Holidays

Cheapest seaside spot in England is full of abandoned £40k homes ‘nobody wants’

One village and its neighbouring town were named as the cheapest seaside destination in England by Rightmove, with two-bedroom terraced houses available for as little as £5K

Third street in horden
Horden is the cheapest seaside village in England(Image: Craig Connor/ChronicleLive)

Residents of a seaside village claim their seaside community is suffering as family homes lie empty and dozens more are set to be demolished.

Rightmove named Horden and neighbouring Peterlee the cheapest seaside destinations in England, with two-bedroom terraced houses available for as little as £5K. According to the website, the average asking price in Peterlee and Horden is just over £122K, less than half the average national house price.

Even though demand for seaside properties has increased by eight per cent compared to last year, locals say no one wants to live in the area, which struggles from a lack of investment, drug gangs and anti-social behaviour plaguing the small coastal community. It comes after reports of a small fishing village with some of the UK’s best seafood but hardly any tourists.

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boarded up houses in Horden
Several properties in Horden are boarded up(Image: Craig Connor/ChronicleLive)

“It’s the armpit of England”, one resident said on a local Facebook group post about Horden. Locals previously raised concerns over criminals who have been using the houses in Horden to grow and deal drugs, reports the Express.

One man was jailed for over three years in April after he was found hiding in a cannabis farm at a disused shop in Blackhills Road. Two years ago, feuding rival gang members clashed in Horden’s Fifth Street, where a stolen Transit van smashed into shop fronts and shots were fired before a high-speed chase through the village. Seven men were jailed for a combined 94 years after pleading guilty at Newcastle Crown Court.

Residents have voiced their concerns, claiming that Durham County Council is ignoring their housing issues. The council reportedly wants to buy and demolish homes on the Numbered Streets in Horden to make way for new builds, despite some locals having resided there all their lives.

The Numbered Streets, a well-known part of the village encompassing First Street through to 13th Street, were initially constructed in the early 1900s to accommodate the large community of coal mining families in the vicinity. Numerous family-friendly properties now stand vacant, with current listings priced significantly below £40K.

Local campaigner and published author Pip Fallow expressed his views: “Most of Europe has a shortage of houses. We’ve actually got the opposite, as no one is living there, it’s boarded up.” He remains sceptical that new housing developments will benefit Peterlee and its neighbouring villages.

pip fallow in front of boarded house horden
Pip says ‘no one’ is living in the area (Image: Pip Fallow)

“The proof’s in the pudding, there are houses there already and no one wants to live in them. There’s nothing to offer. You need to bring in new industry,” he further commented.

Another local, Liz MacPhee, described Horden as “quite a run-down area, lots of lovely houses, just boarded up” but since moving to the village, she’s found herself part of “a really strong community”. She relocated from the South of France in search of an affordable coastal home.

However, she alleges that her friends are now in danger of being evicted by the council, which is only offering them the average auction value for their properties. “We’re prepared to fight… all [the council] want is shiny new houses,” she added.

Durham County Council insists that the development, along with additional projects in the area around Peterlee, will enhance walking and cycling routes to Peterlee centre, its train station and the Durham Heritage Coast. Yet, residents argue that the council should be focusing on refurbishing the existing homes instead.

“The council isn’t listening to us,” Liz stated. “We want them refurbed as they are absolutely beautiful houses. “The council and the Government treated the miners really badly,” she added. “And now they’re coming back a second time to get their offspring.”

Third Street in Horden, County Durham
Durham County Council wants to purchase properties on Third Street(Image: Craig Connor/ChronicleLive)

Horden and its surrounding areas have seen several new developments over the past few years, including a £10.55M train line between Newcastle and Middlesbrough that opened in June 2020. In July, it was announced that Believe Housing had proposed a new development in neighbouring Peterlee for 70 homes on disused land.

“It’s a beautiful part of the world”, Liz said. “But people here are so run down and have been treated so negatively in the past they feel it’s just something that’s just going to happen.”

When approached for comment by the Express, Michael Kelleher, head of planning and housing at Durham County Council, said: “The Horden Masterplan has been subject to extensive consultation with residents and has received strong support. The aim is to regenerate the village and improve life for local people by tackling issues such as the high number of empty homes in the Numbered Streets, supporting those with housing needs and enhancing community facilities.

“The acquisition of properties in Third and Fifth Street will pave the way for new council housing that is truly affordable, alongside the provision of private housing.

“We understand this is an unsettling time, and we are working closely with owners and landlords to negotiate the purchase of their properties and identify the housing needs of local people.

“Owners are not being offered auction prices. We have appointed an independent firm to undertake property valuations in line with the RICS Red Book Valuation approach, which is widely recognised as a standard approach to valuation. Tpas, a tenant engagement specialist, has also been appointed to provide residents with additional advice and support.”

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Man Utd fan starts GoFundMe page to raise money for Carlos Baleba transfer with £120m target set

MANCHESTER UNITED are so desperate for a new midfielder that one fan has launched a GoFundMe to raise money to sign Carlos Baleba.

United have reportedly made contact with Brighton to explore a potential deal for Baleba though it will prove difficult.

Carlos Baleba of Brighton & Hove Albion celebrates.

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Man Utd fans are desperate to sign Brighton midfielder Carlos BalebaCredit: Getty

Brighton could potentially ask for as much as £100m for Baleba, who still has three years remaining on his contract.

Other Cameroonian reports have suggested Amex chiefs want £87m on the table to even consider opening talks over Baleba.

The 21-year-old enjoyed an impressive season for the Seagulls, featuring 34 times in the Premier League and scoring three goals for Fabian Hurzeler‘s side.

According to The Athletic, the Red Devils have expressed their interest in the central midfielder.

And, while United may be struggling for money as they flirt with PSR amid the arrivals of Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo for £133m combined, one fan has taken things into his own hands to try and raise some cash.

Supporter Ian M organised the fundraiser on Wednesday night, titled Baleba to ‘Man Utd fund’.

Alongside a picture of Baleba in a Brighton shirt, the description reads: “We need this to happen we need this to happen we need this to happen we need this to happen.”

The post set an ambitious target of raising 120million.

Screenshot of a GoFundMe page for a Baleba to Man Utd fund, showing £5 raised of a £120M target.

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A fan has set up a GoFundMe page to try and raise money to sign Carlos Baleba

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At the time of writing, there has been one £5 donation from an anonymous user.

United will need all the help they can get ahead of the pending £74million arrival RB Leipzig striker Benjamin Sesko.

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Although a No9 is a clear must, many fans think new midfielder is an even bigger priority.

United are on the hunt for a dynamic midfielder to go in Ruben Amorim’s 3-4-3 pivot after unconvincing displays by Manuel Ugarte in pre-season, with his display against Everton facing scrutiny.

Baleba was one of the Premier League’s top ranked midfielders last season for tackles, blocks, interceptions and recoveries, while his progressive carries and forward passing numbers were also impressive.

Carlos Baleba's 2024-25 Brighton Premier League stats.

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His stock is rising fast, and he’s already been linked with Liverpool and Manchester City.

The Brighton star’s journey is nothing short of remarkable so far. Just three years ago, he was still in Cameroon, uncertain about his future

When he finally got his breakthrough move to Lille, tragedy struck, he lost his mother, he says it was sudden and quick. It’s a pain that still drives him.

Baleba previously told SunSport: “It was very difficult for me because I didn’t see my mum. I wanted her next to me, but when I signed for Brighton, she wasn’t here.

“That’s why the first season was really hard. I thought about her a lot. But I vowed that I would be the best version of myself and go as far as I can in my career.”

Brighton have made an incredible profit off the traditional ‘Big Six’ in recent years.

A switch to United would see Baleba follow in the footsteps of midfield stars like Alexis Mac Allister, Yves Bissouma, and Moises Caicedo – who all left the Amex for Prem giants.

Manchester United Premier League fixtures, 2025/26.

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Thousands of hotels in Europe to sue Booking.com over ‘abusive’ practices | Travel & leisure

Booking.com is facing a class-action lawsuit from more than 10,000 European hotels arguing that the accommodation mega-site used its muscle to distort the market to their detriment over a 20-year period.

The Association of Hotels, Restaurants and Cafes in Europe (Hotrec), which represents the industry within the EU and is bringing the legal action, recently extended to 29 August a deadline for hotel owners to join the suit because of high demand.

The lawsuit, expected to be one of the largest ever filed in the European hospitality sector, is also backed by 30 national hotel associations, including Britain’s.

“Over 10,000 hotels have already joined the pan-European initiative to claim compensation for financial losses caused by Booking.com’s use of illegal ‘best price’ (parity) clauses,” Hotrec said in a statement.

