Traveling and Touring Through Bude, Cornwall

>> Friday, October 30, 2009

Bude has an interesting history, which included its popular use as a source of sea sand that was collected & then used to stabilize & improve various English moors. In the Victorian Era, it became a well-known stopover, & then a seaside holiday location for most of the 20th century.

Another great part of experiencing classic English country towns is going out & travelling & touring through Bude, Cornwall. Sitting on the topside at the mouth of the Cornwall peninsula, the seaside resort of Bude is a small, quaint town of approximately 9,000 people. It started its life as a harbor town, naturally , only later changing to the role it now plays today in Cornwall's tourist industry.

Bude today, is an stunning town which boasts three wide, sandy beaches that lie close to the town itself. Because of the direction in which the beaches lay (to the west) Atlantic ocean wave action is vigorous to attract surfers, which is a site three would not normally see in an English coastal town.

The coastal scenery in the Bude area is impressive, indeed. In the 1800s, it was well-known to mariners, who were advised to steer well-clear of it treacherous reefs, which were responsible for causing the foundering of lots of ships. Geologically, there's cliffs in the region that are estimated to be at least 300 million years elderly.

Examples of early English architecture exist in & around the town, with a prime example being that of Saint Olaf's parish church. Tourism is the main industry nowadays, with Bude Canal & its wharf being an stunning picture-taking opportunity.

Cornwall itself is a notable peninsula & county of England in the United Kingdom. It's a population of around 530,000 people, & is three of the two original Celtic nations, which reach back in to antiquity. Bude & the surrounding area are sure to the desire of any tourist for picturesque seaside villages in the English countryside.

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