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Things To Do in Holt Norfolk
Explore the Holt Owl Trail
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Take a Ride on the North Norfolk Railway
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Visit the Church of St Andrew the Apostle
Discover Baker & Larners Department Store
Stroll Around Spout Hills
Shop the Art Galleries
Visit the Obelisk and Blind Sam
Wander Holt Sunday Market
Fill Up at Byfords
One of the best places to eat in Holt, Byfords on Shirehall Plain has long been a go-to destination in North Norfolk.
Styling itself as a posh B&B, cafĂ©, delicatessen and store, Byfords is perfect for a post-beach brunch at the weekend, a lovely location for a cuppa and home-made cake, great for all your picnic goodies, and a celebration of Norfolk’s fantastic local produce.
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Experience the Holt Festival
The Holt Festival takes place in July every year. It features a lively and eclectic mix of international music, drama, visual arts, comedy, literature, street theatre, and cinema.
More Norfolk Travel Ideas
Things To Do Near Holt Norfolk
Explore Baconsthorpe Castle
Located just four miles from Holt are the extensive ruins of Baconsthorpe Castle, a moated and fortified 15th-century manor house that is a testament to the rise and fall of a prominent Norfolk family. The Heydons built, enlarged, and modernised this castle over 200 years before finally abandoning it in the mid-17th century.
The castle has a fascinating history that weaves through several hundred years of fortunes made and squandered in the fabric trade, poor business decisions, and lavish living, all of which led to the eventual downfall of the Heydon family.
The castle was given to the Ministry of Public Works in the 1940s and later opened to the general public. Today, it is a Grade I and Grade II listed building and a scheduled monument managed by English Heritage.
Ramble Around Holt Country Park
On the edge of Norfolk Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and bordered by the River Glaven, Holt Country Park is set in 100 acres of mixed woodland and heathland. It’s a perfect spot for wildlife enthusiasts, dog walkers, families and people looking for a peaceful walk.
A Green Flag award-winning country park, the tranquil woods are dominated by Scots Pines, Oaks, Silver Birch, and other native broadleaves. The rich ground flora supports an abundant array of wildlife, including many varieties of butterflies, dragonflies, goldcrests, greater spotted woodpeckers, reptiles, and deer.
There is also a children’s play area, Hetty’s House Tea Room (which makes a mean Victoria sponge), waymarked trails, a cycle route, a visitor centre (in the summer), a viewing tower, and sculptures to discover, as well as an annual programme of lively countryside events, such as ranger-led mini-beast hunts and discovery trails.
Visit Natural Surroundings
Just three miles from Holt, Natural Surroundings is a hybrid business that offers a combination of wildlife-friendly gardens and grounds and a cafe, shop, and plant sales. With a mission to champion wildlife and promote wildlife-friendly gardening, Norfolk’s wildflower centre is one of the best places near Holt to visit.
There are 20 demonstration gardens to inspire and encourage your gardening efforts. All the gardens are designed to showcase wildlife—and wildflower-friendly design, from the tiny bog garden to the larger woodland garden and the fascinating reptile refuge.
The gardens are similar in size to the average household garden, making it easy to transplant ideas to your own patch.
Spend a Day in Sheringham
Sheringham is a traditional Norfolk seaside town just seven miles from Holt. Known for its fabulous beach, family-friendly atmosphere, good restaurants and places to eat, leisure centres with swimming pools, and beautiful surroundings, Sheringham is one of Norfolk’s most popular seaside towns.
There are lots of Sheringham attractions to keep everyone busy. Sheringham will entertain the whole family with an award-winning beach, a traditional Victorian town centre, a really good local museum, and even a snorkel trail.
You could even leave the car behind and pop over on the North Norfolk Railway for the day!
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Explore the Langham Dome Museum
RAF Langham was an active airfield for eighteen years, playing a key role in both World War II and the Cold War with Russia. Langham Dome Museum is a great place to visit with slightly older kids to help them learn about the UK’s history.
With lively and thought-provoking displays, you’ll learn about the Dome from friendly and knowledgeable volunteers and be inspired by the stories of those who served here.
You can try your hand at Morse code using a Wellington bomber radio, walk in the footsteps of the service men and women who were stationed at Langham during the war, find your favourite uniform in the dressing-up locker and play table-top board games to find out more about military missions.
Visit the Seals at Blakeney Point
Within the Norfolk Coast AONB, Blakeney is a charming coastal village with bags of history, its own nature reserve and a landscape made up of tidal creeks and salt marshes. The nature reserve is home to Blakeney Point and England’s largest colony of Atlantic Grey seals, one of the most popular North Norfolk attractions.
There is a lot to do in Blakeney, and the village can be busy in summer. It’s a perfect crabbing destination, and boat trips take visitors to Blakeney Point on seal-watching tours.
For a more tranquil experience, walk along the sea wall between Blakeney and Morston Quay and be blown away by far-reaching views of muddy creeks and the rich variety of seabirds.