It alleges that the “best price” pledge on Booking.com was extracted from hotels under huge pressure not to offer rooms at lower prices on other platforms, including their own websites.

The hotel industry says that the Netherlands-based platform also used the clauses to prevent customers making what it called “free-rider” bookings, which it defined as using its services to find a hotel but then booking directly with the management, cutting out Booking.com.

“Registration [to the legal action] continues to grow steadily, and the response so far demonstrates the hospitality industry’s strong desire to stand up against unfair practices in the digital marketplace,” Hotrec said.

The litigation, which experts say will be an uphill battle, seeks damages for the period from 2004 to 2024, when Booking.com did away with the best price clause to comply with the EU Digital Markets Act.

Hotrec said the class action, to be heard in Amsterdam, follows a European court of justice (ECJ) ruling from 2024, “which found that Booking.com’s parity clauses violated EU competition law”.

“European hoteliers have long suffered from unfair conditions and excessive costs. Now is the time to stand together and demand redress,” said Hotrec’s president, Alexandros Vassilikos, calling out “abusive practices in the digital market” in Europe.

Booking.com called Hotrec and other hotel associations’ statements “incorrect and misleading” in an emailed statement, adding that it had not received “formal notification of a class action”.

It said that the ECJ ruling did not find that Booking.com’s “best price” clauses were anti-competitive but “simply stated that such clauses fall within the scope of EU competition law and that their effects must be assessed on a case-by-case basis”.

The company referred to a statement about its “commitment to fair competition”, in which it argued that “past parity clauses served to foster competitive pricing rather than restrict it”.

It cited a poll in which 74% of hoteliers said Booking.com made their business more profitable, with many reporting higher occupancy rates and lower customer acquisition costs. However, other industry representatives criticised the company’s practices as extractive.

“As they gained control of the market, Booking was able to increase its commission rates and exert much greater pressure on hoteliers’ margins,” Véronique Siegel, president of the hotels division of French hospitality sector association Umih, told public broadcaster France Inter.

“For a room that the customer pays €100 (£87) for, if you take away Booking’s commission, the hotelier receives €75 at best, with which they have to pay their employees and invest.”

Despite the friction, Booking.com appears unavoidable for many hotels, offering an online reach and visibility hard to achieve for smaller, independent establishments.

A study by Hotrec and the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland found that Booking Holding, the website’s parent company, controlled 71% of the European market in 2024, compared with 68.4% in 2019.

The corporation is valued at $170bn (£127bn), three times that of Volkswagen.

Rupprecht Podszun, director of the institute for competition law at Düsseldorf’s Heinrich Heine University, said Booking.com was a classic example of how a digital platform could conquer an entire sector, creating a “winner takes all” dynamic.

He said the legal action would probably be protracted and turn on the thorny question of how damages could be measured.

“Judges will have to form an opinion and then it will go through all the appeals – everything at great expense and with all the tricks available under the law,” he told Germany’s daily Süddeutsche Zeitung.

“The case is a revolt of the hotels, saying: ‘You can’t just do what you want with us.’”

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Doctor shares ‘scary truth’ about plane food and why he ‘never eats it’

It’s common for food served on flights to seem different and while some passengers enjoy it, others don’t. A well-known UK doctor has spoken about why he doesn’t eat plane food.

Passenger eating airline meal with metal cutlery. Menu with pasta, vegetable, dessert and drink on tray during long haul flight.
A doctor has spoken out against eating in-flight meals (stock photo)(Image: Getty Images/500px Plus)

Air travel is the main way holiday-goers choose to visit exotic destinations, especially in summer, and regular flyers will be familiar with the food available on planes. Many airlines, such as easyJet, TUI and Jet2 provide a variety of snacks and drinks that passengers can buy on board and longer, international flights often include complimentary meals.

Some travellers look forward to their inflight meals whereas others prefer to bring their own food with them. Dr Rangan Chatterjee is thought to be one of the most influential medical doctors in the UK and is best known for his TV show Doctor in the House and for being the resident doctor on BBC Breakfast. He is also the author of the number one Sunday Times bestseller Make Change That Lasts.

The healthcare professional recently posted a video on TikTok featuring a clip from his Feel Better Live More podcast where he discussed the ‘scary truth’ about plane food with surgeon and wellness expert Dr Darshan Shah.

Dr Chatterjee recalled a time when he spoke to a cabin service director onboard a flight who allegedly said he always brings his own food on planes only because “the stuff that needs to be added to plane food so that you find it tasty at altitudes, if you knew you wouldn’t touch anything on here.”

Dr Shah also shared: “I noticed that if I eat the meal that they gave me in the flight, not only does my glucose shoot up but it would stay up for hours and I was like, ‘I’m going to fast on every plane trip now. It’s just not worth eating’.”

Plane food often has increased salt and seasoning to make up for the reduced ability to taste flavours when flying at high altitudes.

The magazine Prima reported that reduced air pressure and dry cabin air dry out our noses, which dulls our ability to taste.

It further revealed that chefs and scientists have also discovered that umami, a new flavour known as the ‘fifth taste’, enhances the taste of many foods when you’re flying.

This is especially abundant in food like tomatoes, mushrooms, and spinach.

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Conde Nast Traveller spoke to Ellie Birch, senior nutritionist at Holland & Barrett about the food served on planes.

She told the publication : “Food on planes also typically tends to be ultra-processed and low in nutritional value. The meals tend to be lower in fiber and higher in sugar, salt, and preservatives, which can cause digestive issues, too.”

In his TikTok post, Dr Chatterjee remarked that the conversation he had with the cabin service director was “quite interesting.”

He added: “I already wasn’t eating plane food anyway, but that made me even more convinced.”

Dr Shah responded: “Oh that makes total sense because it just feels like the food has a tremendous amount of additives to it.”

The TV doctor’s TikTok clip has garnered 326,800 views, more than 9,300 likes and almost 200 comments, at the time of writing.

One user agreed: “He’s right, I used to work for an aviation food manufacturer and they have labs to make sure it tastes right because our tastebuds change at that altitude.”

Another added: “I’m always bloated on flights after a meal and I don’t normally get bloated.”

However, some viewers weren’t as concerned about the food on planes as a third said: “Depends on how often you fly. It makes perfect sense for a steward to avoid it.”

A fourth chimed in: “Stuff they add to our everyday food, if we knew we wouldn’t eat anything.”

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Birmingham Airport crash landing chaos continues as passengers face more delays

Birmingham Airport’s runway was shut down for about six hours on Wednesday afternoon and evening, delaying thousands of passengers and leading many planes to divert

Birmingham Airport is still dealing with the knock‑on impact of an emergency landing that closed its runway on Wednesday afternoon.

At 1.40 pm a Beechcraft B200 Super King Air, with three people on board, began to experience issues with its landing gear. The pilot aborted the journey to Belfast and turned back to Birmingham for a bumpy landing, which saw it collapse onto its undercarriage on the tarmac.

Emergency services rushed to the scene, whisking the two crew members and one passenger away from the wreckage. Thankfully, they were not injured. The runway was immediately closed following the crash landing, leading to dozens of flights both to and from the airport being cancelled and delayed. Thousands of passengers in Birmingham, across the UK and internationally were disrupted. The incident at Birmingham came after a union in Spain announced its Ryanair workers would strike at 12 airports in the coming weeks.

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Newly emerged footage from the scene shows the white light aircraft collapsed on the runway, its nose tilted down towards the tarmac. It is surrounded by emergency service vehicles and personnel. The incident is now being investigated by the Air Accidents Investigation Branch.

Live departure and arrival boards highlight the knock‑on impact of the runway closure, which was only lifted at 8 pm last night, meaning six hours of the flight schedule were missed.

Delays this morning include a four‑hour wait for a TUI flight to Keffalinia, a three‑hour wait for Lanzarote and a three‑hour wait to Zakynthos. A handful of arrivals have also been bumped down the schedule. The 6am KLM flight to Amsterdam this morning was cancelled because the aircraft and crew could not reach Birmingham on Wednesday.

Diversions yesterday meant that several planes were in the wrong place, causing a headache for airline schedulers. Planes were diverted as far away as Liverpool, Cardiff, and Gatwick.

The Air Accidents Investigation Branch says it is investigating the incident at Birmingham Airport. It said in a statement: “Following an incident involving a light aircraft at Birmingham Airport, the AAIB has deployed a team to the site to begin an investigation. A multi‑disciplinary team including inspectors with expertise in aircraft operations, engineering and recorded data have been deployed to the airport.”

