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East Devon & The Jurassic Coast (Slow Travel): Local, characterful guides to Britain's special places 3rd Revised edition [Mīkstie vāki]

  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 312 pages, height x width: 198x130 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Aug-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Bradt Travel Guides
  • ISBN-10: 1804692735
  • ISBN-13: 9781804692738
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 18,59 €*
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  • Standarta cena: 24,80 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 312 pages, height x width: 198x130 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Aug-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Bradt Travel Guides
  • ISBN-10: 1804692735
  • ISBN-13: 9781804692738
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

East Devon and west Dorset ‘Slow’ travel guide. Expert local insights and holiday tips for Exeter, Exmouth, Seaton, Sidmouth, Beer, Lyme Regis, the Jurassic Coast, River Otter and Blackdown Hills. Covers coastal walks, cycling, watersports, wildlife, World War II connections, where to stay and eat, quirky festivals, cream teas and other local food.



Part of Bradt’s distinctive, award-winning series of ‘Slow’ travel guides to UK regions, this new, thoroughly updated third edition of Bradt’s East Devon and the Jurassic Coast (Slow Travel) remains the most comprehensive – and only standalone – guide available to this area. Written with insider knowledge that can only be gained by living in the area, and combined with colourful, enthusiastic and witty writing, plus contributions from local experts, this guidebook is as much a pleasure to read as an invaluable companion for exploring east Devon and west Dorset.

Devon is the fourth most popular county for UK holidaymakers – and for good reason. Over a hundred square miles of East Devon are designated a ‘National Landscape’ (formerly ‘Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty’) and the internationally famous Jurassic Coast stretching into Dorset is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The charming coastal town of Seaton, which hosted American forces in the run-up to World War II’s Normandy D-Day landings, benefits from the extension (to wildlife-packed Seaton Wetlands) of the Stop Line Way, a long-distance cycling and walking route, originally designed for World War II defences. Wolford Chapel is a little piece of Canada given to the people of Canada in 1966, where the Maple Leaf is still hoisted daily. Dorset’s Lyme Regis, meanwhile, is Britain’s fossil-hunting capital – as featured in the 2020 film Ammonite, starring Kate Winslet.

With an emphasis on car-free travel – walking, cycling and local buses – this Bradt guide’s detailed descriptions, historical glimpses, folklore and personal anecdotes whet visitors' appetite for exploration. Many activities are covered for the first time in this new edition. Coastal walking has never been better following the reopening of the South West Coast Path locally. Savour the artisan coffee that has become a big deal locally, or taste the produce of the region’s fastest-growing agricultural sector: wine. Giggle at the goings on at the ancient Goose Fayre in Colyton, and enjoy other idiosyncratic local festivals such as the Ottery tar barrels and Honiton hot pennies. And indulge in one of Beer’s Devon cream teas while admiring this picturesque fishing village. Wherever you amble, let Bradt’s East Devon and the Jurassic Coast (Slow Travel) be your companion.



Part of Bradt’s distinctive, award-winning series of ‘Slow’ travel guides to UK regions, this new, thoroughly updated third edition of Bradt’s East Devon and the Jurassic Coast (Slow Travel) remains the most comprehensive – and only standalone – guide available to this area. Written with insider knowledge that can only be gained by living in the area, and combined with colourful, enthusiastic and witty writing, plus contributions from local experts, this guidebook is as much a pleasure to read as an invaluable companion for exploring east Devon and west Dorset.

Devon is the fourth most popular county for UK holidaymakers – and for good reason. Over a hundred square miles of East Devon are designated a ‘National Landscape’ (formerly ‘Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty’) and the internationally famous Jurassic Coast stretching into Dorset is a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The charming coastal town of Seaton, which hosted American forces in the run-up to World War II’s Normandy D-Day landings, benefits from the extension (to wildlife-packed Seaton Wetlands) of the Stop Line Way, a long-distance cycling and walking route, originally designed for World War II defences. Wolford Chapel is a little piece of Canada given to the people of Canada in 1966, where the Maple Leaf is still hoisted daily. Dorset’s Lyme Regis, meanwhile, is Britain’s fossil-hunting capital – as featured in the 2020 film Ammonite, starring Kate Winslet.

