English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Will it be tooooo cold?? will it be too dark?
If it is not worth it going up north (i live in London) this winter, could you recommend some other place in the UK thats not so cold that time of year?

i've never been to any part of the uk except london before, so give me advice!!!

2006-11-02 12:00:17 · 18 answers · asked by confundida 1 in Travel United Kingdom Other - United Kingdom

18 answers

Edinburgh is great lots of pubs, lots of restaurants and plenty to see too.

2006-11-02 12:05:43 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I live in Wales and I'm not planning to go outside from January to March. Last January I took a bin bag to the bin in a teeshirt and nearly died! Only lots of alcohol or not going outside at all can solve the problem of freezing to death in minutes here in Winter!

2006-11-02 12:18:21 · answer #2 · answered by Wattsie 3 · 1 0

Edinburgh, much more interesting than Wales. If you want to do the coastal thing as well as the new year thing then you can head up to the highlands after that.

2006-11-02 15:19:41 · answer #3 · answered by Chris H 6 · 1 0

If you mean for the 1st January new year celebrations then Edinburgh or Glasgow is the place to go but remember... Glasgow smiles better.

2006-11-02 19:48:05 · answer #4 · answered by richiesown 4 · 0 1

Edinburgh is a hub of all most readily useful points you certainly can do, see and appreciate the city, see more with hotelbye . In Edinburg you will discover great days out and get the within scoops on the most effective little-known areas waiting to be discovered. Edinburg is also for family days out to cultural pursuits. Edinburgh has lots of prime attractions to satisfy all preferences, including some of Scotland's most visited free and paid-for attractions. The city's foundation of Arthur's Seat, the Pentland Hills and Edinburgh's Waterfront make the town a remarkable place to call home your holyday.

2016-12-16 10:48:53 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The be conscious "Downtown" became coined in manhattan city in the process the 1800s and in effortless use via the 1900s. manhattan's historic city centre became on the southern end of ny island. with the aid of fact the city grew, residential aspects greater desirable to fill the north of the island. the city centre got here to be basic as "downtown" at an analogous time as the suburbs have been basic as "uptown". This utilization of "downtown" became copied in different cities in the process North usa. it is the reason that's a effortless word in American English. "Downtown" by no potential got here for use in Australia with the aid of fact British customs and history have been the main suitable impacts on language and subculture for many of its history till WW2. As Australia matured and claimed her very own independence, CBD, city centre, city (as in "going into city") grew to alter into the effortless varieties rather. Australia has had plenty greater impression from American subculture by using movies and tv now. yet "downtown" utilization has by no potential particularly taken off right here.

2016-10-03 05:36:55 · answer #6 · answered by cosco 4 · 0 0

West coast of Ireland - its warm there and I'd rate it above Edinburgh all year round.

2006-11-02 12:11:23 · answer #7 · answered by Simon K 3 · 0 1

if you've never been to scottland, i really really recommend you to go to scottland in january, espacially to highlands, you can enjoy the very impressive sight and go skiing as well. it's not only worth but over worth, as in my point of view

2006-11-02 13:32:37 · answer #8 · answered by HuCeR2212 2 · 2 0

IRELAND.

edinburgh is full of english middle class students and is as expensive as london.
wales is a ****hole and they all hate the english anyway.
ireland is more down to earth and the people are more friendly

2006-11-02 19:56:36 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

itll be cold, but edinburgh is an amazing city

2006-11-02 12:02:24 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers