search.noResults

search.searching

saml.title
dataCollection.invalidEmail
note.createNoteMessage

search.noResults

search.searching

orderForm.title

orderForm.productCode
orderForm.description
orderForm.quantity
orderForm.itemPrice
orderForm.price
orderForm.totalPrice
orderForm.deliveryDetails.billingAddress
orderForm.deliveryDetails.deliveryAddress
orderForm.noItems
July/August 2024


further into the pit before entering the Biome complex and escaping into the steamy tropics. This was followed by a more gentle passage through the adjoining Mediterranean Biome to take in the sights scent and stories from that part of the world followed by those


www.nitravelnews.com


of California, South Africa and Western Australia.


I was disturbed to learn that an area the size


of the canopy above our head was destroyed every eleven seconds so releasing around three thousand tonnes of stored carbon back into the air as CO2. It was also interesting to read that the wasps one was most likely to see were the common ones which nested together in colonies. While they might often appear to be annoying and liable to sting, they also preyed on other pests and consumed thousand tonnes of them every summer, we were told. Since opening its doors to the world in March 2001, more than eighteen million people have visited The Eden Project and its originator Tim Smit has received


a


knighthood for delivering his astonishing vision.


Although I had previously seen aerial pictures of the Eden Project, I had still experienced the wow factor when visiting for the first time.


But I certainly never expected to enjoy a similar experience just a couple of hours later when on our way back to the inn, we called in to the National Trust’s Lanhydrock House and Gardens!


Having presented our membership cards and been given a map, we were instructed to follow the footpath down through a magnificent sweep of open parkland with a backdrop of trees cloaked in bright spring green to reach the house. This delightful walk took about five anticipatory minutes and then around a slight bend in the path we came upon one of the most visually outstanding National Trust properties I have ever seen. First built back in the 17th century, one wing of the mansion was destroyed in a devastating in 1881and then rebuilt in the Victorian style to become the home of the wealthy Agar-Robartes family whose earlier


CORNWALL AND THE FAMOUS JAMACIA INN | 17


fortunes had been based on the Cornish tin mining industry.


Here one is able to step back in history and follow the daily lives of the family through a series of furnished rooms.


Meanwhile on the other side of the house visitors can enter the long gallery with its masterpiece of Jacobean plasterwork and watch conservators at work on a major project to clean and restore it.


It was almost closing time when we hurriedly retraced our steps up the long path to the carpark and drove back to the inn for tea and a spot of rest and recuperation. The following morning it was time to go off and visit the privately owned Pencarrow House and garden, a magnificent Georgian mansion tucked away on the edge of Bodmin Moor and again no more than a thirty-minute drivefrom the Jamaica Inn. Peacocks were calling when we drove


down the leafy drive to the house which has been in the Molesworth-St Aubyns family for almost five hundred years.


While a formal Italian garden is laid out


in front of the mansion, there are a series of delightful woodland walks leading up a natural valley to a sheltered lake. We just had enough time to complete a leisurely circuit before joining a tour of the house full of oil paintings, lovely old furnishings, framed family photographs and other memorabilia going back through the generations. We lunched on delicious home-made quiche and focaccia under a sun umbrella in the mansion’s cafe garden before driving back to the Jamaica Inn where another trip into the past treat was in store.


For here we spent another fascinating hour looking around the inn’s famous museum packed with Daphne du Maurier memorabilia


Page 1  |  Page 2  |  Page 3  |  Page 4  |  Page 5  |  Page 6  |  Page 7  |  Page 8  |  Page 9  |  Page 10  |  Page 11  |  Page 12  |  Page 13  |  Page 14  |  Page 15  |  Page 16  |  Page 17  |  Page 18  |  Page 19  |  Page 20  |  Page 21  |  Page 22  |  Page 23  |  Page 24  |  Page 25  |  Page 26  |  Page 27  |  Page 28  |  Page 29  |  Page 30  |  Page 31  |  Page 32  |  Page 33  |  Page 34  |  Page 35  |  Page 36  |  Page 37  |  Page 38  |  Page 39  |  Page 40  |  Page 41  |  Page 42  |  Page 43  |  Page 44  |  Page 45  |  Page 46  |  Page 47  |  Page 48  |  Page 49  |  Page 50  |  Page 51  |  Page 52  |  Page 53  |  Page 54  |  Page 55  |  Page 56  |  Page 57  |  Page 58  |  Page 59  |  Page 60  |  Page 61  |  Page 62  |  Page 63  |  Page 64