Sara McConnell
Your last chance to get tickets to Top Gear Live

You want a restful holiday in the UK this summer. You want to be with your family. which just happens to include children as well as adults. The problem is that the UK has never been noted for its child-friendly hotels.
So where can you relax, knowing that you won't spend the whole time tensing up as fellow-guests glare at your children every time they speak above a whisper?
Here's our selection of child-friendly hotels across the UK with plenty of activities for children and genuinely friendly staff.
SOUTH
1. The Seaview Hotel in the Isle of Wight is a seaside hotel on an island with hundreds of rock pools to explore, and near to a sports club with swimming pool, gym and tennis. Young children have high tea at 5pm. Fresh orange juice, porridge and kippers are on offer at breakfast: 17 rooms, doubles from £120, B&B.
2. If your children are sporty and full of energy, try Foxhills in Ottershaw, Surrey, which has tennis and golf lessons as well as a crèche and a Cub Club for 4-11s. A beauty salon has treatments for exhausted parents, and the restaurants offer with-or-without-the-kids dining. Online Business Travel Editor Mark Frary also reviews the hotel from a suit's perspective. Two-night breaks, half-board, from £160 per adult; children sharing with parents pay £30 a night.
3. For parental glam and style, go to Chandler's Cross in Herts where The Grove has a spa, several restaurants and a golf course, while your children are looked after in a suite of rooms with a crèche and nursery. An outdoor play area has a treehouse. Doubles from £250 a night, B&B, under-13s can have an adjoining room for 50 per cent.
WEST
4. Reviewer Michael Harvey and family check into Woolley Grange in Wiltshire, which has a staffed creche and was the first “country house hotel of its kind to openly welcome children." Rooms from £240 including dinner, B&B - no charge for children sharing.
5. Do you want to try a place that's a bit quirky but doesn't pall for the children when the novelty wears off? The Evesham Hotel in Worcs has an Alice in Wonderland suite. But it also has slides, trampoline, indoor swimming pool, games room, croquet and a junior à la carte menu. A family suite costs from £170, with kids charged £2 per year of their life.
6. The Priory Inn in Tetbury, Gloucs has highchairs, toys, cots, changing facilities and special menus help families feel at home in this market-town hotel on the River Avon at Tetbury. Doubles from £99.
7. Currently AA Hotel of the Year, Calcot Manor in Gloucestershire is especially popular with families: there is a Playzone for children from newborn to 16 years-old packed with toys and computer games. The Conservatory restaurant provides healthy, well-balanced organic meals, while gastro-pub The Gumstool serves high-tea for children. The spa also caters for children, writes Alice Miles. A former English farmhouse, Calcot is surrounded by beautiful gardens and its own 220 acre-estate. From £195 per room per night.
Search for a holiday
e.g. Villa in Tuscany
Explore your passion for food with the delights of Thai, Indian & Chinese cooking
In our new series, Tony Hawks takes a dry, wry look at modern life - junk mail, interminable meetings and snooty sales assistants
Read the training tips and advice that helped our London Triathletes
Read our exclusive 100 Years of Fleming and Bond interactive timeline, packed with original Times articles and reviews
The latest travel news plus the best hotels and gadgets for business travellers
If you are travelling to France, the major museums often have guided tours for kids, 2 hours 5 euors so mum can enjoy art and kids also get it in their language, mine loved it . Some English tours at the Museum d'orsay I found some other great exhibitions for kids at www.myweekin.net
Alison Wallace, Sydney, Australia
Check out this witty but informative web site
http://www.travelsavvymom.com/category/europe/
for over 100 family friendly hotels and rentals as reviewed by mothers. It focuses solely on family friendly places world wide. Amusing blog on it too.
Jane
http://www.travelsavvymom.com/
Jane, Palo Alto, California, United States of America
We're in "The North" and run a B&B. Ofsted has just registered the child care to be run onsite in our new venture. This is a walking area - so parents who enjoy walking, but the children don's - both can do something that interests them! Or parents could go out for an early evening meal or lunch!
anna hunter, muker, england
I completely agree with "parent from Chelmsford". We spend all our working week away from children while they are in daycare - only to go away for a few days to spend more time away from them because they are in a creche. I personally want to be with my children on holiday, have fun with them and enjoy the time whilst they are young. I want to look back on family holiday photographs with my children in them as well as us.
Parent, Gerrards Cross,
I am not sure that hotels that offer a crèche and high tea at 5pm are really embracing everyoneâs idea of family (it certainly doesnât conform to mine). To call them family friendly seems a bit odd, as they are really creating "family separated: everyone doing there own thing". Donât get me wrong, I am as keen as anyone for my own space and indulgencies, I just donât think itâs called family friendly. It would be nice to see a list of hotels that truly cater for the family as a whole: ones where you get to eat with your kids and do activities together.
Parent, Chelmsford, Essex
Does this mean there aren't any 'family friendly' hotels in the north of England then?
paul croft, lincolnshire,