best camping site kent
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cokercoker
3 friends and I are looking to camp somewhere this week within a couple of hours of our home in essex, we are thinking Kent, sussex, norfolk. The catch is we want to go somewhere we can listen to music and make a bit of noise without disturbing families. Any ideas?
Answer
There is a camp site that has been closed and is just now re-opening. The owner, Steve Christy, welcomes teen groups and is more than understanding with late night noise. Its called, Camp Crystal Lake. Beautiful place, but struggling financially. Years ago, it got a bad rap when a local mom, Pamela Voorhees lost her son in a boating accident. She blamed the counselors and was instrumental in closing this place down. Now, it is just a place with some great camp sites and some run down cabins you can rent cheap. I'm sure that Steve would be willing to offer a free stay in trade for word of mouth. He really wants to get this property back to positive income flow. The local's and their superstitions have been quite the drag. They have created some ridiculus stories about the horrible accident. Apparently, the body of Pam's son, Jason, has never been found.
Good luck!
What are some good places to visit for World War 2 history?
Alex D
I want to travel Europe some day and want to know what are some good World War 2 sites to visit. Places other than Normandy/Omaha Beach.
Answer
In addition to Normandy battlefields, there is:
â¢Hamm (Luxembourg)
Visit the American Military Cemetery, where General Patton is buried.
â¢Bastogne (Belgium)
This is the center of the Battle of the Bulge, the largest land battle of World War II. It was also the largest battle ever fought by the American Army.
1.Visit the site, near Malmedy, where Nazi troops massacred 85 American prisoners.
2.Visit the Battle of the Bulge Museum at Diekirch.
â¢Hürtgen Forest (Germany)
The battle of the Hürtgen Forest, lasting from September, 1944, to February, 1945, was one of the worst battles ever experienced by the American Army.
Walk in the forest near Kommerscheidt, reflecting back on that horrible time in the autumn of 1944 when thousands of American soldiers became casualties among the firs of the black Hürtgen Forest.
â¢Remagen (Germany)
The capture of the bridge at Remagen enabled thousands of American troops to cross the Rhine âwith dry feet.â
1.Visit the site of Ludendorff Bridge and see the imposing towers that still stand today.
2.Visit the small museum inside the towers on the West Bank.
These were the major WWII "battlefields". Other places of interest include:
â¢Holocaust Memorials:
Of the countless concentration camps, Dachau , just outside of Munich, is most visited. Auschwitz-Birkenau (near Kraków), Mauthausen (between Vienna and Salzburg), and TerezÃn (near Prague) are more powerful and less touristed.
In Amsterdam, Anne Frank's House museum tells the story of a young girl who lived through it and died from it.
â¢Nazi-related Sites and Museums (Germany) :
-Munich
1.The Munich City Museum traces the origin and development of Nazism.
2.To uncover Nazi sites in Munich, take the "Hitler and the Third Reich" walking tour by Radius Tours (www.radiusmunich.com).
-Berlin
1.Most original Nazi sites are hidden. To help uncover them, take the "Infamous Third Reich Sites" walking tour by Berlin Walks (www.berlinwalks.com).
2.The Topography of Terror exhibit illustrates SS tactics.
3.Käthe Kollwitz Museum is filled with art inspired by the horrors of Berlin's Nazi experience.
4.In nearby Wannsee (near Potsdam), you can tour the house where Hitler's cronies came up with the "Final Solution" of the Holocaust.
5.In front of the glass-domed Reichstag is a row of slate slabs embedded in the ground, memorializing the 96 politicians who were persecuted and murdered because their politics didn't agree with Chancellor Hitler's.
6.Plötzensee Prison, where Nazi enemies were imprisoned and executed (www.gedenkstaette-ploetzensee.de).
-Nürnberg
1.The Rally Grounds, where the the ghosts of Hitler's showy propaganda rallies still rustle.
2. Nazi Documentation Center, with a "Fascination and Terror" exhibit that examines the causes and consequences of the Nazi phenomenon (www.museen.nuernberg.de).
-Berchtesgaden
1.The town of Berchtesgaden, near the Austrian border, is any German's choice for a great mountain hideaway â including Hitler's. Hitler's famous Eagle's Nest, designed as a retreat for diplomatic meetings, towers high above Obersalzberg near Berchtesgaden.
2.For more substance visit the nearby Nazi Documentation Center, including a visit to the bunkers that burrow into the mountainside.
-Trier
Westwall Museum, with tourable bunkers that made up part of the Nazis' supposedly impenetrable western fortification.
â¢Other Interesting Sites and Museums:
1.Torgau (Germany)
Visit the meeting site and small museum commemorating the Russian - American link-up of armies.
2.Imperial War Museum (London, England)
This museum features military vehicles, weapons, war memorabilia of 20th century and later conflicts.
3.Churchill Museum and Cabinet War Rooms (London, England)
Located in the bunker which was operational nerve centre of the British government during World War 2.
4.Dover Castle (Kent, England)
This castle was used as a base to monitor the Normandy invasion.
5.D-Day Museum (Portsmouth, England)
This museum tells the story of Operation Overlord during the Normandy D-Day landings. The museum houses the Overlord embroidery and the display involves a film show including original footage and archive film.
This is all I could come up with, after studying websites and comparing tours. These are the main attractions. I'm sure there are more. Enjoy your planning. Goodluck.
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