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Wool Town Kersey and The Splash with Suffolk Pink houses

_Why Suffolk is Cotswolds-by-the-Coast

Suffolk has everything The Cotswolds has, with added sea and beaches

If you’ve visited the Cotswolds you’ll know it’s a place of Farrow & Ball paint, Chelsea Tractors, expensive homes for wealthy Londoners and is very dog-friendly. And so is Suffolk! In fact, we think our wonderful East Anglian county has everything that the land-locked Cotswolds have, with one added extra – Suffolk is by the sea!

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Wool Town Clare

To be fair, Farrow & Ball’s Sudbury Yellow No 51 might not be named after the Suffolk market town that’s home to Gainsborough’s House, birthplace of the acclaimed British painter, but if F&B do want inspiration from this neck of the woods, they could do worse than look at Suffolk Pink, our own paint from medieval times that’s a concoction of white limewash and pigs’ blood and which you’ll see on wonky timber-framed houses in quaint villages all over the county.

Quaint villages are something that the Cotwolds and Suffolk have in common, both a result of the prosperous wool trade (Cotswold means sheep pen on the hill) that ended when the Industrial Revolution took the textile trade to the north.

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Half-timbered house in Wool Town Lavenham

A legacy of those times are our marvellous ‘Wool churches’, included in the total of more than 500 medieval churches, the second largest concentration in the world after neighbouring Norfolk. Suffolk also has its beautiful wool towns, not least Lavenham, which was later used as a location for Harry Potter films (Potter was also filmed in Gloucester, in the Cotswolds).

Where are movie and TV film locations in Suffolk

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Distillery tour at Adnams, Southwold

Suffolk has two National Landscapes to the Cotswolds’ one: we have Dedham Vale, inspiration for famous British painter John Constable (The Hay Wain was painted at Flatford Mill), and Suffolk Coast and Heaths, which, unlike the Cotswolds, is next to the sea, so can offer low cliffs, lovely estuaries that can only be crossed by ferry, and fabulous sandy beaches at sleepy Walberswick, bright and breezy Felixstowe and genteel Southwold with its fabulous Adnams’ Brewery and Distillery (and popular tours) and working lighthouse. Aldeburgh, just down the coast, isn’t known as ‘Islington-on-Sea’ for nothing!

Talking of estuaries, in the shadow of the Orwell bridge on that estuary you’ll find The Suffolk Food Hall, our equivalent of the famous Cotswolds’ Daylesford Farm Shop.

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Carlton Marshes

Both areas have gently rolling countryside, and while the Cotswolds have the meadows of the upper Thames, Suffolk has coastal marshes at Carlton near Lowestoft, Dunwich and Snape Maltings.

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Angel Hill, Bury St Edmunds

Like the Cotswolds, the Romans settled in Suffolk, but Suffolk was also a homestead for the Anglo Saxons, including at Sutton Hoo, famed for the burial ship and treasure of King Raedwald. Another Suffolk Saxon King, Edmund, was martyred by the Vikings and became the first patron saint of England. He is best remembered at bustling but gentle Bury St Edmunds, which could easily be mistaken for a Cotswolds market town.

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Riverside market town Beccles

Suffolk is punctuated with beautiful gardens, historical and lively market towns such as Georgian riverside Beccles, picturesque villages such as Clare and Kelsey, and splendid stately homes such as Ickworth House with its Italianate Rotunda and moated Tudor Kentwell.

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RSPB Minsmere

Like the Cotswolds, Suffolk has famous reserves for wildlife and birdwatching, such as Suffolk Wildlife Trust’s Carlton Marshes and RSPB’s Minsmere, breath-taking landscapes that are ideal for walking and cycling, and an arty vibe with galleries, exhibitions and festivals.

Unsurprisingly, this landscape provides a rich harvest that can be enjoyed in gastro pubs, country inns, and restaurants in chic hotels as well as characterful cafes. Except, again, Suffolk has its own superb seafood and shellfish that can be enjoyed along the 40-plus miles of coastline.

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Guildhall, Lavenham

On pubs, both the Cotswolds and Suffolk are renowned for them. Except Suffolk’s beer is better, especially the afore-mentioned Adnams and St Peter’s. Oh, and if The Cotswolds has the amazing Fleece Inn at Bretforton, owned by the National Trust, then Suffolk has The King’s Head/Low House at Laxfield, an ancient wood-panelled watering hole that doesn’t have a bar – you order at a back room that’s full of fresh barrels of guest beers.

And talking of hotels, there’s great accommodation in Suffolk – spa hotels, country house hotels, boutique hotels, charming B&Bs, glampsites and self-catering cottages.

So, is that enough to win you over? Suffolk. Just like the Cotswolds. With added Coast. And perhaps a little less pretentious. And better beer and seafood. You’ll love it. At any time of the year.

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