Three bedroom eight berth caravan located on Bunn Leisure’s West Sands holiday park.
Open plan living area, comfy seating with a separate dining area. It has a good size kitchen with everything needed for your stay including washing machine and dishwasher. All the bedrooms have fitted wardrobes. It has 2 Shower rooms with wash basin and toilet. This caravan is right on the sea front and over looks the beach.
For your arrival, we include beds made up, complementary tea and coffee and some essentials to make your initial arrival as easy as possible. We can supply other items on request:
Cot
High Chair
Please Bring Your Own Towels.
Layout
Lovely open plan living area perfect for families. Three Bedrooms and 2 bathrooms each with a spacious shower
Sleeping Arrangements
One Double Bedroom
Two Twin Bedrooms
One pull-out sofa bed.
Exterior
This caravan is located right on the Sea Front of West Sands, it has a decked area around it to sit out and admire the views from.
Local Area
Selsey, a coastal village steeped in history.
Eight miles south of Chichester, at the southernmost point of the district you will find the historic seaside town of Selsey. Today Selsey is a popular seaside town with several beaches but probably most notable for the Selsey Bill.
Selsey’s fishing industry has always been at the heart of the town. Home to one of the few remaining fishing fleets on the south coast, which provide fish and seafood to leading London restaurants.
Selsey Crab is widely accepted as some of the best in the world. Local restaurants and pubs are all keen to promote the provenance of their local suppliers. Lots of the locals still sell directly from the wharf, check out Julie’s hut on the seafront at East Beach. A cup of cockles, a pint of prawns or a fresh crab sandwich, you’ll find it all in Selsey and you know it’s fresh from the boat.
Rich in wildlife, Selsey is a popular destination for twitchers. Pagham harbour is a lovely walk with the chance to spot some rare wading birds. If you’re lucky, you might even spot a seal! Selsey takes is name from the Saxon ‘Seals-way’ which translates to ‘Isle of Sea Claves’ (sea claves are of course better known as seals).
After a walk it’s time for some food and drink. Selsey has some traditional local pubs that offer local beers and a friendly welcome. With a busy fishing heritage, Selsey once had multiple pubs! Today there a fewer but they are still well attended. The Seal is a notable favourite but there are also some new businesses on the scene too, such as The Crab Pot which has received some glowing reviews.
On the very edge of what is known as the manhood peninsular, Selsey was once inaccessible as high tide at the inlet of Pagham harbour and a boat was stationed to ferry people and horses across. With lots of inlets that filled with water at high tide, Selsey was very popular with smugglers including the infamous Hawkhurst Gang, some of which were hung in chains on Selsey Bill. At high water, a raft could quite easily slip onto land without raising suspicion. At Church Norton, on the west of the harbour you can see the remains of a church which was once reputedly linked to the old rectory.
Selsey has lost much of its costal land to the sea in recent years. The Bill (the sea spit) used to extend much further out into the harbour. It’s an ongoing battle that local residents and councils fight to protect the coastline and nature reserves from being taken by the sea.
More information here: https://www.visitchichester.org/place/selsey
Accessibility
Unfortunately this caravan is not disabled friendly