Top 10 - Britain’s 10 Best Beaches | FYI2DAY
Britain’s 10 Best Beaches - FYI2Day
1. Bantham Beach, South Devon
2. Durdle Door, Dorset
3. Barafundle Bay, Pembrokeshire, Wales
4. Scarista Beach, Isle of Harris, Scotland
5. Pentle Bay, Tresco, Scilly Isles
6. Rhossili Bay, Wales
7. Achmelvich Beach, Highlands, Scotland
8. Porthmelgan Beach, Pembrokeshire
9. Scarborough South Bay, North Yorkshire
10. Woolacombe Beach, Devon
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South Devon Sightseeing
Some sights of Salcombe, Hope Cove, Thurleston, Bantham Beach, Dartmouth, River Dart, Slapton Ley, Dartmoor.
Bantham Beach Devon , England
Beautiful Bantham beach in Devon , England
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Bantham, Devon, UK - Phantom 2
Bantham, South Devon, UK - 9th Sept 2014.
GoPro Hero3 Black edition and Phantom 2, featuring the Rock(Hand).
Music: Make Me a Boat
Artist: The Family Crest
Category Music
LicenceStandard YouTube Licence
Great Britain Plymouth Dartmoor Devon Cornwall My Travels Neil Walker
Great Britain. Plymouth, Dartmoor, Mevagissey, Polperro, Devon, Cornwall, My Travels Neil Walker.
South Devon Coast - Devon Holiday Attractions
The video is of three coastal areas in South Devon, England. It takes you to Torcross, Start Point, and Prawle Point every one of them well worth a visit with beautiful views and wonderful walks.
The Attack Of The Big Splodge - Bantham Beach, Devon.
Tim + Lupa arrive on Bantham and find a beautiful beach and a great landscape photography opportunity. Although there is aways something to complicate matters.
Hembury Court - 5* Self Catering Accommodation in the Blackdown Hills of Devon
Robert and Mandy are proud to welcome you to their Devon luxury holiday cottages which have now won numerous tourism awards. Hembury Court has four 5 star holiday cottages which are situated on their organic farm in East Devon on the edge of the Blackdown Hills. The tranquil location makes it the perfect place to get away from it all, whilst still being easily accessible from the M5 and A30. and also close to the East Devon beaches
These 5 star luxury holiday cottages make an ideal base from which to explore all that Devon has to offer. Hembury Court is one mile from the famous thatched village of Broadhembury and six miles from the market town of Honiton. The Dartmoor and Exmoor National Parks, as well as the Jurassic Coast, are also nearby.
The 5 star self catering cottages, sleeping 2, 4, 5 or 6 people are complemented by outstanding additional facilities including an eight person hot tub,a very large games room, a communal sitting room, barbecue veranda, fitness suite and a games lawn.
Kingsbridge South Hams Devon.
Kingsbridge is a market town and tourist hub in the South Hams district of Devon, England, with a population of 6,116 at the 2011 census. Two electoral wards bear the name of Kingsbridge (East & North). Their combined population at the above census was 4,381. It is situated at the northern end of the Kingsbridge Estuary, a river that extends to the sea six miles south of the town. It is the third largest settlement in the South Hams, following Ivybridge, the largest, and Totnes.
The town formed around a bridge which was built in or before the 10th century between the royal estates of Alvington, to the west, and Chillington, to the east, hence giving it the name of Kyngysbrygge (King's bridge). In 1219 the Abbot of Buckfast was granted the right to hold a market there, and by 1238 the settlement had become a borough. The manor remained in possession of the abbot until the Dissolution of the Monasteries, when it was granted to Sir William Petre. Kingsbridge was never represented in Parliament or incorporated by charter, the local government being by a portreeve. It lay within the hundred of Stanborough.
Kingsbridge is in fact a combination of two towns, Kingsbridge and Dodbrooke. Dodbrooke was granted its own market in 1257 and had become a borough by 1319. While Dodbrooke was originally considered to be the dominant of the two, Kingsbridge later expanded to include it. The town consists of two ecclesiastical parishes: St. Edmund's in the west and St. Thomas Becket at Dodbrooke in the east. St. Edmund's Church, in mainly Perpendicular style, retains some 13th-century features including a font, but was enlarged and reconsecrated around 1414 and was mostly rebuilt in the 19th century. The parish church of St. Thomas Becket displays a particularly well-preserved rood screen, restored in 1897.
In 1798 the town mills were converted into a woollen manufactory, which produced large quantities of cloth, and serge manufacture was introduced early in the 19th century. During the 19th century the town had an active coastal shipping trade, shipbuilding, a tannery, other industries and a large monthly cattle market. The chief exports were cider, corn, malt, and slate.
The town centre retains many 18th and 19th-century buildings. The Shambles, or market arcade, was rebuilt in 1796 but retains its 16th-century granite piers. The former grammar school, now a museum, was founded and built by Thomas Crispin in 1670.
Kingsbridge has been the main market town in the area for centuries. Being situated within the South Devon Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and its proximity to the spectacular south Devon coast and sailing venues, such as Salcombe, Kingsbridge has developed into a popular tourist destination. Its attractions include several restaurants, pubs, a cinema housed in the town hall building, and a museum devoted to the chemist William Cookworthy, born in Kingsbridge in 1705.
There are two supermarkets in Kingsbridge: a Morrisons and a Tesco Store, which opened on Valentines Day 2011. It also has a large secondary school, Kingsbridge Community College, which has over 1000 pupils and serves the surrounding area. Kingsbridge is home to the only nightclub in the South Hams, Coast, with the next nearest club being in Torquay.
The town is linked to Plymouth and Dartmouth by the A379 road, and to Salcombe and Totnes by the A381. For seventy years Kingsbridge boasted a railway station until the branch line, via South Brent, was closed in 1963 as part of the reshaping of British railways.
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Cinematic (Sting) by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Daily Beetle by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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