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by Julia Goodfellow-Smith 2023's stand-out new personal development book. Live Your Bucket List: Simple steps to ignite your dreams, face your fears and lead an extraordinary life – starting today, uses the author’s personal experiences to provide insight into achieving a specific bucket list dream. Instead of reinventing the wheel, readers can learn from Julia’s mistakes and triumphs to make their own bucket list adventure the best possible success. FREE - Download your free 'Live Your Bucket List' templates: charts, diagrams & certificates
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If you've ever climbed Snowdon/Yr Wyddfa (or even just dream of climbing Snowdon) - Wales' highest mountain - then this stylish, superb quality sew-on embroidered patch makes a great souvenir, keepsake or gift.
- Eye-catching, modern design
- Full colour
- Embroidered
- 80mm high
- Contrasting stitched edge
- Colourfast and washable
- Designed in Wales
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Tea Shops in South Cornwall
A walk on the South Cornwall coast without a visit to a tea shop is like Ant without Dec or fish without chips. What could be better than sitting down to afternoon tea – jam, first, of course! – at the end of a lovely walk along the crest of roller-coaster cliffs? Or tucking into a Cornish pasty while gazing out at a beautiful sandy bay? And you won’t just find the time-honoured favourites; the cafes, tea shops and bistros of South Cornwall also serve up tasty brunches, vegan lunches and gluten-free cakes all washed down with excellent artisan coffees, local beers and even tea grown in the county. Modern or traditional, you’ll find it here. -
This NEW Official Guide to the Isle of Anglesey section of the Wales Coast Path describes the route in an anti- clockwise direction, starting and finishing at Menai Bridge. New Edition - wholly rewalked and updated 2024 One of seven Official Guides to the Wales Coast Path The Isle of Anglesey can boast some of the finest and most varied coastal scenery in Britain. During a 125-mile/200 kilometre circuit of the island, you'll experience the dramatic Menai Strait, broad tidal estuaries, sandy bays separated by rocky headlands, dramatic cliffs and sheltered, quiet coves. For much of the route, Snowdonia's mountains and the Llyn peninsula form a dramatic backdrop to the coastal views. Along the way you'll find prehistoric monuments, sea arches and caves, a medieval castle, lighthouses and a church in the sea as well as a wealth of wildlife from grey seals and dolphins to little egrets, peregrines, terns and puffins.
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Tea Shops in North Cornwall
A walk on the North Cornwall coast without a visit to a tea shop is like Ant without Dec or fish without chips. What could be better than sitting down to afternoon tea – jam, first, of course! – at the end of a lovely walk along the crest of roller-coaster cliffs? Or tucking into a Cornish pasty while gazing out at a beautiful sandy bay? And you won’t just find the time-honoured favourites; the cafes, tea shops and bistros of North Cornwall also serve up tasty brunches, vegan lunches and gluten-free cakes all washed down with excellent artisan coffees, local beers and even tea grown in the county. Modern or traditional, you’ll find it here. -
The Yorkshire Dales' Weird and Wonderful Places
Since the last Ice Age, hunter-gatherers, then farmers of crops and animals, then miners, have moved into the Dales and made their mark on the landscape. From prehistoric standing stones and rock art, to lonely wayside crosses, monastic routes, packhorse bridges, medieval churches and shrines. More recently, there are follies in parkland and relics of the extraction of limestone, copper and lead. The land too holds mysteries, from fantastical wind-sculpted gritstone edges to the forbidding, dark liminal spaces of caves —once thought to provide portals to a veiled netherworld. A rich folklore attests to beliefs in fantastical creatures such as kelpies, trolls, fairies and witches, peopling untamed uplands or the cavernous underworld. Enjoy a freaky walk!