
I've found the UK's little-known lidos to visit ahead of 29C weather – with no queues and some are even free to enter
AS temperatures are set to hit 29C in the UK this week, there is nothing better than hopping into a cool pool.
Thankfully, I've found some amazing lidos in the UK that are less crowded than some of the more well-known ones - and some are even free to visit.
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We're lucky to have so many great open-air swim spots in the UK and most are run by local councils, making them an affordable day out.
Some of them even share facilities with an indoor pool, so you can pay once and use both, whatever the weather.
You can usually book in advance, so you won't be queuing out the door to see if you can squeeze in on a hot day.
I've even seen security guards having to crowd control at some leisure centres before, but there's lots of little-known lidos that are a bit less busy, especially if you go off-peak.
Our family favourite is Hitchin Lido, which has a 50m main pool, shallow toddler pool and a sandpit playground for little ones.
It shares its location with an indoor pool - I remember one memorable opening day when we had only just got into the outdoor pool and a thunderstorm rolled in, so we all headed indoors to carry on swimming until it passed over.
Prices this year are £7.20 per adult and £3.60 for juniors.
Also nearby are Letchworth Lido and Ware Priory Lido.
We're heading back to Ware for the first time in a decade this summer to check out its refurb, with a new changing village due to open soon.
It's a lovely little pool and I think upgrading to heated floors, air conditioning, anti-slip tiles and hot showers in the changing area is just what is needed.
Next on the cards is a new studio space and treatment rooms later this year, as this 90-year-old lido gets brought into the 21st century.
It now stays open all year round, although it's not heated over the winter. An adult swim is £6.75, while children pay £3.75.
One special spot that I found last year is fed by natural heated springs, so it's a good temperature all year round and no pool chemicals are used.
Most of the time, the pool at the New Bath Hotel in Matlock Bath is adults-only, although they do hold one session a week over the summer holidays when swimmers aged 10 or above can attend with an adult.
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It's got a lovely atmosphere, with the cliffs of the Derbyshire Dales as a backdrop, so it's well worth a visit, although it does cost £10 per swimmer.
If you're not a fan of pool chemicals, Nantwich Brine Pool uses the naturally salty water to offer outdoor swimmers something different.
It's at the back of a leisure centre so there's an indoor pool and changing village onsite, although the old open-air toilets are also still in use.
There's an ice cream kiosk and lawned area for sunbathing. An adult and junior swim is £12.35 or £20.75 for a family swim.
If you're heading to the coast, both Bude Sea Pool and Clevedon Marine Lake are tidal and free to access, although donations towards upkeep are very welcome.
Here in landlocked Leicestershire, we only have one public outdoor pool, but it's a little gem.
Swimming safety advice
Experts have revealed some of their top advice for both adults and kids heading to the water this summer:
How to stay safe at the beach
Gareth Morrison, Head of Water Safety at the RNLI said: "If you find yourself being swept out to sea in a rip, try to relax and float until you are free from the rip and you can then swim to safety.
"If you see someone else in danger, alert a lifeguard or call 999 or 112 and ask for the Coastguard."
How to stay safe at the swimming pool
Tiny Hearts Education, former paramedic and CEO Nikki Jurcutz said: "Always put your little one in bright or contrasting colours that would be easy to find in an emergency.
"It only takes 20 seconds to drown, little tips like this could save a life".
An Auqabliss spokesperson added: ' Swimming toys such as noodles, dive rings, floaties and beach balls can be dangerous if left in the pool.
' Children may try to grab these from the pool's edge and fall in."
How to stay safe at a waterpark
Ali Beckman, Puddle Ducks Technical Director, said: "Never send a child down the slide on their own, not only are they going to be entering the slide pool area independently, they then have to exit the pool and wait for an adult.
"And wave pools should be avoided until your child is really confident with water going over their faces and you know they are able to regain their feet independently.
' Waterparks are often very busy places and it's easy to lose sight of a child in a split second."
