Number of results: 130
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more than 5 miles
The Neb flows from Little London, through the beautiful Glen Helen, bisecting roadside fields towards St Johns, then joining the Foxdale River before flowing onwards to meet the sea in Peel Harbour. The river holds substantial numbers of brown…
Address
Station Road, Port Erin, IM9 6AEPort Erin
A unique museum that will take you back in time to a period when train travel on the Isle of Man was a regular occurrence and not just a day out!
Tripadvisor Traveller Rating
128 reviewsThis beautiful waterway has a reputation as one of the Isle of Man's best salmon and sea trout rivers. Many anglers base their fishing around the Sulby Claddaghs Recreational Area.
Peel
Visit Cathedral Isle of Man in Peel to discover the history of the Isle of Man through the mediums of religion, art and culture, or stop to have a quiet moment of contemplation in the beautiful Cathedral Gardens.
Douglas
Visit St Thomas' Church in central Douglas and discover the unique art, history and culture that are housed within this church.
The small Groudle River runs through the mature woodland of Groudle and Molly Quirk’s Glens. There is good, easily accessible angling here for wild brown trout.
St Johns
Situated in St Johns the Tynwald National Park and Arboretum is set in more than 25 acres of picturesque countryside.
Address
Patrick Old School Rooms, Patrick Corner, Patrick Village, IM5 3ALTelephone
+44 (0) 1624 648477Patrick Village
The Centre for WW1 Internment tells the story of the Knockaloe Internment Camp, its guards, staff and over 30,000 German, Austro-Hungarian and Turkish civilian men who were held as internees behind its barbed wire between 1914 and 1919.
Tripadvisor Traveller Rating
39 reviewsAddress
Derby Castle Sheds, Queens Promenade, DouglasDouglas
A great opportunity to see information charting the conception of the railway right up until the modern day
The source of the Laxey River is located on Snaefell, the Island’s highest peak. It rushes down the side of the mountain, eventually spilling into Laxey harbour. Each season during the autumn months, salmon make their way up the river.