Back Roads Great Britain (Eyewitness Travel Back Roads)

(Tina Meador) #1

DRIVE 9: The Garden of England 105


Eat and Drink: inexpensive, under £25; moderate, £25–£50; expensive, over £50

EAT AND DRINK

RYE
Webbes at the Fish Cafe moderate
The best seafood restaurant in town –
try the steamed selection of fish with
shellfish – also serves meat dishes, too.
Tower Street, TN31 7AT; 01797 222 226;
http://www.thefishcafe.co.uk
AROUND RYE HARBOUR
The Tea Tree inexpensive
This café-restaurant serves a wide range
of wholesome snacks and daily specials
12 High St, Winchelsea, TN36 4EA (6
km/3 miles on A259); 01797 226 102
AROUND TENTERDEN
West House moderate
Eat Romney lamb and crème brulée
with rhubarb at this excellent Michelin-
starred restaurant, on the road to
Sissinghurst, in the centre of the village.
28 High St, Biddenden, TN27 8AH;
01580 291 341; http://www.thewesthouse
restaurant.co.uk; closed Mon

Above Camber Sands has seven miles of
award-winning dune-backed beach

roundabout, and take the first exit
past the Bridge Inn. Then, turn first
left up the steep Strand Hill under
Strand Gate into Winchelsea^3.
Overlooking the wetlands and sea
below, Winchelsea is laid out in the
manner of a medieval Bastide town
(from Southwest France) – on a grid
pattern divided into quarters with
wide streets. With little modern
development, it feels as if nothing has
changed since it was first designed by
Edward I in 1288, following a series of
storms in which Old Winchelsea all
but disappeared. At the town’s centre
is the large Church of St Thomas the
Martyr. Half ruined, its great chancel
now serves as the nave, with brilliant
stained-glass windows, including one
to the victims of the 1928 Rye lifeboat
disaster. A feature of Winchelsea’s
houses is their enormous cellars: look
out for the stone steps leading to
these vaulted undercrofts where wine
was stored; tours are arranged at
weekends in summer (www.
winchelsea.net). The town, which is not
big enough to get lost in, merits a
wander and offers several places to
stop for refreshments or a cream tea.
Return down to the roundabout
and back down Sea Road. Past the
Castle Farm barns, just after the
footpath begins, follow the signs left,
along the track to Camber Castle 4 ,
a ruined 16th-century fort. Take the
path forking right that skirts the Castle
Water. This is another great spot for


seeing more birdlife. Follow the path
sharp left towards the road, then right,
between the ponds and back onto
the road. Turn right here back to the
car park by the Martello Tower 5 ,
one of a series of 74 bastions built
along the south coast between 1805–
08 during the Napoleonic Wars.
ª Return to Rye, take A268 through
the town centre, forking right onto
B2082 to Tenterden. Park free for 2 hours
at the supermarket just before town.

9 Tenterden
Kent; TN30 6AN
On the road to town, after a series of
sharp bends, stop at Smallhythe Place
(open Sat–Wed; weekends only, in winter),
home of the actress Ellen Terry (1847–
1928). Dating from the 16th century,
when Smallhythe was a centre for
shipbuilding, this pretty half-timbered
house and cottage garden was the
actress’s home for nearly 30 years.
Also on the way, look out for Chapel
Down Vineyard (with free tastings),
and Morgew Park Farm selling organic
potatoes from their honesty stall.
Antiques shops in Tenterden are
open at weekends and the high street
is ideal for browsing. Visit the small
local museum and step back in time
at the Kent & Sussex Light Railway
Station (www.kesr.org.uk) which runs
steam and classic trains to Bodiam.
ª Drive through Tenterden turning
left on the A28, signed to Ashford, then
forking left on the A262 to Sissinghurst.

Below The restored Kent & Sussex Light Railway
Station, Tenterden

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