Saturday, 26 May 2012

Week 3 Day 2 - Morwenstow to Widemouth



Another gloriously sunny day but with a strong, at times gale force, wind blowing from the east. We leave the camp site at 0820, park up in Bude (£5 for the day) and catch the 0918 bus to Morwenstowe. Whilst waiting for the bus we get chatting to another guy in the bus shelter who, we discover, lives in Yeovil and is visiting his mother in Bude. He is a retired English teacher called Robin who did some youth work in the town and knows Pete Brier, the retired youth workers from Tinneys Lane in Sherborne. He is off by bus to visit his grand-daughter in Truro.

We are the only passengers on the bus out to Morwenstowe and arrive c0945 and walk out to join the coast path where we left it yesterday afternoon. We have several steep valleys to cross although they get successively lower in height as we get nearer to Bude. The strong wind is welcome as it keeps us cooler but tends to blow my hat off at every opportunity so my bald patch is exposed to to the sun!

We stop for elevenses at Duckpool where there are obviously people who have camped out overnight.






We discover a cafe at Sandy Mouth and have coffee and a toasted tea cake. Liz suggests we walk on to Widemouth after Bude to get some of tomorrow's walk under our belts in advance. We get to Bude c1330 and stop for lunch on the beach where the tide had gone right out and there are many families out enjoying the fine weather. The wind is still blowing hard and from time to time we get blasted with sand as we walk back to the car.

After an ice cream we set off along the cliff path to Widemouth. This is a much busier section of the coast path and we meet many people going in the opposite direction. We get to Widemouth at 1515 and miss the 1520 back to Bude whilst studying the timetable by the bus stop on the opposite side of the road! We have a drink in the beach cafe and wait to catch the 1621 coming from Crackington Haven. The bus eventually turns up 20 minutes late just as we are about to give up and start walking back to Bude.  Also on the bus are the couple who missed their connection at Hartland yesterday.


We visit Sainsburys on the way home and have a pleasant evening in the sunshine reading the paper and doing the puzzles.

Distance walked today on the GPS was 0.61 from Morwenstowe to the coast, 7.5 miles along the coast path to Bude and another 3 miles to Widemouth making 11.1 miles in all.


Distance completed today: 10.65 miles
Total distance completed: 127.4 miles (20.2%)

Friday, 25 May 2012

Week 3 Day 1 - Hartland Quay to Morwenstow



We are up and about early, before anyone else, at 0630 so that we can be off to Hartland Quay as soon as possible. We are hoping to walk all the way to Bude - 15 strenuous miles according to the guidebook. We get away by 0745 and park up in Hartland Quay at around 0845.

We are the first to park in the upper car park and set off in glorious sunshine along the coast.






The first 4 miles are not too bad - a gentle climb up to 150m and then a fairly flat plateau thereafter. The waterfall at Speke's Mouth is spectacular. At about 5 miles, the going gets tough with several steep-sided valleys to cross, each 150m deep, and the sun beating down relentlessly. We both get tired and dehydrated even though we have brought plenty of water.

We stop for lunch at Welcombe Mouth and talk to a National Trust warden who is putting up notices to say that the car park is closed overnight - it is hoped that this will deter campers and revellers who have caused some vandalism recently, including setting fire to a large patch of gorse on the hillside. They are also worrying about some rare wildlife that they have in the area - particularly a creature called an 'oil beetle' which is apparently parasitic on lone bees.

At Marsland Mouth we leave Devon and cross into Cornwall.






Because of the oppresive heat and our obvious tiredness and slow progress, we decide to stop at Morwenstow and leave the stretch to Bude for tomorrow. We have a refreshing pot of tea in The Rectory tea rooms followed by a pint of ale in The Bush. We catch the 1621 bus to Bude followed by the 1730 from Bude to Hartland. One unfortunate couple on the same bus are hoping to catch the connecting service from Hartland to Clovelly but we are late and can just see the back of the Bideford bus disappearing as we drive into Hartland. We learn later that they have to take a taxi.


We have a 3 mile hike from Hartland to Hartland Quay back to the car and we have an evening meal in the hotel. We stop at Morrisons in Bude for some shopping for tomorrow and get back to Camelford after sunset at around 2130. After a quick shower and brush up we turn in for an early night.

Distance walked today 7.75 miles on the coast path plus another 0.6 miles into Morwenstow.

Total distance completed: 116.75 miles (18.5%).

Thursday, 24 May 2012

Week 3 Day 0 - Sherborne to Camelford


We are off on week three of the great south-west coast trek. We have booked camping at Joliot's Well in Camelford. Having packed the tent and all the camping gear on Tuesday afternoon, we only have to sort out our clothes for the week and any food that we are taking from home.

With the sun beating down from an azure sky, we leave Sherborne c0930 and head west, stopping for coffee in Honiton, and continuing on to Boscastle where we have lunch - nothing special - in a pub just by the car park. Some sea mist is covering the coastal strip down in these parts so we don't hang around and set off to find our camp site. The charge for the week is £133 which is a bit steep. The camp site is mostly static vans and cabins with a few hard standings for caravans and tourers and a couple of sites where tents will go. All pitches have access to electricity but we are not geared up for it.

We get quite sweaty putting up the tent in the full afternoon sun but enjoy a pleasant beer afterwards. The showers are different to anything we have encountered before. It is a set of rooms each with a WC, basin and shower cubicle plus soap and hand drier. Men and women use the same showers. There is a hair drier and one room has a bath for which you have to pay extra.

We drive down to Tescos in Wadebridge (sorry Martin) to stock up with supplies for breakfast and packed lunches. After a late night shower in the unisex shower block we turn in for an early night.

