Executive summary
This is the slow, salty, food-forward version of England: a fortnight tracing the South West peninsula from Georgian Bath down through Dorset's Jurassic Coast, across Dartmoor's moorland, and out to the Atlantic edge of Cornwall. Expect granite coves, pasty lunches on harbour walls, Michelin-level seafood in fishing villages, sub-tropical gardens, and more cream teas than strictly defensible. Pace is deliberately unhurried: two 3-night anchors (St Mawes and St Ives/Penzance area) give the couples time to breathe, swim, and read on cliffside terraces. History threads through Stonehenge, Tintagel and Roman Bath, but the stars here are sea, sand and supper.
Highlights
- Roman Baths & Georgian Bath — thermal springs, Royal Crescent, afternoon tea at The Pump Room.
- Stonehenge & Salisbury Cathedral — Neolithic monument plus the finest original Magna Carta.
- Jurassic Coast — Durdle Door arch and Lulworth Cove's near-perfect horseshoe bay.
- Dartmoor wild ponies — granite tors, clapper bridges, and ponies grazing the open moor.
- Tintagel Castle — the Arthurian clifftop ruin and its dramatic new footbridge.
- St Michael's Mount — tidal causeway crossing at low tide; boat back at high.
- Minack Theatre — open-air amphitheatre carved into the cliffs above Porthcurno.
- Land's End & Lizard Point — the two southwestern extremes of mainland Britain.
- Eden Project & Lost Gardens of Heligan — the biomes and the restored Victorian pleasure grounds.
- Tate St Ives & Barbara Hepworth Museum — modernist art with the Atlantic as backdrop.
- Rick Stein in Padstow — the seafood pilgrimage, done properly.
- Cornish cream tea — jam first, then cream. Argue with Devon later.
Day-by-day
- Accommodation
- The Gainsborough Bath Spa (thermal spa in-house) or The Royal Crescent Hotel for a splurge.
- Drive
- LHR → Bath, ~185 km, 2h15 via M4. Car pickup at LHR Terminal 5.
- Morning
- Arrivals staggered; Couple A lands BUD→LHR on BA (Bristol routing likely gets dropped for easier four-person logistics). Meet at Avis/Hertz, collect the automatic.
- Afternoon
- Drive west, check in, stroll the Royal Crescent and the Circus, drinks on the Gainsborough terrace.
- Dinner
- The Olive Tree at The Queensberry Hotel — refined, Michelin-starred, walkable from either hotel.
- Tip
- Jet-lag will hit. Skip any big evening plan; a 90-minute soak in the Gainsborough's thermal pool beats a sightseeing push.
- Accommodation
- As above.
- Drive
- 0 km.
- Morning
- Pre-booked 9:00 entry to the Roman Baths (avoids tour-bus crush). Coffee at Colonna & Small's afterwards.
- Afternoon
- Bath Abbey tower climb, then the Holburne Museum and a slow walk through Henrietta Park to Great Pulteney Street. Cream tea at The Pump Room or Sally Lunn's.
- Dinner
- Menu Gordon Jones (tasting menu, book far ahead) or Beckford Canteen for something looser.
- Tip
- Park once on arrival in Bath — it's a walking city. SouthGate or Charlotte Street car parks are the sane options.
- Accommodation
- The Chapter House Hotel (cathedral-close) or Howard's House Hotel out in Teffont Evias.
- Drive
- Bath → Stonehenge → Salisbury, ~80 km, 1h45 with stops.
- Morning
- Book a 10:30 timed-entry slot at Stonehenge. Allow 2 hours including the visitor centre.
- Afternoon
- Old Sarum earthworks (15 minutes), then Salisbury Cathedral and the Magna Carta. Evensong at 17:30 if the day aligns.
- Dinner
- The Haunch of Venison — 14th-century, creaky floors, decent pies and a deep wine list.
- Tip
- Stonehenge slots sell out in summer; book the instant the itinerary is locked.
- Accommodation
- The Castle Inn Lulworth or Limestone Hotel, Weymouth, if Lulworth is full.
- Drive
- Salisbury → Lulworth via Corfe Castle, ~85 km, 2h.
- Morning
- Corfe Castle ruin (National Trust), then coffee in the village square.
- Afternoon
- Coastal walk from Lulworth Cove to Durdle Door — about 3 km round trip, steep steps, worth every one. Swim in the cove if the Channel is obliging.
- Dinner
- Lulworth Cove Inn, terrace table.
- Tip
- Lulworth parking fills by 10:00. Arrive early or stay in village so the car stays put.
- Accommodation
- Gidleigh Park (two Michelin stars, country-house legend) or Lewtrenchard Manor for a Jacobean alternative.
- Drive
- Lulworth → Chagford, ~160 km, 2h45. Cross the River Exe around Exeter.
- Morning
- Drive west, lunch stop in Lyme Regis — fossil hunt on the Blue Lias beach and a walk along The Cobb (Persuasion, French Lieutenant's Woman).