The plane
The plane came to rest on the tarmac(Image: / SWNS)

The latest statement from Birmingham Airport came just before 8 pm last night. It read: “Following the aircraft incident today, the runway has reopened and operations have resumed. All passengers must check flight details with their airlines and follow advice issued by them. We understand the frustration and apologise for the disruption this has caused. Our teams have worked as quickly as possible, in line with strict protocols, which must be followed to ensure a safe reopening of the runway following a prolonged closure.”

A small silver lining for delayed passengers came in the form of a chilled pint. Organisers of a beer festival held next door to the airport offered those caught up in the chaos a free bev if they showed their boarding pass. “We hope everyone is ok at Birmingham International Airport. If you are stuck at the airport, come to the Great British Beer Festival next door at the NEC for a pint while you wait,” the organisers tweeted.

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First migrants detained under Starmer’s ‘one-in, one-out’ deal with France as MORE boats arrive in UK

MIGRANTS arriving in Britain by small boat were immediately detained yesterday under the new “one in, one out” deal with France.

The first to be held under the pilot scheme were picked up in Dover on Wednesday – just hours after the new treaty kicked in.

Migrants arriving at a Border Force compound in Dover.

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A group of people thought to be migrants are brought in to the Border Force compound in Dover, KentCredit: PA

Photos showed arrivals in life jackets being led off Border Force vessels at the Western Jet Foil facility.

An unspecified number were held on the spot and taken to immigration removal centres — with swift deportation to France now expected.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: “Yesterday, under the terms of this groundbreaking new treaty, the first group of people to cross the Channel were detained after their arrival at Western Jet Foil and will now be held in detention until they can be returned to France.

“That sends a message to every migrant currently thinking of paying organised crime gangs to go to the UK that they will be risking their lives and throwing away their money if they get into a small boat.”

The Home Office says it will not be disclosing figures at this stage for fear it would be exploited by smugglers.

But just around 50 people a week are expected to be returned under the deal,  a tiny number compared to the 25,436 who have already crossed this year.

Just hours after the “one in, one out” scheme came into force, footage showed a French warship escorting a boatload of migrants towards Britain without stopping it.

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp, filming just off Calais, said: “I’m on the Channel today just off Calais to see if the Government’s new deal with France is working. It isn’t.

“There is a boat full of illegal immigrants crossing right in front of me.

“The French warship is escorting it and making no attempt at all to stop it.”

The scheme allows Britain to return small boat arrivals in exchange for taking in the same number of approved asylum seekers still in France.

But legal rows broke out within hours of the plan taking effect – as ministers gave conflicting accounts on whether deportations can be blocked by human rights claims.

Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy told the BBC small boat migrants sent back across the Channel could have their human rights claims heard in France.

She said: “I know that the Conservative Party has been saying that this is a loophole. It isn’t and we’re really confident about that.”

But the full agreement, published on Tuesday, states clearly the UK must confirm a person has no outstanding human rights claim before returning them.

It also says Britain “shall not seek France’s participation in legal proceedings to which this article applies”.

The Tories insist the text of the treaty provides an “easy loophole” for lawyers of migrants to exploit.

And it is understood the Home Office is preparing for a wave of judicial review challenges from migrants set to be deported – meaning legal battles could drag on for weeks.

Officials insist migrants will be removed “when there is no barrier to removal” – even if they have made a human rights claim, so long as it’s been ruled “clearly unfounded”.

That is 49 per cent higher than this time last year – and a record for this point in the calendar.

Border Security Minister Dame Angela Eagle wrote on X: “It will take time, and it will be hard, but as we get it up and running, it will make an important contribution to the all-out assault we are waging against the business model of the smuggling gangs.”

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Where tourists seldom tread, part 18: three seaside towns that defy the tides of fashion | United Kingdom holidays

Tis the season to be beside the seaside – and to hype and critique coastal towns in surveys and rankings. I suppose lists of this year’s “in” and “out” resorts help tourists decide where to go; no point going to Skegness for Michelin-starred food, or to Salcombe for a laugh and cheap beer. Less obvious coastal towns provide more nuanced fare. Perhaps the most alluring spots are those where we don’t forget the sea. These three towns are routinely ranked last resorts or else ignored altogether, but they offer more than stuff to eat, drink, buy and post on socials – and are close to swimmable beaches.

Ayr, Ayrshire

A view of the Isle of Arran from Ayr. Photograph: Allan Wright/Alamy

A century ago, Clyde steamers and the Glasgow and South Western Railway took thousands of sunseekers from inland towns to the Ayrshire coast. They came to escape the smoke and noise of industry, breathe in the briny air, and admire the Isle of Arran and tiny Ailsa Craig – from afar or up close on an excursion. The bed and breakfasts on elegant Park Circus (a sweeping crescent lined with cherry trees that blossom red on one side and white on the other) and the Georgian villas on Eglinton Terrace evoke something of the golden days of yore.

It’s easy to imagine parasol-sporting ladies and tall-hatted gents strolling across the Low Green, a large field between the town centre and the beach. This open space – perfect for picnics, kite-flying and impromptu games – and the absence of any clutter on the prom make the seafront unusually peaceful. It’s as if Ayr has refused to become a traditional resort. No tat, no tack, not many tourists. There are places to play on swings and get an ice-cream or a pint, but lovers of amusement arcades and bucket-and-spade shops should probably stay away. On the short block beside the Low Green the buildings are mainly residential – including care homes, that standard fixture of coastal towns.

The beach is a golden sweep about two miles in length, with the old harbour at the north end. Wharves and quays once bustled all along the River Ayr. By the 14th century, this was Scotland’s principal west coast port. In the 18th century, more than 300 ships were moored every year, unloading American tobacco, French wine, Spanish salt, English earthenware and slate from Easdale in the Firth of Lorn. Walk south and you come to the ruins of Greenan Castle, a 16th-century clifftop tower. The sunsets over Arran are life-enhancing. I watched a woman of retirement age do her tai chi moves while keeping her eyes fixed on the island – spiritually separate from the dog-walkers and prom-striders.

The Tam o’ Shanter Inn is one of the pubs that claims to be Ayr’s oldest. Photograph: Andy Arthur/Alamy

Robert Burns was born near Ayr and baptised in the Auld Kirk. In Tam o’ Shanter he writes: “Auld Ayr, wham ne’er a town surpasses, / For honest men and bonny lasses”. A lively pub on the high street, which is set back a good mile from the beach, is named after the poem; it claims to be the oldest in Ayr, but so does the Black Bull on the opposite side of the river. The old bridge (or Auld Brig, if you prefer, which inspired another Burns poem) that takes you across is pedestrianised and a beauty. All the old pubs are enticing but I had my most enjoyable, peaceful beer and dram in the Twa Dugs – also named for a Burns poem. In Ayr’s Waterstones, I found a long-overlooked 1969 Booker-nominated novel by Gordon M Williams, From Scenes Like These, that provided a brutally realistic riposte to Burns-esque takes on rural Scotland. I read it in the boozers, the caffs, on benches.

People in Ayr will tell you the town has declined. They’ll tell you that in nine out of 10 seaside resorts. But this column gets me around, and I can vouch for the town’s general busyness and good looks. Sedate, somewhat stern, bereft of traditional fun stuff, it’s an ideal hideaway for those who want to do beach walks, read or write, and check into small, friendly guest houses.
Things to see and do: Rozelle House Museum, Robert Burns Birthplace Museum, Culzean Castle and Country Park

Bangor, Gwynedd

A quiet corner of Bangor. Photograph: Howard Litherland/Alamy

Bangor, the oldest city in Wales, came second from bottom in the Which? 2025 rankings and absolute bottom in 2024. Perhaps the latter partly anticipated the former. Casually saddle a place with derision and it takes a great effort to shake it off.

As the gateway to the island of Ynys Môn (Anglesey), a university town and former royal capital, Bangor doesn’t need star ratings or hip amenities. The city’s origins stretch back to the founding of a monastery in the early sixth century. A cathedral was later built on the site. For centuries, Bangor was the spiritual and ecclesiastical hub for Gwynedd – a kingdom until the English came a-conquering – but remained a small settlement. Nonetheless, during the first flush of Welsh tourism, at the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries, pleasure steamers from Liverpool brought visitors to see the big church and the wild waters of the Menai Strait.

The boom years came after 1826 with the completion of the Holyhead Road, linking London with Dublin – hitched to the recently created UK by the 1800 Acts of Union. The first major civilian state-funded road building project in Britain since the Roman era, the job was given to Thomas Telford. The road (much of it on the same route as today’s A5) swept through central Bangor, making the former big village a major staging post, and creating the longest high street in Wales. To replace the ferry-shuttles, Telford’s magnificent Menai Suspension Bridge opened in 1826. Two decades later, Robert Stephenson built a tubular bridge to carry the Chester-Holyhead railway across the straits. With communications much improved, Bangor became a proper little port, with shipbuilding, sail making, iron founding, smithing and timber yards, as well as slate yards.

