Walberswick
Walberswick is one of the most appealing small villages on the Suffolk coast, a settlement of traditional timber-framed and brick cottages on the south bank of the River Blyth opposite Southwold whose combination of the beach, the river, the marshes and the character of an unspoiled coastal village creates one of the most rewarding and most atmospheric destinations on the East Anglian coast. The village is accessible by foot across the old iron bridge from Southwold or by ferry in summer, and its slightly detached position from the main holiday infrastructure preserves a quality of quiet that the more celebrated Southwold across the river cannot quite match. The beach at Walberswick, a broad expanse of sand and shingle extending south from the river mouth, provides excellent bathing and walking and the combination of the beach and the river mouth creates habitat for the terns, waders and wildfowl that make this section of the Suffolk coast one of the most rewarding for birdwatching. The Walberswick National Nature Reserve, encompassing the extensive reedbed and heath behind the beach, provides some of the finest reedbed birds on the Suffolk coast. The village green and the scattered cottages of the village centre, several converted fishermen's dwellings of considerable age, provide an architectural character that has attracted artists since Wilson Steer's celebrated plein air paintings of the beach in the 1880s and 1890s established Walberswick as an artists' colony. The tradition of artistic engagement with this coast continues and several galleries in the village reflect the sustained creative response to a landscape of great subtlety.