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Camelford Town Centre

Camelford, Cornwall

Camelford, Cornwall PL32

Open daily

free

About Camelford Town Centre

Camelford is a town and civil parish in north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, situated in the River Camel valley north-west of Bodmin Moor. As a programmatic destination page, it works well as a hub for nearby beaches, walks, heritage sites, food spots and local itinerary links across CornwallMagazine.
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Location

Nearby Attractions

Helstone Village

tourism

Helstone is a hamlet in north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. As a programmatic destination page, it works well as a hub for nearby beaches, walks, heritage sites, food spots and local itinerary links across CornwallMagazine.

3.0 km away

Delabole Village

tourism

Delabole is a large village and civil parish in north Cornwall, England, United Kingdom, which lies approximately two miles (3 km) west of Camelford. As a programmatic destination page, it works well as a hub for nearby beaches, walks, heritage sites, food spots and local itinerary links across CornwallMagazine.

3.7 km away

Brown Willy

natural

Brown Willy is a worthwhile natural stop near Highertown, valued for open views, sea air and the kind of landscape that gives Cornwall much of its identity. It rewards slow exploration, whether that means a clifftop walk, a pause at a viewpoint or simply taking in the changing weather and light.

6.0 km away

St Nectan's Glen Waterfall

natural

Reached by a woodland path above Bossiney, St Nectan's Glen is a place of ancient sanctity — a waterfall that plunges through a hole in a slate rock basin in a scene of extraordinary intimacy and beauty. The glen is associated with the Celtic saint Nectan, and visitors have tied ribbons and written prayers on the surrounding trees for centuries. The atmosphere is genuinely unlike anywhere else.

6.1 km away

Rocky Valley

natural

Rocky Valley is a worthwhile natural stop near Bossiney, valued for open views, sea air and the kind of landscape that gives Cornwall much of its identity. It rewards slow exploration, whether that means a clifftop walk, a pause at a viewpoint or simply taking in the changing weather and light.

6.3 km away

Rough Tor

natural

The second-highest point in Cornwall, Rough Tor rises from the open moor to a summit strewn with granite tors that have been shaped by weather into fantastic forms. The landscape around it — Bronze Age settlements, ancient field systems, a medieval longhouse — is one of the richest prehistoric landscapes in England, all visible at once from the trig point at the top.

6.4 km away

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