Walk - Killigarth - Polperro and East Coombe

7.5 miles (12.0 km)

Killigarth Manor - PL13 2JQ Killigarth Manor

Challenging - Telling a rumbustious tale of shipwrecks and smugglers and the booty from both, this is a hard walk but one which is well worth the effort. The coastal views are magnificent and in summer the path is alight with flowers and butterflies, as are the meadows on the path up to Raphael Road. Take a picnic and make a day of it!  

Telling a rumbustious tale of shipwrecks and smugglers and the booty from both, this is a hard walk but one which is well worth the effort. The coastal views are magnificent and in summer the path is alight with flowers and butterflies, as are the meadows on the path up to Raphael Road. Take a picnic and make a day of it!

 

There are a range of wonderful places to lay your head near the Coast Path for a well-earned sleep. From large and luxurious hotels, to small and personable B&B's, as well as self-catering options and campsites. The businesses that support the Path, where you've chosen to visit, are listed here.

Highertown Farm Campsite

Campsite sits 3/4 of a mile from the secluded beach of Lansallos Cove. A simple site with basic facilities where guests can relax and enjoy the beautiful setting without distractions.

Landaviddy Farm B&B

Situated just a 10 minute walk from Polperro and close to beautiful Lansallos & Lantic beaches. 2 ensuite bedrooms, ample parking.

Great Kellow Farm Caravan & Campsite

*Budget* Situated above the beautiful village of Polperro. We are a quiet family & dog friendly campsite. The campsite has sea views and easy access to country and coastal walks.

House on the Props

B&B & Restaurant.16th Century timber building 'propped' up over the river on old ships timbers. On the Path overlooking Polperro Harbour & Quay

FOX VALLEY COTTAGES

Fox Valley Cottages, beautiful rural holiday cottages just a few miles from Lantivet, Lansallos & Lantic bays. With indoor pool, hot tub & sauna, plus dog & boot wash.

Killigarth Manor Holiday Park

Nestled down a country lane, this Park offers a wide range of caravans and lodges. There's a direct path to the magical cove of Talland Bay and facilities for adults and children, including indoor pool, gym, sauna & tennis court.

Old Vicarage Talland

Beautifully refurbished former Vicarage sleeping up to 15 in luxury, with direct access onto the SW Coast path.

Talland Bay Hotel

Luxury hotel on a secluded stretch of Cornish coast The true spirit of Cornwall lies to the South East. Undiscovered and unspoilt. Away from the crowds, in a quiet nook.

Studio Cottage Talland Bay

Experience the Beauty of Cornish Coastal Living at its Best - Self-Catering in Talland Bay for 10 max

Trelawne Manor Holiday Park

A family friendly holiday park just 2 miles from the lively fishing village of Looe. There's a range of caravans, apartments and lodges available and heated indoor and outdoor pools (with flume).

Polruan Camping and Caravaning

Single night stay budget pitch up camping. Other camping/accommodation options for longer stays. Short distance from Path.

The Lugger Inn, Polruan

Just yards from the Polruan foot ferry, this 18th century pub with takeaway service is at the heart of the local community , offering local produce, real ales and fine wines. 4 rooms available.

Hannafore Point Hotel, West Looe

Hannafore Point Hotel & Spa in Looe offering Well Appointed AA 3 Star Accommodation with Stunning Views across Looe Bay, Restaurant & Bistro for Residents and Non-Residents, Indoor leisure Facilities, Spa and Beauticians.

Bridgeside Guest House

A family run Victorian Guest House situated in the heart of Looe with bar, outdoor area and harbour views. A stone's throw from Looe's many shops and restaurants and 5 minutes from the coast path.

Room at number 9

Bedroom in a 2 bedroomed bungalow, access to a shared bathroom. Within 5 min walk from coast path. King sized bed, breakfast extra. .

