Mentioned by what2do-where2go.co.uk
Where 2 Eat & Drink in Scarborough
"No list of Whitby's top coffee spots would be complete without a mention of Botham's - a permanent Whitby fixture since 1865. Choose either 'top' Botham's on Skinner Street and enjoy their upstairs tea room away from the hustle and bustle of the street outside, or 'bottom' Botham's on Baxtergate. Tea, coffee, cold drinks, sandwiches, pasties, sausage rolls, cakes..."
"impeccably served, high-class cafetiere, and excellent local ginger "tea-bread". Will definitely revisit when next in Whitby!. 04/05/2021: I wish you were near where I lived as I would come every day as the cakes are to die for."
"The activity is of the kind of café.Visitors say that the help is marvelous here. Vote based expenses at this place are inspiring information for its guests.As a result, Sluurpy’s users have agreed on raging this activity with a 99 out of 100. After visiting Scarborough, come here for a meal."
"Scarborough’s vast open air theatre is located within Northstead Manor Gardens in the North Bay area and offers a packed programme of concerts featuring some of the biggest names in pop music. Ranked as the largest open air theatre in Europe, the venue is impressive and has a rich history as a natural amphitheatre dating back to the 1930s. A host of food and drink outlets are on-site alongside ample parking and merchandise stalls"
"At the base of the cliffs on South Bay, the Spa is a 19th-century complex of performance venues erected at the site of Scarborough’s natural springs. The current Grand Hall opened in 1880 after the previous spa saloon burnt down in 1876. The complex is nearly half a mile in length and you can reach it via the magnificent Spa Bridge, dating to 1827, and the South Cliff Lift from 1873."
"On West Cliff, overlooking the mouth of the River Esk, is the Whalebone Arch, an archway formed from a set of 20-foot-high whale jaw bones. The arch is a reminder of the role played in Whitby's heritage by the whaling industry in the 18th and 19th centuries. The original arch was erected in 1853."
"Whitby was once a whaling town and the arch made from 2 whale jaw bones is a reminder of its past. The bones that stand there today are not from illegally hunted whales but those from a whale killed legally by Inuits in Alaska."
"At the top of those 199 Steps, and before you get to Whitby Abbey, you’ll be confronted by the compact Church of St Mary. The building goes back to a Norman church, consecrated at the start of the 12th century. The tower, choir and parts of the nave all date to that earliest period, and at the transept you can look for the three Gothic lancet windows."
"The 199 steps of Church Stairs lead steeply up from the end of Church St, passing the spooky graveyard of St Mary's Church, a favourite haunt of Goth courting couples. The atmospheric interior of the church is..."
"In the secluded valley of the River Rye about 3 miles west of Helmsley, amid fields and woods loud with birdsong, stand the magnificent ruins of Rievaulx Abbey (ree-voh). The extensive remains give a wonderful sense of the size and complexity of the community that once lived here, and their story is fleshed out in a series of fascinating exhibits in a new museum. There's also a cafe with floor-to-ceiling windows and outdoor terrace from which to gawp at the ruins."
"13/04/2021: We don't live near the take away but have really enjoyed quality chinese food from here. Not easy to find good chinese in York so worth the detour. 28/03/2021: Good, reliable Chinese food."