Walking tours England  organised by Westcountry Walking Holidays - a family run business.
Please contact us for more details of the guided and self-guided walking holidays and short breaks described in this web site.

Walking tours England

Walking tours England

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GENERAL INFORMATION

Westcountry Walking Holidays Our walking tours cover some of the best of Westcountry's scenery with grand cliffs and seascapes, rugged moorland and picturesque villages.

The Westcountry Coast Path, from Minehead in Somerset to Poole in Dorset, (at 630 miles, the longest walking trail in Westcountry), offers endless walking holiday opportunities and choices.

The S.W.C.P. begins on the sea front at Minehead, climbing up onto rugged Exmoor with its purple terrain and high coastal cliffs, passing the tiny Culbone Church, with spectacular cliff and coastal scenery all the way to the highest point at Lynton, then descending to softer terrain from Combe Martin with Sandy Bays tiny coves and rocky headlands, the long sandy beaches at Woolacombe and Braunton. Round The Taw/Torridge Estuary skirting the Market Town of Barnstaple and the port of Bideford. The old shipbuilding town of Appledore with its narrow streets and the long sandy beach at Westward Ho! The path rounds Bideford Bay on the edge of fields and scrub oak woods littered with wild flowers, to the old fishing village of Bucks Mills and Clovelly with its 17th century harbour and steep cobbled street. On through wooded cliff tops round Hartland Point to Hartland Quay.

Books
R.D. Blackmoors 'Lorna Doone'
Henry Williamson 'Tarka The Otter'
Charles Kingsley 'The Water Babies' and
'Westward Ho!'
Charles Dickens 'Message from the Sea'

Railway Station - Barnstaple
Airport - Exeter

Cornwall Atlantic Coast

The lush green landscape of North Devon is replaced by rugged headlands exposing amazing distorted rock strata and secret sandy coves on Cornwall's Atlantic Coast. The trees found here are usually in sheltered valleys protected from the winter westerly winds between the cliff top headlands. Delightful fishing villages, Boscastle with its tiny harbour, Port Issac and Padstow. The mysterious legend of Port Quin. Rocky inlets at Crackington Haven and Trebarwith Strand. Tintagel, with its castle and the legend of King Arthur. Coves with evocative names like 'Hell's Mouth' 'Porth Joke' and 'Deadmans Cove.'

Books
Ronald Duncan's 'One Man is an Island'

Railway Stations - Barnstaple and Bodmin
Airport - Exeter

Cornwall's Lands End and Lizard Peninsulas

St Ives a haven for artist's, attributed to the quality of it's light, is the gateway to the Lands End Peninsula with its unspoilt heather covered moors, rugged granite cliffs and the winding houses and chimneys, relic's left from a bygone age of tin mining. Stunning views from headlands at, Zennor, Pendeen, Cape Cornwall, Land's End, Gwennap, Tater-Due and Carn-Du.

Magical Coves at Sennon and Lamorna. The Minack open air Theatre perched high on the cliff edge at Porthcurno. Mousehole is a very picturesque little fishing village. St Michaels Mount reached by boat, from Marazion at high water and by causeway at low water.

The Lizard coast is littered with coves such as Kynance and Church Cove, where the church is actually on the beach! Thatched cottages set around coves at Mullion and Cadgwith.