I took these photo's back in August on my Panasonic compact camera. I walked around some lesser known areas of the town before going onto the seafront.
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Café at the bottom of Seaview Street. |
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It welcomes dogs, as does a few cafe's and eating places these days.
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Many years ago it was a local dairy and retains this mosaic in the entrance doorstep.
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Cuttleby, a walkway between two roads with a couple of houses. |
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I spotted this display in the porchway. |
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This sign made me laugh too. |
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St. Peter's Church where we got married and where my wife's funeral took place in July. |
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On the wall of the house next to the church. |
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It depicts "Dudley", a donkey once owned by Gladys Nuttall. A well known Cleethorpes lady who kept donkeys on the beach. |
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This old Austen is regularly seen around the area. |
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Local butchers shop in St. Peter's Avenue.
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Above the shop front is an old delivery bike. |
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Modern versions of Victorian street lamps. |
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This fish & chip café is considered by some as the best in Cleethorpes.
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But then again, many folk say this one is the best. |
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Looking down toward the seafront. |
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Lots for our visitors to buy at this shop. |
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Of course, I was attracted to these delightful dogs. |
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In the Pier Gardens is this life sized sculpture of Dudley, made by local potter Donnas Peterson, who I got to know a few years ago. The local vandals have broken off his right ear, leaving only the metal spike and have since broken off the left one too. |
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A ferry heading past the pier on it's way to either Grimsby or Immingham dock. |
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Crazy Golf, always popular. |
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One of the signs in the Crazy Golf, fashioned in the style of Donald McGill, who used to design saucy seaside postcards. |
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The old Baptist Church. During WW1 it was bombed and some soldiers billeted in it were killed.
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"The Point", apartment block on the highest point along the seafront. |
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Strange name for a shop I thought. |
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Folk enjoying some outside hospitality at the top of Seaview Street.
Panasonic TZ100 compact. |