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Blackdown Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty


The Blackdown Hills is an unspoilt rural landscape of great beauty with an extraordinary variety of flora and fauna to discover.

 

Rural Mid Devon

 

Visiting the Blackdown Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty is like stepping back in time, for this peaceful group of hills lying on the border of Devon and Somerset has survived almost unscathed by post-war development.

To the north the land rises steeply in a dramatic wooded scarp, while to the south it forms a plateau, deeply dissected by valleys. On top of the plateau lie open windswept spaces, while in the valleys picturesque chertstone, cob, and thatched buildings cluster in villages and hamlets, surrounded by a patchwork of small enclosed fields, and accessed down narrow winding lanes with tall hedgerows.

It is wonderful countryside for walking, riding and cycling, particularly as it is home to many wildflower species including orchids, violets, and primroses, and a number of less common mammals and birds such as dormice, otters,and nightjars. The flower - rich grassland is ablaze with butterflies in summer, while the autumn colour of the woodlands is an amazing sight.

Another favourite Blackdown Hills' beauty spot is Iron Age Hembury Fort surrounded by great earthwork ramparts. Hembury's massive beeches with gnarled twisting roots preside over well worn tracks leading to the summit, which in late spring is carpeted with a sea of bluebells.

The Blackdown Hills is also famed for its community of high quality food producers, and tracking some of these down to sample their delicious produce is another Blackdown delight.

For more information on the Blackdown Hiils please visit www.blackdown-hills.net

Blackdown Hills