- Afternoon
- Into Dartmoor: Haytor for the classic tor walk, then down to Widecombe-in-the-Moor. Wild ponies grazing the roadside are not staged — they're just there.
- Dinner
- Gidleigh Park tasting menu, or The Three Crowns pub in Chagford village for something unbuttoned.
- Tip
- Dartmoor roads are single-track with stone walls both sides. Fold the wing mirrors in when you park, and take it slowly after dark.
- Accommodation
- Hotel Tresanton — Olga Polizzi's sea-facing classic; the reference-point Cornish hotel.
- Drive
- Chagford → St Mawes via A30 then A390, ~170 km, 3h. Mid-week, so A30 should flow.
- Morning
- Leave Dartmoor after breakfast. Stop at the Eden Project near St Austell — 2–3 hours in the biomes, lunch in the Mediterranean canopy.
- Afternoon
- Continue to the Roseland, catch the King Harry Ferry across the Fal, arrive St Mawes in time for G&Ts on the Tresanton terrace.
- Dinner
- Tresanton's dining room — the view is the starter.
- Tip
- The King Harry Ferry saves 40 minutes and is itself a small pleasure. Cash or card, runs every 20 minutes.
- Accommodation
- Hotel Tresanton.
- Drive
- Optional day-trip driving only, ~60 km round trip.
- Morning
- Ferry across to Place, coastal path to St Anthony Head lighthouse (the one from Fraggle Rock). About 4 km of genuinely lovely walking.
- Afternoon
- Lost Gardens of Heligan — the "lost" Victorian estate rediscovered in the 1990s. Allow 3 hours for the Jungle Valley and Productive Gardens.
- Dinner
- The Idle Rocks in St Mawes (sister property, seafood-heavy) or back at Tresanton.
- Tip
- Heligan beats Eden for atmosphere if you have to pick — Eden is impressive, Heligan is romantic.
- Accommodation
- Fowey Hall (Edwardian, gardens, Daphne du Maurier country) or The Old Quay House for harbourfront rooms.
- Drive
- St Mawes → Fowey, ~45 km, 1h10 with the Bodinnick car ferry.
- Morning
- Slow start; walk the St Mawes harbourside, browse the gallery, board the Fal ferry if you fancy an extra water excursion.
- Afternoon
- Drive via Mevagissey (15 minutes of pottering), arrive Fowey, walk the Hall Walk above the estuary to Polruan for a pint at the Lugger Inn.
- Dinner
- Sam's on the Beach at Polkerris, or Appleton's at the Vineyard for a land-based option.
- Tip
- The Bodinnick ferry takes 4–5 cars at a time. Don't sprint to catch one; the next is 10 minutes away.
- Accommodation
- The Old Coastguard, Mousehole — sub-tropical garden straight to the rocks.
- Drive
- Fowey → Mousehole, ~110 km, 2h15. Saturday on the A30 is changeover day — leave by 8:30 or after 14:00.
- Morning
- Early start, A30 west, coffee at Jamaica Inn on Bodmin Moor if traffic is fine (or the Little Chef ghosts if not).
- Afternoon
- Drop bags in Mousehole, walk the South West Coast Path to Lamorna Cove (1h each way) or cheat and drive. Swim at Lamorna if brave.
- Dinner
- The Shore, Penzance — chef Bruce Rennie, tiny room, serious seafood. Book weeks ahead.
- Tip
- Mousehole's lanes are not for visiting cars. Use the harbour car park and walk in — it's 4 minutes.
- Accommodation
- The Old Coastguard.
- Drive
- ~70 km of looping day trips.
- Morning
- St Michael's Mount — check the tide table. Walk the causeway at low tide, climb to the castle, boat back if the tide's in.
- Afternoon
- Minack Theatre for a tour and a cliff-edge look; Porthcurno beach below has the clearest turquoise water in Britain. Book an evening Minack performance if the week's programme aligns.
- Dinner
- 2 Fore Street, Mousehole — unfussy bistro, local catch, garden seating.
- Tip
- Minack matinees start 14:00. Bring a cushion and a waterproof; it's open to the sky.
- Accommodation
- Boskerris Hotel, Carbis Bay — clean lines, deep bathtubs, bay views; or Pedn Olva in St Ives town for harbour-side.
- Drive
- Mousehole → St Ives via Land's End, ~55 km, 2h with stops.
- Morning
- Drive to Land's End (skip the theme-park bit, do the coast path out to Sennen Cove). Geevor Tin Mine if the industrial-heritage pull is strong.
- Afternoon
- Arrive St Ives, Tate St Ives (compact, excellent), then the Barbara Hepworth Museum in her preserved studio-garden.
- Dinner
- Porthminster Beach Café — feet-in-the-sand table at sunset.
- Tip
- Do not try to drive into central St Ives. Use the Park & Ride at Lelant Saltings and take the branch-line train in — it's one of the best short train rides in Britain.
- Accommodation
- Rick Stein's Bryn Cocyn or the Padstow Townhouse — either puts you 2 minutes from the Seafood Restaurant.
