Walk - Porlock Marshes

3.4 miles (5.5 km)

Porlock Central Car Park - TA24 8ND Porlock Central Car Park

Easy - Gentle footpaths, no noticeable ascent or descent. One path travels close to the shoreline and could be liable to flooding on very high spring tides. At such times there are other paths nearby that can be used.

A leisurely amble along paths around Porlock's fascinating saltmarshes, a coastal wildlife area of national importance, designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest. Children will love the shingle beach, the wilderness atmosphere and the tumbledown limekilns and pillboxes.

Checked by SWCPA Volunteer Geoff Garfield- December 2017

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.

Sparkhayes Farm Campsite

Family site-5 minute walk to the village and its shops, pubs, cafes and restaurants. 20 minute walk down to the sea on the South West Coast Path.

The Cottage B&B

A cosy, luxurious, historic and friendly B&B in the heart of the village, close to all amenities

Myrtle Cottage B&B

A comfortable thatched cottage built over 400 years ago, bursting with character and charm. All rooms en-suite, SW Tourism award winner 2024.

Bossington Hall Luxury B&B

With breathtaking views and 9 superb rooms, Tennis and Squash within the 8 acres, and a private bar for the lazy evening.

Harbour House Coffee Shop

SWCP Passport Stamping Station - Coffee Shop/Cafe next to South West Coast Path, Porlock Weir, Exmoor, FREE water refills, healthy eat-in/takeaway menu incl Vegan/Veggie

Ash Farm B&B

We are a working farm just off the Coast Path. We can pick up from Porlock Weir if required. Packed lunch on request.

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.

Harbour Gallery & Cafe

Situated right on the coastpath we sell a fabulous range of freshly prepared food and drinks.
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.

Porlock Visitor Centre

Porlock Visitor Centre provides a vast array of information for visitors to Porlock Vale, including accommodation booking service, maps, walks, things to see and do.

Interactive Elevation

Route Description

  1. From the car park, take the road up past the fire station, and at the top, turn left. After the library, turn left again onto the main street through Porlock, and shortly afterwards take the next left, down Sparkhayes Lane. Follow the road down to the marshes, using the footpath alongside the road as directed.

Severe storms at the end of 1996 breached the shingle barrier between the sea here and the floodplain behind it, changing the nature of the marshes and creating a whole new ecosystem, providing a habitat for enough rare coastal plants and wildlife to merit making it a Site of Special Scientific Interest in 2002.

There is a line of trees over the hedge looking distinctly the worse for wear, as a result of saltwater flooding around their roots during the sea's encroachments. On the saltmarsh itself, just to the west of this walk (see the Porlock Bay Walk), there is a plantation of stunted trees, long dead, raising their bare branches heavenwards like some primitive tribe turned to wood in retribution for some awful wrongdoing.

Over on the western side of the bay, near Porlock Weir, there is a much-reduced submarine forest visible at low tide, which really is a petrified forest, dating from some 6000 years ago, before melting ice from the last Ice Age caused sea levels to rise and shift the shoreline inland.

    1. Don't turn right onto the Coast Path: instead, carry on northwards, towards curved boardwalk and the sea.

    After the destruction of the shingle ridge, a decision was made to let nature take its course, rather than trying to rebuild the barrier. The saltwater which washes through into the marshes mixes with the freshwater flowing through Porlock from the hills above, creating a saltmarsh. It is an ideal opportunity to see how the coastline is changing fairly rapidly, something that will become more commonplace if sea levels rise.

    One of the many plants to have taken advantage of the change from fields to saltmarsh is the yellow horned poppy, nationally rare but abundant in shingle areas like this. The leaves are covered in fine hairs to protect them from the salt. The clumps of flowers resembling Michaelmas daisies on the shoreline, too, are the daisy's coastal cousins, sea asters, which in turn attract butterflies like red admirals and painted ladies.

    Bird visitors include the grey heron, egret and shelduck, with small winter flocks of lapwing, curlew and teal, as well as many different species of migratory birds.

    1. When the path turns, just before the shingle bank, turn right with it. Stay with it, keeping to the left of the fields, past the remains of a limekiln, until it hits the track below the hill. Turn right onto this track and head towards Bossington.

    On the shoreline along this part of the walk are a number of disused lime kilns, dating back to the beginning of the 18th century. These burned limestone to produce lime for use as an agricultural fertiliser, and there are many of them around the south-west coastline, because the limestone and the coal used for its production were most easily transported by sea.

    Also along the pebble ridge are the remains of several World War II pillboxes. Built of reinforced concrete and brick, and faced with beach pebbles, (like many of the walls and banks in Porlock Vale), these were small fortified structures with good visibility out across the bay, built as part of Britain's anti-invasion preparations. Each was designed for a garrison of 8 or 9 men armed with a maximum of 5 light machine guns and 2 rifles, with splayed peripheral loopholes placed so as to protect the other pillboxes as well as to defend the land behind.

    Bossington Hill itself, and the ridge behind it leading to Minehead's North Hill, featured prominently in World War II as an area used for tank training (see the North Hill Walk).

      1. When your track reaches the Coast Path a little while later, turn right onto this, just before Lower Farm, and head southwestwards, back along the marshes. When the Coast Path turns to the right, heading towards Porlock Weir, leave it, and carry on along the footpath curving left between the fields and joining Villes Lane.
      2. Keep straight on down Villes Lane to the A39 coming into Porlock from Minehead.
      3. Turn right and follow the High Street back through Porlock to the car park.

      Public transport

      Porlock is easily reached by bus from Minehead on the main A39 road. For timetable information, zoom in on the interactive map and click on the bus stops, visit Traveline or phone 0871 200 22 33.

      Parking

      Porlock Village. Postcode for sat navs: TA24 8ND

       

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