Bristol Escorts
Indie Collective is not a Bristol escort agency, we are a group of independent Bristol escorts - without managers - who keep 100% of our income. To arrange a date with one of the independent escorts in Bristol shown on this page, click her picture and contact directly.
Meeting an Elite Bristol Escort
The escorts on this page are available to meet in Bristol and/or the South West including Bath, Taunton and Exeter; they may be available for outcall or incall, please visit their individual websites for more information.
The Indie Collective elite Bristol escorts will meet in any of the good quality hotels around the city of Bristol, and most can accommodate daytime or evening trysts with notice. Shorter bookings of 2 are offered, along with 4 hours dinner dates or sumptuous overnight encounters. The Bristol escorts listed on this page are friendly and fun and will ensure you have a wonderful time in their company.
The best thing, of course, about booking an independent Bristol escort is that you know you are making an ethical choice, where the lady keeps 100% of her fee and is free from any managerial demands. She's seeing you on her terms, and that's completely legal in the UK. Bristol escort agencies, are not legal
Looking for work as a Bristol escort? As we are not a Bristol escort agency, we cannot help with employment, however, if you set up independently it will be possible for you to join our little group of lovely ladies!
More About Bristol and its Independent Escorts
The city of Bristol is home to one of the most important ports in the UK, and its main history is based entirely around its maritime trade. Bristol’s close proximity to the sea with its heavy involvement in the Tobacco, Spices and Slave trade throughout the ages meant that piracy in Bristol was inevitable. Piracy was so rife in Bristol and the entire West Country including Devon, Cornwall and Dorset between the 17th and 18th centuries, that this period is actually known as the Golden Age of Piracy.
The South West coast of England was a particular hotspot for piracy and smuggling during the Golden Age, mainly due to the shape of the coast with its many small coves that were perfect for hiding small boats and smuggled goods or pirated bounty. It also linked many sea-trade routes between Bristol, London and Northern Europe. Some of Britain’s most famous pirates hailed from Bristol, which is why people today always portray Pirates with a West Country accent.
Bristol nowadays is a delightful hotchpotch of different architectural periods and building styles clustered around the docks and spreading out up and down some very steep streets with amazing original cobble stones and medieval buildings clustered in the heart of the city. It’s an eclectic blend of modern with ancient, hipster with traditional, all nestling cheek by jowl together in a comfortable jumble. Further inland it has areas where wealthy merchants built beautiful huge town houses and mansions which are still standing today. Like Liverpool, the town undoubtedly prospered from its slave-trading activities. The Clifton and Redland areas boast very handsome large homes which are highly sought after and expensive now.
The author Daniel Defoe who wrote Robinson Crusoe was said to have met a pirate called Selkirk who was truly marooned on a desert island in the Pacific, following a bitter disagreement with his ship captain. He was stuck almost 5 years on the island, but was finally rescued by a privateer who coincidentally also hailed from Bristol, and brought back to England. Selkirk met the author at the famous Llandoger Trow on King St in Bristol, where his account of events inspired Defoe’s book Robinson Crusoe.