Secret lost gardens, pirate’s bay, coastal towns filled with
beaches to the end of the world as we British know it; all this and more on my
adventure around the Jurassic coast of Cornwall.
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Mud maid |
For if you have never visited the country of England you
might not know that it is an island with tremendous coastlines of varying sorts
but also relatively small island. Everything is ditty over here including the
streets but none such as the tiny streets of Mevagissey. Traveling by car is
the best way to see all Cornwall has to offer. Just be sure to listen to your
navigator (ahem, Andy) or you will get lost driving about on those famous one
lane roads meant for two cars to pass whilst trying not to drive off the road
into the hedges. For even more fun, wait until there is a farm tractor trying
to use the same country lane!
Mevagissey is a lovely coastal beach town built on hillside
with streets that are very tight (even made my very British driver squirm and
HE’S USE TO TINY COUNTRY LANES)! The streets are
just wide enough to fit a
small
car or 4-wheeler (forget vans or trucks) through. Side mirrors made be touching
the buildings. Oh the fun when you meet another car trying to go the opposite
direction and get by you. It’s like a game of Chicken. Who will be the first to
back all the way uphill through the town to let the other pass? Good luck! O,
wait! I forgot about the pedestrians wandering through the town looking in all
the shop windows and those walking their dogs through town (just to make it
extra challenging and get in your way).
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Two way coastal road |
For even
MORE driving fun, take the coastal road (um…it’s a cow path) around
to the Lost Gardens of Heligan nearby. It’ll be easier if there are two of you
because one must get out to open and close the cow gate over the lane for the
car to pass through (how is this even a road I think but hey ho who doesn’t
like a little crazy adventure in their life right? Don’t even get me started on
the cliff drop below without guard rails or even lack of pavement along this ‘road’.
Andy thought Montana was bad. Ha!).
The Lost Gardens of Heligan were developed some time after the
World War by soldiers who came home from the war and wanted to give back. After
they died the place was forgotten about. It fell into shambles becoming overgrown
locking away the secret garden over the years.
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The Jungle |
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Garden Troll |
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Rope bridge |
In 1991 the Cornish stumbled
upon the lost gardens and began to tidy them up developing the 200 acres
into the beauty it is today for all to see. Watch out for the sleeping troll
and the mud maid as you embark into the woodlands. Dare to climb across the
rope bridge in the jungle known as Fern Gully. Walk amongst the sheep and see
pigs and emus peppered around the fields. Finally check out the grand estate
and gardens but don’t leave without seeing the Grotto, the Lost Valley and
clamber around the waterfall ravine. There is much to see and do here. I would
spend the day!
Since you are already down here this far you might as well
drive to the end of the earth! Or as the English like to call it, Land’s End.
This is the furthest south you can get in England by car—feel free to swim the
rest of the way to New York, but count me out. The sea is always too cold for
me. Land’s End has been commercialized into an ‘amusement park’ but you can
still enjoy the coastal walks for free. Parking is £5 unless you stop off
before reaching Land’s End to park and walk there. Hungry me sniffed out a
bakery onsite and just had to try a true Cornish pasty (pronounced PAW-stee
not PASTE-ee). YUM! *carries on walking
happily along the coast now* (what?? It’s a long drive to the edge of the world
one works up an appetite). Several hours later driving up the coastline I had
reached the famous Jurassic coast with its infamous Durdle Door landmark.
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Land's End |
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Durdle Door |
Durdle Door is the Anglo Saxon term “Thirl” which means a
pierced hole or opening. By visiting the structure you will understand what is
meant here. Legends and stories are told of pirates using Durdle Door and its
beaches to hide out and stash their treasures but the Cornish are very well
known for their story telling. Free parking at Durdle Door beach as long as you
parked after 7pm (which we did because…well, erhm...the driver didn’t listen to
the navigator and couldn’t quite….you know what? That bit of the story is not
important. What
IS important is that we managed to get there at sunset and
before it was dark. Barely. Ahem). The landmark can be seen from the top of the
hill but for a closer, better look; climb down the steep staircase and across
the pebble beach. There is no wheelchair friendly access however I was tempted
to tuck and roll after seeing all the steps. But I didn’t and hence I’m still
here to tell the tale.
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Durdle Door at sunset |
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Cornwall's smallest library |
Places I'd recommend to eat:
The Dolphin Inn, Grampound, Cornwall (large plates of good food and very affordable. Staff very friendly but comical too).
The Crown Inn, St Ewe. (delicious food worth the wait, good atmosphere)
Where to stay:
Polsue Farm/ The Barns (B&B on farm with dog friends)
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