Arrival in England

by | Oct 7, 2022 | Europe, United Kingdom | 0 comments

After a very uncomplicated ferry crossing, we arrive well on English soil. Both the port in Calais and the one in Dover are super organized and well signposted. Since we take the ferry on a Wednesday during the week and relatively early in the morning, it has mainly trucks on the ship beside us. When driving down from the ferry we feel quite tiny between all the big and long trucks, even though we are not a small bus ourselves.

BritStops

In England, wild camping is not generally prohibited, but it is still more difficult than in many other European countries, as virtually every piece of land is privately owned. The law states that you must ask the owner of the land. However, it is often difficult to find the owner.

With BritStops there is a great alternative. BritStops is an association of local pubs, wineries, farms, etc. that each offer a pitch for a maximum of 24h. You buy a one-time book with a sticker for the windshield for 28 pounds and can stay for free on over 1’100 such BritStops. Of course, the operators are happy if you buy something in their farm stores or treat yourself to a beer in the pub, but generally the pitches are free.

Unfortunately, the book is hard to be delivered to Switzerland at the moment. Therefore, we are sent to a pub, which also offers a BritStop, in Folkestone right next to Dover, where we can buy the book.

Folkestone

We wouldn’t have visited Folkestone at all if we weren’t here for the BritStop book. However, Folkestone is so typically English and such a stark contrast to the places in northern France that we fall in love with the town and feel even more encouraged in the decision to come to the UK.

Here we also directly buy a SIM card with data volume so that we are online in the UK. The internet makes things much easier.

On the ferry, Paddy has already made himself smart about the providers. We find, thanks to Maps.me (offline map app), an EE store relatively quickly, where we get a SIM with 100GB data for 30 pounds. The data we do not use up within a month, we can transfer to the next. We think this is a really fair offer, especially since we are used to the prices in Switzerland.

St. Margaret

From a local we get the tip to visit the St. Margaret Cliff. From experience we know that tips from locals are either super good or you can find a local store of an aunt / uncle who wants to sell us expensive tourist junk. This tip belongs to the former category!

The white chalk cliffs are really impressive and there are several trails that invite you to a leisurely walk. We could admire the cliffs already from the ferry, now we stand on them.

This is a detour that is worthwhile and we highly recommend it to you.

Do you like our contribution to the travel community?

If you like our blog and you would like to read and see more of us, we would be very happy if you would like to support us. Often we sit for hours in coffee shops, write our blog, sort out pictures and edit them. That’s quite a large number of coffees together. Maybe you would like to buy us one or two?

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About us

We are Paddy and Mimi, a travel-hungry couple from tiny Switzerland in the middle of Europe. We call ourselves slow travelers, because we like to spend enough time in one place or country. Therefore we don’t only visit the typical sights but also get to know the culture of the respective country.

Our current location:

Punta Arenas, Chile

Our world map

Might interest you too:

Patagonia Perito Moreno National Park

Patagonia Perito Moreno National Park

The name of this national park is somewhat confusing for us. There is a very well-known glacier in Argentina, Perito Moreno, and a lesser-known Perito Moreno National Park. We are now visiting Perito Moreno National Park, which is not home to the well-known Perito...

Patagonia – Marble Caves

Patagonia – Marble Caves

As the Patagonia region is really big, we are publishing the next highlights straight away. Due to the particularly harsh climate, there are many natural attractions that are simply worth seeing and reporting on. This blog post is about exciting marble formations on...

Patagonien – Puerto Montt to Río Tranquilo

Patagonien – Puerto Montt to Río Tranquilo

We have finally arrived in Patagonia. Still more in the northern part but nevertheless in the middle of Patagonia on the Chilean side. Now we are following Ruta 7 instead of Ruta 5 as the main route further south. The section of Ruta 7 from Puerto Montt is also known...

Our most popular articles

Northern Ruta 40

Northern Ruta 40

After a short time in the north of Chile, we cross over into Argentina. We drive over the Paso de Jama, the Jama Pass, and continue to be impressed by the beautiful, barren landscape. On this pass road we have a few smaller lagoons in front of us, more impressions...

Potosí

Potosí

Bolivia comes up with the next somewhat controversial item on the program. We drive our campervan Ben to Potosí, the historic silver capital of the world. We want to learn about the history of silver in connection with Potosí. Not only can we visit a museum, but we...

Pantanal

Pantanal

Next on our South America trip we visit a beautiful region with an extremely dense wildlife: The Pantanal in Brazil. The name sounds spectacular and exotic to us but translated from Portuguese it just means swamp or swamp region, derived from pântano. It is the...