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Discover Walsingham
Just eleven miles from Holt, Walsingham is steeped in a history of religious pilgrimage that dates back to the 11th century, when the Lady Walsingham received visions of the Virgin Mary and requested that a replica of the Holy House at Nazareth be built there.
Today’s pretty rural village has many 14th—and 15th-century buildings and incorporates both Great Walsingham and Little Walsingham. Pop into the Shirehall Museum and Prison, Walsingham’s Georgian Courtroom, to discover village history from 1061.
The small museum is the entrance to WWalsingham Abbey, where the grounds surrounding the historic house are famous for the ruins of the medieval Priory of Our Lady of Walsingham. In early spring, beautiful swathes of snowdrops bloom. Later in spring, the grounds burst to life with daffodils and the woods with bluebells.
Go Wildlife Watching at Pensthorpe Natural Park
Pensthorpe Natural Park is a family-friendly destination situated just eleven miles from Wells. The park is home to a nature reserve, stunning gardens, and a range of activities to keep kids entertained.
The reserve is a natural habitat for a diverse range of species, including birds, mammals, invertebrates, and plants. These species live in various habitats such as wetlands, hedgerows, woodland, water meadows, and riverbanks, which are managed by the Pensthorpe Conservation Trust.
In addition to the nature reserve, visitors can explore four of the most impressive Norfolk gardens, including The Millennium Garden, designed by the renowned Dutch plantsman and garden designer Piet Oudolf.
The garden is a breathtaking meadow-style landscape of colour and texture, featuring swathes of grasses and perennials. Other gardens include the Wildlife Habitat Garden, Wave Garden, and Infinity Garden, which is home to exotic plants such as bananas and ginger.
Children can enjoy interactive trails, bird hides, and boardwalks that meander through the reserve. Hands-on activities like wildlife spotting, pond dipping, and bird feeding allow younger visitors to get up close to native and visiting wildlife.
There’s also an indoor play area and an outdoor eco-play area with towers to climb, zip wires, underground tunnels to explore, and worm-like slides, all adjacent to a perfect paddling stream.
Explore the Muckleburgh Military Collection
Sited at the former Royal Artillery Anti-Aircraft training camp near Weybourne, the Muckleburgh Military Collection is Norfolk’s largest working museum of military vehicles, including tanks, guns, and a wide range of other weapons.
Most of the extensive range of tanks and armoured cars are maintained in working condition, and exhibits include artillery, machine guns and missiles, in addition to a fine collection of ships and land warfare models. You can even book to drive a tank here!
The museum also includes the Suffolk and Norfolk Yeomanry collection of uniforms, weapons, photographs and documents, as well as RAF Reconnaissance, Air Sea Rescue and Marine Craft exhibits.
Go Nature Watching & Walking
For bird watchers, Norfolk’s coastal nature reserves, with their open expanses of marshes and reedbeds, are a haven for all sorts of bird life.
The Norfolk Wildlife Trust’s Cley Marshes is one of the best places near Holt to see many bird species in their natural habitats. Six hides, accessible via boardwalks, give far-reaching views across pools and scrapes specially managed to attract breeding and passage birds.
The nature reserve is bordered by Cley Beach – definitely not of the bucket and spade variety, but a wonderful place for solitude, big skies, bracing sea air and miles of shingle. The beach car park is also the starting point for a fantastic walk out to Blakeney Point.
Closer to town is Holt Lowes, a botanist’s delight and home to a large number of scarce species. These include marsh fragrant orchid, eyebright, marsh fern, wood horsetail, lesser skullcap and common wintergreen. The site is also excellent for butterflies, with a good population of graylings. However, its speciality is dragonflies, with more than 20 species recorded, including the rare-keeled skimmer.
Visit The Shell Musuem
The Shell Museum at Glandford is the oldest purpose-built museum in Norfolk and houses one of the finest seashell collections in Great Britain.
The quantity and quality of the shells are unique, and the museum also contains fossils, birds’ eggs, pottery, local archaeological finds and a gorgeous tapestry, Panorama of the Norfolk Coast, by the local artist and fisherman John Craske.
Nearby is pretty Glandford Church and the Art Cafe, a very good vegetarian restaurant, gallery and licensed cafe.
Explore Binham Priory
Eight miles from Holt, Binham Priory is one of Norfolk’s most complete and impressive monastic ruins. This Benedictine priory was founded in 1091 by Peter des Valoines, a nephew of William the Conqueror.
Binham Priory’s history is one of almost continuous scandals. Many of its priors proved to be unscrupulous and irresponsible, and by the time the priory was suppressed in 1539, the community had been reduced to just six monks.
The nave of the priory church, with its splendid 13th-century west front and fine tiers of Norman arches, is now the parish church. It displays the former rood screen with medieval saints overpainted with Protestant texts. The extensive ruins beyond emphasise the monastery’s original size.