Small local nature reserve with two hides for birdwatching.
Small and pretty local nature reserve with lots of wildlife to see.
A 16-hectare lake set in a country park that was once one of the biggest colliery spoil heaps in Europe.
A gem on the County Durham coast in terms of variety, scenery, history and passive science at work.
A short but sweet 0.8km sculpture trail in Thornley Woods.
A feast for photographers, natural history enthusiasts, structure admirers, sculpture lovers and children
Small park in the heart of Whickham, home to Whickham Windmill.
A nature reserve at the northern end of Druridge Bay and one of the best wildlife spots in the north east.
A series of linked public parks in Wallsend comprising Richardson Dees Park, the Hall Grounds and Arboretum.
A 47 hectare nature reserve near Witton le Wear created on an area of former sand and gravel quarry and sewerage treatment works.
Nature Reserve set in a former Whinstone Quarry in the village of Embleton
221 hectares of woodland, grassland and paths leading to the beautiful Durham coast.
Nature Reserve near Houghton-le-Spring run by Durham Wildlife Trust.
Two Parks, Castle Vale and Coronation Park, set either side of Berwick Station which include footpaths, shelters, rose gardens and a lily pond.
Excavated Roman fort, with a museum and 35m viewing tower.
650 hectare site attracting thousands of birds every year.
A Victorian public park in Walker, Newcastle with links to Robert Burns and its own population of Ring Necked Parakeets.
24 hectare park with lake, woodland and waymarked paths in the heart of Gateshead.
A series of 12 gardens set in 3 acres of land in rural Gateshead.
Beautiful 360 hectare woodland, great for walkers, cyclists and horse riders.
Mound marked by Beech trees, dating back to the Mesolithic period.
A nature reserve set within Gosforth Park where you can see birds, otters, deer and much more.
A traditional Victorian Park packed with features sitting between Tynemouth and North Shields.
Group of islands off the coast of Northumberland.
A lone Sycamore Tree that stands on Hadrian's Wall and is considered the most photographed spot in the Northumberland National Park.
The route of the former Wansbeck or "Wannie Line" railway line that ran from Morpeth to Reedsmouth and Rothbury.
An 18th century, 40 acre park designed by London architect, James Paine.
A spectacular woodland planted on crags to the north and south.
A quaint little fishing village set around old fishermen's cottages and spectacular jagged cliffs - Also twinned with New Asgard!
A small and picturesque harbour which used to export salt, coal and bottles.
A huge rock standing on the beach at Marsden, South Shields that has collapsed into an arch an then to a single rock.
A sandstone ridge to the south of Rothbury with teems of crags, wildlife and amazing views.
A 15 hectare public park, right in the centre of Newcastle, dating from the 1880s and associated with, and named after two major exhibitions, the Royal Jubilee Exhibition of 1887 and the 1929 North East Coast Exhibition.
A Victorian Public Park on South Shields seafront that is part of a 4km chain of parks.
A modern take on a 16th Century Physic Garden dedicated to the life of Morpeth native William Turner, also known as the "Father of British Botany"
Stunning crags and landscape with standing stones and a Devil's Punchbowl.
Northumberlandia is a unique landform sculpture near Cramlington, opened by Princess Anne in 2012.
Spectacular crags in beautiful countryside, with a castle on top!
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