I've put in all the photos I'd like to for Devon, but later I'll add a blog telling more about my experiences staying in Ilfracombe and also tell about my trip to Glastonbury, a genuinely magical place.
Friday, October 23, 2009
10/23/09--Lee cont'd
I've put in all the photos I'd like to for Devon, but later I'll add a blog telling more about my experiences staying in Ilfracombe and also tell about my trip to Glastonbury, a genuinely magical place.
10/23/09--Lee
10/23/09--More Lynton
Although many of my pictures show the green fields of Devon--green throughout the entire winter--this one shows the craggy outcrops that also show up in the landscape. This one has that odd thing up at the right, which looks like it could be a man-made sculpture but is not.
This craggy hill and its valley are home to feral goats--a couple of kids visible here.
Here's a shaggy adult.
On the side of Lynton away from the goat hill is this little park area next to the cemetery, next to a COE church. The hill in the background is the headland on the other side of the Lyn river. So the dropoff near the seated folk goes down to the river and to the little town of Lynmouth.
10/23/09--Lynmouth

The Lyn rushes quite strongly in some places, meanders in others.
If one follows the river back inland, one comes to a park with a little restaurant. I didn't make it quite that far in.
The Victorians called the Lynton/Lynmouth area Little Switzerland because of the little hill and valley geography here. In fact, there is a funicular which runs up and down the hill to take people back and forth between the two towns.
10/23/09--Lynton
A few miles further along the North Devon coast are Lynton and Lynmouth. Lynton is the town up the hill, from which I took this photo. Lynmouth is at sea level, on the banks of the Lyn river, which empties into the sea here.
View of a typical European hill town, this time in England. Lynton is small but atmospheric.
Another part of Lynton, with the Devon hills in the background, complete with hedgerows.During the 60's, the Brits began cutting down their hedgerows but, by the 90's, had discovered how important the hedgerow habitats were for little mammals, insects, and birds, so they began bringing them back. Also, I think the vegetation helps prevent soil erosion--the thick plants make windbreaks.
Thursday, October 22, 2009
10/22/09--Art reference added
Note that at the top left of the blog is a new link to my art webpage. I clicked on it, and it does indeed work. Hope you'll enjoy seeing some of my art. You must click on the attachments to see the individual works of art, which is rather a pain, but the images are fairly large.
10/22/09--Exeter cont'd
I stopped in Exeter on my way to St. Ives in Cornwall. Unfortunately, I seemed to have shot over my pictures of St. Ives, so I have no photos from there.
I enjoyed the bus and train rides through the rolling hills of Devon and Cornwall. St. Ives is known as an artists' town, so I wanted to go there. Sure enough, there are many galleries and a couple of good little museums. The color of the sea there is remarkable; artists say it's more like the Mediterranean than the Atlantic. That effect is more noticeable in summer, but the winter sea was beautiful, too, often more greenish than blue--a clear teal. I called it "mermaid green."
There are postcards which capture the color pretty well, so if you're ever in St. Ives, you might want to pick up a card or two.
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