The seaside port of Polperro, Cornwall, England. May 9, 2008

Bonnie and I stopped here for dinner. It’s Jamaica Inn, considered Cornwall’s most famous smuggler’s base. Made famous by Daphne du Maurier’s 1936 novel, this greystone hotel and pub dates from 1750, when its remote Bodmin Moor location attracted smugglers. May 9, 2008

It was time to leave Tintagel and Cornwall to make our way to The Cotswolds but before leaving, we stopped at St. Nectan’s Glen. It is an area of woodland in Trethevy near Tintagel, north Cornwall stretching for around one mile along both banks of the Trevillet River. May 10, 2008

Me at St. Nectan’s Glen’s, a woodland in Trethevy near Tintagel, north Cornwall stretching for around one mile along both banks of the Trevillet River. The glen’s most prominent feature is St Nectan’s Kieve, a spectacular sixty foot waterfall through a hole in the rocks. The site attracts tourists who believe it to be “one of the UK’s most spiritual sites,” and tie or place ribbons, crystals, photographs, small piles of flat stones and other materials near the waterfall. May 10, 2008