Gorgeous- [so I hear]

So, Husband descends into Lydford Gorge and I make a slow ascent back to the National Trust cafe, where I have my sights set on a cup of tea in the tiny cafe. Since uphill slopes are a little easier than descents or flat, I get back up without too many problems, although I’d have liked a rest on a handy bench, which was occupied by a father and sons having a pic-nic lunch.

Back in the cafe, there are no empty tables but I get to sit with two very charming ladies and have a very lengthy chat- principally about health issues [we have a lot in common!] but ranging over many subjects. Like me, one of the ladies is waiting for her husband to return from the gorge and I welcome the company and the chat.

They’ve only just left when Husband turns up and hands me the camera, eulogising over the delights of the waterfall, [The ‘Whitelady’ Waterfall]. I cast an eye on the photos. Hmm…He’s taken some interesting videos of his feet on the path and various other confusing scenes. But he has got one or two snaps of the falls. I realise I should have given him a tutorial on the camera before he went. Although, it is very simple to operate. Turns out he was pressing the video button, thinking it was the shutter.

Lydford Gorge has two entrances. One for the waterfall and another for ‘Devil’s Cauldron’. We’re due to leave the site at Lydford but can go to the Devil’s Cauldron entrance on our way to our next stop. It’s early and the car park is mercifully free of vehicles, so we can park up, Husband can hike down to the bottom of what is the steepest gorge in the South West of the UK and I can stay put, have a read or something in the comfort and shade of the van. He knows better this time and returns, delighted with what he’s seen. It’s a more difficult walk that the waterfall and just as well I made no attempt this time.

Onwards, then, to Polzeath, a coastal village in North Cornwall, near Padstow, which has achieved some fame and popularity because of the celebrity chef, Rick Stein, who has a fish restaurant there. But we’ve stayed just outside Padstow before and it’s great to visit somewhere new. The site at Polzeath is a long, sloping strip, it’s lower end adjoining another site of chalets, which must be walked through before accessing the beach. The touring part of the site is a bit of an add-on but has the advantage of being at the lower end and therefore nearer to the beach access and the small town. A disadvantage is that the shower block is dated and strange and showers are not free- requiring a 50 pence coin in a meter. This seems unfair on top of the site fee [not cheap]. Another odd thing is that in the ‘ladies’, the coin slot meter is inside one of the cubicles, so that someone wishing to use the other shower would have to wait until the coin-slot shower was empty before they could use it! How odd!

But here we are…

Photos courtesy of Husband!

Novels by Jane Deans [Grace]: The Year of Familiar Strangers and The Conways at Earthsend. Visit my website: janedeans.com

A Tavistock Trip

Having ascertained that there is a regular bus service from the road near our site at Lydford, we opt to go and visit Tavistock, a Dartmoor town with some quaint features. The heatwave has continued apace and, having reached the bus stop [an achievement in itself] I’m glad to see there’s a shelter. Inside the stone shelter there are two windows, which is fancy, but no proper seating- only one of those perching planks. This strikes me as odd.

Although the shelter is on a steep bank, when the bus turns up [on time!], the lowered entrance is in the exact position level with it, which is impressive. I/m starting to notice these things.

The bus winds through the villages and up over some of the moor before getting to Tavistock. We get off at what looks like the centre, opposite the church. Here, most of the buildings are grey stone, including a huge, posh hotel. Across the road there’s a market entrance, flanked by a beautiful plant stall, which I peruse while Husband queues up for an ice cream.

The market is impressive, some outside and a lot inside a vast, stone market hall. I’m taken with the hat stall [I love a hat] and Husband [in the manner of husbands] is drawn to the tools, where he buys some screws for a van job. We wander a bit more until the hip protests, then Husband leaves me on a bench to explore a bit more until the bus comes, although there’s not a huge lot more to Tavistock.

The cab to the pub is booked. At the appointed time, we go to the site gate and it’s there- with a lady driver who turns out to be very lovely. When we chat about my dodgy hip she confesses to have had a replacement hip joint and assures me that ‘I would never regret it’ even though I haven’t actually been offered a new hip.

The pub, [The Dartmoor Inn] is lovely and rustic and has a great menu. We’ve allowed two hours and, sure enough, our lady driver is there to collect us. It’s a family firm, with her husband and son also taxi drivers.

On day two we’re going to Lydford Gorge, which is just up the road but we’ll still need the bus, which can drop us at one of the two entrances; one for the waterfall and one for the ‘Devil’s Cauldron’. We’re heading first to the waterfall and I’ll need to ascertain how difficult the walk down is. Having chatted to the National Trust lady I determine that I can get down and up, although Husband remains sceptical.

There’s a small cafe at the entrance, where we’d expected to get lunch. The only offerins, however are sandwiches or a pasty. We get pasties and sit outside on a rickety bench [it’s still very hot] where I share my pasty with a scruffy robin.

We set off down the slope. And inevitably, we get so far and it begins to be clear it will be too challenging for dodgy hips. Goodness! This is the easier of the two walks! We sit and have a conflab, with Husband urging me to abort and finally convincing me. I pass him my camera and prepare to go back up, which is a little easier than the descent. It’s bitterly disappointing…

Novels by Jane Deans [Grace]: The Year of Familiar Strangers and The Conways at Earthsend. Visit my website: janedeans.com