Appledore
Built on a hillside and described by Victorian novelist Charles Kingsley as that ‘little, white fishing village’ Appledore’s maze of narrow lanes are an attractive jumble of closely packed, brightly painted cottages, decorated with hanging baskets. Near the quay tiny whitewashed terraces face each other across cobbled courtyards, the former homes of fishermen, who depended on salmon, cod and bass for their livelihoods as well as cockles and mussels collected at low tide, and shipwrights, employed to build the schooners, ketches and barques that Appledore was famous for, many of which were to sail across the Atlantic to North America and beyond.