Trappers End

“Comfortable 3-bedroom house overlooking Whitstable with a garden” - VisitEngland Assessor

LOCATION

Whitstable, Kent

Official Rating
Assessed by
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Awards
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Our Inspector's view

A detached house, Trappers End sleeps 5 (with a folding bed for a 6th person) and is 1.5km from the sea overlooking Whitstable, with three bedrooms, double, twin and bunk beds, sitting-room and dining room. The bathroom has toilet, basin, and shower. There's also wi-fi, with dishwasher, cooker, microwave, washer/drier fridge and freezer. Sheets, towels, hot water and heating are included in the rent. There is a garden with patio furniture, a garage for storage and parking bay for two cars.

Trappers End
73 Saddleton Road, WHITSTABLE, Kent, CT5 4JL

Features

Rooms
  • Total units: 1
  • Maximum occupancy: 5
Children
  • Children welcome
  • Cots provided
  • High chairs
Facilities
  • Private garden
  • Lawn area
  • Garden furniture
  • BBQ on site
  • Dish washer
  • Washing machine
  • Microwave
  • Freezer
  • Sky or freeview
  • Linens provided
  • Towels provided
  • Internet
Room Rates
  • Low season minimum price: £550
  • High season minimum price: £700
Opening times
  • Open all year
  • Changeover day: saturday sunday monday tuesday wednesday thursday friday

About the area

Discover Kent

The White Cliffs of Dover are an English icon – the epitome of our island heritage and sense of nationhood. They also mark the point where the Kent Downs AONB, that great arc of chalk downland stretching from the Surrey Hills and sometimes known as ‘the Garden of England’, finally reaches the sea. This is a well-ordered and settled landscape, where chalk and greensand escarpments look down into the wooded Weald to the south.

Many historic parklands, including Knole Park and Sir Winston Churchill’s red-brick former home at Chartwell, are also worth visiting. Attractive settlements such as Charing, site of Archbishop Cranmer’s Tudor palace, and Chilham, with its magnificent half-timbered buildings and 17th-century castle built on a Norman site, can be found on the Pilgrim’s Way, the traditional route for Canterbury-bound pilgrims in the Middle Ages. 

In the nature reserves, such as the traditionally coppiced woodlands of Denge Wood and Earley Wood, and the ancient fine chalk woodland of Yockletts Bank high on the North Downs near Ashford, it is still possible to experience the atmosphere of wilderness that must have been felt by the earliest travellers along this ancient ridgeway.

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