A companion for the road

South Molton Companion

South Molton & the North Devon / Exmoor / West Somerset country

Everything here sits within about ninety minutes of the door: churches, gardens, coast, beaches, restaurants, cider farms, vineyards, cheese, smoked fish, steam railways and mechanical days out. The map holds every pin; each entry links out for directions and further checking.

The ground

All 70 places on the map

South Molton base · local Leaflet assets · OpenStreetMap tiles

Planning corners

Choose by corner

These groupings collect places that sit naturally together, from South Molton and the Mole valley to the Lynton coast, West Somerset and the far Somerset day.

Family, trains & machines

Steam, tanks, models and easy wins

The strongest picks for a nine-year-old who likes trains and mechanical things, plus beaches, short walks and hands-on stops that can carry a mixed party.

Devon Railway Centre, Bickleigh

Family, trains & machines

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Devon Railway Centre, Bickleigh

Two ride-on railways + model layouts

~50 min Top pick for trains

The best single day for a train-mad child. Unlimited rides on a 2ft narrow-gauge line and a 7¼-inch miniature railway, a big undercover model-railway exhibition with push-button controls, an Edwardian model village and model funfair, drive-your-own trains and cars, the Black Hole Orbiter, crazy golf and indoor play coaches — all around a restored Victorian GWR station.

Open daily in early Aug (school holidays); also Thu–Sun + BHol. Café on site.

Photo: Lewis Clarke · CC BY-SA 2.0

Lynton & Barnstaple Railway, Woody Bay

Family, trains & machines

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Lynton & Barnstaple Railway, Woody Bay

Heritage narrow-gauge steam

~45 min Steam

Narrow-gauge steam through Exmoor in restored 1890s carriages — a two-mile round trip from Woody Bay (England's highest narrow-gauge station) to Killington Lane, about 25 minutes, tickets valid all day. There's a miniature railway and a gnome-and-fairy garden too, and volunteers often let children near the engines.

~£10 adult, under-14s free. Open Apr–1 Nov, most days except Fri and many Mon. Tea rooms.

Photo: James Johnstone from Ecclefechan, Scotland · CC BY 2.0

West Somerset Railway, Minehead

Family, trains & machines

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West Somerset Railway, Minehead

Britain's longest heritage steam line

~55 min (Minehead) Steam

Twenty miles of steam (and diesel) from Minehead to Bishops Lydeard along the Quantocks and coast, passing near Dunster — so you can pair a ride with the castle. The Gauge Museum at Bishops Lydeard has a hands-on signalling display and a model railway. 2026 is its 50th anniversary.

Board at Minehead (closest) or Dunster/Blue Anchor. Runs Tue–Wed, Sat–Sun + BHol from Apr, plus more in summer.

Photo: Geof Sheppard · CC BY-SA 4.0

Watermouth Castle, Berrynarbor

Family, trains & machines

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Watermouth Castle, Berrynarbor

Mechanical curios, model railway & rides

~40 min Mechanical things

A Victorian mock-castle turned family park, strong on the mechanical: a mechanical robot organ, antique pier penny-machines, a model railway room and a water clock, plus a water show, steam carousel, toboggan run, big river ride, maze and dungeon, and the new Hobbledown adventure play village.

~10am–3.30pm last admission; seasonal. Free parking. 15% summer online discount.

Photo: own photo · Public domain

The Big Sheep, Abbotsham

Family, trains & machines

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The Big Sheep, Abbotsham

Theme park + train ride (brewery on site)

~40 min Family day

North Devon's biggest family attraction: the Rampage roller coaster, the Twister, a train round Swan Lake, tractor rides, sheep races and EWEtopia indoor play. Country Life Brewery is on the same site, so the grown-ups can taste while the children ride.

Online ~£10+ adult/child (more in school holidays). Book before 10am for the discount.

Photo: Roger A Smith · CC BY-SA 2.0

Stone, glass & rood screens

Churches & Sacred Sites

The country around South Molton is dense with great churches, and three of the best sit within a quarter-hour of the door. Beyond them lie a working monastery, Exeter's vault, and the far-edge cathedral-and-abbey pair at Wells and Glastonbury.

