NOTHING brings the country together like football.
But there are some people who have more than a little insight into the game and the hype surrounding it – the WAGs.
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Belinda, now 60, was the spouse of the Welsh football coach Chris Coleman – but in 2011, their 19-year relationship came to a bitter end following cheating accusationsCredit: Getty
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Belinda has revealed what life is like when your millionaire marriage ends, the money disappears, and you go from the A-list lifestyle to having the bailiffs at your doorCredit: Getty
Belinda Coleman was also once one of them, having a front row seat to all the money, the pleasures – and pitfalls – of life as a Premier League wife.
She was the spouse of the Welsh football coach Chris Coleman – but in 2011, their 19-year relationship came to a bitter end following cheating accusations.
The divorce ended in Chris, now 55, giving Belinda just two months to leave the two bedroom flat she shared with their four kids, Sonny, Christy, Faraday and Georgie – all whilst he planned his marriage to blonde TV presenter Charlotte Jackson.
Belinda previously lifted the lid on how their dream marriage turned into a nightmare – and how his flings led to their split after 19 years together.
Belinda then said. “He’s an adulterer and I just became bored of his indiscretions.
“His affairs were into double figures. And I’d even confronted three or four of the women. I never ranted at them. I just told them they weren’t the first and they wouldn’t be the last.
“And I told him if he wanted to be with them, he should just walk out and leave us alone to get on with our lives.”
Now, over a decade later, Belinda has revealed what life is like when your millionaire marriage ends, the money disappears, and you go from the A-list lifestyle to having the bailiffs at your door.
By 1991, when she met Chris, then a player with Crystal Palace, Belinda owned a flat of her own and was managing a hotel health club.
“I’d been invited to a match by a player who’d come to the health club for physiotherapy. The first time I spoke to Chris in the lounge after the match it was so natural. I had no idea this man would change my life forever,” Belinda told The Telegraph.
Husband given £325k of wife’s £60m fortune in divorce WINS bid to get more cash
Just six months later the pair tied the knot – and according to Belinda, it felt like a fairy tale.
As Chris’ career began to climb, they went from a two-bedroom rental to purchasing a small house before Chris moved to Blackburn – ”and suddenly, there was so much money”, Belinda said.
There were luxurious holidays, shopping sprees galore and private school education for their four kids.
“I decorated our lovely home in the country, called the Old Stables, with all the top-of-the-range equipment I could find.”
But with so much money coming in, there was no planning for their financial future – something Belinda looks back at now and cringes at how ”financially irresponsible” the two were.
Meet the WAGS of the England footballers
England Wags range from childhood sweethearts to recently blossoming love stories.
The fitness instructor has been married to the England captain since 2019 and joined him in Germany with their four children after he joined Bayern Munich.
“I couldn’t be sensible about it because I couldn’t bear to think about it. There was a lot of guilt at having money when people I loved didn’t, so spending it as quickly as I could on myself and others seemed to make sense.”
Of course, there was also the pressure to look the part, which came with a hefty price tag – the scrutiny of Premier League wives and girlfriends was intense.
There were amazing times together, she explained – the fun of supporting their men at their games, the lavish getaways abroad, the luxurious parties and the fun of watching their children grow together.
But the lifestyle also came with lots of troubles to share, such as woman ”falling over” their husbands, which ”took a huge psychological and emotional toll” on Belinda.
As rumours of Chris’s infidelity became louder, with headlines everywhere, the trust between the couple crumbled.
While Belinda was trying her best to pretend everything was okay for the sake of her children, it was just a mask – and in reality, she was losing her mind.
It eventually led the mother-of-four to do things that she wasn’t proud of, including hiring a private detective and hiding a tracker in Chris’s car – something, she now thinks, created ”suffering”.
As for why the separation and then divorce meant swapping a millionaire pad for a two-bed flat, Belinda is frank.
“Despite once having millions, the money had run out. It was my fault too, of course, but suddenly I was facing financial ruin.”
Bailiffs knocking on door
But the worst was yet to come.
One day, Belinda, now 60, heard loud banging at the door – it was two men who turned out to be bailiffs.
Paralysed with fear, she didn’t dare to move, and when the two finally left, she collapsed.
Following their visit, Belinda’s car was repossessed, and then an eviction notice arrived.
