MARCH OFFER! STAY 3 NIGHTS GET 4TH NIGHT FREE. OFFER VALID 10/03/23 - 13/03/23

Local Area

Two Mills is situated 1 mile away from the market town of North Walsham, an easy 2-minute drive or 20-minute walk. North Walsham is one of the largest market towns in Norfolk and is well known for its important role in the weaving trade of the Middle Ages. North Walsham is also where the English naval hero, Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson, and his brother, William, were educated at Paston Grammar School. The Market Place in the centre of town is home to a variety of shops, pubs, restaurants, cafes and take-aways. Also within easy reach of the town centre is the library, swimming pools, spacious parks including a secure dog park, a cinema, community theater and multiple supermarkets. 

To See and Do

Most Places on this list are within a 20/25 minute drive from our park 

  • The Norfolk Broads

  • The Seals on Horsey Beach

  • Day Boat Hire at Wroxham

  • Sheringham Steam Trains

  • Norwich Cathedral

  • Fresh Cromer Crab 

  • Happisburgh Lighthouse

  • Bure Valley Railway

  • Cromer Pier

  • Bacton Woods

  • Sandringham Estate

  • East Ruston Old Vicarage Coastal Gardens

  • Hoveton Hall Gardens

  • Wide open beaches of Cromer, Mundesley, Sheringham and Sea Palling to name a few.

  • Worsted Village & Start of the Weavers Way

  • Amazona Zoo


National Trust  

We are very lucky to have 4 Naional Trust properties within a 20 minute drive from our site.

Blickling Hall Estate

Blickling Hall is a Jacobean stately home situated in 5,000 acres of parkland in a loop of the River Bure. Steeped in a rich history dating back to 1616.

Felbrigg Hall

Felbrigg Hall is an unaltered 17th-century English country house near the village of Felbrigg (near Cromer), It has a lovely walled garden, orangery and orchard. 

Horsey Wind Pump

Horsey Windpump (or drainage windmill) The present structure was built in 1912 on the foundations of the 18th-century Horsey Black Mill,

Sherigham Park

Sheringham Park is a landscaped park and gardens. The park was designed by Humphry Repton in around 1812