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Tourists urged to visit Thorpeness for authentic reasons

By Editorial Team
Sunday, April 5, 2026
5 min read

Tourists urged to visit Thorpeness for authentic reasons

The Suffolk coastal village of Thorpeness, battered by winter storms that forced the demolition of several homes, calls on visitors to respect local residents and appreciate the area beyond its recent devastation.

Tourists urged to visit Thorpeness for authentic reasons

View of Thorpeness coastline after winter erosion.

There are calls for tourists visiting a coastal village to do so for the "right reasons" and respect locals dealing with the effects of erosion over the winter.

Thorpeness in Suffolk has seen 11 homes demolished before they fell in to the sea, after bad weather eroded away large sections of the cliffs.

Shelley Cowlin, whose home of 48 years was torn down, said tourists turning up to witness other people's suffering were "sick".

Hamish Ogilvie, who owns the Thorpeness Meare boating lake, said: "It's obviously very sad to come just because some people's houses have fallen into sea and I think we need to be very respectful of them."

Hamish Ogilvie is the great‑great grandson of playwright and barrister Glencairn Stuart Ogilvie, who developed Thorpeness from a small fishing hamlet in the 19th Century into a seaside resort.

The boating lake has more than 100 boats, some of which were originally used as fishing vessels at sea, according to Hamish Ogilvie.

Hamish Ogilvie said Thorpeness was a great place for young people to "have their own adventures, as they did 50, 100, years ago".

After a difficult winter for many in the village, Hamish Ogilvie said people should be visiting to enjoy the sights and not just to see the destruction.

"I think it's sad to come to such a nice place for those reasons, when there are much better reasons to come here," Hamish Ogilvie said.

Now living in a holiday let, which Shelley Cowlin said did not feel "like home", the 89‑year‑old called on so‑called "trauma tourists" to leave villagers in peace.

"We don't want people relishing in glee at the tragedy of other people," Shelley Cowlin said.

Shelley Cowlin said there had been incidents of people claiming they were her gardener, or even her grandchildren, and stealing things.

"We had one fellow deciding to remove my ornamental flower pots and then another guy decided he was my so‑called gardener and he was not. I have a very nice gardener and it was not him," Shelley Cowlin said.

"I don't understand the mentality. I really do feel they must be a bit peculiar. Why do you want to take photographs of houses that have been demolished? It's just not on," Shelley Cowlin added.

David Scott is chief executive of The Hotel Folk Group, which owns Thorpeness Golf Club and Hotel.

David Scott said the early signs of tourists wanting to visit the village were positive.

"What we've seen with our upcoming bookings in April and May is probably the strongest couple of months since the Covid lockdown," David Scott said.

David Scott said tourism was "vitally important" to the area and Thorpeness was becoming "stronger as a tourist destination as people find it".

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