The magnificent Menai Suspension Bridge. Photograph: Slawek Staszczuk/Alamy

Walk to the natural end of this high street – which turns residential – and you come to the shore, a pier and a large park between neo-Norman Penrhyn Castle and the sea. You don’t have an in-town beach, which might be why some of the raters have a low opinion of Bangor. But the Wales Coast Path and the railway line link Bangor with beaches at Llanfairfechan and Penmaenmawr, eight and 10 miles away respectively. In fact, this might be the best-connected seaside town in the UK, with Eryri national park (Snowdonia), Unesco-listed Caernarfon Castle and Criccieth and the Llŷn peninsula accessible by bus, and of course Anglesey on the doorstep.
Things to see and do: walk the Menai Suspension Bridge, kayaking off Caernarfon, Aber Falls Distillery

Millom, Cumbria

Millom, Cumbria, with Black Combe behind. Photograph: Jon Sparks/Alamy

The Cumbrian coast is the most intriguing stretch of littoral in these islands. Backed by the towering, cloud-drawing fells of the national park, the shore is often beneath a blue dome. The towns along it are chapters in British social history. Whitehaven is like a Devon port town without the crowds. Workington is a fascinating ex-industrial town. Nethertown is a hidden hamlet in a spectacular setting.

Millom, at the southern tip of the old county of Cumberland, is a stop on the coast-hugging railway line – a superlative train ride – between Barrow-in-Furness and Sellafield. Its main connection to the nexuses of nuclear war and power are the Millomites who commute south and north for work. Millom once had industry; hematite ore (iron oxide) was found at Hodbarrow in 1856 and mined till 1968, the population swelling to 10,000. Much of the land was transformed into an RSPB nature reserve, centred on the north-west’s largest coastal lagoon; little, common and sandwich terns breed on the islands and you can see ringed plovers, redshanks, great crested grebes and oystercatchers around the wetlands.

Millom is tiny, but has none of the jams and crowds of the villages in the nearby Lakes. The Camra-rated Bear on the Square has real ales, good food and live music. The town has its own fell – Black Combe – and while only a 600-metre Marilyn, its isolation and proximity to the sea make it feel higher. The views from the summit are magnificent – with Blackpool Tower and Scafell Pike visible in clear weather.

The poet Norman Nicholson (1914-1987) was born in Millom and spent almost all his life here, shunning metropolitan literary circles and asserting that the much-maligned “provincial” has more in common with people of other times and lands and consequently “may be all the more aware of that which is enduring in life and society”. The titles of his books reflect the locale: Rock Face (1948); The Shadow of Black Combe (1978); Sea to the West (1981). St George’s church has a stained-glass window designed by Christine Boyce that was inspired by Nicholson’s writing. His house is being restored, while Millom as a whole is undergoing a major rebuild with heritage and health projects afoot as well as a 7.5-mile walking and cycling trail.

For a swim, head to Silecroft by train (one stop) or on foot (3.5 miles); Haverigg beach, though closer, often has pollution warnings.
Things to see and do: Millom Heritage and Arts Centre, Swinside Stone Circle

Further information: Visit Scotland, Visit Cumbria and Visit Wales

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UK’s most expensive seaside town ‘abandoned’ by tourists over £10 charge

Salcombe in Devon has been deserted by tourists after it was revealed to be the UK’s most expensive seaside town – and a new £10 parking charge has been implemented

View of Salcombe, Devon
This town has been branded the UK’s most expensive(Image: CHUNYIP WONG via Getty Images)

A new £10 parking charge is putting off day-trippers from visiting Salcombe, recently branded the UK’s most expensive coastal town.

Lloyds revealed in May 2024 that the average house price in the Devon hotspot has tumbled by 22% to £970,657, compared to over £1.2million in 2022. However, Rightmove’s August rankings still positioned Sandbanks and Canford Cliffs in Dorset at the summit of the list for the most costly seaside towns, with average asking prices of £1.5million and £1.2million respectively.

Salcombe, known for its high concentration of second homes – making up about 60% of its housing stock – is already hitting these properties with double council tax. It comes after reports of a small fishing village with some of UK’s best seafood but hardly any tourists.

READ MORE: World’s ‘prettiest town’ dubbed ‘Little Venice’ with stunning canals and winding streetsREAD MORE: ‘Fish and chip capital’ that’s perfect for tourists named top place to visit

Drone view of Salcombe in Devon
Salcombe is known for its high concentration of second homes(Image: CHUNYIP WONG via Getty Images)

The recent launch of a £10 daily parking fee for visitors has triggered outrage, whilst South Hams District Council provides locals an annual permit for £5, enabling them to park for £8 per day, reports Devon Live.

Local business owners are worried about the effect on trade. Beck Gordon, owner of a cafe and fishmonger’s, said: “It’s quieter generally. The parking’s definitely an issue.”

She noticed a drop in visits from nearby residents, saying: “In terms of day-trippers, if you talk about more local people, they definitely don’t come any more.”

Gordon also emphasised the gap in parking costs, pointing out it’s cheaper to get a weekly parking ticket for £25 or £50 than paying the car park fees, which would total £70. She branded the situation “absolutely ridiculous”.

Salcombe harbor, taken just after sunset on a summers evening.
Salcombe harbour after sunset (Image: Devon and Cornwall Photography via Getty Images)

A local cafe manager revealed that she spends a whopping £120 of her earnings solely on parking. Councillor Julian Brazil, who is in charge of community services at the local council, commented: “We’d like to do everything to help the tourism trade and we have kept our car parking charges as competitive as possible.

“Residents of the South Hams can benefit from our discounted resident parking scheme.” He also highlighted the benefits for Salcombe’s workforce, stating: “Many workers in Salcombe have benefited from our competitive parking permits, which offer significantly lower long-term parking compared to our pay-on-the-day rates.”

Councillor Brazil was frank about the financial decisions, asserting: “Be under no illusion, we don’t want to increase prices, but this is the best choice for us under the circumstances we find ourselves in.”

He further clarified the reasoning behind the pricing strategy: “Our prices have been frozen for four years, and now everyone who benefits from our public services are being asked to contribute, and that includes our visitors.”

Property experts at Zoopla have pinpointed Devon’s South Hams district as a prime location. The area, which includes the historic town of Dartmouth and nearby Kingsbridge, Ivybridge, Salcombe, and Totnes, is deemed “desirable”.

They expanded on the available housing options, stating: “Dartmouth and its surrounding town and villages offer a range of properties from terraces, cottages and merchants’ houses, to new-builds and luxury sea-view flats, town houses and boathouses.”

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‘I climbed terrifying bridge that’s 260ft high and instantly made a mistake’

The Story Bridge in Brisbane is one of a handful in the world that you can climb – there’s one mistake I was warned not to make and yet instantly did it

Clare on top of the bridge with views out across to Brisbane
Clare braved the terrifying climb

I knew I should have listened the second I did it. “Don’t look down,” my friend advised, having just made the same mistake on our trip to Australia.

But it was too late, I was already gazing through the gaping slats 262ft (80m) down to the fast current of the river below, waves sloshing through the brown water that had me questioning why we’d opted for an activity holiday.

Head slightly spinning, I raised my eyes a little to the cars whizzing across the bridge I was precariously hanging from the top of. All very disconcerting but undeniably an experience of a lifetime. (After all, I’d already survived a kayaking trip through shark-infested waters).

READ MORE: UK travellers warned they face £5,000 fines for buying 5 items from duty freeREAD MORE: ‘World’s strangest country’ with deserted ghost capital to finally open up to tourists

The Story Bridge in the city centre of Brisbane is one of only a few in the world that you’re able to safely climb over the top of. And while it felt precarious at the top I knew deep down I couldn’t possibly fall as I was firmly attached to a steel cable.

I just wish my head had been able to convince my pounding heart of the same. I’d been all bravado beforehand.

Living in London I’m very used to the sight of bridges so at first I didn’t worry too much – it didn’t look that high… When you’re standing at the bottom looking up at the 1,088 steps to the top however, it’s a different kettle of fish. But, after a thorough safety briefing and freshly kitted out in a very, erm, fetching jumpsuit and harness it was time to climb.

River with the Central Brisbane District in background and the story bridge behind
The Story Bridge is one of a few you can climb around the world(Image: Getty Images)

Attaching a rock-climbing style carabiner to the cable that runs the entire width of the bridge, my expert guide from the Story Bridge Adventure Climb assured us there was no chance of taking a tumble and plummeting to our deaths so, wobbly-legged, we set off up the stairs.