Eventually managing to find a private rental she could just about afford, this was the first of 11 forced moves in ten years for Belinda and the children, Sonny, now 32, Christy 30, Faraday, 27, and Georgie, 25.
While she did eventually receive spousal and child maintenance, the money was nothing compared to her previous lavish lifestyle and Belinda felt as if she ”was depriving the children of the life they’d become accustomed to”.
On one occasion, she remembers, her card was declined at the supermarket checkout, despite calculating everything in the trolley to the penny.
Now raising four kids as a single mum, Belinda took whatever jobs she could fit around their schedule, working nights, weekends and 12-hour shifts.
“I packed boxes for a removal company, worked in a call centre and cleaned. One day in 2016, a year after our divorce was finalised, I drove through the wrought-iron gates of the Old Stables. I was there to clean the house we’d once owned.
Standing in the beautiful home, the memories of the happy times came flooding back and Belinda realised just how much her life had changed.
But she refused to feel sorry for herself. Instead, she appreciated being alive and having four wonderful kids, friends and family who loved her.
Then in 2019, during yet another forced house move, she was packing a book – and things in her life were about to change.
The sentence read: ”Sometimes the universe is just waiting for you to say yes.’’
For Belinda, it was a sign – a sign that if she truly wanted something different in her life, she needed to do something different.
This was the start of Belinda’s journey with manifestation, journaling, meditating, visualisation and expressing gratitude daily that turned her life around – as did winning a legal case.
On a whim one day, the mum-of-four wrote herself a cheque for the amount she believed was achievable from an ongoing legal dispute, placing it beside her bed and acknowledging it every day.
In the end, she ended up winning that case against the odds, and the money meant she could finally achieve the dream of owning her very own home.
”The house I bought was listed for exactly the amount I’d written on the cheque.”
Now a qualified motivational coach and NLP (neuro-linguistic processing therapy) practitioner, Belinda has written a book about her journey.
Wag to Warrior, Every Woman’s Roadmap to Overcoming Life’s Challenges and Rewriting Her Story is a book that Belinda hopes will help other women who are struggling, including other WAGs.
Robot vacuums come in a wide variety of budgets and capabilities, from basic models that just sweep to high-end devices that map your entire home and even mop.
But you don’t always have to splash the cash for great features, as Amazon often drops the price on some leading cleaning devices.
Right now, you can snap up the Vexilar Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum Cleaner for an absolutely steal.
It was priced at £329.99, but is currently reduced to just £199.98 – that’s a discount of almost 40%.
We in the Sun Shopping team haven’t tested out this particular models ourselves – for some tested recommendations, you’ll need to head to our best robot vacuum cleaners page.
But this device has proved incredibly popular with shoppers, currently ranking as the third-best selling robot vacuum on the Amazon site.
The Vexilar packs two pieces of impressive tech for a price that’s now firmly in budget territory.
Firstly, it’s unusual to get a robot vacuum for less than £200 that comes with a self-emptying bin – that’s usually the domain of premium devices.
(I recently reviewed a flagship robot vac that self-empties, but it costs a whopping £1,119 – read my Eureka J15 Max Ultra review if you’re curious.)
The Vexilar’s base station contains a 2L dust bag, which is advertised to last for 60 days before you need to empty it.
That’s a massive plus for busy households.
Secondly, there’s the laser-mapping, which is something you’ll not often see with cheaper devices.
Basically, its Advanced LDS Laser Navigation will precisely map your home in 360 degrees, allowing it to plan the most efficient cleaning route.
It even lets you set virtual ‘no-go’ zones and customise suction or water levels for specific rooms via the app.
When it comes to power, the vacuum boasts a 6000Pa suction, and the manufacturer says it’s effective at tackling pet hair and debris on everything from hardwood floors to low-pile carpets.
The device also has a long 180-minute runtime on a single charge in quiet mode, before returning to its base station to re-charge.
You can control it via the companion app, or connect it to your smart home using Alexa, Google Home, or Siri – that’s seriously hands-off cleaning.
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The Vexilar robot vacuum will run for 3 hours off a single charge in quiet mode
“Worth it – powerful, reliable, and hassle-free,” says one happy customer.
“[I’m] really happy with this robot vacuum. Easy to set up, cleans well, and the auto-empty base is a big time saver.
It navigates around furniture without any issues and picks up dust and pet hair easily… Makes life a lot easier. Definitely recommend.”