Ashby Lido has a sandpit playground in the former toddler pool and has just had a facelift for the new season, with its cubicle doors painted in bright colours to give a beach hut vibe. It costs £5.70 for adults and £3.90 for children.
Hopefully the warm weather is here to stay and we can all take a dip in our local lido over half term.
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It's as much about the cooking as it is the concept; a meal first, a flex second. It doesn't try to reinvent the wheel. It just smooths it out, oils it and rolls you somewhere quieter. It's expensive, yes. It's a bit wishy-washy in places, sure. But somehow they never make you feel like you're paying to be dazzled. You're just paying for good food, handled with care, which, in this city, is rarer than it should be. I still long for L'Enclume – the original, the farm, the whole damp Cumbrian dream of it – but Aulis London gets me most of the way there without leaving Zone 1. Which is, really, the magic of the place: that trick door at the edge of Soho that, for three hours or so, whisks you somewhere with softer edges and more hedgerows – then deposits you gently back on St Anne's Court, blinking at the noise, wondering if you dreamt it. 16 St Anne's Ct, London, W1F 0BF Open: Tuesday to Saturday for dinner from 7pm, Friday and Saturday lunch from 12.30pm. The experience usually takes around three and a half hours. Price: Tasting menu £195, wine pairings from £95 to £295, non-alcoholic pairing £79 (wines by the bottle available) Bookings released on the first Tuesday of each month for two months in advance. | 020 3948 9665 | aulislondon@ Gorse: The tiny Cardiff star showing Wales was always more punk rock than pastoral No techno, no tweezers, no £400 bill – just Welsh soul, smart cooking and a bill that won't make you weep. Meanwhile, over in Cardiff, a restaurant is doing the opposite – not transporting you somewhere else, but insisting you stay right where you are. Well, after a three-hour train and a brisk walk, obviously. Gorse, with chef Tom Waters at the helm, sits on a quiet corner in Pontcanna, in what used to be a coffee shop (and actually what still looks like a coffee shop). It's now home to the city's first-ever Michelin star, earned less than a year after opening. That fact alone should be enough to tell you how overdue this is. Wales has always had the good stuff, like the country's larder everyone borrows from but rarely celebrates properly until there's a feast to impress the neighbours. Salt marsh lamb, crab plucked from Pembrokeshire, seaweed thick on the tide. A national bounty hidden in plain sight. Still, there's no fanfare at Gorse. Just 22 seats, a small team in Birkenstock clogs who move with the calm efficiency of a ballet company, and a menu that doesn't so much perform as it does reflect. If Ynyshir is Welsh dining on a nightclub bender – techno, tweezers, £390 price tag – then Gorse is the morning after. Not in a bacon sandwich and Berocca kind of way, but in the sense of clarity that comes when the noise fades. Waters takes the raw materials of Welsh cooking – mutton, seaweed, oats – and does what Rogan does for Cumbria at Aulis: refines them, sharpens them, lets them speak for themselves. Transformed not beyond recognition, but into something cleaner and quietly sure of itself. If you're looking for theatre, you won't find it here. What you will find is an excellent martini that gives the capital a run for its money. Gorse's house version has been on since day one, a gentle wink that they knew exactly how to coax in Londoners, even this far west of Paddington. It's made with seaweed stock, Dà Mhìle gin and local vermouth, and it's as saline and elegant as the coastline it conjures. A coastal dirty martini, if you will, but one that washes your sins away instead of compounding them. The first thing you eat, or rather the second thing you drink, is a seaweed broth – the kind influencers try to sell you as a miracle detox elixir, only this one isn't part of a green juice pyramid scheme. It's briny, mushroomy and served in a handmade mug that looks like it's been prized off a rock pool. Welsh seaweed, and indeed the Welsh coast, is a lot like the Japanese, just treated differently. They dry theirs into nori sheets. The Welsh boil theirs for 10 hours