You'll be spoilt for choice for where to eat and drink along the Path. With lots of local seasonal food on offer, fresh from the farm, field and waters. Try our local ales, ciders, wines and spirits, increasing in variety by the year, as you sit in a cosy pub, fine dining restaurant or chilled café on the beach. The businesses that support the Path, where you've chosen to visit, are listed here.

Rosslyn Café

Small café and take away situated in the heart of Lansallos servinging hot and cold drinks, sweet treats and savoury pastries.

Flapjackery Fowey

Stop off and treat yourself or stock up for your trip along the Path with these delicious, award winning, gluten free flapjacks in a variety of flavours. Enjoy 10% Discount in store when you show your SWCP Passport. .

Readymoney Beach Shop

Beach shop selling hot/cold drinks, ice-cream, cake, pastries, locally sourced gifts. Open everyday except Xmas Day. Public toilet 24/7

Catch

Award winning Fish & Chip shop on Looe harbour with gluten-free and vegan options. Featured in Beyond Paradise TV show. Click & collect via website.

What is on your list of things to do when you visit the Path? From walking companies, to help you tailor your visit, with itineraries and experts to enhance your visit, to baggage transfer companies and visitor attractions there are lots to people and places to help you decide what you'd like to do. The businesses that support the Path, where you've chosen to visit, are listed here.

Looe Tourist Information

Find all the information you need on places to stay, eat and drink and visit in the Looe area

Interactive Elevation

Route Description

  1. From the entrance to Killigarth Manor Holiday Park turn left and walk to the sharp right-hand bend.
  2. Turn right and walk past the school to the T-junction.
  3. Turn left and walk down Talland Hill into Polperro.

Coastguard Cottages, on your right as you start down the hill, were built in 1870 for customs men.

In the eighteenth and nineteenth century the Cornish coast was alive with bands of smugglers landing their contraband in just about every remote cove from Plymouth to Bude (and in many coves either side of the county borders too). Everyday goods as well as luxuries were heavily taxed in Britain and whole communities were engaged in the Free Trade, with the gentry turning a blind eye, and the local parson often embroiled himself. With the crippling tax on tea, a brew cost six times as much in Britain as it did on the continent, and brandy was five times as expensive. Gin, rum and tobacco were other commodities brought quietly ashore in the dead of night and carted up cliffs and through passages carved in the rock. In addition, ships returning from the Far East with exotic cargoes would often have to offshore and sell their wares to the locals tax-free – usually china, silk and cotton.

It has been estimated that by the middle of the eighteenth century 50-65% of the spirits consumed in Britain was imported illicitly, and it has been said that the activity was so profitable for France that Napoleon set up a depot for smugglers!

Customs officers were duly appointed at ports, and certain goods could only be imported at particular places. The small fleet of Revenue sloops were no match for the larger ships of the smugglers, and so the Board of Customs invested in bigger and better cutters. By 1782 there were 40 vessels in service with 700 crewmen and 200 guns, and after the Napoleonic Wars, in 1816, the Coast Blockade Service was formed. By 1831, the newly streamlined Coastguard Service had 6700 men at its disposal. Coastguard cottages like these were built around the coast, and the customs men patrolled the shoreline on foot, which is how the South West Coast Path came into being.

Towards the bottom of the hill, Teak Cottage was built from timber washed ashore in a storm in December 1849, after the Shepherdess, a barque carrying teak logs from Penang to Plymouth, struck a flat rock ledge known as 'The Bridges', just west of Polperro, and broke in two. The sea stacked much of the timber against the foot of the cliff, forming a bridge, and the captain, his wife, a passenger and 17 of the crew were able to walk to safety.

Another notable local shipwreck, more than a century earlier, was the Albemarle, which was driven ashore in a violent storm in December 1708. Belonging to the East India Company, the ship was carrying diamonds, indigo, coffee, pepper and silks. Most of the crew survived, but the ship did not, and neither did its cargo. According to local legend, the sea was stained blue for much of that spring, as the indigo melted underwater.

  1. Continuing past Talland Street on the left, take the next left turn to cross the Saxon Bridge and walk down Big Green. Turn left again along Lansallos Street to walk along Quay Road to the harbour.

