Copper Beech
Holiday Cottage in Lostwithiel
Sleeps 4 - Bedrooms 2 - From £420
Property Details
Accommodation
Ground floor only: There is a sun deck with a table and chairs. Kitchen/dining room with fitted units and appliances and a table and chairs. Living room with comfortable sofas and a flat-screen TV. A further door leads into the hallway with access to the master bedroom with a 5' bed, en suite shower room, plenty of storage. Also accessed from the hallway is a second double bedroom with a 5' bed and a family bathroom with a shower over the bath, WC and hand basin.
Facilities and Services
Heating is via gas central heating throughout. The kitchen includes a combined fridge/freezer, washing machine, dishwasher, electric oven and gas hob, microwave, kettle and toaster. Free unlimited superfast WiFi (no streaming!) is available at the property. The lounge area has an LED TV with Freeview, DVD player and electric coal effect fire. There is an iron, ironing board, cot and high chair.
Use of children's outdoor adventure playground and indoor games room including pool table, bar football table etc.
Miscellaneous
Electricity, heating and bed linen are included, but you will need to provide your own towels. There is unlimited parking on site. BBQs are available from reception for a small deposit.
General Booking Information
Arrival / Departure day is a Friday.
Short breaks are available during quieter periods.
£250 pre-authorised to your credit or debit card is required as a security deposit.
Property Location
St Austell was once the major producer of the world's China Clay; now with cheaper foreign imports, the industry is in decline but The Wheal Martyn China Clay Museum set in two former working pits depicts the countryside in years gone by. Wet weather activities could include the visitor centre at St Austell Brewery, sampling beers and ales made on the premises. The Eden Project hosts many bands throughout the season as well as featuring an Ice Rink out of season. Bodmin was the former county town of Cornwall for many years and the only Cornish town to be recorded in the Domesday Book, which was lodged in the town's prison during the First World War. The county prison is now a museum and open to the public. It was the first prison in the country to have separate cells. The oldest part of the town is made up of mainly granite buildings clustered around the Bodmin Beacon. The Beacon is a 144 feet tall obelisk in memory of Sir Walter Raleigh Gilbert. The area around the Beacon which has woodland and traditional hay meadow was declared a Local Nature Reserve in 1994. At Tregullon you are just 10 miles away from The Eden Project and 2 miles away from the National Trust's amazing Lanhydrock House. Nearby Bodmin Moor, bisected by the newly expanded A30, is home to one of Cornwall's Areas of Oustanding Natural Beauty, reaching a height of 1,377 feet above sea level at Brown Willy, Cornwall's highest point. The heather covered granite moorland provides East Cornwall with the most stunning country views and rugged walks. Near Blisland you will find two of Cornwall's stone circles, the Trippet Stones and Stripple Stone Henge and just round the corner, one end of the famous Camel Trail. The 18 mile Camel Trail follows the route of the old railway along traffic free paths, providing a fairly flat cycle through Bodmin and Wadebridge out to Padstow, eminently suitable for families.
Property Reviews
5 out of 5
Great stay beautiful area and caravan park
Reviewed on 13/07/2022Great place to stay quiet ,very nice area to stay,near places that you would love to see,Copper Beech was a lovely bungalow comfortable clean and cozy, would not need anymore.We enjoyed our stay thank you loved it.
5 out of 5
Great Park Perfect Holiday Home
Reviewed on 17/05/2022We had a five night stay at this lovely holiday home and found it to be the perfect break away in this part of Cornwall. The park was quiet friendly and perfectly located.
Property Floorplans
