Related links:

Reviews | Reports | Destinations | Travel

BOOK BUCKINGHAMSHIRE HOTELS

Join in

Send page to a friend

Buckinghamshire Travel Tips

Help other visitors to Buckinghamshire - email us your own travel tips

Buckingham

What a great place!Had lunch at Almaries tucked away down a side walk.Very friendly and great food.Coffee Fantastic - Jo

Buckingham Market Days: Tuesday and Saturday - well worth a visit - Elias

Buckingham Town Details

Marlow

Marlow is a fascinating little town with much to interest the traveller in its mixture of the old and new. In the High Street there are many old houses, but its most famous feature is the Suspension Bridge, built in 1831. Jerome K Jerome wrote much of Three Men in a Boat in the Two Brewers Inn in St Peter's Street, and Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein in a house in West Street in 1817. The town contains many fine Georgian houses and riverside walks, and is well worth exploring on foot

Marlow Town Details

Milton Keynes

The Xscape leisure centre is great! It has a real snow indoor slope for skiing and snowboarding, indoor rock climbing and plenty of restaurants and shops but avoid the Cineworld cinema there - the staff are totally incompetent (one lad took 25 minutes to make an icecream milkshake and still didn’t get it right) plus it is not at all disabled friendly. Mark - visitor.

Great shopping centre fulfilling all Christmas shopping needs but the grid work street system is too samey with too many roundabouts and very little distinctive landmarks so is frustrating to drive around (best to stick to public transport). Kev - visitor.

Milton Keynes Town Details

Buckinghamshire County Page | Buckinghamshire Attractions| More Tips

Recommended Books:

A Picture of Britain
A Picture of Britain
Ashes Fever
Ashes Fever
Coast
Coast
Churchill
Churchill

Brit Quote:
Great things are done when men and mountains meet. - William Blake
More Quotes

On this day:
Benjamin Franklin Arrives in London - 1724, First Bomb Dropped on English Soil - 1914
More dates from British history

click here to view all the British counties

County Pages