Here at Ramble Worldwide, we're always on the hunt for destinations that punch well above their weight, and Guernsey is one of the best examples we know. This small Channel Island, just a short hop from the UK mainland, manages to pack in centuries of history, a food scene that's recently caught the attention of the Michelin Guide, some of the prettiest gardens in Britain and beaches that wouldn't look out of place in the Mediterranean. Here's why it deserves a spot on your travel bucket list.
An Impressive History
Guernsey wears its history well, and there's a real depth to it once you start digging. The de Sausmarez family have been associated with the island since at least 1115, and Sausmarez Manor, parts of which date back to the 12th and 13th centuries, has been their home for almost 800 years, with the elegant Queen Anne-style frontage you see today added in the early 1700s. Down in St Peter Port, Castle Cornet has guarded the harbour since the 13th century, surviving the Hundred Years' War, a Civil War siege that made it the last Royalist stronghold in the British Isles to surrender, and a German occupation during the Second World War. Further back still, the island's Dolmen tombs are a reminder that people have been living, and dying, on Guernsey for thousands of years, long before anyone thought to build a castle. More recently, the range and direction-finding towers at La Pointe de la Moye stand as a stark, concrete reminder of that wartime occupation, a chapter of Guernsey's story that still shapes its identity today. Explore Guernsey's history on our Discover Guernsey tour.