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-   -   help with cornwall (southwest coast) (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/help-with-cornwall-southwest-coast-707335/)

RM67 May 25th, 2007 05:43 PM

'My, my - cranky today aren't we??'

Actually, no, I'm not. Since when did disagreeing with other posters about which locations make the best base equal cranky? I don't agree with those who think that Penzance has a lot to offer but at least I haven't been rude to anyone I disagree with - unlike your good self!

How would you have liked it if I'd started this post with 'My my, patronising today aren't we?' (Which would be highly appropriate in your case!).

RM67 May 25th, 2007 05:48 PM

PS - The thing I find most laughable in all of this is that none of the Penzance recommenders have given ONE SINGLE specific example of something worth doing there or visiting for. Try backing up your arguement with some evidence instead of just putting other people down!

annhig May 26th, 2007 08:48 AM

well, here's one- the penlee art gallery - it's full of the loveliest newlyn school paintings and a very interesting museum about the origins of the area, right back to the phonecians.

It also has a very good cafe attached, where i usually have my lunch when I'm in town.

then there's historical chapel street with its antique shops and ancient pubs, the numerous public gardens, the lovely views across st. Michael's Bay, the habour area, the charming area between the gallery and the main town full of old houses with tiny, well-tended gardens ..is that enough???

and RM67, you still haven't told us when you were last there.

#-o

regards, ann

carolyn May 26th, 2007 12:24 PM

Ann, could you tell me a little about Newlyn, both the village and the school of painting? Thanks.

annhig May 26th, 2007 01:03 PM

hi, carolyn,

I'll do what I can, though I'm no art expert. the newlyn school was founded at the end of the 19th Century by Stanhope Forbes and friends - walter langley and Elizabeth Forbes are amongst the best, IMO. if you google "newlyn school of artists" you can find a number of sites where you can look at their works - the Tate is a good one.

they are semi-romanitic but nevertheless realistic depictions of local life - fishermen and their wives, rural scenes, etc. the best collection is at the penlee gallery in Penzance, not at the newlyn gallery which is all "modern" art.

Newlyn itself retains the largest fishing fleet in cornwall, fighting off competiton from the spanish and french fishermen. it is still a working village - picturesque, but not at all touristy.

Just along the coast is the village of "Mousehole" [pronounced "mousel"] which is everybody's ideal of a fishing village - picturesque houses, tiny streets, pubs humming with custom [and sometimes their customers]. It also has a terible traffic problem, and a really good restaurant with rooms - "the old coastguard".

hope this helps,

regards, ann

carolyn May 27th, 2007 11:20 AM

Thanks, Ann. My husband's family name is Newlen. We saw the signpost to Newlyn but didn't have an opportunity to go there. He did find a postcard in St. Ives and sent it to the kids.

annhig May 28th, 2007 01:49 PM

hi again, carolyn,

by co-incidence, this month's Cornwall Life has an article all about Newlyn, which you might find interesting. It's not on their web-site yet [it's in the June edition] but it should surface soon.

sorry you never made it on your trip.
When were you here?

regards, ann

carolyn May 29th, 2007 01:01 PM

Thanks, Ann, for the info. I'll keep an eye out for it.

My daughter and I love London and try to go every autumn. My husband and I did a 28-day Great Britain-Ireland trip in 2001 as my retirement gift to myself. I hate to say so here, but we did a (gasp!) Globus tour--and it was fabulous. It was, of course, an overview type of trip; but it did give me ideas for the places I would most like to visit more thoroughly and let me know that I liked Cornwall better than the Cotswolds, for instance.

Here's hoping I don't age out before I get to see more of England, Scotland, and Wales. Just now, I'm off to Italy the middle of June. Sigh--so many places to go. It's such a problem!

I'm sorry for hijacking this thread.

jungli Feb 26th, 2008 07:15 AM

hi !!
My husband and I are planning to go to Cornwall for easter from london and we have booked our tickets to penzance as that seemed the easiest plavce to be as regards public transport.Can someone pl tell me of places taht one can do by buses/trains-ofcourse St Ives is one, but any others as well. Also we were looking at places to stay-qunitessentially english so would staying in mousehole be a good idea instaed of penzance and can one go by bus to and fro from penzance to mousehole easily? Pl help..

annhig Feb 26th, 2008 09:39 AM

Hi jungli,

as you wil have gathered, i think that Penzance is an excelent base for a holiday in Cornwall using public transport.

there are lots of buses all round the area - i suggest you google "public transport in Cornwall" and go to the First buses web-site. as well as mousehole, you will find buses to sennen, St. Ives, marazion, etc. etc.

you can also get a train to St. Ives via St. erth, and the helicopter to the scillies.

personally i would not stay in Mousehole without a car - you'll find yourselves going backwards and forwards to Penzance all the time which would be a bore. Mousehole is NOT quintissentially english IMO, but quintissentially touristy, especially in summer - a big difference.

there are B & Bs in both places, plus guest houses and hotels a plenty in PZ, and a few top-end hotels.

good luck!

regards, ann

aussiedreamer Feb 29th, 2008 01:22 PM

Hi annhig (& OP, sorry if this is a hi-jack!)

We arrive at LHR on the 3rd May. One night LHR hotel and then pick up our car and 'go'. Cornwall is HIGH on my list and I was interested in you comment.
Mousehole is NOT quintissentially english IMO, but quintissentially touristy, especially in summer - a big difference.

My question is, can you suggest a quintissentially english town/village to base ourselves. Of course we will drive to Lands End and I have to go to Padstow (rick stein fan) we enjoy walking a lot. Not full day hiking, but lots of meandering and exploring.

