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Prawle Point

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Prawle Point Prawle Point walk National Trust

Dolphins at prawle point south devon on 24th feb 2016


Prawle Point (Old English: Prǣwhyll, "lookout hill") is a coastal headland in south Devon, England

Contents

It is the southernmost point of Devon.

Access is from the village of East Prawle along a single-track road, at the end of which a National Trust car park is present.

Prawle Point Gammon Head to Prawle Point Devon Guide

At the point itself, there are high cliffs.

The National Coastwatch Institution has a station at the point

The area around the point is a noted area for cirl bunting, a localised bird in Britain, while the area has also attracted many rare vagrant birds including Britain's second chestnut-sided warbler.

Prawle Point East Prawle The Area

The point is included within the Prawle Point and Start Point Site of Special Scientific Interest.

Many ships have been wrecked at Prawle Point, the most recent being in December, 1992, when the ship Demetrios, formerly the Long Lin from China was being towed by a tug from Dunkirk to a Mediterranean scrapyard. During terrible gales in the English Channel, the tow broke and the Demetrios drifted helplessly. The ship struck the rocks at Prawle Point on 18 December, breaking her back in a few hours. The wreck attracted huge crowds for many weeks, and eventually a local salvage company cut up the ship and towed away the remains to Plymouth. However, the cost of scrapping the ship sent them into liquidation. Some remains were, however left over and are still visible today.

Dolphins off prawle point salcombe devon


Prawle Point Prawle Point Wikipedia

Prawle Point East Prawle and Prawle Point Walk South West Coast Path

Prawle Point No 9 Prawle Point Holiday Cottage

References

Prawle Point Wikipedia


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