St Mary Magdalene, South Molton

Churches & sacred sites

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St Mary Magdalene, South Molton

15th-c. Perpendicular town church

In town

A big Perpendicular Gothic church, Grade I listed, with a carved stone pulpit, a medieval font and a fine set of Green Men — one with foliage pouring from his fingertips, thought to be the master mason. In the churchyard, Wagstaffe's Gate recalls the 1655 Penruddock Uprising, when New Model Army cavalry broke 300–400 Royalists in a three-hour fight through the streets.

Open ~9–4 Mon–Sat; closed after the Sunday morning service.

Photo: Robert Cutts from Bristol, England, UK · CC BY 2.0

St Hieritha's, Chittlehampton

Churches & sacred sites

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St Hieritha's, Chittlehampton

Devon's finest tower; a saint's shrine

~15 min Don't miss

The local masterpiece. A Saxon-origin pilgrimage church rebuilt 1470–1520 for St Urith, martyred here; pilgrims' offerings paid for the tower, reckoned the best in Devon. The c.1500 wineglass pulpit shows Urith with a martyr's palm; her holy well survives at the east end of the village. As they said: 'Bishop's Nympton for length, South Molton for strength, Chittlehampton for beauty.'

Usually open in daylight hours.

Photo: Lewis Clarke · CC BY-SA 2.0

Exeter Cathedral

Churches & sacred sites

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Exeter Cathedral

The longest continuous medieval vault on earth

~55 min Major

The premier church in range. The longest unbroken medieval stone vault in the world (~96m, with no central tower to interrupt it); over 400 gilded roof bosses; the earliest complete set of misericords in Britain (including the first carved elephant); a 14th-c. minstrels' gallery and Great East Window; the 1484 astronomical clock; and an 18m Devon-oak bishop's throne. Pevsner called the interior 'unforgettable.'

~9–5 Mon–Sat, restricted Sun; admission charged; an active church, so areas may close for services. Roof tours bookable.

Photo: Antony McCallum · CC BY-SA 3.0

Buckfast Abbey

Churches & sacred sites

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Buckfast Abbey

A living Benedictine monastery

~75–90 min Edge of range

A working Benedictine community and the closest match to your Mount St Bernard visit. Founded 1018, dissolved 1539, then famously rebuilt 1907–38 by six monks. Free entry; the Byzantine tower iconography, the dalle-de-verre Blessed Sacrament chapel window and St Thomas More's preserved hair shirt reward the drive.

Church open long hours; gardens/centre ~10–4.30. At the far southern edge — treat as its own day.

Photo: Stefan Schwarz · CC BY 4.0

Wells Cathedral

Churches & sacred sites

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Wells Cathedral

Scissor arches & Vicars' Close

~1h15–1h20 Far edge

Spectacular: the scissor (strainer) arches, the sculpted West Front and Vicars' Close — claimed the oldest intact residential street in Europe. Built 1175–1490.

~61 miles, right at the limit and longer in August traffic. Do it with Glastonbury (15 min apart) as one big day. Generally open daily, restricted Sun.

Photo: Diliff · CC BY-SA 3.0

Hartland Abbey

Churches & sacred sites

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Hartland Abbey

Dissolved monastery turned house & garden

~1 hr Closed Fri/Sat

The last monastery dissolved by Henry VIII, now a family home with a Gertrude Jekyll fernery, walled and bog gardens, and a beach walk to Blackpool Mill (of Sense and Sensibility and The Night Manager).

2026 season Sun 29 Mar–Thu 1 Oct, open Sun–Thu + bank holidays; CLOSED Fri & Sat. Gardens 11–5, house 2–5 (last 3.45). Garden £15, house+garden £18.50.

Photo: Greenshed · Public domain

Exmoor falls into the sea

Coast, Moor & Towns

High cliffs, wooded gorges, dry valleys and small harbours: the north coast is the trip's dramatic counterweight to the churches and larder.

Lynton & Lynmouth + Cliff Railway

Coast, moor & towns

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Lynton & Lynmouth + Cliff Railway

Water-powered funicular since 1890

~45 min Don't miss Family fit

The signature Exmoor coastal day. The cliff railway — opened Easter 1890, the highest and steepest fully water-powered railway in the world (862ft of track, 500ft rise, 57% gradient) — links the two villages and runs daily in season.

Runs ~March–early Nov, from ~10am, near-continuous.

Photo: Ben Shade (BenShade or see wikipedia BenShade) · CC BY 2.5

Tarr Steps

Coast, moor & towns

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Tarr Steps

Britain's longest clapper bridge

~35–40 min Check route Family fit

A 17-span ancient clapper bridge in an oak-wood nature reserve on the Barle. The Tarr Farm Inn does food and cream teas.