At first it’s hard not to just stare at the next step but soon the spectacular views begin to creep into your eyeline until after a few minutes you forget to worry and simply look around in awe.

The Brisbane river – known locally as the brown snake due to the colour from the silt at its base – can be seen winding its way through the skyscrapers of the city. And from the gantry at the pinnacle of the bridge our guide pointed out the main sights and recounted the history of the bridge itself.

Built from 1935 and originally known as the Jubilee Bridge in honour of King George V, it opened five years later to a crowd of 37,000 people. Its name was later changed to the Story Bridge in recognition of John Douglas Story who fought for it to be built to provide employment and a sense of community during the Great Depression.

It’s reasonably pricey at £75 for the two-hour tour but it’s one of remarkably few in the world that you can climb. The Sydney Harbour Bridge started the trend in 1998 and as well as the Story Bridge, you can also now climb the Matagarup Bridge in Perth, the Akashi Kaikyo Bridge in Kobe, Japan, Auckland Bridge in New Zealand, Porto Bridge in Portugal and the bridge over the New River Gorge in West Virginia, USA (though that one goes under the bridge rather than over it).

As we headed back to more solid ground, there was a general air of elation. We had conquered our fears and done something extraordinary that we’d always remember.

You can find out more and book the Story Bridge Adventure Climb at storybridgeadventureclimb.com.au. For more information on Brisbane and Queensland visit www.queensland.com.

Do you have a story to tell us? Email us at [email protected].

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Wizz Air launches budget £20 flights to ‘Maldives of Europe’

Blessed with a Mediterranean climate and summer temperatures soaring up to 30°C, it’s a paradise for sun worshippers. Jetting off to Albania won’t break the bank either.

Woman swimming in the ocean along the Albanian Riviera
Albania has been keen to push the idea that it’s the ‘Maldives of Europe’(Image: Getty Images)

Wizz Air has launched a new route, linking up the UK with a cheap and sunny European destination.

Albania has been dubbed “the Maldives of Europe” thanks to its unspoilt white sandy shores and crystal-clear waters that grace its spectacular Riviera. Whilst it’s not exactly a hidden gem – with growing numbers of holidaymakers discovering the region – it still offers remarkable value compared to other European hotspots. Travellers can indulge in luxury accommodation without emptying their bank accounts, with seafront flats available from just £20 per night.

Food is equally kind to the purse strings, with a hearty meal and drinks typically setting you back around £15. Thanks to a flurry of TikTok videos flaunting its crystal-clear waters and pristine white sands, Albania has become a hot topic for holidaymakers seeking a slice of the Maldives experience.

READ MORE: ‘World’s strangest country’ with deserted ghost capital to finally open up to touristsREAD MORE: Unique UK railway lets passengers request a stop at special pub station

Tirana Skanderbeg square from drone, Albania
Wizz Air has launched a new route to Tirana(Image: Fani Kurti via Getty Images)

Blessed with a Mediterranean climate and summer temperatures soaring up to 30°C, it’s a paradise for sun worshippers. Jetting off to Albania won’t break the bank either.

Wizz Air’s new route connects London Gatwick with Tirana, the capital of Albania. The cheapest tickets cost just £19.99, with five weekly flights running from October 26. If you’re not close to Gatwick, then Ryanair also offers flights to Tirana from Birmingham, Bristol, Manchester, Edinburgh and London Stansted. The new fare has been launched after a family admitted that they arrived at the airport a year early for their flight.

Albania boasts the lowest living costs in Europe, with city-centre hotel rooms in Tirana going for less than £30, breakfast included. Beachside flats along the Adriatic coast are even more affordable.

Another wallet-friendly route to Albania’s glittering coastline is to fly into Corfu and then hop on a ferry for roughly £15 each way. If you set up camp in Dhërmi, you can explore a new beach every day. A delightful beachfront lunch in the area will only cost about £10 per person.

Laura Hewson, a Kiwi backpacker who explored the country last autumn, said: “We were planning to go Croatia. But one of our friends who’d been to Albania told us [we should go there]. They said it’s like Greece or Croatia but cheaper and a lot more beautiful because there are not as many tourists. We’re actually staying at a four-star hotel with breakfast included for the same price that we were staying in hostels with eight [strangers] in a room in Italy and Spain.”

Her travel companion, Farrell Modd, mentioned that social media influenced their decision to visit Albania, noting the impact of TikTok videos from travel accounts that highlighted the country’s stunning landscapes. She commented: “It’s beautiful, clear blue water, lots of swimming spots.”

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15 reasons why the Ford Transit is the GOAT of the van world – from transporting rock bands, elephants and even ROYALS

WE could argue all night about who is the GOAT. 

Messi or Ronaldo? Senna or Schumacher? Tiger or Jack? Ant or Dec

Ford Transit van on assembly line.

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The first Ford Transit was built at Langley, Berks, an old Hawker Hurricane factory, on August 9, 1965. It cost £542 and had a 610g payload
Pepsi-branded van.

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If the Pepsi van was not spectacular enough from the outside, the interior featured a mirrored cocktail bar with luxury seats and disco lights. It was the 70s, man
Kate and William Middleton wearing daffodil pins.

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Wills and Kate had a transit on Anglesey to avoid getting spotted

But when it comes to vehicles, it’s not even a debate. 

Greatest OAll Transit. 

The humble Ford Transit has been Britain’s best-selling van since day one – August 9, 1965. 

That’s like Liverpool winning the Prem for 60 years on the bounce. Everyone else might as well give up and go home. 

To celebrate Transit’s 60th, we’ve peppered today’s column with quirky facts, as well as hearing from owners with a cherished van from each decade. 

Ford’s famous Backbone Of Britain telly ad from the Eighties was genius marketing. Yet also 100 per cent true. Transit keeps this country ticking. 

Everything we see and touch was transported in a van. 

Slade band members with a Ford Transit van.

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Every rock band travelled to gigs in a van, here’s Slade with their Transit
Two elephants being loaded into a van.

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Two baby elephants once hitched a ride at London’s Regent’s Park Zoo
Henry Cooper holding a card, standing by a truck.

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Boxing legend Henry Cooper drove a Transit pick-up, delivering fruit and veg

One reason Transit is successful is that Ford engineers sit with owners to find ways of making the next model even more useful.

Like the bloke who shoved a lump of wood through the bottom of the steering wheel to make a lunch table.

The latest Transit Custom has a tilt-up steering wheel with a tray for his quinoa tuna salad. Bosh. 

Ford’s insane V8 1971 Transit Supervan

Retired builder Peter Lee, founder of the Transit Van Club, said: “Transit is like a forklift with two doors.

“Built to work. They’re good honest vans that will do the job.” 

The OG and still the best. 3 MILLION UK sales and counting. Always available in white. 

Chitty Chitty Bang Bang car in motion.

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Even Chitty Chitty Bang Bang was built on a Transit chassis
Yellow toy van.

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Dinky produced 104 toy vans with 1,000,000 Transit stickers on the sides for factory execs
Capital Radio van with a large figure on top promoting "Music Power."

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Capital Radio circled the new M25 for seven days and nights in 1986
A van with advertisements painted on its sides airborne above a crowd of onlookers.

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A stuntman jumped over 15 cars in a Transit in 1985 to raise money for cancer research
Forza Horizon 4: Ford Transit Custom van.

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Gamers can drive an Mk1 Transit in Forza Horizon 4
Blue van with its rear doors open, showing its empty cargo area; a miter saw sits outside the van.

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Today’s Transit can power your work tools and lights
A large dinosaur model on a flatbed truck.

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A 15-metre, 1.5-ton Cetiosaurus was driven from Kent to Scotland on a Transit
Monster truck with a driver leaning out of the window.

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The Monster Transit was mounted on axles from a US military vehicle
Five race vans and cars parked on a tarmac.

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Supervan 4.2 won Goodwood’s 2024 King of the Hill shootout against some pretty senior race cars

FORD TRANSIT FACTS

  • Ford took £33million of orders before production had even started
  • The Transit is nudging 3 million UK sales and 13 million worldwide
  • The largest 2t Transit can swallow 236,000 ping pong balls
  • There are 1,300 variations of the 2t Transit – before picking a colour
  • Cheapest baby Transit Courier costs £17,700 excl VAT

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Rihanna shows off baby bump as she is spotted out in LA wearing £2.1k marshmallow-inspired designer dress

PREGNANT Rihanna shows off her baby Flump — sorry, bump — in a bonkers outfit the colour of the marshmallow treat.

The singer, 37, was seen out and about in Los Angeles in a pink and orange dress.

