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Tamar Valley Donkey Park - This
is only 5 minutes up the road!

Cornwalls only donkey sanctuary!!! Over 25 donkeys on
site for you to pet and interreact with. Adopt a donkey
and help the enormous costs of keeping it for a year.
Visit the pet goats, ferrets, pigs, sheep, rabbits,
chicken enclosures and play in the adventure
playgrounds.
Visit the website
Cotehele House and Gardens - This is only 15 minutes
down the road

Enchanted and remote, Cotehele is a Medieval House that
was owned by the Edgecumb family for nearly six
centuries. It has beautiful walks and gardens leading
down to the river Tamar from which you can take a boat
trip. Superb collections of original furniture, armour
and tapestries are housed in its rooms.
Visit the website
Tavistock

A
classic West Country Market town and a shoppers
delight!!! The birthplace of Sir Francis Drake, situated
on the South West edge of the Dartmoor National Park and
famous for its annual “Goosey Fair”. The re-designed
Wharf is now a bustling entertainment area with live
concerts, theatre, cinema, art gallery and piano bar
Visit the website
China Fleet Country Club

China Fleet Country Club. Whilst staying at the lodge,
you have affiliate membership to this exclusive Country
club for 2 adults and four children. For more
information and pricing checkout the website at -
www.china-fleet.co.uk
Morwellam Quay

A
lost world, deep in the Tamar Valley .A quaint, restored
port once used for shipping copper ore down the river,
You will be transported back to the bustling 1860’s,
where you can visit an underground mine, Victorian farm
and nature reserve while just soaking up the atmosphere.
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www.morwellham-quay.co.uk
Whitsand Bay - 35 minutes from the lodge

The
nearest sandy beach to your base, on the south Cornish
coast, in Cornwalls forgotten corner, close to Torpoint.
Visit Rame Head, Freathy and Tregantle with their
excellent clean sandy beaches.
Launceston
Castle

Fantastic views are on offer from the ramparts of this
impressive Norman Castle. Launceston Steam Railway.
Travel through glorious countryside by locomotives built
in Victoria’s reign.
Plymouth and the Barbican Maritime Village
In
the olden days, seafarers set sail from the ancient
heart of the city, including the likes of Drake and
Raleigh and of course The Pilgrim Fathers who sailed
from the famous Mayflower steps to the New World on the
good ship “The Mayflower”. Walk the cobbled streets and
quayside now packed with cafes and bars like Tanners
Restaurant run by brothers Chris and James Tanner of “
Ready, Steady, Cook” and “Saturday Kitchen Fame” or the
World renown Cap’n Jaspers Burger Bar!!. Soak up the
areas cosmopolitan atmosphere, visit the Barbican
Glassworks where you can watch the glassblowers at work
and next door marvel at the wonders of the deep at The
National Maritime Aquarium and to end your day,head off
to The Black Friars Distillery the home of Plymouth Gin
where you can relax and eat or enjoy a tipple in its
brasserie bar.
A days climbing

Climbing is a great activity for people of all ages and
physical abilities. All at once challenging and always
exhilarating with the illusion of danger that sets your
adrenalin pumping, even though you know that there’s
someone keeping you safe on the other end of the rope.
We
choose our climbing areas for their ease of access and
general beauty, as well as the quality of the
experiences that you will gain by visiting them with us.
Your
instructor, Nigel Kerr is an experienced and qualified
climbing instructor who has been involved in the
training of potential instructors himself. If other
Instructors are needed, they will always be qualified
and experienced, in order to give you the best day out
you’ve had in a long while.
Canoe Trips with Canoe Tamar

The
first journey takes place between the ancient quays of
Morwellham and Cotehele.
You will be on the water between two and a half and
three hours and we will take a
short break at Calstock.
We
will paddle past the steep woodlands of the estate and
the chapel built by Sir Richard Edgcumbe to mark his
escape from the Roundheads.A sharp bend in the river
take us past Danescombe House, built for a mine captain
and once a hotel.
Boatyards and moorings bring us to the famous Calstock
viaduct completed in 1907 and our halt at the village.
You may want to get out here, stretch your legs and have
refreshments.
The
river then winds it way up to Morwellham Quay. It is now
a living history museum, depicting Victorian life in the
1800s.
Moorland walking

With
beautiful walks around the archaeologically rich area of
Bodmin Moor, the Coastal Paths of Cornwall, or the great
open landscape of the Dartmoor National Park to choose
from you can almost imagine yourself in times past, away
from civilization.
Days
will involve meeting up at 9:00am and deciding on the
route we’ll take, ensuring that everyone has a pack
lunch, plenty to drink and appropriate clothing before
heading off to the start point. From there we’ll take a
leisurely stroll around a circuitous route that will
give you the opportunity to appreciate the countryside
that you’re in. With awesome natural views and visible
history all around you it will be a great day out for
everyone.
For
the kids and parents alike, our routes can take in some
of the popular letter-boxing sites, see if you can find
them, give you the opportunity to try your hand at
Navigation and possibly even take in a village tea-room
before we head back in plenty of time for you to relax
and prepare yourself for the evening meal that you have
earned.
Eden
Project - Only 35 minutes from the lodge

More
than just a green theme park, then? Eden is about
connecting plants, people and places. We are a living
demonstration of regeneration and we aim to reconnect
people with their environments locally and globally. We
don't have all the answers, we don't want to tell others
what to think; what we do is invite people to explore
their world afresh.
Visit the website
Dartmoor National Park -
It's torrs and ponies are only 20 minutes away!

A
National Park where you can escape the hustle and bustle
of modern life, sip a pint of real Dartmoor ale, devour
fresh home baked bread and farmhouse cheddars while
watching the sight of ponies roaming free. Search for
bronze age tombs, stone huts, trace the boundaries of
hill forts and castles, then stumble across the
forbidding sight of Princetown Gaol, still in use ,built
in 1806 to house Napoleonic prisoners of war and once
had between seven to nine thousand prisoners crammed
into it!!! Take a much needed rest in the pretty village
of Widdecombe- in –the-Moor famous for its annual
Widdecombe Fair and”Uncle Tom Cobbley and all!!!Choose
to go horse riding at Chowell Farm, whether you’re
experienced or a novice, discover a great holiday thrill
riding on the open moor, all rides are escorted and
qualified tuition is available.
Visit the website
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