Favorite Winning Tip: Seabirds, Crashes and Witchcraft, Anglesey
The Llanddona ocean side is a long stretch of sandy beach that extends to Red Wharf Bay, on the east side of Anglesey. 
Left for the winter, it is ideal for adults, children, and dogs to stretch their legs, watch seabirds, or assemble amazing shells. 
Discover the ancient fish trap, the sand-covered crash and the wonders of the mythical witches who arrived centuries earlier. Set against the backdrop of the green slopes, the sea side is on the front of the sea, so you can walk or drive here and think you are lucky you may see dolphins or porpoises playing in the streets.

Focused Cornwall
February is a rare month to get out and look at the ocean, however, a side view of the ocean that can be weighed down by the huge Atlantic waves could be a test here in Cornwall. As a family, we often traveled to Perranuthnoe on the south coast, between Porthleven and Mount's Bay. 
In winter the white sandy beach is often inhabited by cold-blooded swimmers, as well as families with dogs. 
Towards the end of the beach you can climb to the top where you can see St Michael's Mount, watch the gannet go down and, you think you're really lucky, the sleeves are broken. The best part is that when it starts all over again, there is an amazing bistro that offers focus point teas and a delicious breakfast to keep you warm.

Layla Astley
Crow Point is a waterway on the raven's home: an open sandy area at the junction of Rivers Taw and Torridge, shortly before they join the west coast of Barnstaple. 
The low light of winter descends to the Taw at sunrise and kills the joys of the streets at night: whatever it is, we love the wide circular segment of the two sides of the Crow Point light, the tufted marram grass that gives life to the earth. 
Seabirds that care for the waves, and how you can turn around so you can see the other side on each side.

Prehistoric Merseyside
Seefton Coast is a western-looking area where there are hills, series, seabirds and history, just 20 miles [30 km] north of Liverpool. Our cold season travel time often has high tide waves, supporting the wind and sand that blows your face. 
Birds flutter along the shore, silenced fishermen in search of prizes, youngsters scurrying about, and adults scurrying about. Especially bad waves erode sand and expose the soil. The revelations of old and young are revealed - remnants of a thousand years before. 
How are you treated? Is it the same as us? We accompanied these ancient travelers along the inspiring Sefton coastline.

Mini Archipelago, Dee estuary
The supporting walk across the folded sands to the small island at Dee's mouth makes for a wow-factor winter trip. 
Large residents, for example, purple sandpipers, live on the red sands of the Hilbre island, but if you think you are lucky you will be able to see a black mark facing the beautiful Welsh slopes or West Kirby marina. 
When you leave the last option in shallow water, allow enough time to get back and forth: a full four-mile circle to the third island, followed by arranging rockpools between Little and Middle Eye, requires two hours.

Descent and storm, Pembrokeshire
No one who claims to love the sea can say so until they invest in the Newgalese (eight miles east of St Davids) winter. 
The refreshing summer breeze turns into a thunderstorm that blows with its intensity. 
The delicate flow of August is subtly transformed into a crumbling, foaming mountain that strikes the sand hard and hurls rocks down into their lowlands. Apply warmth, tread on the sand and let the cold weather of the year blow your mind.
 
Wide sky and shiny sand, Kent
Winter is a great time to soak up the vast expanse of sand and shiny sandwiches from Sandwich Bay. Although you may not see many people, curious seals from near the province are regular visitors. This side of the beach is used as a harness, and watching the horses run on the sand and in the shallow sea is always a pleasure. 
As the coast in front of you moves to one side firmly, you can see the spectacular scenery of pasty bluffs and the red curves of Ramsgate harbor. Go one way, and on a cool morning, you may see Deal Pier connecting on the English Channel.

Skye sees, Wester Ross
The pink sands and ridges of the Redpoint coast near Gairloch at Wester Ross are usually not left in the winter. 
Most head for the hills, yet a short exit via the entrance, past the Redpoint Farm, pulling you down to the ideal seafront overlooking the Isle of Skye. The rest of the empty salmon fishing grounds are inadvertently waiting for their future. If you take time permits, continue south to old Craig with both of you. 
When a youth lodge is heavily closed in the UK, it has an amazingly dark Celtic knot painted by the former superintendent of residence for the short period of his life.

The last trip to Covid, Northumberland
Newbiggin-by-the-Sea of ​​Northumberland captured my heart last February. Our last (unknowingly) time before Covid, we stayed a few miles back from the beach and walked the entire length of it each day with our canine. 
I admired the scope of the pedestrian precinct, the wide architectural curves of the entrance, the vast expanse of sand and the form of Couple standing at a distance outside. 
The coldest weather of the year brought stormy winds and torrential rains in a few days, with a bright new start for some however anything like it was there were others sharing in the sea breeze - the seafront that really loved its city.

Fresh air, North Yorkshire
Across the waterway from Whitby's four-mile-West Cliff Beach, the mystery finds itself in the low tide: Saltwick Bay. I walk in a small harbor lined with ancient bluffs for years. It jumps west of Saltwick Nab, dive into the cold water. 
To the east, the Black Nab stands a short distance from the confusing danger of Admiral Von Tromp. It is shocking that the cold seasons of the year the rains are changing this area. 
They float on a cliff like a sensitive cascade, turn on falling rocks, and swim in the arms of the North Sea virus. The cool breeze of the winter solstice is raging in my head as I wonder.