and turn it into a thick black sludge called laverbread. Because here in the British Isles, we like to cook things until they forget what they used to be. And yet, this one is delicious. Not quite Tokyo, not quite Tenby, but a compelling case for the in between. Maybe I'll start flogging it myself. And so it goes. The meal builds like a memory. A disc of celeriac in a slick of buttermilk-laverbread sauce does its best impression of that scallop dish you've clocked a hundred times on other tasting menus but is entirely of itself: earthy, saline, oddly nostalgic. There's crab from Solva, pureed with horseradish into a smooth, orby blob somewhere between quenelle and custard, topped with a bump of roe so generous it might start a rumour in Soho. Between that and the martini, it feels just like home. It's a menu that starts like a sightseeing bus tour (but with better snacks) and ends like a whispered folk story – Waters uses Welsh ingredients the way a poet uses dialect: familiar but reborn in your mouth. There's Pembrokeshire mackerel under another slap of horseradish, apple and lovage giving bite and brightness. Mutton from the Gower arrives robust and just a little feral, with wild garlic and a neat fillet of neck on the side – no nonsense, just the good stuff. But for all his respectful nods to the land, Waters isn't shy about bending its rules. A mushroom and pickled juniper cone – basically a miniature forest disguised as a Cornetto – lands in one bite: earthy, creamy and weird in all the best ways. Mushroom ice cream is surely just one plucky investor away. I'd buy the six-pack. Dessert, once again, does the heavy lifting. This time it's sucan – or llymru, or flummery, depending on how deep you want to dig into Welsh culinary trivia. Once a humble, tangy oat pudding for labourers, now a slick, silken finale with apple caramel and smoked raspberry jam, all subtle sourness and deep comfort. It'd look perfectly at home behind a polished glass counter in a Parisian patisserie, but feels truer here, on a quiet Cardiff corner, exactly where it belongs. It's not the kind of pudding you expect from a Michelin-starred kitchen, but then again, that's sort of the point. The wines follow the same rhythm – unfussy, quietly interesting but well worth paying attention to. A glass of Grüner Veltliner from Loimer starts things off with just the right amount of zip: crisp, citrusy, faintly peppery, like it's been designed to wake up your palate without elbowing the food out of the way. The 'Ava Marie' Chardonnay from Restless River comes in later – cool, elegant, lightly oaked, with that chalky sort of backbone that makes mackerel taste even more like mackerel. And with the mutton, a natural Anjou Rouge from Domaine des Brumes, all juicy red and gentle grip, with enough dirt under its nails to meet the wild garlic head-on but still feel light on its feet. There's a four-course lunch at Gorse for £60. The seven-course is £95. Go all in with 10 at £125 and you're still, somehow, paying less than at most London restaurants trying to sell you a story half as well told. Because that's what Gorse does so elegantly: it roots you in Wales not with fanfare or flag-waving, but through the slow build of ingredients, rhythms, rituals. You come expecting polite heritage. You leave realising Wales was always more punk rock than pastoral. If Aulis is the tasting menu as magic trick, a rabbit pulled from a Cumbrian hat in central London, then Gorse is the tasting menu as map. Not the shouty kind with arrows and landmarks, but the sort you fold into your pocket and keep, just in case. One experience is imported, the other is homegrown. One bends place to the plate; the other lets place speak for itself. And that, perhaps, is the joy of this column: not just finding where the food is good – and, crucially, where it's worth the price tag – but where it means something. Sometimes it's a sleek Soho counter conjuring the Lake District in 10 courses. Other times it's a former coffee shop in Cardiff, whispering stories of seaweed, oats and salt marsh lamb. Different destinations, same principle. And dining, when done right, doesn't need to travel far to take you somewhere. 186-188 Kings Rd, Cardiff, CF11 9DF Open: Tuesday to Thursday 18.30-20.00, Friday and Saturday 12.00-14.00 and 18.30-20.00