I have a great suggestion to do i go to cornwall every year in tintagel and boscastle and i would suggest a very nice beach in the tribarwith strand and there is a farm shop up there too for food afterwards
I live around 5-7 hours away from Cornwall and me and my family+ mums parents go to Cornwall pretty much every year we love it there and can’t wait to go again in may this year! It’s almost like a second home for us
@@littlebill4877 i went and It was horrible. however if you go there when it’s the right weather it’s alright but just go to another country there isn’t anything interesting here
@@ralphopiumyes there is!! I live here, might be a but rainy at times but oh my gosh is it beautiful when it's sunny. I'm sick of complaining, atleast we have roofs over our heads right? Warm blankets, food and water. Quit complaining and start living!!
Hayle beach beats all of these, you have a 3 mile long beach with pure white sand, an island with a traditional lighthouse on one side with coves full of seals, huge water pools, masses of sand dunes, a harbor the other side looking onto the beautiful st Ives, sorry I'm biased 😊
I want to move there from the U.S. so I can surf on a regular basis. If anyone reading this has any advice or suggestions for me please let me know! Jenna
Might sound obvious but live on the north coast of either Cornwall or Devon. I'd recommend Devon if I'm honest but Cornwall is also great, just a bit further from the rest of England
Mist beaches in England are set amongst rural areas with historical significance. There are not that many untouched beach there . Scotland dies though !
There are so many beautiful beaches across England, Scotland and Wales (they literally have hundreds of miles of stunning coastline), so whether or not you prefer the beaches where you live does not take away their obvious natural beauty. I’m from the states (now living in the English countryside), and something I’m interested in that both Australia and America lack is history. So for me you couldn’t pay me to live in either also; as someone that loves exploring rich heritage and beautiful historic architecture - hence why I moved to England.
@@tamaracarter1836 thanks for sharing Tamara, we notice that as well. In Australia they have a really old building and it’s less than 200 years old 😂 in Greece for example a really old building is more than 2000 years old
You don't have to live there, Austria looks lush but the deadly insects, the crazy harsh government with it's crazy harsh lock downs are to much, give me cornwall any day, I love swimming daily in the sea, I'm so glad we don't have to worry about being swallowed or bitten in half by sharks😊