Static Caravans for Sale in Suffolk
Looking for a static caravan holiday home in Suffolk? We’re here to help!
It can be hard to find specific caravans and costs when you explore holiday parks in in Suffolk- so we do the hard work for you. Here, you’ll find everything you need to know about up-to-date caravans for sale, the different parks they’re on, and different payment options.
Click on the caravan you like the look of, and you’ll be able to see more photos, more details, more info about the park, and plenty of contact details so you can arrange to view it.
Suffolk is the most varied of the East Anglian counties. To the south along the Stour Valley, it boasts a string of pretty towns and villages. Elsewhere, Bury St Edmunds is an attractive town and Ipswich the largest town in the county. However, it is the northern coast which probably has most to offer the visitor, a designated Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty ripe for exploration!
A Diverse Landscape
Along the coast lies a dramatic heathland strip known as The Sandlings – the rock here is soft and the coast is being eroded, leading to the erection of coastal defences. There are also some beautiful areas of marshland, including the well known bird reserve Minsmere. Most of the county is of clay and deeply cut by rivers, and to the west there are some chalk uplands – definitely a diverse region.
Distinctive Towns and Villages
Suffolk has some very characteristic architecture, particularly in its small towns and villages. There are many fine, black and white, timber framed buildings, as can be found across much of the country. More specific to Suffolk are its pink houses – these have been rendered with plaster and pargetted, that is patterns have been created in the wet plaster, and then a pink wash is applied, which was apparently traditionally coloured with pig or ox blood!
The town of Dedham and village of Stoke-by-Nayland make an attractive introduction to southern Suffolk, while the peaceful and luxurious Lavenham is the area’s most visited town. However, one place that can’t be visited is medieval Dunwich, which has disappeared under the sea!
Historic Attractions
Suffolk has some fascinating historical sites, one at Sutton Hoo, where in 1939, a forty oar burial ship for an Anglo-Saxon warrior king was discovered. There is a magnificent castle at Framlingham, which is also home to a vineyard open to visitors.
The coast offers traditional British seaside resorts of a quieter, more genteel nature, and plenty of opportunities to look for wildlife, especially birds. Suffolk also has very strong artistic connections, not least with the painters John Constable and Thomas Gainsborough, and also with music through the Aldeburgh Festival.