ETAL CASTLE OR what is left of it can be found southwest of Berwick on Tweed, a few miles of the A1 trunk road. Constructed in about 1341, by 1603, it had fallen into disrepair and was abandoned. Now the remains of this fortification are maintained by English Heritage.

Next to the ruins, stands the former Presbyterian chapel. Once a place where people concentrated on the Holy Spirit, it now deals with a different kind of spirit. Currently, the chapel contains a ‘cidery’, a place where alcoholic ciders are manufactured using apples grown in Northumberland. Visitors are encouraged to sample some of the ciders produced in the repurposed chapel, and bottles are available to purchase.
The old castle is picturesque, as is the small village that includes a row of whitewashed houses. In the village, there is a pub and a very pleasant tea room that also serves as the village shop and post office.