Rihanna walking in Los Angeles wearing a pink dress and Puma sneakers.

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Pregnant Rihanna shows off her baby bump in this colourful outfitCredit: TheImageDirect.com
Rihanna walking down a street in Los Angeles, wearing a pink dress and Puma sneakers.

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The star was seen out and about in Los Angeles in a pink and orange dressCredit: TheImageDirect.com

And the Barbadian star’s vintage 2001 Issey Miyake frock cost a lot more than the sweets — at just over £2,100.

Rihanna, expecting her third baby in weeks, is no stranger to confectionery-themed fashion, wearing a Haribo Heart Throbs-style red dress in 2016.

The pregnant star also showed off her huge bare baby bump while going out for dinner in LA at her favorite eatery.

The business mogul, who announced her pregnancy earlier this year, looked ready to pop.

Stepping out to head for dinner at her favorite Italian restaurant, Giorgio Baldi, Rihanna put her bump on display.

Giorgio Baldi is a “luxurious family-run Italian spot near the ocean” which serves seafood and pasta.

While heading out for food at the spot, Rihanna looked sensational in a navy suit, sheer mesh bra and polka dot tie.

The mother-of-two wore her navy blazer open at the front, with her bump showing.

She wore her hair slicked back, and kept her makeup natural and soft, yet glamorous.

Pregnant Rihanna’s third baby’s gender revealed as partner A$AP Rocky slips and leaks news on Smurfs red carpet
Pink and yellow twisted marshmallows.

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Rihanna looks like one of these Flump sweetsCredit: Shutterstock
Rihanna in Manhattan wearing a red heart-shaped fur coat.

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She is no stranger to confectionery-themed fashion, after wearing a Haribo Heart Throbs-style red dress in 2016Credit: Getty – Contributor

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Viral brand behind Labubu dolls to go on sale at Britain’s biggest toy chain in hours

THE viral brand behind Labubu dolls will soon be on sale at one of Britain’s biggest toy chains at stores across the country.

From today, shoppers will be able to find toys from the highly sought-after brand.

Fuzzy monster keychains.

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The popularity of collectable toys has grown in the UK and worldwideCredit: Getty
Pop Mart store sign.

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Toy brand Pop Mart is behind the viral Labubu Dolls that started the crazeCredit: Getty

The Entertainer will see POP MART toys at select stores around the UK, as the start of a larger nationwide roll-out in coming months.

POP MART has grown its global audience, particularly with consumers’ increasing love for collectible toys like Labubu dolls.

The company, based in China, has pioneered the collectable toy market that is for both children and adults by merging art, fashion and pop culture.

They have revealed UK fans fans will be able to get their hands on iconic blind box collectables from POP MART.

This includes limited-edition favourites like MOLLY and SKULLPANDA which will be at select The Entertainer stores today.

The brand is already available at the latest The Entertainer store in Bluewater.

Six locations are included in the trial of POP MART products at The Entertainer, before they are rolled-out to additional stores nationwide in coming months.

The stores where the toys can be found include:

  • Manchester Arndale
  • Kingston The Bentall Centre
  • Lakeside Shopping Centre
  • Milton Keynes Centre: MK
  • Sheffield Meadowhall
  • Stratford Westfield

Coming in mystery-style blind boxes, a surprise figure is contained inside.

Dramatic moment crowds join massive queue to grab viral Labubu dolls as latest doll craze sweeps across the world

This has added to the growing excitement and demand for these products, which have even been popular amongst celebrities like Dua Lipa and Rihanna.

Chief Product Officer at The Entertainer, Brian Proctor, said: “As the POP MART phenomenon continues to rapidly grow, we’re thrilled to reveal that The Entertainer will stock the popular toys in selected stores.

“The upcoming arrival of POP MART at The Entertainer highlights our ongoing commitment to offering innovative and exciting products to our customers. In addition to the arrival of POP MART, we will continue to ensure that our diverse product range offers plenty of choices for toy fans across the country.”

The Entertainer has over 160 stores across the UK, with thousands of toys and games to offer customers.

It also provides through a thousand concessions like Tesco and Matalan, as well as trading internationally and online.

News of the products coming to the UK comes just as huge crowds have been swarming to toy stores to snap up the viral Labubu Dolls at POP MART stores countries across the world.

A queue in the German city of Berlin was seen extending all the way around the block of a POP MART store as it just opened with Labubu dolls.

The craze for these collectable toys has also being going off online.

TikTokers have been raving about the collection of new plush toys that have labelled the “next Labubus“.

The Wakuku dolls have been compared to Labubus, and shoppers are also able to get a blind box of the toys online.

These toys have really taken the internet by storm – with Chinese toymaker POP MART’s valuation skyrocketing to £31.6bn.

A Labubu plush toy attached to a brown Prada handbag.

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POP MART’s valuation has skyrocketed to more than £30 billion thanks to LabubusCredit: Getty

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Bookstore Romance Day: Where to celebrate in Los Angeles

In 2019, Oregon bookseller Billie Bloebaum saw an author raise a question on X she had heard many times before: “Why should I support independent bookstores when independent bookstores don’t support romance?”

“For a long time, and still somewhat to this day, independent bookstores have had a reputation as being not as welcoming to romance readers and books as they could be,” Bloebaum told The Times. “There were a lot of booksellers that I knew who read romance, who championed romance, who had it on their shelves in the bookstores where they worked or that they owned.”

Determined to rewrite the narrative, Bloebaum launched Bookstore Romance Day in August — Romance Awareness Month — that same year. The inaugural event had less than 200 participating bookstores across the U.S. Now, in 2025, there are more than 600 registered locations around the world.

“It really was a way to get the word out that independent bookstores are not romance-unfriendly,” Bloebaum said, “to bring those two communities together, the romance community and the independent bookstore community.”

There are now 103 brick-and-mortar, romance-only bookstores in the U.S., according to Romancing the Data, including the Ripped Bodice in Culver City, Heartbound in Anaheim and Mystic Box in Huntington Beach. Over the past three years, Pages: A Bookstore in Manhattan Beach has doubled its space dedicated to romance titles, said general manager Jeff Resnik.

“We take romance seriously,” Resnik said.

Across Los Angeles, independent storefronts are observing Bookstore Romance Day on Saturday, Aug. 9, with author talks, book bedazzling, giveaways and more. For those who can’t attend the festivities in person, Bloebaum also offers free virtual events all weekend.

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Real Betis vs Como friendly descends into chaos with ex-Premier League ace SLAPPING opponent and punches thrown

A so-called friendly between Real Betis and Como descended into chaos after players from both sides were seen throwing punches at one another.

The Spanish and Italian clubs were playing their penultimate friendlies before the competitive season starts for them.

Soccer players arguing on the field.

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Pablo Fornals squared up with a rival during a pre-season friendly between Real Betis and Como
Soccer players arguing with a referee.

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He was seen hitting former Man City star Maximo Perrone in the face
Soccer players arguing with a referee on the field.

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That resulted in players from both teams rushing over
Soccer players in a brawl on the field.

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It caused a mass melee before the end of the first half
Soccer players contesting the ball during a match.

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Betis star Natan was accidentally punched in the face by team-mate Cucho Hernandez during the chaosCredit: Getty

But Wednesday evening proved the two sides had certainly found their competitive edge in pre-season.

Cesc FabregasSerie A side won the clash 3-2, but not before trying to go 12 rounds with their rivals after a stunning brawl broke out at the end of the first half.

Former West Ham star Pablo Fornals was at the centre of the brawl as he exchanged blows with Máximo Perrone.

The rivals were seen squaring up to one another before they got involved in a shoving match.

That was abruptly ended when Fornals appeared to PUNCH Perrone, with the Argentine then trying strike the 29-year-old.

However, he was unable to do so as Betis and Como players rushed over to intervene, before many of them also ended up in grappling matches of their own while trying to diffuse the situation.

There was one unfortunately funny moment in the melee as Cucho Hernandez came flying in to try and land a punch on a rival, only to punch his own team-mate, Natan, in the face instead.

Fornals avoided being sent off despite landing the first blow, with the same lack of punishment also going to Hernandez following his attempted flying punch.

BEST ONLINE CASINOS – TOP SITES IN THE UK

Meanwhile, former Manchester City star Perrone was not so lucky and was sent for an early shower.

In the aftermath, ex-Arsenal star Hector Bellerin tried to speak to the referee to get the situation under control.

Dele Alli tipped for Rangers switch | Transfers Exposed

But the Spaniard instead became more and more animated himself as he grew frustrated with the referee after he had also sent him off.

The 30-year-old was guided away from the official while still protesting, before tempers between the teams flared again by the tunnel.

