We went to Torquay for a few days. It started off well with a lovely calm evening at Anstey's Cove, just a short walk through the grounds of the hotel. |
However, by Tuesday, it seemed more like November than July on a river trip from Totnes to Dartmouth as the clouds came down and down! |
From Dartmouth we went across to Kingswear on the ferry to catch the train to Paignton. Goliath was built in Swindon in 1924. |
Approaching Paignton with its rows of beach huts and a deserted beach |
Where have all the tourists gone? |
Ah, we spotted a few having a jolly time on the sand! |
After the Reformation the Abbey became a country house for 391 years during which the Cary family were its owners from 1662 to 1930 - none of the trauma of moving house for them! |
In 1930 the house was bought by Torbay Council and converted to a museum and gallery. This is the Thrupp Gallery filled with plaster casts from the studio of Frederick Thrupp (1812-1925) |
The Spanish Barn in the grounds of Torre Abbey, so called because for a time is housed prisoners-of-war from the Spanish Armada in 1588. It was built soon after 1196 and re-roofed in 1450. |
Torquay Marina - don't let the blue sky fool you; there was a stiff south-westerly blowing that forced us to retreat from the jetty for fear of being blown overboard! |
From Torquay we caught the bus to Babbacombe where there is a splendid cliff railway descending to Oddicombe Beach. |
Spot the landslide onto the beach. We'd only been there for a few minutes when the rain began |
It really was too wet so we called it a day. |
The open-plan kitchen cum cafe |
I wish my vegetable garden looked like this! |