From: Newquay to Porthcothan
Distance: 11.5m / 18.4km
Cumulated distance: 74.7m / 120km
Percentage Completed:
7.27

Subscribe to receive posts

<iframe src="https://www.google.com/maps/d/embed?mid=1rGYTz7H--iXw2LOgeAu3wbvP6Fw" width="372" height="800"></iframe>

The other day I learnt about contours. Today’s lesson was in tides. There are high ones and low ones. And bridges which take you across estuaries in low tides don’t do the same when it’s high tide ..

Low tide bridge at high tide in Crantock

This rather fundamental confusion meant a detour of 3 miles, around The Gannel Estuary until we found the high tide bridge.

Eventually .. the bridge!

There was a lot of mud and water to challenge us along the way but we also found a swing in the woods which was a lot of fun.

Swing diversion

My friend Liz joined me today for the walk to Porthcothan. It was great to have company and someone to help me forge a path through the mud and streams, when the way-marking was difficult to find.

Crossing the ford

We made our way through the outskirts of Newquay, grabbed a coffee and rejoined the Coastal Path just after the little beach of Lusty Glaze. Yes, you read that correctly and here’s a photo to prove I’m not making it up ..

Beach apartments at Lusty Glaze

After walking past Whipsiderry Beach and Fruitful Cove we came to Watergate Bay.  I have very fond memories of Watergate Bay and its long sandy beach. It’s a surfers’ beach these days but as I was growing up, we loved just racing to the shore and jumping over the massive, crashing waves. They were wonderful too for filling up the moats of our patiently built sandcastles. It reminds me of later in my life when our boy was taught by his godfather and his sister to build Frenchmen traps on beaches. Not as innocent as my sandcastles, these consisted of concealed trenches created beneath the surface of the beach .. built solely with the intent of causing unsuspecting passersby to sink suddenly into the unseen hole! Looking down on the beach from the south end, it was every bit as beautiful as I remembered.

Watergate Bay

We had a tentative plan to stop at the cafe on the beach to grab a sandwich around midday. One thing turned into another and we ended up having lunch instead at Jamie Oliver’s original Fifteen restaurant .. and instead of my normal glass of water, a couple of glasses of wine too! (The same thing happened last time I walked with Liz, along the Thames .. so I’m totally blaming her for this lingering diversion!) Of course it was utterly delicious and the views from the window were dramatic, with white fluffy clouds in an azure sky being chased by steely grey storm clouds and brave hardy kite surfers. And many, many happy dogs chasing sticks and balls.

Unexpected (long) lunch at Jamie’s

 

Kite surfer at Watergate

 

Packing up the kite

On the adjacent table to us were a mum and dad with their two toddlers. They were impeccably behaved, the children that is, and we struck up a conversation with them later, as we were putting on our coats. We started a silly game about ears and eyes and fingers and toes. The conversation went like this ..

Me: How many eyes do you have?

Adorable little boy: Two!

Me: And what do you use them for?

Adorable little boy: To see with!

Me: How many noses do you have?

Adorable little boy: One!

Me: And what do you use it for?

Adorable little boy: For picking!

Out of the mouth of babes.

With our wet weather gear back on we went out into the rain. It was one of those sorts of days .. rain then sun; sun then rain. We consulted the map. Almost as common as the word ‘shaft’ scattered along the map of the coast, is the word ‘tumulus’, written in oldy worldy script with seraphs. There were a good number of them today along the Path. Turns out it’s the word for ‘ancient burial mound’. Clearly people liked to be buried in places where they would have a good view in the afterlife, as many tumuli are located on headlands and cliffs, overlooking the ocean. I find it a bizarre notion that IF there is an afterlife, that you would stay lying in your tomb, even if the view is good. Wouldn’t you want to get up and go do things? Makes no sense to me.

With the alternating rain and sun during the day we saw no less than five rainbows. Just beautiful. And with the combination of rain and sun breaking through the clouds there were some fabulous views.

Weird and wonderful weather

There were none of the steep, uneven steps of previous days along the path and it was a joy to be able to crank up the pace and cover the miles quickly.

The Path not far from Saint Eval

 

South West Coast Path close to Mawgan Porth

The views remained spectacular.  The colossal, pointed stacks marching across the beach at Bedruthan Steps were, according to legend, stepping stones for the Giant Bedruthan.  With all the caves among the granite on the shore it was easy to imagine smugglers hiding away their booty. It’s a magical landscape.

Bedruthan Steps

Last beach of the day is Porthcothan. It’s another dog-friendly beach and was used in Poldark as Nampara Land. Anyone who knows me will be aware of how much I adore dogs, especially black labradors, in fact any labradors and actually most dogs. But particularly black labradors. Especially those called Chuckles. And so there’s a bit of a conundrum for me (and others), as to why Churchill famously chose the term ‘black dog’ to refer to his depression. He wasn’t the first to use it either. Samuel Johnson, the English author wrote in 1783: ‘When I rise my breakfast is solitary, the black dog waits to share it, from breakfast to dinner he continues barking’. Johnson also used the term when writing to the diarist Boswell, ‘What will you do to keep away the black dog that worries you at home?’

Being so comforted by Chuckles when I had my own dark days, I felt compelled to find out more. Was it just the presence of a loyal black dog, always at your side, always ‘dogging’ you that led Johnson and Churchill to malign all black dogs and for the term to become synonymous with depression?

Well, it turns out you could write a thesis about it. I’ll spare you the unbelievable detail and just give you the bare bones. Folklore in Britain is riddled with stories about black dogs, almost always appearing as nocturnal apparitions and strongly associated with the devil. Seeing the black dog was a serious warning that death was about to strike, especially if he appeared to you at crossroads, places of execution or ancient pathways (yikes!!). Around the UK names for the black dog are fabulously expressive: Hairy Jack, Shriker, Churchyard Beast, Shug Monkey, Galleytrot, Swooning Shadow, Bogey Beast and (take note HP fans), Padfoot and Grim. Every single county in England, bar Middlesex and Rutland, have reports of black dogs in their history. The most famous has to be Arthur Conan Doyle’s ‘Hound of the Baskervilles’. And the vast majority are malevolent harbingers of impending doom. No wonder they were thought appropriate as metaphors for clinging melancholia.

I’m thrilled to find out though, that there are a few benevolent black dogs. As I walk across Somerset and the Quantock Hills for instance, I can apparently look forward to meeting the ‘Gurt Dog’, who will protect and guide me as a lone traveller. I guess it means that I will have to continue to view the black dog with a strong dose of irony  … benign and malevolent in equal measures.

Black Dog Tails
Chuckles. My very own hero, who barely left my side when I was hounded by the metaphorical black dog.

 

Loading