Bellerin’s red card was reversed before the end of the first half.

It remains to be seen whether any retrospective punishment could be enforced.

Europa Conference League runner-up Betis take on newly-promoted Elche in their La Liga opener.

On the other hand, Como – who recently “banished” Dele Alli from their squad – will play Suditrol in the first round of the Coppa Italia before facing Lazio in their Serie A opener.

Hector Bellerin of Real Betis protesting during a soccer match.

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Hector Bellerin was seen arguing with the ref after he was sent off in the scuffleCredit: Shutterstock Editorial
Hector Bellerin of Real Betis protesting during a soccer match.

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But he too got overly heated by the situation, before his red card was reversedCredit: Getty

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TRANSFER NEWS LIVE – KEEP UP WITH ALL THE LATEST FROM A BUSY SUMMER WINDOW

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Wife insists ‘3-hour night’ is perfect for saving your marriage – you don’t even need to spend full time with husband

A WIFE is sharing her secret ‘3-hour rule’ that keeps her marriage alive, and other married couples can’t get enough of it.

TikToker Rachel Higgins posted a video sharing the simple way she and her husband manage to reconnect after long days.

Woman discussing a "3-hour night" for marriage.

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TikToker Rachel Higgins shared her secret to keeping her marriage aliveCredit: TikTok/rachelleehiggins
Two people clinking wine glasses at a candlelit dinner.

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The three-hour night involves carving out phone-free time for each otherCredit: Getty

Higgins and her husband began following a three-hour night back in 2024, and the mother said it has been a “game changer” in their relationship.

What is the three-hour night? Higgins explains it as dividing up three hours into three different sections, which allows them to accomplish chores and connect.

Higgins and her husband would previously spend the entire night taking care of their young daughter, lounging on the couch while scrolling through their phones, and then going to bed.

However, after prioritizing their relationship, their nights take on a slightly different look.

“What we do is after my daughter goes to bed…we take an hour of productive time,” Higgins explained.

“Anything that’s productive for the household.” 

During the productive hour, they do chores that they couldn’t accomplish throughout the day, such as cleaning the kitchen or laundry.

“The second hour we’re dedicating to our marriage.

“During this time, we put our phones away and we’re solely dedicated to each other and to our marriage.”

Higgins said that this hour can look a little different every night.

How can I bring up kinks with my partner?

Some nights it may mean taking a shower together, while others it may just be as simple as playing a game together.

The purpose of this hour is to debrief, discuss, and connect.

“The last hour is about taking time to yourself,” she said.

In the final hour, both of them can do whatever they want without judgment.

Carson Daly’s relationship rule

In 2024, Carson Daly revealed his secret relationship rule to People:

Daly told People that he and his wife, Siri Pinter, sleep in separate rules.
“It’s been good for us,” said the Today host before revealing that he and Siri “secretly love it.”

Daly isn’t the only celebrity to participate in the “sleep divorce” trend. Cameron Diaz said in 2023 that she and her husband Benji Madden also sleep in different rooms. “We should normalize separate bedrooms,” she said. “To me, I would literally, I have my house, you have yours.”

This may be lying on the couch, on your phone, or any other self-care activities you need to do.

“Main point is to inspire you to be intentional with your time if you feel stuck doing the same thing every night like we did,” Higgins wrote in the comments.

“No hard rules.”

Higgins said that they don’t necessarily accomplish their three-hour night goal every night, but they try to do it three to four times a week. 

The mother said that even just succeeding one night a week can be enough.

Higgins’ three-hour night drew the attention of over 300,000 TikTok users, with many people rushing to the comments to support the idea or question how she manages to make it work.

“Such a good idea,” one woman commented.

“Good for us empty nesters too! The phone scrolling is outta control!”



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Man Utd transfer news LIVE: Red Devils make contact for Baleba, Sesko ‘AGREES United move’, Maguire offers ‘REJECTED’

Greenwood ready for big international call

Mason Greenwood is on course to return to international football – but not with England.

The disgraced former Manchester United winger made his Three Lions debut in a Nations League clash with Iceland back in 2020.

Benjamin Sesko latest as United step up interest

Manchester United are growing confident that Benjamin Sesko wants a switch to Old Trafford, according to the Manchester Evening News.

The Reds have tabled a €75m (£65.3m) bid — with a further €10m (£8.7m) in add-ons — to land the RB Leipzig hotshot.

Newcastle have offered more cash, but the 22-year-old’s preference could prove decisive.

Harry is a man in demand

Manchester United have rejected a stunning FIVE approaches for Harry Maguire this summer.

The future of Maguire, 32, had been uncertain this summer as United eyed a clearout following their worst-ever Premier League season that saw them finish a lowly 15th place.

Sesko gave United what they needed before bid was placed

Manchester United are looking to close the deal for Benjamin Sesko.

But according to reports, the move was only possible after the club confirmed that the RB Leipzig striker wanted them just as much as they wanted him.

Ruben Amorim’s side are determined to bring in players who genuinely want to play for them — which is why they waited to hear directly from Sesko before making their move.

Forgotten Manchester United star linekd to Al Nassr

Al Nassr have made contact with Marseille over a potential move for Mason Greenwood, according to talkSPORT.

The 23-year-old only joined the French side from Manchester United last summer in a £26.6million deal — but is already attracting big-money interest.

Marseille are reluctant to sell, despite re-signing Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang on a free.

But it’s believed an offer of more than £85m could tempt the Ligue 1 club to the table.

The Saudi giants are watching closely.

Mason Greenwood, Manchester United forward.

United dealt Hjulmand setback

According to Italian paper Corriere dello Sport, Juventus have struck a preliminary deal with Morten Hjulmand ahead of a summer move from Sporting.

But the Old Lady are still haggling over the fee after their opening bid was knocked back.

Juve have reportedly offered a player-plus-cash deal — with Douglas Luiz included — to try and sweeten the pot.

Morten Hjulmand of Sporting CP during a soccer match.

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Award-winning Wetherspoons pub that has huge rooftop beer garden is right by the beach

A WETHERSPOONS pint always goes down a treat – and even more so at this one venue that has a rooftop garden and sits right by the beach.

Back in 2015, The Admiral Collingwood in Ilfracombe, North Devon, scooped up the prize of best new pub at the National Pub Design Awards.

Aerial view of The Admiral Collingwood pub in Ilfracombe.

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The Admiral Collingwood is an award-winning pub in Ilfracombe, DevonCredit: Alamy

And since, the boozer has become an icon of Ilfracombe’s seafront after judges described it as “an uncompromisingly modern building where the glass dome offers urban presence, while the rest of the main elevation is understated yet sophisticated”, according to Harrison Ince Architects.

Inside, new artworks were commissioned for the pub at the time, and a steel sculpture of a wave breaking was installed.

On the roof of the pub, there is a beer garden which is open between March and October and boasts amazing views across the coast.

One recent visitor said: “The view of the sea is amazing; the roof terrace is lovely and the drinks are true spoons quality.

Read more on travel inspo

“We love Ilfraspoons!”

Another added: “The view and the amazing prices make the THE place to go”

According to Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA), the pub serves three changing beers which often include ales from Fat Belly, GT Ales, Exmoor, Cotleigh and Bays featuring regularly.

In the summer, this increases to four beers.

And then additionally, there are three regular beers on offer to punters.

Visitors also get to learn a bit of histroy about the purpose built pub when they visit, as the menu states: “Until its very recent closure, the Collingwood Hotel had welcomed visitors to north Devon’s Ilfracombe for over 130 years.

I went to the UK’s biggest Wetherspoons with rooftop bar overlooking the beach

“The imposing five-storey building was named after Admiral, Lord Collingwood, Nelson’s second-in-command at Trafalgar (who fought just off the Spanish coast in 1805).

“Cuthbert Collingwood fired the first shot in the battle (one of British naval history’s most famous and crucial) and took over command of the British fleet after the fatal wounding of his friend Horatio Nelson.”

Just a short walk away from the pub is Wildersmouth Beach, which is sheltered and shingle.

Despite being central to Ilfracombe, the dog-friendly beach is often less crowded than other sandy beaches nearby.

Damien Hirst's controversial statue of a naked, pregnant woman wielding a sword, on Ilfracombe seafront. ... Damien Hirst's Verity statue ... 17-10-2012 ... Ilfracombe ... UK ... Photo credit should read: Ben Birchall/PA Archive. Unique Reference No. 14905094 ... Picture date: Wednesday October 17, 2012. The 20 metre (66ft) bronze monument, titled 'Verity' has been given on a 20-year loan by the artist to the coastal town of Ilfracombe in north Devon. Photo credit should read: Ben Birchall/PA Wire

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Also in Ilfracombe is Damien Hirst’s bronze Verity sculptureCredit: PA:Press Association

Ilfracombe is also home to the Landmark Theatre, in Jubilee Gardens.

