The very best of England

Published Apr 26, 2013

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London - See Naples and die, goes the saying, such was the Italian city's erstwhile fame for beauty and magnificence. Taking inspiration from such sentiments, tourism bosses in England have produced a “bucket list” of 101 things to do and see before you expire - or worse, holiday abroad.

The full list features staple favourites such as visits to Stonehenge, the Tower of London and Buckingham Palace. But it also contains some more unusual suggestions, such as rampaging around in the treetops of Sherwood Forest or going on a bat patrol.

Here The IoS looks at 10 of the most surprising “must-dos” and 10 of those deemed too eccentric to make the list.

Start the day with a full English breakfast in London's East End, at E Pellicci, an Italian café in Bethnal Green that's been in the same family since it opened in 1900.

Go in search of damsels and dragons - the insect variety - by visiting Wicken Fen nature reserve in Cambridgeshire, home to thousands of types of plants, otters, water voles, dragonflies and birds.

Mix martinis in James Bond's spiritual home - Dukes Hotel in St James's Place, London - and follow in the footsteps of the Bond author Ian Fleming, who used to drink there.

Curry is a “national treasure”, according to Visit England, who recommend visiting the Sparkhill, Balsall Heath and Moseley areas of Birmingham - Britain's curry capital.

Have a night on the toon in Newcastle - a city with some of the “friendliest folk you'll ever meet” say tourism bosses. Not to mention a “cool yet unpretentious arts scene”.

Take to the treetops in Sherwood Pines, Nottingham, where you can charge around almost 10 metres above the ground, and go down a 140m-long zip line between the trees.

Trawl the back streets of Bristol in search of Banksy graffiti. Stokes Croft is home to the artist's Mild Mild West mural, and some of his earliest works can be found in Easton.

Join a bat patrol at Cheddar Gorge, Somerset. With the help of an ultra-sonic bat detector, you can wander around Gough's Cave and Cox's Cave - home to endangered greater horseshoe bats.

Visit John Rylands Library at the University of Manchester and see 15th-century accounts of witchcraft, the oldest piece of the New Testament, and a first edition of Shakespeare's sonnets.

Walk across the top of the O2 in Greenwich, London. The venue is 52 metres high with a diameter of 365 metres, and people can arrange to go on the top of the dome. - The Independent on Sunday

* See the full list at www.101thingstodoinengland.co.uk

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