|
With its rolling meadows, narrow lanes and remote thatched cottages, Devon has long been the urbanite's ideal vision of a pre-industrial, "authentic" England, and a quick tour of the county might suggest that this is largely a region of cosy, gentrified villages inhabited mainly by retired folk and urban refugees. Certainly parts of Devon suffer from an excess of cloying nostalgia and an abundance of commercialism, but its popularity has a positive side to it as well - chiefly that zealous care is taken to preserve the undeveloped stretches of countryside and coast in the condition that has made them so popular. Pockets of genuine tranquillity are still to be found all over the county, from moorland villages with an appeal that goes deeper than mere picturesqueness, to quiet coves on the spectacular coastline. Devon has played a leading part in England's maritime history , and you can't go far without meeting some reminder of the great names of Tudor and Stuart seafaring, particularly at the two cities of Exeter and Plymouth . These days the nautical tradition is perpetuated on a domesticated scale by yachtspeople taking advantage of Devon's numerous creeks and bays, especially on its southern coast, where ports such as Dartmouth and Salcombe are awash with amateur sailors. Land-bound tourists flock to the sandy beaches and seaside resorts, of which Torquay , on the south coast, and Ilfracombe , on the north, are the busiest - though the most attractive are those which have retained something of their nineteenth-century elegance, such as Sidmouth, in East Devon. Other seaside villages retain a low level of fishing activity but otherwise live on a stilted Old World image, of which Clovelly is the supreme example. Inland , Devon is characterized by swards of lush pasture and a scattering of sheltered villages, the county's low population density dropping to almost zero on Dartmoor , the wildest and bleakest of the West's moors, and Exmoor , whose seaboard constitutes one of the West Country's most scenic littorals. Exeter and Plymouth are on the main rail lines from London and the Midlands, with branch lines from Exeter linking the north coast at Barnstaple and the south-coast towns of Exmouth and Torquay. Buses from the chief stations fan out along the coasts and into the interior, though the service can be extremely rudimentary for the smaller villages.
Your Tip for Devon
Help other backpackers! Write your own guides and backpacking tips to Devon - they will appear instantly on this page - Please only write a tip/guide to Devon - visit the main Devon forum to ask a question!
Please do not post links to your site here (they won't work) - please use the Devon webguide section below! Thanks.
|