2026 caveat: the Hinds Pitt footbridge upstream has been closed since 2025, breaking the usual loop — out-and-back may be your option. Check before going.

Photo: Stefan Kühn · CC BY-SA 3.0

Three miles of sand

Beaches

Woolacombe, Croyde and Saunton give you the classic surf-coast run: long sand, Atlantic air and easy food nearby.

Roses, carriages & Gothic Revival

Houses & Gardens

Rosemoor, Arlington, Knightshayes and Dunster Castle cover the green half of the guide: serious gardens, house interiors and views over old estates.

RHS Garden Rosemoor

Houses & gardens

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RHS Garden Rosemoor

65 acres, ~2,000 roses

~35 min Don't miss

Near Great Torrington: formal and woodland gardens, a great rose summer, a restaurant and tearoom. August shows the rose and Cool/Hot gardens at their best.

Open daily ~10–6 (last entry 5); free for RHS members. The Garden Festival is 21–23 Aug — just after your dates.

Photo: Patche99z · CC BY-SA 3.0

Where to eat

Restaurants & Pubs

The best dinners sit on the coast and toward Exeter, with a few reliable pubs nearer base. August rewards early booking.

Lympstone Manor

Restaurants & pubs

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Lympstone Manor

Michael Caines · 1 Michelin star

~1h15–1h30 Edge of range

The best bona-fide starred meal in reach: modern French on the Exe estuary, a 17,500-vine estate vineyard and a 600-label cellar; Relais & Châteaux. Star held since 2018.

Outer edge of range; could top 90 min in August traffic. Book well ahead; ideal as a destination lunch.

Photo: Maypm · CC BY-SA 4.0

The country larder

Producers, markets and farm visits

Within reach of the door is a serious cluster of places you can taste at and buy from: vineyards, cider farms, cheese, smoked fish, sturgeon caviar, ales, spirits, markets and working farms.

Vineyards & wine

Vineyards & wine

English still and sparkling from the Exe valley and North Devon — small, hands-on, friendly operations rather than grand estates.

Venn Valley Vineyard, Landkey

Vineyards & wine

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Venn Valley Vineyard, Landkey

North Devon wine · tours & café

~20–25 min Top pick

The closest serious vineyard and an easy win. Family-run, growing Chardonnay, Pinot Noir and Meunier for red, white, rosé and a Brut. Tours (~1.5 hrs: vines, a winemaking talk and a tasting of up to four wines) run Thu–Sat 10:30 & 14:30 and Sun 10:30; The Vine café takes walk-ins.

Open ~late Feb–late Sep; book the tour. Max 20 per tour.

Photo: Derek Harper · CC BY-SA 2.0

Cider

Cider

The headline West Country drink. Soft Devon farmhouse cider near you; drier Somerset scrumpy if you'll drive east.

Sandford Orchards, Crediton

Cider

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Sandford Orchards, Crediton

Britain's oldest working cider mill

~40 min Excellent

One of Devon's most exciting cider names, pressing only Devon apples. The shop opens six days; the Tap Room opens Fri & Sat evenings (from 4pm) with a licensed bar and sourdough pizzas. Once a month, a Tour & Tasting evening (~£35: tour, pizza, flight, Q&A).

Check the monthly tour date against your stay. Try Devon Red, Katja, Ice Cider.

Photo: Missvain · CC BY 4.0

Sheppy's Cider, Bradford-on-Tone

Cider

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Sheppy's Cider, Bradford-on-Tone

Somerset, sixth generation · full visitor centre

~50 min Best Somerset day

The easy, high-quality Somerset contrast: a House of Cider shop, a café and Apple Bay restaurant, a rural-life museum, orchard trails and animals. Guided tours (~1.5 hrs + tasting) run for 2026; SheppyFest is the first weekend of September.

Shop ~Mon–Sat 9–5, Sun 10–4 (verify). Museum may be closed for roof repairs — check.

Photo: Rosser1954 · CC BY-SA 4.0

Cheese & dairy

Cheese & dairy

World-class clothbound cheddar an hour off, and a local ice-cream dairy on your doorstep.

Quicke's, Newton St Cyres

Cheese & dairy

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Quicke's, Newton St Cyres

World-class clothbound cheddar

~50 min Essential for cheese

Farming since 1540, cheese since 1973: traditional clothbound cheddar matured in the 'Cathedral of Cheese', plus buttery, smoked and elderflower cheddars and whey butter. Behind-the-scenes Cheese Tours (Apr–Sep) end with a tutored tasting and lunch.

