Bradt Isle of Wight (Slow Travel) Guidebook

by Mark Rowe 

Slow Isle of Wight travel guide – holiday advice and tourist information covering walking, wildlife, birdwatching, accommodation, restaurants, beaches, food and festivals. Thorough coverage, including Tennyson Down, Sandown Bay, Farringford, Compton Down, Bembridge, Ventnor, fossil hunting and St Catherine’s Oratory.

Published:  25th Mar 2022
Size:  130 X 198 mm
Edition:  1
Number of pages:  312
Format AvailableQuantityPrice
Paperback
ISBN: 9781784777968
In stock
£15.99
ebook Glassboxx
ISBN: 9781804690185
£13.99

Bradt Isle of Wight Guide

This Bradt Isle of Wight guidebook has practical information, descriptive detail, anecdotes and insider tips to help you make the most of your trip.

About this guide to the Isle of Wight

This Bradt Isle of Wight guidebook forms part of Bradt’s top-selling, award-winning series of Slow travel guides to UK regions. Written by expert author and journalist Mark Rowe, who has visited the island over 30 times since first spending childhood holidays there, it is the perfect companion to help you get the most out of your visit, replete with not just all the practical information you could need, but also all the descriptive detail, anecdote and insider tips to make time spent there truly enjoyable and memorable.

The Isle of Wight is an island that is astonishingly – and unexpectedly – rich in food producers, wildlife, natural beauty, history, archaeology and dramatic landscapes. This is all the more remarkable for it being so close to the densely populated southern edges of England. At just 25 miles x 13 miles, in no other equivalent-sized area of Britain is there such a variety of landscapes (downland, estuaries, hills, saltmarshes, meadows, riverine, beach) or such a concentration of food producers (50+ independents at the last count). Here there is a real Island culture, a creative spirit that is quite quirky and independent.

Bradt’s Isle of Wight includes where to go to see red squirrels, where to hire e-bikes, where to go foraging and where is best for families. It also covers historic and present quirks, curiosities and attractions, including Jimi Hendrix’s unusual love affair with the island, a day in the life of a ferry master, tree climbing, World War II history, night-time wildlife, the annual walk at low tide to explore the wildlife underneath Ryde’s grand Victorian pier, the island’s award-winning wines and its dinosaur fossil-rich beaches – of which it has more than anywhere else in the UK!

With 20 maps, including regional, walking and cycling maps, you’ll be well placed to navigate your way from one point of interest to another. Whatever your interest, this Bradt Isle of Wight guidebook will help you to plan and enjoy a visit to remember.

Before ordering ebooks from us, please check out our ebook information.

Contents

GOING SLOW ON THE ISLE OF WIGHT

1 YARMOUTH & THE NORTHWEST

2 COWES, RYDE & THE NORTHEAST

3 TENNYSON DOWN & THE SOUTHWEST

4 THE SOUTH

5 NEWPORT & AROUND

6 SANDOWN, SHANKLIN & THE EAST

ACCOMMODATION
INDEX

About the author

Mark Rowe is a wildlife and outdoors journalist with 20+ years’ experience who has visited the Isle of Wight more than 30 times over the years, first as a teenager, then as a walker and birdwatcher, now as a parent. He knows the island inside out and feels strongly that it has a great deal to offer a wide range of visitors interested in food, wildlife and stunning coastal landscapes, and much more besides. He has an eye for detail and delights in the quirky and unusual side of Island life, which is very much part of an experience of visiting. He is also the author of the online Slow Wight Travel Guide.

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