If you’re under 19, how do you fancy getting around North East Lincolnshire for just £1.50 a day during half term? You can buy the Holiday Rider ticket (all day travel ticket) on board any Stagecoach bus, online or on the Stagecoach app right the way through half term period from Saturday 25 May 2024 until Sunday 2 June 2024. The ticket can be used on all Stagecoach buses in the North East Lincolnshire borough. That means you could go to the beach at Cleethorpes or visit the Nature Discovery Day at the Humberston Fitties, or check out the fantastic “Our Future Starts Here” programme of events, live music, workshops and debates in Grimsby. Or for the more arty amongst you, how about a visit to the Artisan Market in Bradley or the Craft Fair in Cleethorpes? For a list of things to do, you could visit www.DiscoverNorthEastLincolnshire.co.uk and check out the events list. The Holiday Rider scheme first launched in 2012 and during that summer over 21,630 tickets were sold, equating to ...
Normal text size Larger text size Very large text size Historic buildings on Sydney Harbour could be turned into holiday rentals and hostel-type accommodation for more than 50 people under plans that have been labelled “creeping privatisation”. A new wharf at Nielsen Park and jetty at Milk Beach in Vaucluse are also proposed under a draft master plan from the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service. Former Australian Heritage Commission chairman Peter King criticised the proposed redevelopments of the Strickland Estate and Nielsen Park, calling them Airbnb-type rentals that would turn over the park to business purposes at the expense of locals and park users. Historic buildings at Nielsen Park and the Strickland Estate could be turned into holiday rentals and hostel-type accommodation for more than 50 people under a draft master plan from the NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service. Credit: Rhett Wyman The 1851 Greycliffe House in Nielsen Park is one of sev...
China says it will resume issuing passports for tourism in another big step away from anti-virus controls that isolated the country for almost three years, setting up a potential flood of Chinese going abroad for next month’s Lunar New Year holiday. The announcement Tuesday adds to abrupt changes that are rolling back some of the world’s strictest anti-virus controls as President Xi Jinping’s government tries to reverse an economic slump. Rules that confined millions of people to their homes kept China’s infection rate low but fueled public frustration and crushed economic growth. Read more: Beijing, Shanghai residents back to work as COVID outbreak continues in China Read More Beijing, Shanghai residents back to work as COVID outbreak continues in China The latest decision could send free-spending Chinese tourists to revenue-starved destinations in Asia and Europe for Lunar New Year, which begins Jan. 22 and usually is the country’s busiest travel season. But it al...
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