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Itinerary:
Day 1 - Saturday
Transfer from Exeter Rail
Station to the delightful
village of Chagford, within the Dartmoor National Park. We
stay in the Three Crowns, a modern hotel within a traditional
English pub.
Day
2 - Sunday
Today is a lovely ride.
Dartmoor is hilly, no way to avoid that even though we're
leaving the National Park. We visit an Iron Age village at
Grimspound and the beautiful moorland villages of Buckland and
Widecombe-In-The-Moor as we make our way off the moor at
Buckfastleigh.
Then we'll follow a special
cycle route along the Dart valley, through Totnes to the
Waterman's Arms at Bow Creek. Another traditional pub
developed into a hotel. 31
miles / 50 Km
Day 3 - Monday
Another pretty ride, but very
different. Via Sharpham Vineyard, one of the UK's leading
winemakers, we follow the Dart estuary to Dartmouth. Leaving
Dartmouth we cycle into the South Hams, and our ride through
East Portlemouth, Salcombe and Kingsbridge features some of
the most beautiful scenery of our week.
We also visit the poignant
memorial at Slapton Ley, where 749 American soldiers were
killed in 1944 when German torpedo boats interrupted
rehearsals for the D-Day landings at 'Utah' beach. Forty years
later a US tank was recovered and now stands as a memorial to
a shocking night.
Tonight we stay at Hope Cove, a
delightful, hidden cove with spectacular views across Bigbury
Bay to Burgh Island. 34
miles / 55 Km
Day 4 - Tuesday
A memorable day. We'll follow a
little-known route that brings us into the heart of Plymouth,
Devon's largest City, by ferry. We land at the Barbican, from
where the Mayflower set sail for America in 1620, and where
the names of all the Pilgrims are listed. Before we leave
Plymouth we'll visit the famous gin distillery, then we'll
follow probably a cycle path up the Tamar Valley, past Saltram
House, and up onto the (lower!) slopes of Dartmoor. 34
miles / 55 Km
Day 5 - Wednesday
Back to the cycle path, and
through the traditional 'Stannary Town' of Tavistock - granted
the right to assay local tin, these towns were given peculiar
rights including law-making, which in theory still exist.
We'll cycle along the edge of
Dartmoor, through the delightful villages of Mary Tavy and
Peter Tavy, along a beautiful National Cycle Route to Lydford
House close to the famous gorge and waterfall. 23
miles / 37 Km
Day 6 - Thursday
A long day with a very special
hotel at the end of it. We follow an off-road cycle path along
a disused railway to Okehampton, then we head off towards
North Devon via the Duke of York pub in Iddesleigh. We cross
the Taw valley, and follow the River Mole to South Molton and
the George Hotel (The Good Hotel Guide's 'Hotel Of The Year'
for 2009!). 40
miles / 65 Km
Day 7 - Friday
We cross the valley of the
Little Dart River on our way to Crediton, birthplace of St
Boniface in the 7th Century, who is bizarrely the Patron Saint
of both Germany and the Netherlands.
Then we follow tiny back roads
into Exeter, the capital of Devon. St Peter's Cathedral is
Devon's most magnificent building, with the longest unbroken
Gothic roof in the world.
We leave Exeter on an off-road
cycle path beside Britain's oldest canal. We're headed for
Topsham at the head of the Exe Estuary, once an important
port, now an exquisite village given over to all things
nautical and famous for its fabulous pubs. 39
miles / 63 Km
Day 8 - Saturday
Transfer to Exeter Rail Station
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