Amble

Coquet Island breeding seabirds, bustling harbour and marina, fishing, watersports.

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What can I do?

  • View live images of nesting seabirds (including puffins and four species of terns), transmitted from the RSPB’s Coquet Island reserve, at the Amble Tourist Information Centre.
  • Take a boat trip around the Coquet Island bird reserve and see the 80ft high lighthouse. Its first keeper was Grace Darling’s elder brother.
  • Picnic on the open grassland of Amble Braid and watch wading birds and waterfowl in the Coquet Estuary.
  • Explore the marina, once a busy coal-mining port and still an important fishing centre.
  • Visit Amble Lifeboat Station, part of the local community since 1842.
  • Walk or cycle along the River Coquet to Warkworth.
  • Explore Amble Dunes nature reserve to the south of town.
  • Surf on Amble Beach or learn a range of watersports at the Coquet Shorebase Trust.

What do I need to know?

  • Coquet Island holds 90% of the UK’s roseate tern population (the UK’s rarest seabird).
  • No boat landing is possible on Coquet Island but Omega Charters and Dave Gray Boat Trips in Amble organise boat trips around the reserve in the summer months.
  • The Amble Tourist Information Centre is open from Easter to the end of Summer.
  • The Amble Lifeboat Station is usually open during summer but groups and school parties must book in advance.
  • Druridge Bay, one of the most impressive stretches of beach backed by sand dunes on Britain’s east coast, is three miles south of Amble.

Where can I find out more?

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Forthcoming events

Crime in Wildlife

NWT Coquetmouth Group Crime in Wildlife Talk with PC Andy Swinburn. Cost:…

Date:
15 November 2010
Time:
7:30 pm
Where:
Amble
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