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Pentney is located about 8 miles south east of King’s Lynn. It is in the valley of the River Nar, a tributary of the River Great Ouse.
Sheringham
This traditional seaside town grew up around its old fishing village, and a band of little boats still bring in the daily catch.
Mundesley
Clifftop village harking back to a bygone age, with its sandy beach and colourful wooden beach huts.
Worstead is a pretty village with a history dating back to the Middle Ages.
Dilham is a village in the Norfolk Broads area, on the River Ant just off the A149 road, near Stalham.
Overstrand is a village on the north coast of Norfolk in England, two miles east of Cromer.
Bodham is a small village near the North Norfolk Coast on the main road (A148) between Holt and Cromer.
The small village of Morston, on the Norfolk coast, is close to the villages of Blakeney and Cley-next-the-Sea.
The north Norfolk village of Glandford is about 4 miles north west of Holt in the Glaven Valley. Glandford is very close to the coastal villages of Cley-next-the-Sea, Morston and Blakeney, and within easy drive of the Norfolk Broads and the city of…
Around ½ mile inland from Burnham Market, the village of Burnham Thorpe is the birthplace of Horatio Nelson.
Wells-next-the-Sea
Picturesque small town, its harbour home to a fleet of little fishing boats.
North Walsham
Settled in Anglo-Saxon times, North Walsham became a important cloth-making centre when Flemish weavers arrived in the 12th C.
Hunstanton
The only west facing resort on the east coast of England - there are two sides to Hunstanton.
Cromer
Dominated by the tower of its parish church (the tallest in the county), this sedate seaside town stands on a cliff top.
Norfolk
Sedgeford is situated about 3 miles south east of Hunstanton and is located in the Norfolk Coast Area of Outstanding Natural beauty.
A rural parish, Gresham centres on its medieval church of All Saints with a round tower.
Norfolk
The Village of West Beckham in Norfolk UK, is a small rural village only a few miles from the sandy beaches of Sheringham and Cromer and the picturesque market town of Holt.
Aldborough lies between Aylsham and Cromer, three miles west of the A140. It is a thriving agricultural village, with houses dating from the 14th - 20th century clustered round a traditional village green, complete with a village pond.
Southrepps village consists of two halves, Upper Southrepps and Lower Southrepps.
Located halfway between Cromer and Sheringam, this seaside village boasts a sand and pebble beach, plus the highest point in Norfolk at 328 feet above sea level. Made famous in 1995 by the excavation of an entire mammoth skeleton.