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Page "Fremington, Devon" ¶ 6
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Tarka and Trail
A few small sections of track remain, but most has been removed and replaced with a combined foot and cycle path as part of the Tarka Trail.
The Tarka Trail continues to Bideford, Barnstaple and on to Braunton in one direction and to Meeth in the other making of traffic free trail.
From Ilfracombe to Bideford the Tarka Trail coincides with the South West Coast Path.
* Tarka Trail.
Between Ilfracombe and Bideford, the path mostly follows a coastal section of the Tarka Trail.
* Image: UKAL icon. png ‎ Tarka TrailThe cycling and walking trails were established by Devon County Council, to celebrate Henry Williamson's 1927 novel Tarka the Otter.
The Tarka Trail also passes through the village.
Northam station and the line closed in 1917 having been requisitioned by the War Office, and is now used as part of the Tarka Trail cycle route which forms part of the South West Coast Path.
May, who had previously identified the train set as his " absolute favourite ", hoped that a train would run successfully along the length of the Tarka Trail – a disused long railway line in North Devon.
The Tarka Trail passes through Instow, providing an easy means for people to arrive by foot or on bike.
Follow the Tarka Trail to Bideford and visit Bideford Station as well.
The Tarka Trail and South West Coast Path are easily accessible from the Yelland Power Station Road.
The site is accessible from the Tarka Trail and the museum is open when staffing allows.
British Railways Mark 1 coach S4489, owned by Devon County Council, is at the station acting as the Tarka Tearooms for users of the Tarka Trail.
The trackbed was later converted into the Tarka Trail, a walkway using the formation between Pentrockstow ( later the terminus of services after the line was truncated in the 1960s ) and Barnstaple Junction.
Part of the latter route is preserved as the Bideford & Instow Railway, while sections of both routes have been reopened as cycleways on the Tarka Trail.
The Tarka Line railway line to Barnstaple, and Tarka Trail long distance footpath and cycle path, are named after the book.
* Coincides with the Tarka Trail for part of the way through Exmoor
Whilst rather charmingly built in the style of a railway station, it is not the original one which was located the other side of the Tarka Trail where an original platform still exists.
The Annery kiln lies close to the old canal and can be seen from the Tarka Trail.
* " On the Trail of Tarka " 2006-10-25

Tarka and also
* Tarka, also Chaunk, a common word used in India cuisine to describe the word seasoning
* Tarka ( flute ), also tharqa, a traditional flute of the Andes

Tarka and ),
He was a Ghana Pati and had mastered several Shastras such as Alankara Shastra, Jyothishya Shastra ( Astrology ), Tarka, and Vyakarana ( Literature ) to name a few.
* Tarka ( medication ), a brand name for an antihypertensive medication
* Tarka ( movie ), a Kannada language movie

Tarka and which
The Beam Aqueduct, the " Canal Bridge " near which Tarka is born

Tarka and rail
These trains connect with bus services and heritage railway services at Okehampton, and Tarka line rail services at Crediton .</ br >
In the 1980s it was offering discounted drinks to train passengers ; it is now included in the Tarka Line rail ale trail that allows participants to claim merchandise after visiting a selection of pubs along the line.

Tarka and line
From Crediton the line parallels the Tarka Line to the site of the former Coleford Junction.
If this were eventually achieved it could allow the extension of Dartmoor Railway passenger services and provide the possibility of interchange with the Exeter-Barnstaple " Tarka line ".
The Tarka Line ( named after the animal hero in Henry Williamson's book Tarka the Otter ) is a railway line from Exeter to Barnstaple in Devon, England.
The Esk Valley line still uses a physical token system, modified so that train drivers operate the token instruments themselves ( the system of working is known as No Signalman Token Remote and is used on other routes such as the Heart of Wales Line and the Tarka Line ).
* Tarka Line, a railway line in Devon, England
The Tarka Trail was originally established in 1987 as the Taw / Torridge Country Park using the disused railway line between Barnstaple and Bideford.
It now controls the entire Tarka Line from just north of the Cowley Bridge Junction with the Bristol to Exeter line, all the way to Barnstaple, although most of the line uses the No Signalman Token Remote ( NSTR ) system.
The line is promoted under the Tarka Line name.
The line is promoted under the Tarka Line name.
The Dartmoor Railway is proposing to restore the interchange at Yeoford where its line meets the Barnstaple to Exeter Tarka Line.

Tarka and from
* Tarka Trail, a series of footpaths assembled from former railway lines
A tunnel and section of the Tarka Trail, viewed from a former railway bridge in Instow.
The section from Barnstaple to Meeth was named the Tarka Country Park.
The Trail may be reached from stations on The Tarka Line, the railway from Exeter to Barnstaple.

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