- Drive
- St Ives → Padstow, ~70 km, 1h45.
- Morning
- Coffee on St Ives harbour, then a swim at Porthmeor before the beach fills up.
- Afternoon
- Drive north, stop at Bedruthan Steps (clifftop viewpoint, National Trust cafe) en route. Arrive Padstow in time for an afternoon walk along the Camel Estuary.
- Dinner
- Rick Stein's Seafood Restaurant — the pilgrimage plate. Book the instant dates are confirmed; tables go months out.
- Tip
- Paul Ainsworth at No. 6 is the alternative if Stein is full — arguably the better kitchen, certainly the more inventive one.
- Accommodation
- The Port Gaverne Hotel or The Slipway in Port Isaac.
- Drive
- Padstow → Port Isaac, ~25 km, 45 min.
- Morning
- Camel Trail bike hire from Padstow — gentle 8 km along the old railway line to Wadebridge and back.
- Afternoon
- Drive to Tintagel, cross the new cantilevered bridge to the island ruins, Arthurian nonsense optional but recommended. Down to Port Isaac (Doc Martin's village) for sundowners on the harbour.
- Dinner
- Outlaw's New Road in Port Isaac (Nathan Outlaw's two-Michelin-star seafood) or The Mariners at Rock (Paul Ainsworth's gastropub) across the estuary.
- Tip
- Port Isaac parking is at the top of the village. The walk down is steep; the walk back after dinner is steeper.
- Accommodation
- The Luttrell Arms, Dunster, or Combe House at Holnicote.
- Drive
- Port Isaac → Exmoor, ~140 km, 2h45 via A39 Atlantic Highway — scenic, not fast.
- Morning
- Coastal drive via Clovelly (donkey-pack village, car-free, hellishly steep cobbles — park at the top, walk down).
- Afternoon
- Into Exmoor proper: Valley of Rocks near Lynton, the Lynton–Lynmouth cliff railway, then inland to Dunster for the castle and yarn market.
- Dinner
- The Luttrell Arms dining room — proper West Country cooking, Exmoor lamb.
- Tip
- Porlock Hill (A39) is one of Britain's steepest main roads: 1 in 4 gradient. The toll road alternative is gentler and prettier.
- Accommodation
- The Bristol Hotel (harbourside) or the Artist Residence Bristol.
- Drive
- Exmoor → Bristol, ~115 km, 2h10.
- Morning
- Drive east through the Quantocks. Stop at Wells — England's smallest city, the cathedral with its scissor arches is a 20-minute must.
- Afternoon
- Arrive Bristol, walk the harbourside, SS Great Britain (Brunel's iron ship), then up to Clifton for the suspension bridge at golden hour.
- Dinner
- Paco Tapas or Wilsons on Chandos Road — Bristol punches above its weight for the last supper.
- Tip
- Drop the rental at Bristol Airport the next morning only if your flight leaves from there; otherwise return it at LHR to avoid a repositioning drive.
- Drive
- Bristol → LHR, ~190 km, 2h15. Aim for an afternoon flight, leave Bristol by 09:30. - Return car at LHR, fly home.
Budget · per couple
| Line item | Estimate (EUR) |
| Flights 2 pax RT (BUD or MUC → LHR) | 700 – 900 |
| Share of rental car (15 days, automatic) + fuel + tolls | 700 |
| Accommodation, 15 nights (mix Tresanton-tier + mid-range) | 3,500 – 4,200 |
| Food & drink for 2 (includes 3 tasting-menu nights) | 1,700 |
| Activities & entries (Stonehenge, Eden, Heligan, Tate, Minack, Tintagel, parking) | 500 |
| Buffer | 200 – 400 |
| Total per couple | 7,300 – 8,400 |
Pros & cons
Best for
Couples who want sea, food and slow mornings more than cathedrals and castles — the version of England where you end each day salted, sunburnt, and eating something pulled out of the water that morning.
---
Must book now (April 2026 → July 2026)
- Hotel Tresanton, St Mawes — 2 rooms in July sell out by February. Book first, plan around the dates.
- Rick Stein's Seafood Restaurant, Padstow — releases tables 3 months ahead; set a calendar reminder for the exact midnight drop.
- Paul Ainsworth at No. 6 / Outlaw's New Road — same deal, book with Stein as backup.
- Gidleigh Park — Dartmoor dinner is the destination, not the room; reserve both together.
- Minack Theatre — summer programme drops in February; popular nights go in days.
- Stonehenge timed entry — free-flow is gone; you must pre-book a slot.
- St Michael's Mount tide table — check the 2026 tides before fixing the Penzance days; the causeway only opens 3–4 hours either side of low tide.
- Eden Project & Lost Gardens of Heligan — online tickets are 15% cheaper than gate.
- Park & Ride passes for St Ives (Lelant Saltings) and Padstow — worth the €10, saves 40 minutes of circling.
- Car rental — automatic stock in the UK is thin; book at LHR the moment flights are ticketed.
← back to all options