Shop Mon–Fri 10–4, Sat 9–1; closed Sun/BH. Tours ~£55pp, book ahead.

Photo: Ailura · CC BY-SA 3.0 at

Sea & smoke

Sea & smoke

Smoked trout, top-grade oysters — and, near North Molton, the only sturgeon-caviar farm in Britain.

Ale & spirits

Ale & spirits

North Devon ales and an excellent Exmoor distillery. Note Wicked Wolf Exmoor Gin (Brendon) is superb but not open to visit — buy it at The Cheese Larder in South Molton or Exmoor pubs.

Exmoor Distillery, Dulverton

Ale & spirits

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Exmoor Distillery, Dulverton

Northmoor Gin · tours daily

~45 min Best distillery visit

A small-batch distillery (est. 2018): award-winning Northmoor Gin (London Dry & Navy), Barle Valley vodka and spiced/cask rums on Exmoor borehole water. Shop open daily; guided tours & tastings (~45–60 min) seven days a week by booking.

Saturdays busy — book a tasting.

Photo: Ertly · CC BY 4.0

Markets, shops & farm visits

Markets, shops & farm visits

Assemble a Devon hamper, or get among the animals — your Thursday/Saturday market, the best delis and farm shops, and a working-farm tractor tour.

South Molton Pannier Market

Markets, shops & farm visits

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South Molton Pannier Market

'Britain's Favourite Market 2026'

In town Plan a Thu/Sat

Your home market and a real highlight — a covered market opened in 1864 and a serial award-winner, named Britain's Favourite Market 2026. ~70 traders: local veg, meat, a good cheese stall, bread, pies and pasties, fish, jams and crafts, plus a café.

Thursdays & Saturdays, 8:30am–1pm. Sundays often host car-boot/flea fairs.

Photo: Jack1956 · CC BY-SA 4.0

Quince Honey Farm, South Molton

Markets, shops & farm visits

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Quince Honey Farm, South Molton

Working honey farm & all-weather attraction

~5 min Easy local win Family fit

A genuinely good, family-run working honey farm (est. 1949) right by your base: honey-factory tours, beekeeping demos behind glass, tastings, the Nectar Gardens and soft play, a free-to-enter shop (Exmoor and seasonal honeys, beeswax) and the Nectary Restaurant for honey cream teas.

Open all year; 'An Hour with the Bees' runs Apr–Sep. The best place near you to buy honey.

Photo: Internet Archive Book Images · No restrictions

What to look for

Regional delicacies

A short list for markets, delis, pub menus and farm shops. Each heading links out for more background.

Devon clotted cream & cream teas

Far thicker than ordinary cream — minimum 55% butterfat, around 64% in practice. In Devon the order is cream first, then jam (Cornwall does the reverse). Try whortleberry jam on yours.

Exmoor whortleberries ('whorts')

Wild bilberries that ripen on the moor late July to August — your timing is ideal. Look for whortleberry jam, pies and meringues on Exmoor menus and farm-shop shelves.

Red Ruby Devon beef

The chestnut-red native breed: richly marbled, grass-fed, slow-grown beef, often dry-aged. Buy direct from West Ilkerton or off the market meat stalls.

Exmoor lamb

From hardy Exmoor Horn and Devon Closewool sheep raised across the moor — flavourful and worth seeking out.

Devon scrumpy cider

Unfiltered farmhouse cider straight from the vat. Sam's at Winkleigh and Sandford at Crediton are the closest good ones.

Clotted-cream ice cream — Hockings

The North Devon ritual: maroon vans serving one clotted-cream vanilla recipe (since 1936), with a flake. Find them on the quays at Appledore, Instow, Westward Ho!, Bideford, Barnstaple, Ilfracombe and Torrington Common, roughly March–October.

Locally landed seafood

Crab, lobster, mackerel and herring off Appledore, Clovelly, Lynmouth and Instow — and the classic Devon crab sandwich on brown bread.

Porlock Bay oysters

Top-grade Pacific oysters from Porlock Weir; buy at the weir or eat them at the Kitchen there.

Exmoor Caviar

Britain's only sturgeon caviar, farmed near North Molton on River Mole water. Not an open farm — buy via stockists or online.

