Flower of May Holiday Park

“A well-run, high quality family holiday park with top class facilities.” - AA Inspector
FILEY, NORTH YORKSHIRE
Our Inspector's view
Flower of May is a well-run, high quality family holiday park with top class facilities. This large, landscaped park offers a full range of recreational activities, including an indoor swimming pool, outdoor and indoor playgrounds and other sports facilities. Grass and hard pitches are available – all are on level ground and arranged in avenues screened by shrubs. Enjoy the ‘Scarborough Fair’ museum, with its collection of restored fairground attractions, including rides, organs and vintage cars. There are 4-berth and 5-berth wooden camping pods, each with a decking area. There is also a bar and entertainment complex area, a fish and chip shop and a well-stocked supermarket.
Facilities – at a glance
Dogs allowed
Electrical hook up
Entertainment
Glamping
Indoor pool
Features
- Indoor Pool
- Game Room
- Playground
- Licensed Bar
- Entertainment
- Sports field
- Launderette
- Ice pack facility
- Cafe/Restaurant
- Fast food/takeaway
- BBQ
- Picnic Area
- Shop onsite
- Wifi available
- Baby bathing/changing
- Baby Care
- Calor Gas
- Camping Gaz
- Toilet fluid
- Total Touring Pitches: 300
- Total Static Pitches: 193
- Caravan Pitches Available
- Motorhome Pitches Available
- Tent Pitches Available
Also in the area
About the area
Discover North Yorkshire
North Yorkshire, with its two National Parks and two designated Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty, is England’s largest county and one of the most rural. This is prime walking country, from the heather-clad heights of the North York Moors to the limestone country that is so typical of the Yorkshire Dales – a place of contrasts and discoveries, of history and legend.
The coastline offers its own treasures, from the fishing villages of Staithes and Robin Hood Bay to Scarborough, one time Regency spa and Victorian bathing resort. In the 1890s, the quaint but bustling town of Whitby provided inspiration for Bram Stoker, who set much of his novel, Dracula, in the town. Wizarding enthusiasts head to the village of Goathland, which is the setting for the Hogwarts Express stop at Hogsmeade station in the Harry Potter films.
York is a city of immense historical significance. It was capital of the British province under the Romans in AD 71, a Viking settlement in the 10th century, and in the Middle Ages its prosperity depended on the wool trade. Its city walls date from the 14th century and are among the finest in Europe. However, the gothic Minster, built between 1220 and 1470, is York’s crowning glory.
Dining nearby
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