Friday, 4 May 2012

Week 2 Day 9 - Home again

After breakfast we pack our bags and are out of the cottage by 0830. We are back in Sherborne for coffee by 11am. A reasonably successful week despite the bad weather and the mud. We shall be back again, weather permitting, under canvas this time, on 24th May for another week.

Thursday, 3 May 2012

Week 2 Day 8 - Rain again

The rain has been falling all night and is still falling at breakfast so we decide not to attempt today's testing walk. We had planned to walk from Hartland Quay to Bude - the hardest section in the itinerary with nearly 5000 feet of ascent and descent crossing ten valleys. It would have been muddy as well.


Instead we head off to the RHS gardens at Rosemoor after breakfast and have an interesting stroll around the gardens under our umbrella. There are lots of well-behaved, well-supervised primary school children wandering around seemingly oblivious to the rain.



 

We have an excellent lunch at The Bush Inn, Morwenstow - recommended in The Good Pub Guide - where we end up in conversation with a retired couple living locally who have moved down from Solihull with their dogs.

After lunch we visit Bude and pick up the Cornwall Bus Timetable so that we can work out a detailed plan for the next stage in a month's time.

Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Week 2 Day 7 - Clovelly to Hartland Quay

A beautiful day with unbroken sunshine from start to finish.


We park at the Clovelly Visitor Centre at 0855, put on our walking gear and, because the centre is still closed, we walk round the side and off along the coast path without having to pay for car parking.


There are a couple of steep-sided valleys to negotiate, and in one case we have to cross the stream by stepping stones. Unfortunately, the stream is still in spate and the stepping stones are a couple of feet under water so we walk down the beach and cross where the stream has fanned out and become much shallower.


We are overtaken by a chap whom we met yesterday walking on his own. Yesterday he had his wife and dog with him but not today. He tells us that the dog is getting old and couldn't cope with another walk like yesterday's so his wife is staying with the dog and waiting to meet him at Hartland Point. Later we meet all three at Hartland Point having lunch.


Just after meeting our lone walker we have to walk down a steep path in a field containing a horse. The path is extremely muddy and, to make matters worse, I am sure the horse uses the path for its toilet. Our boots are wet and very muddy by the time we cross the bridge at the bottom. However, on the whole the mud is much less than yesterday and we stay relatively clean.


At Hartland Point we have a cup of tea at the cafe by the car park and then have our lunch in a field just past the lighthouse. We are joined by a couple of French women who tell us they are doing a circular walk from Hartland Quay.


The geology from Hartland Point to Hartland Quay is fascinating with heavy folding and faulting of the sandstones and mudstones. There is also what looks like the remnants of a river valley that has been eroded at both ends by the sea.






At Hartland Quay we have a drink and take some photos before heading inland to the village of Hartland to catch the bus back to Clovelly. We walk up the hill past the impressive church at Stoke with its massive tower. Then we divert back across the Abbey Stream, past the impressive Hartland Abbey and walk across some fields where we encounter sheep before descending again and following the stream through some woodland. Finally, we cross the stream and climb up into Hartland village via what looks like an ancient track that is also very muddy.


We enter the village by the National Geological Survey's Magnetic Monitoring Station and wait for about an hour before the bus arrives. We are joined by a German couple - mother and daughter it seems - who also catch the bus but don't speak much English.



Distance completed today: 10.3 miles
Total distance completed: 109.0 miles (17.3%)

Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Week 2 Day 6 - Westward Ho! to Clovelly

Mud, mud, glorious mud. And today we had lots of it. It was so bad we both slipped over in it.


Today's walk, from Westward Ho! to Clovelly was described as "strenuous" in the guide book and it most certainly was. Apart from about a mile at the start and the last 2 miles at the end we were either climbing up or sliding down steep sided valleys.


We park the car at Bideford and get the bus to Westward Ho! I have forgotten my bus pass and have to pay full price for the journey. At Westward Ho! we set off along the old railway track which once ran from Westward Ho! to Bideford. When that turns inland we continue along the coast path. In many places it is possible to pick our way around the mud but not always and our boots and gaiters soon become wet and covered in a layer of oozing mud. After that we don't try too hard to avoid the mud and often walk straight through it.


The sun soon appears and it starts to get quite warm. We soon dispense with our waterproofs. We stop for coffee on a bench with a glorious view of the bay as far as Saunton with Lundy to the left. At one point we have to walk along the beach for about 50 yards and there is a stream flowing into a large pool which is dammed by the beach and draining through the shingle out to sea. Liz bravely walks across the top of the dam, I worry that the dam might give way and cross the beach lower down well away from the dam!






Continuing onwards, the underlying rock turns to the familiar red Devonian sandstone and the mud becomes particularly slippery. We both take tumbles. I manage to avoid falling over completely by grasping a nearby tree but poor Liz ends up with mud on her knees and, soon afterwards, on her backside.


We reach Peppercombe where we say hello to some National Trust foresters. We miss the sign showing us the coast path and end up on the beach. We decide to stay and eat our lunch before climbing back up the cliffs.


We meet 6 people walking in the opposite direction - the first walkers we have met so far. One couple had caught the bus and are walking back to Abbotsham where they are staying.


We cross another steep-sided valley at Bucks Mill and carry on through the mud, eventually coming out near the end of The Hobby - a track along the cliffs built at the end of the Victorian period by two local worthies, Frederick and Christine Hamlyn. This brings us out by the Clovelly Visitor Centre some 7 hours after we set off from Westward Ho!


Despite our muddy and disheveled appearance we are able to get a cup of tea and a piece of cake and to visit the local shop. We have to hang around for another hour for the bus back to Bideford which leaves at 1828 and we don't arrive back at Cobb Cottage until well after 8 pm.



Distance completed today: 11.2 miles
Total distance completed: 98.7 miles (15.7%)