Hog's pudding

A spiced pork pudding in the Devon/Cornwall white-pudding tradition — from local butchers and market meat stalls.

Pasties

Devon's pasty differs from the protected Cornish one (which must be made in Cornwall, with a side crimp). Devon pasties are sometimes crimped on top. Buy them fresh at the pannier markets.

Honey

Quince Honey Farm in South Molton and Exmoor honey across the region's farm shops.

Checks before setting off

Booking and caveats

Book ahead

  • Lympstone Manor — if you want the starred meal, book as far ahead as you can.
  • The Antidote (tiny, Thu–Sat evenings) and New Coast Kitchen — weeks ahead.
  • The Pyne Arms — especially for Sunday lunch.
  • Producer tours: Venn Valley Vineyard, Sam's Cider, the West Ilkerton tractor tour, and either Quicke's cheese tour or an Exmoor Distillery tasting. Grab Sandford's monthly Tour & Tasting if the date lands in your stay.
  • Confirm Hartland Abbey is open the day you go (closed Fri & Sat).
  • If you want Reeves in Dunster, phone first — its status is uncertain (not mapped here).

Practical cautions

  • Drive times are estimates via the A361/A39/A377; August traffic on the A361/M5 and narrow Exmoor lanes adds time. Wells/Glastonbury (~1h15+), Buckfast (~75–90 min), Lympstone (~1h15–1h30) and the central-Somerset cider farms (Wilkins ~1h20–30; Hecks ~1h25–40) are at or beyond the comfortable 90-minute edge.
  • Closures & changes: The Masons Arms closes 20 Jun 2026 (the region's one easy star, gone by August); Thomas Carr in Ilfracombe has closed; Reeves in Dunster is uncertain. Yearlstone is appointment-only; the New Exmoor Brewery shop/taproom is still establishing; Barnstaple Pannier Market is under regeneration; Sheppy's museum may be shut for roof repairs; Verney's is wholesale-only.
  • Not open to the public: Exmoor Caviar and Wicked Wolf Gin — buy via stockists.
  • Map pins sit at village or postcode level, with a few (Tarr Steps, Dunkery Beacon, St George's Dunster) at known landmark coordinates. Good enough to navigate to the right spot — check each venue's own directions for the final approach.
  • Opening hours shift; phone or check websites the week of travel, especially cider-tour days, NT house-open days, and anything that must be pre-booked.
  • Tides: a few beaches (Barricane near Woolacombe) are cut off at high water; check tide times for walks like Hartland's Blackpool Mill.
Image credits and licences
  1. St Mary Magdalene, South Molton: Robert Cutts from Bristol, England, UK · CC BY 2.0
  2. St Hieritha's, Chittlehampton: Lewis Clarke · CC BY-SA 2.0
  3. St Mary's, Molland: John Salmon · CC BY-SA 2.0
  4. St Mary's, Atherington: David Brinicombe · CC BY-SA 2.0
  5. St Peter's, Tawstock: nick macneill · CC BY-SA 2.0
  6. Exeter Cathedral: Antony McCallum · CC BY-SA 3.0
  7. Buckfast Abbey: Stefan Schwarz · CC BY 4.0
  8. Priory Church of St George, Dunster: Chris Emms · CC BY 3.0
  9. Wells Cathedral: Diliff · CC BY-SA 3.0
  10. Glastonbury Abbey: Steve Slater · CC BY 2.0
  11. Hartland Abbey: Greenshed · Public domain
  12. St Nectan's, Stoke: Dani · CC BY-SA 2.0
  13. RHS Garden Rosemoor: Patche99z · CC BY-SA 3.0
  14. Arlington Court (NT): Row17 · CC BY-SA 2.0
  15. Knightshayes (NT): Rod Allday · CC BY-SA 2.0
  16. Dunster Castle (NT): Mike Crowe · CC BY-SA 2.0
