Putsborough

Putsborough is a hamlet in Georgeham Civil Parish on the west-facing coast of North Devon, England. It is about 34 mile (1.2 km) north of the village of Croyde and 1 mile (1.6 km) west-northwest of the village of Georgeham. 0.5 miles (0.8 km) north of the hamlet is Putsborough Sands, which forms the southern part of the two-mile-long (3 km) beach of Woolacombe Sand on Morte Bay.

Putsborough Beach, looking towards Woolacombe
Map showing the location of Putsborough Sand within Devon

Settlement

The manor house has an adjoining cluster of privately owned homes and holiday homes, a caravan site and a campsite. The manor house itself is Grade II listed and made of stone, cob and thatch construction, with origins dating back to the 17th century.[1] The first recorded written reference to Putsborough is from 1313; however there is mention in the Doomsday book to a sister of Ordulf (a Saxon lord who held the manor of Georgeham and Croyde, amongst others in Devon) who tried to found her own separate manor – possibly Putsborough.

The hamlet is a conservation area in the North Devon Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The South West Coast Path runs past it between Woolacombe and Croyde and around Baggy Point with views towards Lundy Island and the coast of south Wales.

Beach

Putsborough Sands - the surfing beach

Putsborough Sands is the name given to the southern part of Woolacombe Sands. It is a sandy beach with some rock pools, protected by Baggy Point from the prevailing southwesterly winds. The beach is privately owned and the car park is reached by a narrow road with passing places. Above the beach are a small caravan site, beach shop and toilet.

gollark: Even ones which aren't even useful for async?
gollark: Er, why is all that stuff there wrapped *in* the call to `Spinner`?
gollark: But, well, it's kind of better in some ways since it means that a CA on the actual web can't just read some traffic sent between a server and browser.I must note that your thing doesn't really (seem to) protect client->server data.
gollark: Admittedly the actual web has that (CAs and the DNS servers).
gollark: I can't see any reason that wouldn't work, but it *does* seem to introduce a lot of dependence on the registrar.

References

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