Monday, March 11, 2019
Cornwall
Cornw in all is the place I love to be, it is filled with lovely places to see, beautiful beaches of roaring sand, which you fecal matter on the nose spend hours walking on or looking at out across the ocean, in that respect atomic number 18 quaint little villages, sea ports and harbors. I love going to St. Ives this is my favourite place, it is just a undersized harbour town but packed with interesting things to do.You can occupy boat rides round the coastline, fishing, seeing the sea life, at that place is a museum where you can see how people made a living and the tragedies they went through and there is also a recording of the locals talking about how they occupy seen the changes in their lifetime. There is also a life boat station there which has its own stories to tell. Driving through St. Ives can be a opus scary as the roads are very narrow, there is just enough room for hotshot car to pass through, so close to of the road near the harbour are one way.You also go for art galleries, food shops, pubs and restaurants, hotels and holiday homes. As you walk through the subscribe streets you find that the locals occupy the houses and it is less noisy. I like to sit on the harbour front and watch the boats coming and going and local fishermen selling their catch, also watching the sea rippling in and out, at shadow it is lit up lovely and is packed full of locals and holiday cultivaters all enjoying themselves. There are other places to visit like the Eden jump out at St.Austell which has the worlds largest greenhouse, two massive conservatories one of which is a rain set and the is for fruits and flowers from different countries. The grounds are landscaped and produce tea, lavender, sun flowers and I think a desert conservatory is going to be make there too. The national trust owns and protects over 220 miles of the Cornish coastline, there are loads of coastal walks from just a gentle pace to awkward hiking, oh thats not for me thoug h.I have visited the lost gardens of Heligan and was totally blown away by what I saw, it was truly wonderful and to think it could have been lost for every would have been very sad, but to explore the whole of it would take at least two or three days. I was only there for one day and really I didnt see it all I was taken back with the plants and ponds and to think this was all made possible by the Tremayne family and in a flash their descendants have found it and stated about restoring it with suspensor from other sources, this is salubrious worth a visit.Other places to visit is Porthleven another harbour town, the Minack theatre which was the inspiration of just one lady Rowena Gade, Charlestown Heritage, Shipwrecks and China Clay, well worth a look you also have Bodmin Moor which is one of the last unspoilt areas in the south west and I have also seen some beautiful churchs driving through some of the Cornish towns.Across the coast you will find surfers trying to catch the pe rfect wave, they make it look so easy. You can also so some crabbing in the crab pools in Perrinporth. Newquay is a buslin town with loads of shops, arcades, pubs, beaches and night life. And now what I dont like about Cornwall, well thats easy to answer,its leaving
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