Another shopper writes: “I’ve been using this for a few days now but oh boy! I’m honestly impressed!
“The battery lasts long enough to finish the whole house, and if it runs low it goes back, recharges and picks up where it left off.
“I also like that I can control it with the app or just ask Alexa to start cleaning,” said another.
“Worth every penny, don’t hesitate!” wrote a third shopper, while other buyers described it
“Complete game-changer,” commented a fourth.
“Life-changing,” was the verdict of a fifth reviewer.
This huge saving on the Vexilar Self-Emptying Robot Vacuum Cleaner is marked as a limited-time deal, so you shouldn’t wait too long if you want to bag this bargain.
Keep in mind that Amazon Prime Day is happening next week (October 7th-8th), and it’s not impossible that this device could drop even lower in price.
However, any potential further discount will likely be a deal only available to Amazon Prime members.
BLACK Friday 2025 vacuum cleaner deals are just around the corner, and we’ll be hunting down the strongest offers as they drop.
Expect price cuts on heavy hitters like Dyson, Shark, and iRobot, plus handy bundles that include extra tools or accessories.
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Bag a bargain on a new vacuum cleaner this Black Friday
If your current vacuum stalls on thick carpet or the battery gives up mid‑clean, November is your chance to upgrade for less.
We’ll focus on the specs that matter in real homes, including suction power, battery life, filtration and anti-hair wrap tech, then highlight the real bargains so you know when to buy.
We’ll keep this guide updated with live prices, early offers, and standout picks leading up to and throughout November, and we’ll flag the moment a deal reaches its lowest point.
Expect early Black Friday vacuum cleaner deals and broader Black Friday vacuum sales through November, with the steepest price drops often saved for the day.
Shortlist targets now so you can pounce when prices move.
VAX Blade 4 Classic Plus CLSV-B4CA Cordless Vacuum Cleaner, £149 (was £229) – buy here
Shark PowerDetect NeverTouch Pro 2-in-1 Self-Empty, Self-Refill & Self-Clean Robot Vacuum & Mop RV2800ZEUK, £649.99 (was £799.99) – buy here
Dyson 360 Vis Nav robot vacuum cleaner, £749.99 (was £1,249.99) – buy here
What retailers are taking part in Black Friday this year?
Expect wall-to-wall Black Friday vacuum deals from Amazon, Currys, Argos, John Lewis, and AO, as well as direct offers from Dyson, Shark, and Miele.
We are expecting exceptional Black Friday promotions on vacuum cleaners, exciting deals on Dyson vacuums, competitive offers on Shark vacuum cleaners, and smart deals on vacuum bags, filters, and bundles, as well as much more.
Since stock for premium selections tends to sell out quickly, set alerts and be prepared to check out swiftly.
What vacuum cleaner deals can we expect in the Black Friday 2025 sale?
Retailers are lining up cordless vacuum deals, Black Friday robot vacuum deals and sharp handheld vacuum deals across November.
Watch for exclusive Dyson Black Friday vacuum deals and brand-direct Shark drops, plus retailer bundles with extra heads and pet tools.
What vacuum cleaner deals went live on Black Friday 2024?
Last year, Dyson and Shark led the way with some of the deepest discounts, while robot models surged thanks to the introduction of mapping and self-emptying features, which received significant price cuts.
Cordless sticks were the hot ticket, and bundles with pet tools sold out first.
Expect similar patterns in 2025: quick sellouts on hero models, competitive price matching, and fresh waves of stock arriving over the weekend.
Plan for fast decisions on top specs and colours.
When is Cyber Monday 2025, and are vacuum cleaner retailers taking part?
It’s the finale to the weekend, often with new promos or deeper cuts rather than just leftovers.
You can follow our deals stream at our Cyber Monday hub, and expect second-chance drops on things like Dyson Black Friday vacuum deals, Black Friday Shark vacuum deals and Miele vacuum deals across major retailers and brand sites.
How much does vacuum cleaner shipping cost?
Most big retailers offer free standard delivery once you cross a low threshold (which vacuums usually do).
Expect optional upgrades—such as next-day, weekend, or timed slots—for an extra fee, typically a small add-on.
Click & Collect can be the cheapest, fastest route if the stock’s local.
Members (e.g., Prime) often receive faster delivery as a standard feature.
Always compare the total price, including delivery, rather than just the product price.
