Favourite
Lundy Island
Undisturbed by cars, the island of Lundy has a small village with an inn, Victorian church and the 13th-century Marisco Castle. The Island has a variety of migratory seabirds, heathland and grassland habitats and the Lundy ponies. Designated the first Marine Conservation Area, Lundy offers opportunities for diving and seal watching.
Visit Lundy Island
Lundy Island, Lundy Island, Bideford, Devon , United Kingdom
No Records Found
Sorry, no records were found. Please adjust your search criteria and try again.
Maps failed to load
Sorry, unable to load the Maps API.
(Get directions)
Lundy Island 7 Day Weather Forecast
Bideford weather forecast from Yr, delivered by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute and NRK
You may also like ...
In this 'you may also like' section we attempt to answer what else can I do? Here you have a list by order of being the closest some more beaches, things to see and do, accommodation, places to eat and upcoming events.
17th June 2023, 5:00 pm
-
10:00 pm
The River Cottage Summer Shindig is an event at River Cottage HQ in Dorset, the idyllic 100-acre organic farm on the Dorset and Devon border. Music throughout the evening, seasonal food and a bar with organic beers, ciders and spirits as well as soft drinks.
Read more…
16th August 2023
-
17th August 2023
British Firework Championships is a large-scale pyrotechnic competition. You have six professional displays (three 10-minute displays each evening) showing off their choreography skills. The displays are fired from the Mountbatten breakwater and are designed to be seen from Citadel and The Hoe, which makes these areas the prime viewing areas. For the visitor to go alongside the fireworks, you also
Read more…
Where to stay ...
Booking.com
Beach: Saunton Beach View: Located directly on the beach overlooking Saunton Sands. What’s on the menu?: Breakfasts and light bites during the day; informal bistro serving steaks, salads and pasta at night. Fully licensed.
Read more…
Beach: Barricane Beach View: Situated right on this shingle beach, with views stretching across the secluded cove of Barricane Bay, half a mile from Woolacombe. What’s on the menu: Light bites and snacks during the day, great-tasting Sri Lankan curries in the evening!
Read more…
Beach: Woolacombe Beach View: Enjoy the views over the three miles of sandy Woolacombe Beach from the café’s balcony. What’s on the menu?: Breakfasts, light snacks and homemade cakes during the day. At night the café is transformed into a more romantic spot, serving grilled meat and fish, great BBQs and buffets.
Read more…
Beach: Westward Ho! View: Perched on the cliff top overlooking Bideford Bay and Lundy Island, with Westward Ho’s sandy beach below. What’s on the menu?: A seafront bar and bistro offering British classics; great seafood and steaks.
Read more…
Shipload Bay beach is sandy and very hard to get to. Shipload Bay, lies on the northern side of the Hartland peninsular on the coastal footpath. No facilities. We have no dog information for Shipload Bay beach.
Read more…
Hartland Quay beach is rock, shingle and has spectacular rock and cliff scenery and an old Elizabethan harbour. This is the most north-westerly settlement in Devon. Hartland is a convenient centre for walking parts of the South West Coast Path, and the wild coastal scenery around the point is some of the most dramatic on the path, with excellent views
Read more…
Clovelly beach is pebble (sand at low tide) and holds a sheltered position, carved into the 400ft cliffs of this far North stretch of the Devon coast, has been a favorite Devon visitor spot for many years. If you wander down the pebble beach you get excellent estuary views and a waterfall pouring out of the cliff face down to
Read more…
Welcombe Mouth is a Site of Special Scientific Interest. It is home to many specialist plants which can cope with the dry salt spray scattered by the sea. Accessible by lane and track this is a slate grey shingle beach. No facilities other than a small car park.
Read more…
The Lundy South Lighthouse is a compact station with a white circular tower, automated and converted to solar power in 1994. At the mouth of the Bristol Channel lies the Island of Lundy. It is a rugged mass of dark granite, surrounded by reefs of sharp rocks that make an approach to the island difficult to the unknowing sailor. Measuring
Read more…
The Lundy North Lighthouse is set on a narrow plateau, on the cliffs, large colonies of guillemots, razor bills and herring gulls make their nests whilst on the rocks below Atlantic seals take refuge. At the mouth of the Bristol Channel lies the Island of Lundy. It is a rugged mass of dark granite, surrounded by reefs of sharp rocks
Read more…
Hartland Point Lighthouse gives a guide to vessels of all types approaching the Bristol Channel, the lighthouse was built by Trinity House in 1874 under the direction of Sir James Douglass. Hartland Point lighthouse, built on a large rock at the tip of the point, was threatened by the undermining action of the sea to such an extent that rock
Read more…
Hartland Point is a 325 ft (99 m) high rocky outcrop of land on the northwestern tip of the Devon coast. The Hartland Peninsula is an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and the point marks the western limit (on the English side) of the Bristol Channel with the Atlantic Ocean continuing to the west.
Read more…