The Scottish Mail on Sunday

GOTHIC GRANDEUR

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START in York and take a 20-mile trip on the A59 to the spa town of Knaresboro­ugh. Explore the dungeons of its ruined castle, then head into the shadows of Mother Shipton’s Cave and see her ‘petrifying well’. Stay at Knaresboro­ugh Caravan Club site.

Relax on day two as it’s just 12 miles to Ripon. Look at the carvings under the pews in the Gothic cathedral which gave Lewis Carroll inspiratio­n for Alice In Wonderland. Pack a picnic and head to the National Trust’s Fountains Abbey and Studley Royal Water Garden for your own tea party. Stay at the River Laver Holiday Park.

Drive 50 miles through the stunning North York Moors National Park to Lealholm, billed as ‘the prettiest village in Yorkshire’. Stepping stones cross the River Esk to the 250-year-old Board Inn pub. Stay alongside llamas at Lawnsgate Farm Campsite.

It’s then just ten miles to the coast at Whitby. Stand under the 19ft-high whalebone arch before climbing 199 steps to Whitby Abbey, where the spirit of Dracula lives on – the Gothic architectu­re inspired Bram Stoker’s 1897 horror novel. Stay by the sea at Sandfield House Farm Holiday Park.

A five-mile drive gets you to Robin Hood’s Bay and the twisting streets and hidden alleyways of ‘Smugglers’ Town’. Guided tours are great fun while the beach is prime fossil-hunting territory. Stay at Hooks House Farm.

Head 15 miles south to Scarboroug­h, soon to celebrate 400 years as a seaside resort. Return to Victorian times in the Cliff Lift, the country’s first funicular railway, or embrace the new at a water park. Stay at Scarboroug­h Camping And Caravannin­g Club.

Yorkshire’s food capital is 25 miles away in the town of Malton, with plenty of little eateries, shops and food markets. Then walk it off in the 1,000-acre grounds of Castle Howard. Stay at Brickyard Lakes Country Park, then it’s 20 miles back to York.

 ??  ?? SCENIC SPOT:
The viaduct over the River Nidd at Knaresboro­ugh
SCENIC SPOT: The viaduct over the River Nidd at Knaresboro­ugh

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