More Black Friday Appliance Deals
When will the Black Friday vacuum cleaner deals start in 2025?
Early birds will see Black Friday vacuum deals in late October, with larger waves of deals through November.
Amazon, Argos, John Lewis, AO, and Currys typically ramp up their Black Friday vacuum cleaner promotions the week of Black Friday, then refresh them for Cyber Monday.
Hero models sell out within hours. If you spot a target price on Dyson or Shark early, grab it—waiting for an extra fiver off is how you miss it.
What vacuum cleaner should I buy?
Match the machine to your home.
Pets and carpets? Prioritise strong suction, anti-hair-wrap tech and motorised pet tools.
Big spaces? Consider battery life, swappable batteries, and larger bins.
Time-poor? Consider robots with reliable mapping.
On a budget or in small flats? Lightweight sticks or handheld vacuum deals shine.
What is the best cordless vacuum cleaner?
“Best” depends on the floor type, pets, and runtime needs.
Expect strong cordless vacuum deals on Shark and Dyson products during the event, as well as value contenders that undercut the competition on bundles and spare batteries.
Track attachments you’ll actually use—crevice, mini-motorised pet tools, soft rollers—so you’re comparing like-for-like across retailers.
Entry-level sticks and compact cylinders often dip further during sales events like Black Friday and Amazon Prime Day, and even premium brands occasionally offer sharp bundle promotions.
Set alerts, check warranty terms on refurbished items, and be flexible with colour to score the best price.
Which is the best robot vacuum cleaner to buy?
For most busy homes, I’d recommend the iRobot Roomba i5+: self-emptying, smart mapping technology, combined vacuuming and mopping capabilities, easy setup, and a stylish design.
After a cheaper workhorse? The Eufy Robovac G30 delivers powerful suction, whisper-quiet operation, and impressive battery stamina.
Prioritise LiDAR mapping, auto-empty docks, and low profiles if you’ve got pet hair, high-traffic hallways and sofa legs to dodge.
Watch for Black Friday bundles with spare brushes and filters—often the smarter buy than chasing headline suction numbers.
Should I wait for Black Friday to buy a vacuum?
If you can wait, it’s worth it: Black Friday vacuum deals are typically the best of the year, particularly for brands like Dyson and Shark.
However, the best prices can sometimes appear early, as early as late October.
If you spot a deal that reaches a genuine low, don’t hesitate to take advantage of it.
Also, keep an eye on Black Friday robot vacuum deals and handheld vacuum deals, and set alerts so you don’t miss out on any offerings.
Is it better to buy a vacuum cleaner on Black Friday or Cyber Monday?
If you want the best shot at a flagship Dyson/Shark at a record price, Black Friday typically wins on big‑ticket discounts and stock breadth across retailers.
Cyber Monday is no afterthought: online‑only promos often appear, and some deals deepen—particularly on smart/robot vacs and bundles.
My rule: set a target price, track early, and buy the moment it hits during Black Friday—don’t wait and risk sellouts.
If it doesn’t drop, watch Cyber Monday for a second swing.
Find your favourite brand’s Black Friday deals in our A-Z directory
Bob Anderson — physician, pilot, executive — is nothing if not a perfectionist.
He’s owned his fair share of recreational vehicles and disliked each of them uniquely. There was the Earth Roamer (anemic axles, in his opinion), the $350,000 Newmar land yacht (complex emissions technology) and a 25-foot Airstream trailer (lots of propane). Yet Anderson, 81, keeps buying camping rigs. And he’s hoping the next one will be his last.
This fall, he’ll take delivery of a Lightship AE.1 Cosmos, an RV as similar to an Airstream as a Tesla Roadster is to a Pontiac Firebird.
What separates the Lightship from the rest of Anderson’s letdowns is its propulsion system and design: The rig has two electric motors, so it can drive itself while hitched to the vehicle towing it, and the entire top half tucks down for better aerodynamics while underway. With these two hacks, the vehicle towing the Lightship will feel virtually no weight most of the time. On the interstate, Anderson’s hybrid pickup truck will theoretically get its standard 27 miles per gallon, rather than the 12.5 miles it manages with the Airstream behind it.
“It’s going to change everything in the RV world,” Anderson says.
This year may well be an inflection point for the RV industry, when serious alternatives are emerging to the gas-guzzling rigs chugging between national parks.
