Tag: devon

  • Hisley Bridge

    Hisley Bridge

    Hisley Bridge on the Bovey river, on the eastern edge of Dartmoor . . . .

  • Yarner Wood

    Yarner Wood

    A magical early morning visit to Yarner Wood on Dartmoor – pictures taken at around 06.45 am.

  • May Day at Bradley Manor

    May Day at Bradley Manor

    Bradley Manor is a small National Trust property on the western edge of Newton Abbot. This was my first visit and I was pleasantly surprised by how much there was to see inside the house and by the peaceful surroundings. Unfortunately I was too tired by the time we’d finished looking round inside to do…

  • New Year’s Day

    New Year’s Day

    The Coombe Cellars pub, Combeinteignhead, Devon Teignmouth from Shaldon The Shaldon – Teignmouth ferry, with Christmas trimmings Teignmouth from Shaldon John Masefield and Spike Milligan on the wall of the Ness Bar, Shaldon Lime kiln, The Ness, Shaldon

  • Holy Trinity, Torbryan

    Holy Trinity, Torbryan

    I’ve been looking forward to visiting Torbryan church ever since I first saw it described by W. G. Hoskins in John Betjeman’s Collins Guide to English Parish Churches as having ‘the most completely characteristic Devon interior in plan, fittings, colour and atmosphere.’ The fact that it’s in the care of the Churches Conservation Trust was…

  • Dartmoor Outing

    Dartmoor Outing

    Our original plan to take advantage of the beautiful spring weather by visiting Wistman’s Wood had to be abandoned after we found the Two Bridges car parking spaces completely full. Instead we headed down towards Whiteworks, where we ate a picnic lunch and set off for a short walk along a nearby footpath to enjoy…

  • Luscombe Chapel

    Luscombe Chapel

    Luscombe Castle was designed by John Nash in 1800, for the banker Charles Hoare. The chapel, by Sir George Gilbert Scott, was added in 1862. Pevsner describes it as ‘Plain outside; inside Scott’s solid early Gothic, with apsidal east end and sexpartite vault, and a north arcade sumptuously adorned with marble shafts to the piers…

  • Midwinter walk

    Midwinter walk

  • Tramping ‘neath a winter sky

    Tramping ‘neath a winter sky

    A cold morning on Aller Hill, Dawlish.

  • Dawlish

    Dawlish