Thursday 22 August 2013

UK - Devon - The English Riviera

Devon - The English Riviera – Torquay, Dartmouth

During our trip to France earlier in the year, while staying in La Cimentelle, we had met some nice English folks (Katie and Phil) who mentioned that they had a rural property just out of Torquay with some B&B type accommodation attached, so we arranged to stay for a week there. This is another beautiful part of England – spectacular coastline, lots of historical towns and great rural scenery, including some of the narrowest lanes we have had the stress of driving upon! The locals all take these easily in their stride, whereas I approach each blind, single lane corner with trepidation, never too sure of the etiquette of who should back up when one inevitably meets a car (van, tractor, horse) going the other way. Anyway, we have managed to survive so far. Katie and Phil’s place is near the small village of Maidencombe, just outside Torquay, where they raise ducks, geese and chooks, as well as looking after some 9 cats! Torquay is of course, on the English Riviera. I had always thought this appellation to be a Basil Fawlty invention but it is actually what the district is called. Torquay itself is nice and has a long history with a very old Abbey and Tithe Barn. After an excursion to see Agatha Christie’s holiday house, Greenway, later lived in by her daughter and now owned by the National Trust, we took an excellent day trip down to Dartmouth (at the mouth of the Dart river, just down from Dartmoor), going down from Torquay by boat and back by steam train. Greenway is a substantial house in about 30 acres of beautiful gardens running down from the hill where the house sits, to the Dart River.

Dartmouth is most well known as the home of the Royal Naval College, but it is much more scenic than we'd expected - a beautiful harbour at the mouth of the Dart River, hosting a huge number of pleasure boats, and navigable right up to the edge of Dartmoor. 

With our hosts’ guidance we also saw some excellent jazz at a local pub, and met a few colourful locals, many of whom have relatives in Australia. We also snapped a photo of the Gleneagles Hotel in Torquay, which was apparently the inspiration for Fawlty Towers, now a Best Western boasting a Basil’s Bar!

Our final day's excursion was to Burgh Island at Bigbury on Sea. This has a hotel which featured in a couple of Agatha Christie murders, including Evil Under the Sun, an Hercule Poirot story which you can see on TV next time it comes around. It has a sandbar which you can walk across at low tide, but at high tide, there is an ingenious tractor/ferry that wades across - pics below of the machine, but sadly it was low tide when we were there, so we didn't see it in the water. On our way back we stopped at Slapton Sands, a beach used by US Forces in 1944 to practise the D-Day invasion. A large number of US Servicemen were killed when their landing craft were torpedoed during an exercise. A Sherman Tank which "drowned" in 1944 and was rescued in the 80's, sits on the beach at Torcross as a memorial.

Torquay inner boat harbour

Torquay tourist centre

Agatha was born in Torquay
and had a holiday house at Greenway, nearby

Another Torquay view

Beach at Torre Abbey Sands, Torquay

Torre Abbey and old Tithe Barn (oldest and biggest in England!)





Inside the walled garden at Greenway

Greenway garden grotto with pet cemetery (note headstones on rear wall)


View from Greenway down the Dart towards Dartmouth

Greenway House



Vintage transport to Greenway
Devon fishing boats, Brixham 

Beautiful wooden ketches, Brixham harbour

Dartmouth, with Royal Naval College dominating the hilltop

Dartmouth street flowers

Dartmouth has a small, tidal, inner boat harbour for small boats 



Colourful Dartmouth waterfront buildings

Lots of wooden boats around here - view across to Kingswear

Dartmouth Castle, southern bank of the Dart mouth

Kingswear Castle on the other bank of the Dart mouth



Steam driven paddleboat 

Steam loco pulls the train from Peignton into Kingswear, north bank of the Dart

Old fire appliance, Kingswear station

Hercule and fan

Signal Box and trainspotter

Crossing the Dart by ferry to catch the train 
Burgh Island panorama


Hotel and the 14th Century Pilchard Inn
Imagine the tide is out - this is what the sea tractor would look like, maybe ?

The sea tractor

Pilchard Inn

Monument - Slapton Sands

Slapton Sands beach - apparently similar to Normandy beaches

WW2 Sherman Tank memorial

UK - Cornwall - Lostwithiel, Fowey, Eden Project

Cornwall – Eden Project, Lostwithiel, Fowey

With a couple of days to fill in before heading to stay in Devon, we (i.e. Pen) located a great little apartment in Lostwithiel, the ancient capital of Cornwall, a picturesque town (like most of them seem to be!) in a large old building called Peregrine Hall. When built in Victorian times, it was apparently a home for wayward girls, who were put to work doing laundry for the local gentry, in order to keep them on the straight and narrow. It’s now divided up into small apartments, set in a beautiful garden just outside the historic Lostwithiel village, an old Stannary town with a nearby castle which was a former stronghold of the Black Prince.

On the way there we visited the Eden Project, an educational charity which has transformed a disused quarry into a green, eco-friendly environmental science experiment and display. Really interesting to visit and very in tune with the tenor of the times; and hugely popular locally as a tourist attraction.

We made a day trip to the nearby port town of Fowey (pronounced “Foy”) which was an unexpected delight – very attractive town at the mouth of the river, where Daphne du Maurier used to holiday as a child in a house now owned by her son, then later lived there in a house which became the inspiration for Mandalay in “Rebecca”, which is now owned by Dawn French!

Peregrine Hall - sadly, all the wild wayward girls have gone...

Our apartment at the far end

View from garden across Lostwithiel valley



Tropical "Biome" - Eden Project

A real bumblebee

Eden Project Bee

Blue butterfly

Same butterfly with wings folded


Cocoa pods

Bizarre benefits of chocolate !

Dionysus and acolytes - Mediterranean biome

The domes ("Biomes") at Eden Project - each has a different micro-climate and plants
Restormel castle, Lostwithiel - stronghold of the Black Prince

Inside the castle ruins

Fowey harbour with tall ship


More Fowey boats


Daphne du Maurier's holiday house - now lived in by her son
Note the Black Pearl moored in the foreground, but no sign of Johnny Depp!

13th Century Bridge, Lostwithiel