In addition to the Lightship, the Pebble Flow — another towable camper with an electric drivetrain — will hit the road. Meanwhile, a host of electric vans will finally be stamped out in high volumes, most notably Volkswagen’s ID. Buzz , the latest iteration of the brand’s storied bus. Even incumbent Thor Inc., which is to RVs what Apple is to smartphones, is putting the final touches on its first hybrid rig.
“It’s certainly a huge milestone,” says McKay Featherstone, head of global innovation at Thor Inc. “People can finally go and buy these things and experience this technology.”
Last year, Americans bought 637,000 RVs, many of which burned a gallon of gas every six to 15 miles traveled. These rigs will stay on the road for about 200,000 miles, belching copious amounts of carbon dioxide.
Electric RVs promise to make the summer road trip vastly cleaner, more convenient and quiet.
Among other things, electric models will help the RV industry shake off what the Recreational Vehicle Industry Association refers to as a “Covid hangover.” The group is forecasting a slight increase in total US sales this year, in part because of the growing number of electric options.
“The vibes, if you will, are good,” says spokeswoman Monika Geraci. “And there does seem to be an appetite there.”
In a Venn diagram of folks who love camping and folks who are climate-concerned, there’s quite a bit of overlap. That may partially explain why, of the roughly 58 million American households that go camping every year, only 12 million of them own an RV.
Yet it’s not like RV drivers don’t care about the climate. “Obviously, these people love the outdoors,” explains Featherstone at Thor, “and that does translate into people who want a lighter footprint.”
In fact, some of the same people who long avoided camping rigs and their sizable clouds of emissions are now at the helm of RV startups. These folks could never find a camper green enough for their liking, so they set out to make one.
Lightship was launched by two Tesla alumni after a disappointing RV journey. Co-founder Toby Kraus says the company is getting plenty of interest from RV newbies who strive to keep a low carbon footprint, but the company has been surprised at the number of orders from everyday drivers and who don’t care about the climate benefits.
Anderson is one of the latter: He pays little mind to his personal carbon footprint. What thrills him is the idea of spending less money on gas and having an RV that doesn’t have to churn a combustion engine to run the air conditioning and refrigerator.
In that regard, Lightspeed is borrowing a page from the Tesla playbook.
“The reason Tesla was successful is not because it was sustainable,” Kraus explains. “It’s because the product was awesome. It was clean tech by Trojan Horse.”
With the glow of ambient light tucked behind ceiling fabric, the interior of the Lightship Ae.1 feels like the first-class cabin of a commercial jet. An induction cooktop is built into the counter, a heat pump quietly cycles air and everything on the rig is controlled by an app. Lightship plans to eventually sell smaller, more affordable models, but its launch vehicle costs a heady $250,000.
The Pebble Flow parks a little further down market with its founders edition priced at $175,000. Co-founder Bingrui Yang spent much of his career working at Apple on the iPhone and, aesthetically, the rig travels the same lane. With a bed that folds up against the wall and Starlink internet service, the interior is geared for Zoom calls as much as napping in nature, reflecting the rise of remote work.
“This is the right time for this product,” Yang says.
The market is also shifting in ways that may further favor electric models. Since 2021, the average age of US RV customers has dropped from 53 to 49, while the share of the market making more than $100,000 a year climbed from 29% to 33%.
“It’s not your grandma and grandpa anymore,” Geraci says. “It’s a different consumer, and they’re looking for more technology.”
While expensive, the new electric towables change the standard RV economics; because they can propel themselves much of the time, they can be towed with less horsepower and pair nicely with electric vehicles, machines for which towing has been Kryptonite due to range issues.
There are also alternatives on the horizon to the hulking, three-bedroom motor coach. These vehicles make up one out of every 10 RVs sold, yet they get some of the worst gas mileage of any non-commercial vehicle, hoovering up a gallon of gas every six or seven miles.
Thor is putting the finishing touches on a hybrid vehicle — dubbed simply “Test Vehicle” — that doesn’t look markedly different from its gas-burning products. But refinements in design make it about 20% more aerodynamic. The 210 kilowatt-hours of battery power under the hood along with a gas generator for charging give it somewhere around 500 miles of range.
On long trips, it will burn roughly half as much fuel as a similar-sized internal combustion rig and offer even better range on short jaunts. Thor will start taking orders in the fall and producing the vehicles by year-end.
