Wonderful, thank you also for adding so much detail. We'll DEFINITELY
be around. If you look out in late May and see an overweight American
with three blonds females (a wife and two daughters - not a strange
religeous cult!) each carrying multiple cameras trampling down the
moors, come on out and have a beer. It's sure to be us!
Again, many thanks
Philip
On Sat, 19 Apr 2008 10:27:17 -0700 (PDT), misspea
<mistresspea@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>On Apr 19, 11:05 am, Rob Morley <nos...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>> In article <ufhi04te4f1cjmjjijn3p1oajodt9fd...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>, Philip Procter
>> pproc...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
says...> Our family is vacationing in southwest
UK late May. I've been to
>> > Clovelly and the Torquay area and found many things to photograph. Is
>> > there anyone familiar with Devon, Dartmoor andCornwall(and the
>> > surroundings) that can recommend some other pituresque villages and
>> > vistas?
>>
>> Looe, Polperro, Mevagissey, Marazion ...
>> There's a couple of good Henry VIII castles at Falmouth andSt. Mawes,
>> and lots of old tin workings perched on the north coast cliffs.
>> For a different sort of subject maybe the clay tips around St. Austell,
>> the satellite earth station at Goonhilly, Poldark mine (working beam
>> engine and underground tours), the Tate Gallery at St. Ives. Also
>> various stone/bronze/iron-age sites.
>> Carrick Roads if there are some big ****ps or oil rigs in - there are
>> plenty of boat trips from Falmouth, and boat hire from Mylor and
>> Falmouth (or Helford if you want to explore a quieter river).
>
>Yes the Roseland Peninsula (villages include St Mawes, ****tscatho,
>Veryan, ****tloe) is gorgeous and extremely picturesque - lush,
>verdant, unspoilt. Fantastic coastal path walks and vistas, lovely
>country pubs, riverside walks, St Mawes is buzzing in the Summer and
>photographs well. ****tscatho is a quieter fi****ng village and
>extremely photogenic. Artists sit and paint from the quaint harbour
>with its tiny colourful boats (also children-friendly with it's quiet
>roads and sandy beaches and has two lovely old pubs). There is also
>the peaceful tidal river at Percuil with its creeks, light woodland,
>wading birds grazing and views of boatyards - small boat country.
>
>St Anthony's Head at the end of the Peninsula ranks highly on my list
>of THE MOST BEAUTIFUL PLACES - National Trust owned land and one can
>follow the coastal path round a varied coastline, passing a and take
>a tiny passenger ferry over to St Mawes. Veryan, another Roseland
>village, is slightly inland but no less beautiful with its roundhouses
>to keep the devil out of the village.
>
>


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