The large shed on the headland to the right above the beach is a net loft, owned by the National Trust but let to local fishermen. The Trust restored the building in the winter of 1982/3, using three floor beams of Douglas fir, each weighing more than 1½ tons – the largest pieces of sawn timber ever to leave Tavistock Woodlands. With the only access to the net loft being up the narrow footpath, a a specially-built 16-foot barge was used to float them across the harbour, where they were winched up the rock. When the wind is in the south and blowing hard it is not unknown for the waves to break over the net loft roof!

The cave on the western side of the beach is known as Willy Wilcox Cave. Willy Wilcox was a smuggler who was trapped in the cave by the tide when he was hiding from the customs men who were in hot pursuit, and his spirit is said to haunt the cave to this day.

Note the steps carved in the rocks around the beach.

  1. Pick up the South West Coast Path just before the beach and follow it steeply uphill towards Polruan. There is a network of footpaths on the National Trust land at Chapel Cliff, at the top, and they link up further on.

If you choose the path nearest the sea, (the official South West Coast Path), there are no fewer than three shelters along here, erected by the committee which raised the funds in the 1920s for the National Trust to buy this land.

Chapel Cliff (pronounced 'Chay-pell') was named after the chapel of St Peter of Porthpyre (the old name for Polperro) , which once stood at the Polperro end of the cliff. St Peter is the patron saint of fishermen, and it is thought that the building may have served as a lighthouse as well, as chapels and monks' cells often did where there were hazardous rocks below. The chapel, which was first recorded in 1392, was being used as a fish cellar by 1820, and by 1882 the only sign of its existence was a pile of stones.

Continue along the Coast Path towards Polruan.

The whole of this section of coast, from Polperro to Polruan, is a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and a Special Area of Conservation (SAC). The rock formations and structures are of particular interest, and above them the cliffs and slopes provide an important habitat for a variety of plants and animals, some of which are listed in the Red Data Book of Threatened Species.

Wildflowers seen here in summer include the daisy-like chamomile, dainty sea pea, vivid blue-and-pink viper's bugloss, wild cabbage and carrot, clover, tufty blue sheep's bit, spotty white sea campion, purple dwarf heather, and the creepers vetch (purple) and bird's-foot trefoil (yellow).

Grey seals are also seen on this part of the coast. Look out for them on the rocks at low tide.

The small white landmark as you approach East Coombe was formerly a navigation aids for sailors, marking the submerged Udder Rock just offshore, but nowadays there is a buoy identifying the hazard.

  1. Walk past the footpath to the right at East Coombe and cross the footbridge to turn right onto the footpath which runs steeply uphill beside the stream.

The path runs through some wildflower meadows which are also a riot of colour in summer, attracting many butterflies. Look out for the dainty common blue.

  1. Follow the detour to the left at the top of the path to come out on a quiet country lane. Turn right here and right again at the junction beyond.
  2. At the next junction turn right to carry on along the road marked as access only and follow for it a little over a mile, to drop steeply down into Polperro on Landaviddy Lane.

Raphael appeared in the 1086 Domesday Book as Raswale, appearing on later documents as 'Rathwell', 'Resfrawel' and 'Rafael'. It was Polperro's western manor (the eastern being Killigarth).

There was once a holy well at the bottom of Landaviddy Lane, said to have restorative properties. It was a natural field spring issuing from the rock, and it is thought to have been dedicated to St Peter, since the ruins of the chapel were in the field above.

A bronze coin was found here, too, when the foundations of a new house were being dug in the nineteenth century. The coin was from the time of Licinius I, who was Emperor of Rome from AD 308 – 324.

  1. In Polperro turn left along Big Green to cross the Saxon Bridge and retrace your steps up Talland Hill and back to Killigarth Manor.

 

Public transport

The Western Greyhound bus number 573 runs frequently between Polperro, Looe and Liskeard. For details visit www.travelinesw.com  or phone 0871 200 22 33

 

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