Still, there’s a huge chunk of the camper market for whom even a towable is too much. Last year, Americans bought 8,300 camper vans as well as an untold number converted minivans and commercial vans to handle s’mores and sleeping duty.
These folks also have a bevy of new choices. In the first half of the year, Americans bought 2,500 ID.Buzzes. Many of those rigs will be pressed into minimalist camping service, and aftermarket shops are helping kit them out.
That includes Peace Vans in Seattle, which counts both Macklemore and Pearl Jam drummer Matt Cameron as clients. For the Buzz, the company built three different camping configurations. Owner Harley Stitner expects to complete about 1,000 retrofits in the next few years.
Sam Shapiro launched Grounded RVs after six months on the road in 2020 en route to a job at SpaceX. “Before that, I don’t think I’d ever even been in an RV,” he says. “There’s this irony of having this experience to embrace nature, yet you’re sitting there at a campground running a combustion engine, creating exhaust, making noise.”
At its factory in Detroit, Grounded is essentially taking the chassis of an electric General Motors BrightDrop van, topping it with the shell of a Class B motorhome and adding its own solar array and battery management software. The rigs can travel about 300 miles on a charge. As with other electric campers, buyers will pay a premium: $195,000, nearly double what a gas-burning rig of the same size runs.
Last year, Grounded shipped 15 of its machines; this year, it’s aiming for 50. Roughly half of Grounded customers are RV rookies.
“They’ve been waiting for something like this to come along,” Shapiro says. “So many of our customers have said they never want to own a gas-powered vehicle again.”
The beach has been praised for its five miles of sandy shoreline and fascinating rock pools – and travellers who visit say it’s classier than most other beaches around
Filey Beach is located in North Yorkshire
Filey Beach has been crowned Yorkshire’s finest stretch of coastline by TripAdvisor, with visitors declaring it ’90 per cent classier than other beaches’ in the UK.
Nestled between Scarborough and Bridlington in North Yorkshire, this coastal gem boasts five miles of golden sandy shoreline. The beach also features a historic promenade, a sculpture trail and the fascinating Filey Brigg area, where visitors can discover rock pools.
It achieved an impressive 4.7 out of 5 rating on the travel website, outshining both Scarborough and Whitby beaches, which secured second and third place respectively. This triumph comes following feedback from 2,646 holidaymakers.
Filey is known for being a quieter option on the Yorkshire coastline(Image: No credit)
Visitor The Codnore Traveller declared: “Filey as a seaside town is infinitely more classy than about 90% of all other UK seaside towns, and so it is little wonder that Filey Beach is one of the nicest in the country.
“Bookended by Filey Brigg on one side and Bempton Cliffs on the other, Filey Beach comprises 5 miles of clean, unadulterated beach that can be enjoyed by young and old alike. This Beach is clean, and when I say clean, I mean CLEAN.”
Yorkshire Live reports that Michael Scott said: “I asked several local people what I could do in Filey. They all answered ‘go to the beach’. So, on a gloriously sunny May day, I took the train from Scarborough and cycled the half mile or so from the station downhill on a very bumpy cobbled street to the seaside.
“Wow! The beach stretched for miles, a huge expanse of beautiful hard-packed sand. Filey is so much quieter than Scarborough, and I must confess, much more to my taste. There was so much space that people had vast areas to play football, fly kites, and to sit quietly without any interference from anybody else.
“Withlassy sculptures on the wide prom and lots of uncommercialised areas, I must confess Filey quickly became a favourite. I will return.”
Tourists enjoying the June sunshine in Filey(Image: North Yorkshire Weather Updates)
Helen H stated: “Filey has one of the best beaches on this stretch of the coast in my opinion. And today we walked down to Coble landing to the beach this way. This stretch is used for a multitude of reasons: dog-walkers, surfers, fishermen and visitors.
“There are a selection of cafes, restaurants, bars and shops for holidaymakers wanting bucket and spades, and everything else needed for the perfect day on the beach.”
Munchmunchtime4lunch commented: “Beach is lovely- sandy- designated dog areas. Lovely fish and chips place at the top of the beach (one portion of chips and scampi between 3 of us was enough to stop the hunger pangs- £12). The cook to order so you will have to wait.
“There was a place that sold ice cream and drinks and beach stuff (very busy) including some doggy ice cream for dogs (we don’t have a dog but lots of people here did). Lovely beach- would recommend.”