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Part Two. A Well-Spent Week in Southern Devon, England
May 2016 Six months have elapsed since I published Part One about the summer-of-2015 week when my dear friends Anne and David Guy led me on a long ramble across Southern Devon. Of the varieties of jobs I perform, no work challenges me more, or gives me more satisfaction, than the creation of these Travel … Continue reading
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Tags: agatha christie, and then there were none, anne guy garden designs, area of outstanding natural beauty, art deco, art deco in devon, art deco style, arts and crafts style, auguries of innocence, avray tipping, Beatrix Farrand, bigbury bay, bigbury beach, burgh island, burgh island hotel, cactus gardens, champernowne family, chusan palms, claridges hotel, coleton fishacre, coleton fishacre gardens, daphne dumaurier, dartington hall, dartington hall trust, dartington school, dartmouth england, dartmouths higher ferry, devon, dorothy d'oyly carte, dorothy elmhurst, drought tolerant gardens, edric hopkins, edward bawden, electrical rejuvenator, ellis manley, evil under the sun, exotic gardens, garden designers, gardens at dartington hall, george vereker, gilbert and sullivan, hercule poirot, high cross house, kingswear devon, landscape designers, leonard elmhurst, leonard rosoman, marion dorn, marmite, modernist architecture, modernist houses, mrs.danvers, Nan Quick, national trust, oswald milne, otto overbeck, overbecks, percy cane, peter randall page, preben jacobson, pudcombe cove, rebecca, river dart, rock dell, rupert d'oyly carte, salcombe, salcombe estuary, savoy theatre, sea tractor, sharpitor, south devon, southern devon england, spanish chestnut trees, ten little indians, tidal island, tiltyard, to see the world in a grain of sand, totes, tree echium, tropical gardens, william blake, william lescaze
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A Well-Spent Week in Southern Devon, England. Part One.
October 2015 I’m back on Terra Firma (aka New Hampshire), after this summer’s very satisfying, month-long expedition to England, where I continued my investigations of Britannia’s landscapes, luminaries, architecture, and history. Per usual, once home, my first task (after I do some serious laundry) is to sort thousands of trip photos. My brain isn’t nearly … Continue reading
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Tags: 10th flotilla of the U.S.coastguard, above town dartmouth, agatha christie, alfred lord tennyson, amicia de redvers, anne guy garden designs, arthur conan doyle, bayard's cove, bayard's cove fort, britannia royal naval college, bryant and may, bryant and may mysteries, buckland abbey, buckland abbey garden and estate, buckland monachorum, cat's eyes, cherub inn dartmouth, christopher fowler, christopher milne, church of st.saviour's, cistercian monks, d-day, D-Day Invasion, dart estuary, dart river, dartmoor national park, dartmouth, dartmouth england, dartmouth harbor, dartmouth steam railway, devon, devon england, dissolution of the monasteries, exercise tiger, General Eisenhower, glass house, green man, greenway, greenway court, greenway ferry, greenway gardens, guilford bell, gull cottage, herb garden, hound of the baskervilles, humphry rep ton, Ken Small, kingswear devon, landscape designer, lionel fortescue, lower ferry dartmouth, Lt.Marshall Lee, max mallow an, mayflower, Nan Quick, operation tiger, peculiar crimes unit, photographic portraits, pilgrim fathers, plymouth england, river dart, river tay, rosalind hicks, royal avenue gardens, royal castle hotel, saveurs dartmouth, sherman tank, sir francis drake, sir humphrey gilbert, sir richard grenville, sissinghurst, slapton beach, slapton key, slapton sands, southern devon, speedwell, spice bazaar dartmouth england, the boat float dartmouth, the butterwalk, the forgotten dead, the garden house, the garden house gardens, the national trust, the revenge a ballad of the fleet, the revenge battle of flores, the royal dart, Tor, toreros, utah beach, vita sackville west, wall murals, Walled Garden, World War II, yelverton devon
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