Back Roads Great Britain (Eyewitness Travel Back Roads)

(Tina Meador) #1

DRIVE 2: Bideford to Bodmin Moor 43


Eat and Drink: inexpensive, under £25; moderate, £25–£50; expensive, over £50

EAT AND DRINK

AROUND BIDEFORD
Boathouse moderate
Lively waterside restaurant and bar
looking across the Torridge Estuary
to Appledore.
Marine Parade, Instow, EX39 4JJ (take
B3233 out of Bideford along the
estuary towards Barnstaple); 01271
861 292; http://www.instow.net/boathouse;
no reservations
Decks expensive
Smart restaurant next to the
Boathouse, specializing in English and
French cuisine using local produce.
Marine Parade, Instow, EX39 4JJ; 01271
860 671; http://www.decksrestaurant.co.uk;
open Tue–Sat
APPLEDORE
Beaver Inn inexpensive
Atmospheric old pub beside the
Torridge Estuary, with panoramic
views from its terrace. Noted for its
fresh fish dishes.
Irsha Street, EX39 1RY; 01237 474 822;
http://www.beaverinn.co.uk
The Royal George inexpensive
An old beamed pub with a dining area
overlooking the estuary.
Irsha Street, EX39 1RY; 01237 474 335
HARTLAND PENINSULA
Docton Mill Gardens Tea Room
inexpensive
Small café in the delightful gardens
serving snacks and award-winning
Devonshire clotted cream teas.
Lymebridge, EX39 6EA; 01237 441 369;
http://www.doctonmill.co.uk;
open Mar–Oct

4 Great Torrington
Devon; EX38 8AA
It’s a scenic drive beside the River
Torridge to Great Torrington, home
of Dartington Crystal, where visitors
can see glass being hand blown and
pick up bargains in the shop (tours
Mon–Fri; visitor centre and shop daily). At
the RHS Rosemoor Gardens, there
are areas devoted to roses, fruit and
vegetables, a lake and an arboretum
(open daily). The Battle of Torrington –
a Royalist rout in the English Civil War



  • is brought to life at the Torrington
    1646 visitor centre with displays of
    17th-century weaponry (open Feb–
    Nov, Tue–Fri; Jun–Sep, Mon–Sat).
    ª From Great Torrington, take B3227
    to Stibb Cross; turn right on minor road


5 Hartland Peninsula
North Devon; EX39 6DU
This blissfully quiet rural pocket is
crisscrossed by narrow country lanes
leading to windswept Hartland
Quay, where dramatic cliffs give way
to a tiny 16th-century harbour with a
small shipwreck museum (open
Easter–Oct, daily). In Stoke, St Nectan’s
14th-century church is known as the
cathedral for its 350-m (128-ft) high
tower. Nearby are 16th-century
stately Hartland Abbey (open Mar–Oct
Sun, Wed & Thu) and pretty Docton
Mill Gardens (open Mar–Oct daily),
where tea is served by the mill pond.
ª From Docton Mill, take minor road
via Eddistone and Tosberry to rejoin
A39 to Bude. Park in canalside Tourist
Information Centre car park.

Lundy Island
This car-free island 17 km (11 miles)
off the coast is a sanctuary for puffins
with a resident human population of
30 – joined in summer by hordes of
day-trippers who come to go seal
watching, visit its 13th-century castle
and have a drink at Marisco Tavern.

Above left Windswept headlands of Hartland
Peninsula Above right Docton Mill Gardens
Below Mill pond at Docton Mill Gardens

to go through Woolfardisworthy to A39
(signed Bude). At Higher Clovelly, turn
right onto B3248 to Hartland, then
follow signs on minor road through
Stoke to Hartland Quay; park in car
park. Return to Stoke and turn right
down tiny lane to Docton Mill at Milford.
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