A Cornish Walk - Pentire Point and Rumps Point
There's nothing that quite compares to a bracing winter walk.
During summer, the sea might be more enticing, you can stop off
for numerous ice creams en route and meander in shorts and
t-shirt as the sun warms your skin; but at the same time, it's
hot, clammy, you're often jostling for position on the busy
coast path, and parking at the start of the route can be
somewhat problematic. No such problem today. We snare one of
many available free seaside spaces in New Polzeath, and our spot
provides a great vantage point for reading a newspaper and
watching the surfers in the water, before heading a couple of
steps away to the Doom Bar of the Atlantic Hotel for a pre-walk
coffee. Cornwall has a fantastic selection of walks
which make the perfect setting for a winter getaway. Why not
stay for the weekend and relax in one of Cornwall's holiday cottages prior to your walk, and
wrap up warm before you head out into the cold. This
is one walk that you will be more than glad to have a woolly hat
with you, to keep your ears nice and toasty and to stop your
hair blowing in your eyes and obscuring the views. Also, as any
conversation is stolen by the wind, it doesn't matter if you
can't hear anything anyway; it's actually quite nice to be
engrossed in your own world for a while. After sitting inside
and looking beach ward, it's great to be heading away from
Polzeath, and taking the coast path to Pentireglaze Haven, where
the soft sand underfoot is the perfect place for a spot of beach
rambling, though we find little aside from small mussels, plenty
of kelp, and a cottage nestled at the back of the beach, which
we enviably spy through the windows of. Heading away from the
beach to climb the hillside, waving goodbye to our sleepy start
point, we then return to beach level to discover a small pebbly
cove. Tempted as we might be to take the grassy turning to
Pentire Farm, we refrain in the knowledge that we will be
passing through the farm on our return route. Heading
onwards and upwards, the increased puffing is worth it, the path
levels out to provide expansive seaward views which include the
day mark of Stepper Point and the lighthouse of Trevose Head in
the distance. The deserted stretch of sand to the south of
Stepper Point is Harbour Cove, usually peopled with bodies
during the summer months. Looking inland, rolls of hay sit on
the hillside, the lush green of the fields contrasting the grey
and somewhat uninviting ocean. Eyes down, we discover a large
hairy caterpillar in the undergrowth, and once we've seen one, a
game of spot the caterpillar ensues; they're out in abundance
today. We pass a National Trust sign that points us up hill to
the Tumuli - a prehistoric burial ground, where an abundance of
heather disguises what lies beneath. Continuing on the
blustery route to the rocky outcrop of Pentire Point, here
barren volcanic rock makes up the headland; look carefully and
you'll see gas bubbles in the rocks that formed when the lava
cooled rapidly in the ancient seas some 350 million years ago.
Newland Rock can be seen offshore, whilst Rumps Point is visible
in the distance, like a stegosaurus, sporadic triangular rocks
rearing out of the grass headland. As you head to explore Rumps,
you will find area of shelter from the wind, although you won't
want to stay too long in these quiet pockets as the views are
far more spectacular the further up that you climb. On the
unusually shaped double headland of the Rumps are the remains of
an Iron-Age cliff castle, where a massive triple rampart and
ditch system protected an area of around six acres at the tip of
the headland. We explored the stone circles that sat within the
enclosure, trying to envisage those who had stood in the very
spot from which we now admired the views. If the hills could
talk they'd have a lot to say; excavations in the same area have
unearthed pottery from the first century BC, indicating trade
with the Mediterranean area. The large offshore rock behind the
eastern headland is The Mouls, which is a breeding site for
puffins, gannets and kittiwakes. Once you're looking to
head on, I challenge you not to want to roll down the hills that
you have so recently puffed your way up. Carry on your circular
route; following the stone wall until you reach a junction and
bear right to start your inward loop. Heading towards
Pentire Farm, a helpful information board reveals that the whole
peninsula is part of a working farm which produces beef, corn
and sheep, the latter of which we've seen plenty of during our
walk. Though there's not a person around when we pass through
the farmyard, there are cream teas available here in season.
Descending to your start point, you'll be able to appreciate the
shelter, peace and quiet, before a last uphill stretch towards
the car. As we hungry walkers head towards Trebetherick we pass
Mowhay Caf