  17. Lynton & Lynmouth + Cliff Railway: Ben Shade (BenShade or see wikipedia BenShade) · CC BY 2.5
  18. Valley of Rocks: Janine Forbes · CC BY-SA 2.0
  19. Watersmeet: Lydia Larden · Public domain
  20. Tarr Steps: Stefan Kühn · CC BY-SA 3.0
  21. Dunkery Beacon: The original uploader was Mark J at English Wikipedia. · CC BY-SA 2.0
  22. Clovelly: Olaf Tausch · CC BY 3.0
  23. Ilfracombe: John McGowan · CC BY-SA 2.0
  24. Appledore: Steve Daniels · CC BY-SA 2.0
  25. Instow: Barrowbob · CC0
  26. Woolacombe: Myself (Adrian Pingstone). · Public domain
  27. Croyde Bay: Pauline Eccles · CC BY-SA 2.0
  28. Saunton Sands: Raimond Spekking · CC BY-SA 4.0
  29. Lympstone Manor: Maypm · CC BY-SA 4.0
  30. New Coast Kitchen, Croyde: Ron Strutt · CC BY-SA 2.0
  31. The Antidote, Ilfracombe: Dietmar Rabich · CC BY-SA 4.0
  32. The Pyne Arms, East Down: Lewis Clarke · CC BY-SA 2.0
  33. Stage, Exeter: Simon Cobb · CC0
  34. The Boathouse, Instow: Lewis Clarke · CC BY-SA 2.0
  35. Fox & Goose, Parracombe: Roger Cornfoot · CC BY-SA 2.0
  36. The Masons Arms, Knowstone: Edmund Shaw · CC BY-SA 2.0
  37. Venn Valley Vineyard, Landkey: Derek Harper · CC BY-SA 2.0
  38. Yearlstone Vineyard, Bickleigh: Chris Allen · CC BY-SA 2.0
  39. Torview Wines, Sheepwash: Ron Strutt · CC BY-SA 2.0
  40. Sandford Orchards, Crediton: Missvain · CC BY 4.0
  41. Sam's Cider, Winkleigh: Ministry of Information Photo Division Photographer, Wildman Shaw? · Public domain
  42. Sampford Courtenay Cider: Derek Harper · CC BY-SA 2.0
  43. Sheppy's Cider, Bradford-on-Tone: Rosser1954 · CC BY-SA 4.0
  44. Wilkins Farmhouse Cider, Wedmore: Roger Cornfoot · CC BY-SA 2.0
  45. Hecks Cider, Street: Jaggery · CC BY-SA 2.0
  46. Quicke's, Newton St Cyres: Ailura · CC BY-SA 3.0 at
  47. Verney's 'Molton Ice', Bishops Nympton: Derek Harper · CC BY-SA 2.0
  48. Blakewell Trout Farm & Smokehouse: Nemracc · CC BY-SA 4.0
  49. Porlock Bay Oysters, Porlock Weir: Herbythyme · CC BY-SA 4.0
  50. Exmoor Caviar, near North Molton: Chris Light · CC BY-SA 4.0
  51. Exmoor Distillery, Dulverton: Ertly · CC BY 4.0
  52. Country Life Brewery, Abbotsham: Tony Atkin · CC BY-SA 2.0
  53. Clovelly Brewery: Dietmar Rabich · CC BY-SA 4.0
  54. Barum Brewery, Pilton: Lobsterthermidor · Public domain
  55. New Exmoor Brewery, Wiveliscombe: Roger Cornfoot · CC BY-SA 2.0
  56. South Molton Pannier Market: Jack1956 · CC BY-SA 4.0
  57. Barnstaple Pannier Market: Dietmar Rabich · CC BY-SA 4.0
  58. Johns of Instow: Perry Dark · CC BY-SA 2.0
  59. Darts Farm, near Exeter: Raimond Spekking · CC BY-SA 4.0
  60. Dulverton: ChurchCrawler · CC BY-SA 2.0
  61. West Ilkerton Farm, near Lynton: Bill Boaden · CC BY-SA 2.0
  62. Exmoor Blueberries, Exford: Petar Milošević · CC BY-SA 4.0
  63. Quince Honey Farm, South Molton: Internet Archive Book Images · No restrictions
  64. Devon Railway Centre, Bickleigh: Lewis Clarke · CC BY-SA 2.0
  65. Lynton & Barnstaple Railway, Woody Bay: James Johnstone from Ecclefechan, Scotland · CC BY 2.0
  66. West Somerset Railway, Minehead: Geof Sheppard · CC BY-SA 4.0
  67. Watermouth Castle, Berrynarbor: own photo · Public domain
  68. The Big Sheep, Abbotsham: Roger A Smith · CC BY-SA 2.0
  69. Milky Way Adventure Park, Clovelly: Derek Harper · CC BY-SA 2.0
  70. Cobbaton Combat Collection: Mohit S from Mumbai, India · CC BY 2.0