![]() It's a bit of a trek to find the Veryan Bunker and you're advised to keep dogs on a lead (and children for that matter) as the route gets very close to the cliff edge. It is hoped there will be more chances for people to experience the cramped conditions, left exactly as when the bunker closed in the 1980s, later this year. The original at Nare Head is on National Trust land and is open to the public on selected dates each year. ![]() Read more: Eerie Cold War bunker in Cornwall sells for double the asking price Of those, only eight or so are fully preserved, equipped and open to the public. There were originally 1,600 Veryan Bunkers with only about 80 surviving today. The bunker, which was manned by the Royal Observer Corps, was deemed so important that it gave its name to a whole series of similar posts across the UK. The underground bunker, which is reached by an 12ft ladder, was built in 1963, the year after the Cuban Missile Crisis when a nuclear attack on British soil was a very real prospect. ![]() However, this is the Veryan Bunker - one of the few remaining Cold War posts of its time. Thousands enjoy walking the South West Coast Path on the Roseland Peninsula each year, but how many are aware that just a few feet from the clifftop near Nare Head stands a perfectly preserved reminder of a chilling time in Britain's recently history? Many people walking past are confused by the green metallic objects sticking out of the ground near Carne beach. ![]()
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