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The Linney is situated in Bodmin and offers a garden and barbecue facilities. The accommodation is 5.6 miles from Port Isaac.
The holiday home has 3 bedrooms, a TV, an equipped kitchen with a dishwasher and a microwave, a washing machine, and 2 bathrooms with a shower.
Newquay is 20.5 miles from the holiday home, while Padstow is 11.8 miles from the property. The nearest airport is Newquay Cornwall Airport, 13 miles from The Linney.
Cornwalls Cottages Ltd offers a wonderful selection of 400 holiday cottages, homes and apartments across Cornwall. Waterside cottages, country barn conversions, beautiful manor houses, stunning architect-designed homes and unique buildings are all there for you to choose for your next holiday! Every one of the holiday homes has been personally inspected and photographed from every angle so you can book with total confidence.
The Linney is a fantastic, dog friendly, converted barn set on a hill overlooking the Allen Valley and benefits from a substantial lawn garden and magnificent views over fields and woodland. An open plan living area with substantial granite fire place and comfortable seating compliments the three ample bedrooms. This is a holiday cottage that will let you relax in peaceful privacy for the perfect break. One of our many dog friendly cottages.
The Linney is situated about a mile from St Tudy a quaint Cornish village, the church around which the village was built was first constructed in the 6th century and then rebuilt in the 11th, 15th and latterly 19th centuries, the village has been built around the original Celtic circular raised graveyard - known locally as "God's Acre!" St Tudy is believed to be the birthplace of Captain Bligh of the "Mutiny on the Bounty" fame! The St Tudy Inn (formerly the Cornish Arms) will welcome you in for a refreshing drink, a hearty meal or both! Wadebridge was originally a market town. It has an amazing 15th century bridge with 17 arches over the River Camel, which is definitely worth a visit. It is said the bridge was built on wool as this was how the wealthy landowners in the area made their money. From the day the bridge was built the town became known as Wadebridge. The Royal Cornwall Show ground at Wadebridge hosts the county show every June, come rain or shine, opened each year by a member of the Royal Family. Cornish Farmers have had to diversify in recent years and so has the show, but they have kept their traditional roots with steam engines being shown next to the shiny new...
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