The Landmark Trust  
Home Careers Site accessibility Sitemap Contact Links Make a donation
Kingwear Castle, Devon East Banqueting House, Gloucestershire The Ancient House, Suffolk Appleton Water Tower, Norfolk Martello Tower, Suffolk Goddards, Surrey
News
About Landmark
Booking a Landmark
The Handbook
Availability list
Future Landmarks
Supporting Landmark
Visiting Landmarks
spacer
Search Buildings Clear
Arrive:
Depart:
Length of stay:
Sleeps:
 

Compare Buildings Clear

Compare Landmarks by visiting each property's Price and Availability page, select an available start date, and click "Add to comparison". 

To view your saved comparison, please Login.


Late Availability

Get ideas for:



Hanmers, Lundy

Bristol Channel, Devon

 

Overview Photographs Floor plans Logbook Maps Price &
availability

 

Exterior, Hanmers, Lundy

 

Lundy (‘Puffin Island’) lies in the Bristol Channel. It is three miles long, a 400 foot granite outcrop with tremendous views of sea and mainland. Its cliffs and hanging valleys are rich in wildlife and wildflowers. Lundy was taken on by the National Trust in 1969 through the generosity of Sir Jack Hayward, when the Landmark Trust agreed to run the island and restore its buildings under a 99 year lease. Most of these buildings are clustered at the south end of the island: they include a castle, cottages, a working farm and several foursquare houses. You can stay at various levels of comfort, from camping to the former Governor’s House and everything in between.

Lundy is small and far enough away to be a world apart and undefaced. It offers the pleasures both of pure escape and of participation in the island community: walks high amid the breezes and wheeling seabirds, looking out across the sea to the Devon coast or across the wide Atlantic, and sociable visits to tavern and shop. Everyone has free run of the whole island, and for those interested, there are field studies in flora and fauna, rock climbing, diving and snorkelling.

Getting to Lundy is also part of the adventure. You leave your car on the mainland and between March and November, day and staying visitors cross to the island on our handsome supply ship the MS Oldenburg. Through the winter months, there is a helicopter service from Hartland Point for those staying on the island. To view the Lundy transport timetable, visit our Staying on Lundy page. It is also possible to make your way to the island using your own transport.

All those who experience the light and natural beauty of Lundy leave with something in common which they treasure. Many return again and again.

Hanmers was built by a fisherman in 1902. He chose a good site, a dip in the hill, on the path from the beach to the castle, so the place is sheltered but has the usual wonderful view out to sea towards Devon. It is weather-boarded outside and its interior is also of wood, painted white in the front rooms, which gives it a warm and solid feel.



Fire or stove Shower Dogs not allowed Simply and practically furnished A distance from the village

Sleeps: 4

Beds:

Features


  • Solid fuel stove


Other Landmarks at Lundy:


View All

 
Footer
Legal | ©2012 The Landmark Trust | Charity registered in England & Wales 243312 and Scotland SC039205