3 miles
Norfolk Lavender – A Garden and Café dedicated to Lavender!
Visit Norfolk Lavender to see around 100 acres of lavender fields and an oil distillery, plus on-site gift shops and restaurant. Norfolk Lavender are ...
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Built in 1907 by Cook, Welton and Gemmell of Beverley, the Steam Trawler Sheraton was initially used as a fishing vessel but was later used for boom defence work during the First World War and as a patrol vessel in the Second World War when it was fitted with a six-pounder gun. Following this, The Sheraton was moored off Brest Sand and used for target practice. However, a gale on April 23, 1947, caused the Steam Trawler to break free and drift onto Hunstanton beach. Much of the boat was salvaged, but today the bottom of the hull still remains on the beach and can be seen at low tide. The wreck can be found at St Edmund’s Point in Old Hunstanton.