Walk - Porlock Bay

8.6 miles (13.9 km)

Porlock Fire Station Car Park - TA24 8ND Porlock Fire Station car park

Challenging - Tracks, footpaths, woodland paths, quiet lanes, some steep ascent

A delightful walk sampling everything that Porlock has to offer: woodland, saltmarsh, hills and picturesque villages, with scenery, wildlife, geology, history, culture and a plethora of places to eat and drink.

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.

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.

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.

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

Waverley B&B

The Waverley Bed and Breakfast prides itself on being a family run business. We are ideally situated within the picturesque seaside town of Minehead.

The Beach Hotel Minehead

The Beach Hotel is the perfect place for your South West Getaway, Apprentice run social enterprise, with a little help from us!

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.

YHA Minehead

YHA Hostel including private rooms and shared rooms

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.

Flapjackery Minehead

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.

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. Leaving the fire station car park, make your way back up to the road and turn left. Carry on past the library, and turn right at the end of this road, uphill, and then right once more onto the toll road.
  2. Take the footpath off to the right about 200 yards on, and follow it through the woods and down to West Porlock.

As you head through the woodland here, open areas along the way give great glimpses across the saltmarshes and the shingle ridge which protects them from the sea (most of the time – but see the Porlock Marshes walk), over to the dramatic slopes of Bossington Hill and its rocky headland at Hurlstone Point.

  1. Don't turn right into the village at West Porlock, but carry on along the footpath through the woods, until you come to the footbridge which leads you onto the road towards Porlock Weir. Take the footpath beyond, which will drop you onto the main road.
  2. Turn left and travel a few hundred yards down the main road, to the footpath to your right, leading onto the beach.

A few hundred metres along the road from here is the village of Porlock Weir, with a mediaeval harbour, several galleries and tearooms, and the 13th century Ship Inn. A short distance beyond the harbour is the lonely shingle beach at Gore Point, scene of several wrecks and rescues over the centuries (see the Porlock Woodland walk).

  1. Follow the footpath across the shingle as it turns inland. The Coast Path used to travel along the shoreline here, but changing sea levels have made that unsafe and it has been moved inland.

After the sea breached the shingle ridge during severe storms in 1996, the decision was made to let nature run its course here, and the resultant saltmarsh is now a Site of Special Scientific Interest in view of the rapid evolution of a whole new habitat for a number of rare species (see the Porlock Marshes walk).

  1. Do not take the footpath to the right, but carry on with the Coast Path as it runs on the seaward side of the fields, past the memorial, to Butcher's Plantation.

The memorial - built by members of the Porlock Branch of the British Legion, with what materials were available at the time – was originally some distance away, also on the shoreline, where Ordnance Survey maps still show it to be; but it has since been moved to its present location. It was erected to the memory of eight American airmen, the crew of a Liberator bomber which ploughed into Bossington Hill in thick fog, in October 1942.

It wasn't the only plane to come down here during World War II. A German Junkers 88 was intercepted over the Bristol Channel by three Spitfires; but astonishingly, the pilot managed to crash-land his plane on the beach, although his gunner was killed in the incident.

    1. Again do not take the footpath to the right, into Porlock, but carry straight on.

    The striking copse of primaeval-looking trees along here is due to poisoning when saltwater flooded the beach after the pebble ridge was breached.

    1. A couple of hundred yards further on, stay with the Coast Path still, following it around the corner before it straightens up and heads for Bossington.

    The path running along the pebble ridge to your left passes the remains of a number of World War II pillboxes and some rather older lime kilns, once used to make lime for agricultural purposes (see the Porlock Marshes walk).

      1. As it reaches the track at the end of the marshes, the Coast Path turns to the right, and you will too, into Bossington.

      Reaching the edges of the picturesque village of Bossington, you turn your back on the thatched cottages and other such chocolate-box delights and instead head towards Hurlstone Point, where winds howl around the edges of Bossington Hill and breakers roll in from the Bristol Channel onto Selworthy Sand, in the shadow of the rugged, scree-clad cliffs which rear up behind the headland (see the Hurlstone Point Adventurous walk).

      1. Go through Bossington car park and cross the stream via the footbridge, turning left onto the path alongside it.
      2. After about three quarters of a mile you come to Hurlstone Combe.

      If you have time and energy, it is well worth the short detour to the left here, to the old coastguard lookout station at Hurlstone Point, for the glimpse it affords of Selworthy Sand and its imposing cliffs.

      1. Turn right into Hurlstone Combe, and follow the path to the top of the combe.

      It's a bit of a haul to reach the giddy heights of Bossington Hill, but you are amply rewarded for your pains by panoramic views in all directions (see the Bossington Landscape walk for more information on the landscape and how it was formed).

      1. Turn right onto the main path running along the top of the hill, going straight ahead at the junction shortly afterwards and carrying on as another path joins from the left.
      2. After about half a mile a track joins from the right. Turn sharply right, onto it, and carry on down the side of Bossington Hill, dog-legging into Lynch Combe and ignoring the path leading steeply up the combe in the crook of the second sharp bend.

      Bossington Hill is part of the Holnicote Estate, now a National Trust property but formerly belong to the Acland family. The Allerford Plantation on the hillside here was planted by Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, in the nineteenth century, to celebrate the births of his children (see the Bossington to Selworthy walk).

        1. As the path enters the woods in Lynch Combe, another path leads to the left. Ignore it, and carry on down the combe until you leave the woods at the foot of the hill, above West Lynch. Take the footpath to the left here, and follow it down to the road by the mediaeval packhorse bridge.
        2. Branch right towards Porlock a short while later, and follow the road into Porlock, being very careful on the short stretch of busy road at the end, where there is no pavement.
        3. Turn right onto the High Street and follow it round through the village and back to the car park at the end.

      Public transport

      Porlock is easily reached by bus from Minehead, Lynmouth, Combe Martin and other towna and villages on the main A39 road as it wends its way along the Exmoor coast. 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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