Tuesday 5 June 2012

Around Cornwall

Last weekend we went down to stay with Mum's friends Phyllis and Charlie.  But first we had a walk around Cotehele House on the River Tamar near Calstock.

 Mum with her friends Christine and Leslie on the road to Cotehele
 A Robin who wanted to share our coffee break
An apple sculpture in the orchard
 An ornamental lake
 The front garden and the house
 Looking towards the dovecote
 Looking towards Calstock from the front of the house
 The Calstock viaduct over the Tamar from the gardens
 The village of Alturnan on the Edge of Bodmin Moor
 The village church looking across the old Packhorse bridge
 Two views of the old packhorse bridge
and then we went on a circular walk around the surrounding countryside
There were quite a few stiles to climb over - these are three of them


 There was a ford
 But luckily there was an old granite slab footbridge as well

And finally an old medieval granite cross which is now serving as a garden feature at a local farmhouse
 Between the village of Luxulyan and St Austell there is an industrial archaeological site pertaining to mining.  In the nineteenth century a light railway was built to take the China Clay mined in Central Cornwall to the Port of Par for shipping away.  There are a few impressive remains including this viaduct which is now hidden by trees
Here is some more information about the activities in this valley over the centuries:



 One of the walking tracks along the route of an old Tramway
 Two views of the remains of Water wheel that powered some of the processing activities that occurred here in the 19th century

 Whilst we were staying with Phyllis and Charlie we visited Godolphin House near Helston.  This was the family seat of the Godolphin family who made their fortune from Tin Mining.  The most notable of these was the first Earl of Godolphin who was treasurer to Queen Anne and a strong Political friend to the First Duke of Marlborough.  The house is mostly 17th Century.  When the Godolphins ran out of sons, the house passed into the hands of the Duke of Leeds.  These Dukes were absentee landlords and by the end of the 19th century, some of the house had been demolished and it was no more than a farmhouse.  The National Trust have now acquired the property and are busy restoring the gardens and turning the house into holiday accommodation.  More information can be found through the following Links:

 More views of the house and gardens




 Beehives at Godolphin
Mum and Phyllis at Godolphin

 Marazion is an old fishing village between Helston and Penzance on Mount's Bay
 Which means that it is ~Access Point for St Michaels Mount
A plaque in memory of HMS Warspite which was wrecked near here on it's way to be broken up after World War 2
 Phyllis, Charlie and Mum near the Maritime Museum in Falmouth
 Charlie in the Car
 Some Ships and Yachts around the Maritime Museum in Falmouth


 Trelissick House and Gardens at Feock


 Caqrrick Roads from Trelissick
 The River Fal from Trelissick.  Ships are laid up here when they become un-econmic to use commercially
Tregothnan House viewed from Trelissick home of the Boscawen family and not generally open to the public
 We drove home via the Cornish North Coast
This is a view of Trevose Head lighthouse

 Two views of Padstow harbour.  Padstow is the home of the celebrity chef Rick Stein and his businesses are quite prominent

 There used to be a railway that went from Padstow via Wadebridge and Bodmin to a small hamlet called Wenfordbridge.  The purpose was to move the China Clay mined on Bodmin Moor to Padstow for shipping.  Today most of this line is a Rail Trail called the Camel Trail after the river that it runs alongside but a small part is utilised by the Bodmin and Wenford Tourist Railway.  The first two pictures are of the drying Shedswhere the China Clay slurry was dried prior to shipping
Here are some links:
http://www.thisisnorthcornwall.co.uk/camel_trail.htm
http://bodminrailway.co.uk/
http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-495204-wenford-dries-st-breward



The Hamlet of Wenford Bridge and it's Post Box

The bridge at Wenfordbridge crossing the River Camel
The next bridge down - Poley's Bridge and the River Camel
One for my friends Helen and Angela - The Jamaica Inn at Bolventor on Bodmin Moor.  This inn was immortalised by Daphne Du Maurier in her novel of the same name about Cornish Smugglers.  This is in memory of the last New Years Eve when we watched the classic movie after seeing in the New Year.
http://www.jamaicainn.co.uk/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaica_Inn
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamaica_Inn_(film)




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