Scarborough Family Camping & Caravanning Holidays, North Yorkshire
Field Lane, Burniston Road, Scarborough, North Yorkshire
Scarborough has always been a popular holiday destination for families and this campsite is open from 1st April - 31st October 2011
We are delighted to offer 50 family and child friendly campsites - specifically selected for us by the Camping and Caravanning Club. We don't have a personal review for Scarborough as we haven't visited yet, so if you require further information please visit the owner's website by clicking the top right button and please do bear with us until we visit all these sites.
The Camping and Caravanning Club recognises how important it is for campers especially with children to find clean amenity blocks with a high standard of fixtures and fittings - this particular one has a parent and baby room AND a family shower room. All sites highlighted have additional on-site laundry facilities, just in case your brood happen to have fun frolicking in the mud! Your pitch will be available after noon on your arrival day and you will need to vacate it before noon on your last days stay.
The children's outdoor playground with an area for ball games should help keep little ones entertained whilst parents need a breather or while tea is being prepared. There is also a large recreation room with table tennis and pool tables, which is a handy respite if the weather happens to be wet. The Site shop sells all your basic groceries and also provides a takeaway service.
Things to do with Kids and Family Days Out in Scarborough
The town of Scarborough is three miles away. It has two sandy bays, divided by the castle headland. The North Bay is popular with surfers, while the harbour and donkeys are in the South Bay. It takes around 15 minutes to walk from the site to the nearest beach via a cliff-top walk.
Scarborough Sea Life and Marine Sanctuary is a 20-minute walk from Site, where you can go beneath a Caribbean reef and enter the world of magnificent sea turtles.
Whitby has a pretty harbour and cobbled streets. It is dominated by the ruins of St Hilda's Abbey. Robin Hood's Bay was once popular with smugglers. It is now good for fossil-hunting. Walk along the cliffs to Ravenscar and a geological trail taking in old alum quarries. The North Yorkshire Moors National Park is perfect for ramblers and cyclists, and contains 11 abbeys and priories. The North Yorkshire Moors Railway claims to be the country's most popular heritage railway and runs from Pickering to Grosmont
A traffic-free cycle path passes close to the Site on the way to Whitby