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It was a lovely sunny day here in Devon.uk, so we decided to take Zola for a ride to see the daffodils and possibly some lambs. Devon and Cornwall used to be the main suppliers of daffodils to the rest of the country, but during the first world war , farmers had to dig up their daffodil fields and plant food crops. However, local families gathered to plant the bulbs from the fields in other, non-cultivated places to save them -such as by the sides of the roads - a similar thing happened in the second world war, as well.As a result, there are thousands of daffodils along many roads , appearing through hedges, and scattered everywhere. They are not the little native wild ones, of course, but you couldn't really call them cultivated now - and they are much larger and brighter than the true native ones.
Here is a small house we pass on our way through the daffodil land ...
Here is a small house we pass on our way through the daffodil land ...



