Walk - Treago Farm - Kelsey Head & Holywell

4.0 miles (6.5 km)

Treago Farm Treago Farm

Moderate - Featuring another sandy beach and two more holy wells, this is a relatively gentle stroll in an area particularly important for wildlife.

Featuring another sandy beach and two more holy wells, this is a relatively gentle stroll in an area particularly important for wildlife. Watch out for seals around The Chick and check out the prehistoric cliff castle on the headland.

 

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.

Trevornick Holiday Park

Trevornick offers a range of 5* accommodation from camping to luxury lodges, onsite restaurant/cafe and bar, entertainment, golf courses, fishing, swimming pool and more.

Crossroads Campsite

Crossroads Campsite is a friendly, quiet, small site to camp or tour in the South West of England and ideal to just get a away from it all..

Pentire Hotel Ltd

Award-winning breakfasts and 75 rooms, some with Fistral Bay views. Relax in our indoor pool. Enjoy a drink with dinner. Some rooms are dog-friendly, so all welcome!

Fistral Studio

Minutes from the SWCP section Crantock across the Gannel Estuary to Newquay, Fistral Studio is a self catering chalet with shower room, parking and a private garden.

The Headland

Relaxed luxury at this 5 star hotel in a wild, dramatic setting. Includes the Aqua Club Spar. z

Porth Sands Penthouse

Porth Sands Penthouse is a beautiful romantic beach apartment, situated right on Porth Beach in Porth, Newquay, Cornwall, with stunning views across the bay

Perran View Holiday Park

An ideal place to escape everyday life, with lots of sports activities for kids and a recharging dip in the pool and sauna for you.Just 2 miles from Perranporth beach, great for surfing, snorkeling or sailing. Range of self-catering options available.

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.

Bowgie Inn

With unrivalled sea views, lots of seating inside & out, Bowgie Inn sits directly on the path and in the perfect place to explore all year round!

Fort Inn

Family friendly pub on fringe of bustling Newquay .

The Garden Cafe

Great coffee, cakes, traditional Cornish cream teas & light lunches in award-winning gardens

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.

Visit Newquay Tourist Information Centre

We are dedicated to both the promotion of Newquay and to help you make the most of your visit to Newquay and Cornwall! Open 7days a week.

Saunassa

Nordic Spa - Wood-fired Sauna, wood-fired hot tubs and cold baths, changing facilities. Open Tuesday - Sunday

Paul David Smith Photography Courses

Improve your photography whilst taking in some of Cornwall's best views with Paul's range of photography courses.

Interactive Elevation

Route Description

  1. From Treago Farm drop downhill southwards to go through the gate and onto the track which curves to the right just beyond. