Camp Bedrock is on the Rame Peninsula within the Mount Edgcumbe Estate. Touted as Britain’s historic estate by the sea, it’s home to a mansion house, formal gardens and a country park, within which there are lots of things to see and do. You can hire bikes, scooters or segways to tour the wider estate, play disc golf, walk alpacas, or follow one of the walking trails. The South West Coast Path edges the estate for seven miles and provides an easy-to-follow route for a coastal walk as well. The coastal footpath that passes the campsite is not actually part of the South West Coast Path (though links with it just up the road) but it is part of the Tamara Coast to Coast Way, an 87-mile route along the border of Cornwall and Devon. The closest beaches are a mixture of sand and shingle at the villages of Kingsand and Cawsand (three miles away). For sand and surf, head a little further to Whitsand Bay (six miles). The Cremyll Ferry runs from a quay just outside Mount Edgecumbe Park and provides a seven-minute route across the water to Plymouth. Royal William Yard is a short walk from where the ferry docks and is a bit of a foodie destination in renovated grand naval buildings overlooking the modern marina. A short walk away, is the historic port area of the city, The Barbican. It’s home to galleries, independent shops and eateries, and is where you can see the Mayflower Steps – thought to be where the pilgrims boarded the Mayflower when they left England to settle in North America. The National Marine Aquarium is not much further and there are plenty of other museums and city sights.