With an emphasis on car-free travel – walking, cycling and local buses – this Bradt guide’s detailed descriptions, historical glimpses, folklore and personal anecdotes whet visitors' appetite for exploration. Many activities are covered for the first time in this new edition. Coastal walking has never been better following the reopening of the South West Coast Path locally. Savour the artisan coffee that has become a big deal locally, or taste the produce of the region’s fastest-growing agricultural sector: wine. Giggle at the goings on at the ancient Goose Fayre in Colyton, and enjoy other idiosyncratic local festivals such as the Ottery tar barrels and Honiton hot pennies. And indulge in one of Beer’s Devon cream teas while admiring this picturesque fishing village. Wherever you amble, let Bradt’s East Devon and the Jurassic Coast (Slow Travel) be your companion.

Recenzijas

'Eye-opening and wonderful.' The Sunday Times Magazine

'All of the usual characterful prose that makes this series so readable.' The Bookseller

'An awesome handbook to the nooks, crannies, historical gems and gardens in East Devon.' Devon Life

Papildus informācija

. The most comprehensive - and only standalone - guide available to this region . Devon is the fourth most popular county for UK holidaymakers, 2021-23 (Visit England) . Dorset's Jurassic Coast featured in recent films Ammonite and Wonka . Growing market: sales of Bradt's UK guides increased every year 2019-23 and are now 50% higher than pre-pandemic (Nielsen)

About Bradt Guides . Founded in 1974, Bradt is now the largest independent guidebook publisher in the UK with over 200 titles in print. . Authentic guides, written by expert authors who really know their destinations. . Comprehensive, practical information with a particular focus on wildlife, culture and sustainability. . For more information, follow us on X, Instagram and Facebook, or visit bradtguides.com
Devon, How this book is arranged

1 EXETER & THE EXE ESTUARY
Getting there & around, Starting with the Romans, Exeter, Countess Wear, The
Exe Estuary

2 EAST TO HONITON
Getting there & around, The Killerton Estate, From the M5 to Honiton,
Honiton

3 THE CULM VALLEY & THE BLACKDOWN HILLS
Getting there & around, The Culm Valley, The Blackdown Hills

4 THE RIVER OTTER & THE HEART OF EAST DEVON
Getting there & around, Clyst St Mary to Newton Poppleford, Ottery St Mary &
area, The southern Otter, Around the River Sid, From Sid to Seaton, Food &
drink along the A3052

5 THE SEASIDE TOWNS
Getting there & around, Watersports & activities, Budleigh Salterton & area,
Sidmouth & area, Branscombe & Beer, Seaton & area, Axmouth

6 DEVON'S FAR EAST 239
Getting there & around, West of the Axe, The Colys & area, East of the Axe

7 DORSET'S JURASSIC COAST
Getting there & around, Lyme Regis & Charmouth, Golden Cap to West Bay, West
Bay to Abbotsbury, Weymouth & around, The Isle of Purbeck & the end of the
Jurassic Coast

INDEX
Hilary Bradt co-founded Bradt Travel Guides in 1974, but now lives in semi-retirement in Seaton, East Devon. After nearly 50 years of writing guidebooks to Africa and South America, she has embraced her chosen home to the extent of insisting that such a large, varied and beautiful county deserved three Slow Travel guides, not just one. A keen walker, she has covered many miles of the South West Coast Path and inland footpaths. Most Saturdays see her taking part in one of Devon's parkruns (5 km, but she's appropriately slow), and - during the summer - a swim in the sea, just a few minutes away, is always a pleasure. She is a productive member of the South West Sculptors' Association and lectures regularly on travel-related topics at libraries and literary festivals, both in Devon and further afield.

After many decades living in various other parts of Britain, Janice Booth settled in East Devon ('within sound of the sea') in 2001, and enjoyed exploring her adopted home county on local buses until her death in February 2023. As a wartime toddler she lived briefly in Colyton (East Devon), where her mother took her 'to the seaside' at Seaton via a branch of the old Southern Railway that ran where the Seaton Tramway now rattles to and fro. On family holidays she tasted her first clotted cream in Sidmouth aged eight, rode on the Burgh Island tractor aged ten, and rock-hopped along the shore near Wembury in her early teens. She was fascinated by Devon folklore, co-wrote (with Hilary) Bradt's Slow Guide to East Devon & the Jurassic Coast, and - further afield - was co-author of Bradt's Rwanda.