Travel Secrets September - October 2015 | Page 44

the south. NewcastleGateshead is the brand name for joint promotion of culture, business and tourism in the two cities. Art collections, weekly bazaars, shopping for all budgets and tastes, the finest of restaurants and cafes, events and festivals—it all happens here. Go to the indoor Grainger Market, and you will find one of the original Marks and Spencer’s Penny Bazaar still in business (though you might not even get thoughts for a penny any more there.) Look up the Grey’s Monument in the centre of town— it’s got a statue of the reformist British Prime Minister Earl Grey atop a 130-foot column. Yes, that’s who the world famous tea is named after. Head out a few miles out of town, and you will be on the coastline. I loved the pretty town of Tynemouth with cafes such as Dil & the Bear and lovely boutique stores. The castle and the beaches where it stands are a picture of calm; it is tough to imagine this being one of the first landing points of the Vikings. One love-at-first-sight spot The villages of the Cotswolds, dotted with homes and buildings made of honey-hued Cotswolds stone. Manicured lawns, rippling streams, rolling hills, dense forests, happy cattle, bustling bazaars and cool cafes compose the Cotswolds. You cannot be blamed for thinking you have walked into a fairy tale book. One shop you fell in love with Razzberry Bazaar in Tynemouth, a small coastal town a few miles outside Newcastle. My guide, Tom, had recommended I visit it. When I asked him what they sell, he said, “Everything.” He was not wrong. It is a pretty pink shop selling… almost everything you could want to do up your home. Signs, picture frames, hangings, lights, tea cups, clocks—the list is endless, and baggage space limited to 23 kilos. Sigh! The best thing you bought on the trip A big wall clock from a weekly riverside bazaar in Newcastle for five pounds (Rs. 500)—yes, you heard that right. I asked the vendor if it works; he said, wryly, “Yes, as long as you put batteries in it.” Best meal I had freshly baked scones with jam and clotted cream, a pot of English breakfast tea, and cream cheese and cucumber sandwiches for lunch in the Cotswolds at the Tisanes Tea Room in Broadway village, on a table in the backyard. While I had many other delicious meals including at highly rated restaurants, what I had in the Cotswolds is not something you can replicate outside the UK. One truly unique experience A visit to The Beatles Story. At this Liverpool museum, you walk through the life of the city’s most famous sons. On display 44  Travel Secrets September-October 2015