Also whats your opionion on the Downs area? I know we should make the effort to at least see part of it, eg. Brighton. Or would you just spend the alloted couple of days in Cornwall? Which would mean picking up our car and driving there first. And as my ViaMichelin website says LHR to say Mousehole is 5 hours is it worth going via Brighton (say for a lunch break) on the way to Cornwall?

Maybe thats too ambitious, but bare in mind, we are arrive b/class midday(shouldn't be too zombie like). And we drive on the same side as you, down here. And DH is an avid driver.

Sorry if thats all a bit long winded. :-)

Thanks annhig

annhig Mar 1st, 2008 02:07 AM

hi, aussie,

if I read you correctly, you are asking of you could easily do London to cornwall via Brighton in little more than half a day.

the answer is not really - the best way would be to go down to Brighton on the A23, crossing the M25, then retrace your steps back up the A23 to the M25 and head west. you could make your way across country but it would take forever. arriving at LHR at 11.30, you'd be doing well to be in Brighton by 2, so after an hour's lunch, it'd be 9pm earliest before you got to Cornwall.

a better idea might be to spend the night in or near Brighton [an afternoon in the pavilion would be fun] and then spend the next day getting to Cornwall, when you could take your time, arriving in time for dinner.

as for where to stay, in May you'll have a lot of choice. if you are interested in north/west cornwall, although St. Ives is hell in high summer, in May it would be glorious and well-placed for your trips to Land's end, mousehole, sennen, and Marazion. it's a bit more of a trek to Padstow - Port Isaac is a place in that area you might like.

in the south, the Roseland is what some people think of as "quintsentially english" though it's rather off the beaten track unless you use the King Harry ferry across carrick roads [the estuary]. St. Mawes and Portloe are on stunning postions on the water, but Tregony and Veryan [with its round houses,] are also lovely in an english understated way.

have you looked at the www.enjoyengland.com web-site?

keep the queries coming - I'm very happy to keep answering them. not sure I've picked up yet how long you've got in Cornwall or elsewhere.

regards, ann

aussiedreamer Mar 1st, 2008 02:24 AM

thanks for the reply. Sorry if I wasn't very clear.

Arrive LHR middayish on saturday 3 May. Staying over night airport hotel and collecting car the next morning. We have 4 weeks to drive as much of the UK as do-able. I was thinking originally of 1 night Brighton area and 2-3 Cornwall then 'up' from there.

after reading your post, that sounds the best idea. Just need to decide where to stay for one night Brighton and then in Cornwall. I will follow your suggestions and investigate further.

Thanks.

janisj Mar 1st, 2008 07:06 AM

IMO Brighton makes absolutely NO sense for an overnight after LHR. Brighton is south of LGW and a long drive from LHR and in the wrong direction if you eventually want to get to Cornwall. Plus Brighton to Cornwall is a very long drive. Almost anyplace else would be a better stop over. Salisbury, Bath, Bournmouth, Lyme Regis, Exeter, anyplace in Dorset, or Somerset, or -- well, just about any place other than Brighton.

aussiedreamer Mar 1st, 2008 01:08 PM

Thanks janisj, Salisbury was also on our 'list'. I may start checking out priceline for places to stay.

Was your point that I should give 'Brighton' a miss completely? It was only ever on the list as a 'should we go' not a 'must go'. Perhaps I could give us extra time in Salisbury & Cornwall????

Thanks

janisj Mar 1st, 2008 04:07 PM

Brighton is a fine place for an afternoon's visit. But it is not convenient to where you are headed. It is quite out of the way and adding extra time to get across the whole of the south coast after Brighton just makes it worse. There are lovely seaside resorts all along your route w/o going out of your way to Brighton.

annhig Mar 2nd, 2008 04:02 AM

Hi aussie,

as you've got 4 weeks, the main danger I forsee is that you will try to cram in everything and thereby see more of the car than the countryside.

that said, some "one-night stands" are not a bad idea, so long as they are interpsersed with some longer stays.

as you are arriving at about lunchtime the idea of stopping before you get to Cornwall is a good one - you don't know how jet-lagged you are going to feel, how long luggage reclaim, immigration and picking up your car will take, or what the traffic wil be like. whether you opt for Brighton is up to you, but Janisj is dead right about its being somewhat off your route.

so far as Cornwall is concerned, because of its shape, no one place will be central enough to be a base. ideally you would have three stops - one in south cornwall, eg Fowey or Mevagissey, [or fishygissy as an elderly friend of mine calls it], one in the far west, say mousehole or St. Ives, and one along the north coast [you could do worse than a night in Padstow if your are determined to eat chez Rick].

as an alternive to the south cornwall stop, you could head for south Devon instead - two or three nights in say, Salcombe, would make a terrific start to your holiday. then head for cornwall.

after Padstow, I'd head up the north coast, taking in Bude [beaches] and morwenstow [fabulously beautiful cliffs] and ending up at Hartland, where the coast takes a right angled turn. After that, take in clovelley and appledore on the way to Lynton and Lynmouth which would be good places to stay.

all of that could take from a week to 4 depending on how much driving and walking you want to do.

hope that helps,

regards, ann

aussiedreamer Mar 4th, 2008 08:07 PM

Thanks again ann and janisj. I think after much research we will stick to our original plan. And that is 'not to plan'. As DH says, we wont know what we'll like and how long we will feel like staying. So I will come armed with all the info I have gathered and just head off..........

We have decided to book our first stop (probably Saisbury based on research and advice on Fodors) after LHR, purely because its a Bank Holiday wkend, but thats it. Hey, worse case, we can always sleep in the car!!!!! :-)


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