning to tour Kent. Fares vary widely depending on your starting point: Eurostar (www.eurostar.com) sells tickets online for journeys from certain stations in western Europe (see website for list) to any arrival point in the UK; otherwise consult a rail agent in your home country. A great resource for rail travel is www.seat61.com – it’s designed to be used by UK travellers heading abroad, but has plenty to offer travellers seeking to avoid flights as a way to reach (...

Table of contents

  1. How to use this Rough Guides Snapshot
  2. Introduction to The East Midlands
  3. Maps
  4. England Basics
  5. Publishing Information