For art lovers, make sure to follow the coast around to Ilfracombe’s harbour where you will find Damien Hirst’s bonze sculpture called Verity – a half-skinned pregnant woman, who stands 20 metres tall.

The high street is also said to be a “thriving hub of independent shops”, according to Visit Ilfracombe.

There are many craft shops, gift shops and cafes to explore – and even a coffee-cum-craft shop.

Sweet tooths will also enjoy the Ilfracombe Chocolate Emporium, which sells handcrafted chocolates and has a chocolate museum – which is free to visit.

And make sure to check out the department story Chas N Pedlar & Son, which has been running for over a century.

The seaside town has a lot of choice for accommodating too, with lots of holiday homes.

How can I save money at Wetherspoons?

FREE refills – Buy a £1.50 tea, coffee or hot chocolate and you can get free refills. The deal is available all day, every day.

Check a map – Prices can vary from one location the next, even those close to each other.

So if you’re planning a pint at a Spoons, it’s worth popping in nearby pubs to see if you’re settling in at the cheapest.

Choose your day – Each night the pub chain runs certain food theme nights.

For instance, every Thursday night is curry club, where diners can get a main meal and a drink for a set price cheaper than usual.

Pick-up vouchers – Students can often pick up voucher books in their local near universities, which offer discounts on food and drink, so keep your eyes peeled.

Get appy – The Wetherspoons app allows you to order and pay for your drink and food from your table – but you don’t need to be in the pub to use it. 

Taking full advantage of this, cheeky customers have used social media to ask their friends and family to order them drinks. The app is free to download on the App Store or Google Play.

Check the date – Every year, Spoons holds its Tax Equality Day to highlight the benefits of a permanently reduced tax bill for the pub industry.

It usually takes place in September, and last year it fell on Thursday, September 14.

As well as its 12-day Real Ale Festival every Autumn, Wetherspoons also holds a Spring Festival.

A Devon local has walked the South West Coast Path numerous times – these are her best spots The Salt Path movie doesn’t show.

Plus, Devon is also home to the best fish and chips in the UK.

The Admiral Collingwood Wetherspoon pub in Ilfracombe, Devon, with patrons seated at outdoor tables.

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The pub also has a rooftop garden with views across the coastCredit: Alamy

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I visited village named UK’s most desirable with beautiful park and ‘magical’ crystal grotto

The crystal grotto is located inside the grounds of a park within the village, and it’s a real must-see if you’re visiting this summer

White Bridge at Painshill Park
Cobham in Surrey has so many great things to do, like a wander around Painshill Park (Image: SeanMcGrae via Getty Images)

The UK boasts a wealth of stunning beauty spots, but one location that is definitely worth a visit this summer is Cobham in Surrey.

It was voted the second most desirable place to live in the UK by the Telegraph last year, thanks to its relaxing atmosphere, gorgeous scenery and wide range of pubs, shops and independent eateries.

This charming village is the perfect place to spend the day exploring, eating and drinking, especially if the weather is nice. Painshill Park is a particularly lovely spot, and it’s home to a famous crystal grotto that is the perfect place to take pictures.

Surrey Live writer Laura Nightingale finally paid it a visit after wanting to go for years, and she was not disappointed. With her husband and daughter in tow, they headed to the park by car and got ready to enjoy their family day out.

She said: “I was invited to the 18th Century landscaped garden to celebrate the start of the school summer holidays, and we headed straight to the grotto.

“We picked up a map from the ticket office and followed the accessible path around the lake, keeping the large open water to our right hand side.”

Painshill Park
Laura visited the enchanting crystal grotto in Surrey(Image: Laura Nightingale )

The grotto was a 15 minute walk away, and en route, they passed the Mr Hamilton’s tearoom, a play area and a beautiful vineyard slope.

To her daughter’s delight, they also spotted a gaggle of ducks, especially as they got closer to the island housing the magical grotto.

Laura continued: “We strolled over the Woolett Bridge (there is another entrance via the Chinese Bridge on the other side of the lake but that was closed when we visited), to reach the naturalistic cave with shimmering, bubbling water, rough rock and stalactites covered in sparkling crystals.

It was a breath-taking sight. We parked the buggy outside on a patch of grass, and ventured inside the incredible man-made feature. Fellow adults stood in awe of the enchanting sight, and there was an eerie silence inside as we were captivated by its charm.”

It’s a haven for Instagrammers, offering countless picturesque spots for capturing the perfect shot. On sunny days, beams of light shine the interior through strategically positioned openings in the ceiling.

Painshill Park
Laura inside the stunning crystal grotto at Painshill Park in Cobham(Image: Laura Nightingale)

This illumination causes the crystals to twinkle as it reflects off the coral pools and lake water, which Laura described as ‘simply sensational’.

After exploring the grotto, they retrieved the pram and crossed the bridge to complete the tour around the scenic lake.

They managed to spot the Turkish Tent and the grand Gothic Temple on the return journey to the gift shop. King George III, during his visit years ago, said the view from the building was his favourite.

Raving about the park, Laura concluded: “I thought Painshill Park was a great place to take the kids during the school summer holidays. Not only will the grotto amaze youngsters, the site is just so convenient and easy to get around.

“Parking is free, there are toilets, a café, coffee shop, plenty of places to roll out a picnic blanket (in the sunshine or under the trees), a play park and a clean, flat path to push a pram.”

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Best beach in the world with ‘whitest sand’ is ‘paradise’ for travellers – top 20 list

It has been named the best beach in the world for those looking to enjoy the warm weather and relax on the white sands, according to a new study

30's woman walks on a beautiful wild beach with palm trees in Mexico.
There’s nothing better than relaxing on a nice beach(Image: Mystockimages via Getty Images)

Many Brits love to escape the dreary weather for a day by the sea. Perhaps it’s the golden sand, crystal clear water or simply the warmer climate that draws you in. Well, Luxury holiday company CV Villas has conducted research to find out which beaches boast the whitest sand in the world. Let’s be honest, nothing screams ‘perfect beach’ more than pristine white sand.

The study analysed Google Maps images of approximately 200 beaches, examining the colour of each shoreline to determine the results. Unsurprisingly, the beach with the whitest sand is nowhere near the UK, but it’s certainly worth the flight time, reports the Express.

Tulum Beach in Mexico was crowned as having the whitest sand in the world, as it had the least deviation from pure white.

Tulum Beach sits on the Yucatan coast of Mexico at the country’s southeastern tip, looking out to the turquoise waters of the Caribbean Sea.

Tulum is a huge tourist destination known for its beaches and well-preserved ruins of an ancient Mayan port city.

Young Caucasian woman running happily on the beach in Tulum, Mexico
One beach has been dubbed a “paradise” by a traveller(Image: Oleh_Slobodeniuk via Getty Images)

The main building is a large stone structure called El Castillo which sits atop a rocky cliff looking down across the white sand beach and turquoise sea.

Given its tourist draw, there are plenty of hotels, restaurants and bars situated throughout the long narrow stretch of town.

However, some visitors on Tripadvisor do note that prices can be high for amenities such as parking.

Having visited in July 2024, an American tourist left a Tripadvisor review saying the area had both “good and bad” points. They described the beach, however, as a “paradise”.

Coming in second place was Anse Source D’Argent in the Seychelles, which had a variation of 4.3, and Marmari Beach in Greece took third place with a variation of 6.5.

Tulum Mexico
Tulum Beach in Mexico beat the likes of Seychelles to the top spot(Image: Getty)

Here are the top 20 beaches with the whitest sand:

1. Tulum Beach, Mexico

2. Anse Source D’Argent, Seychelles

3. Marmari Beach, Greece

4. Tropea Beach, Italy and Platja de Muro, Spain

6. Cala Pluma, Spain

7. Plage de Valras, France

8. Cala Brandinchi, Italy

9. Stocking Island Beach, Bahamas and Taylor Bay Beach, Turks and Caicos

11. Varadero Beach, Cuba

12. Punta Prosciutto, Italy

13. Maya Bay Beach, Thailand

14. Carmel Beach, USA

15. Bamboo Island Beach, Thailand

16. Siesta Key Beach, USA

17. Spiaggia La Pelosa, Italy

18. Flamenco Beach, Puerto Rico and Luskentyre Beach, Scotland

20. Grace Bay, Turks and Caicos

Eight of the top 10 destinations are in Europe.

If you’re after a beach closer to home, Scotland’s Luskentyre Beach shares the eighteenth spot with Flamenco Beach in Puerto Rico.

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