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Green Fees only £20
Valid until 1st April 2005, Monday to Friday after 11am. Subject to availability.
Handicap certificate required.
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Midweek Winter breaks £49.50 per person per night. Available until 24th February 2005 for a minimum of two nights excluding Friday and Saturday nights and the period 23rd December to 2nd January 2005. Includes dinner, bed & breakfast and golf. Single supplement £30 per night. |
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The hours fly by where time stood still
Imagine a place which effortlessly blends the finest traditions of the past with the best of the new. Where modern-day pressures seem light years away, yet there is so much to enjoy. The choice is endless. An invigorating round of golf, or stimulating set of tennis perhaps? Or a cycle along the shore, rounding off a glorious day with fines wine, best Suffolk ale and first-rate fare.
Thorpeness is unique among holiday villages in the British Isles and has stood the test of time since G.S. Ogilvie set out his holiday paradise in the Suffolk dunes nearly a century ago. The Golf Club, which has a challenging 18 holes links course laid out by James Braid in 1922 and now incorporates a hotel and Country Club, has managed to retain its period charm while offering modern-day facilities.
The hotel has 30 well decorated en-suite rooms, with some having views over the Meare and gardens. There are also two friendly bars serving light lunches, drawing room, library and snooker room. The newly refurbished restaurant offers a varied evening menu, with dishes featuring fresh local, and seasonal produce. Guests are also welcome to enjoy the tennis courts at the Country Club.
To book, simply call us on 0870 446 0352.
Click here to return to winter breaks home.
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| Thorpeness boasts excellent facilities including an 18-hole golf course, clubhouse, a snooker room and a superb restaurant overlooking the third tee. Guests are also welcome to enjoy the tennis courts and friendly bar at the nearby Country Club. |
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| Glencairn Ogilvie set out his holiday paradise among the purple heather and golden gorse of the Suffolk wolds. His grand plan was to provide healthy, family fun free from piers and promenades and by the 1930's the country club, Golf Club, and Meare had appeared. |
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