
On nights that taste of iron and fog, some swear they hear the Wisht Hounds coursing the ridges, breath like torn cloth, eyes coals without ash. At sunrise, that dread thins into alertness, a reminder to keep judgment clear and footsteps careful near mires. Whether legend or warning, the hounds teach attention: mark your exit, mind the weather’s teeth, and treat every distant bark as a reason to check your route once more.

Bowerman’s Nose rises like a profile carved by stubborn wind and older hands. The story tells of a hunter turned to stone by witches he angered, his silhouette forever scanning the moor. In fog, his outline appears, disappears, and returns with warming light, a playful mentor in patience. Linger at a respectful distance, let shapes shift, and consider how myth compresses caution, landscape, and memory into a single granite sentence that resists easy translation.

Wistman’s Wood clings to boulders above the West Dart, an ancient tangle of stunted oaks, emerald moss, and stories as thick as the air itself. Some speak of oaths sworn beneath twisted branches, others of druid paths and haunted nights. At sunrise the wood exhales, mist lifting thread by thread from rocks like sleeping animals. Keep to marked lines, tread softly, and grant the place its needed hush; awe thrives where footsteps are light.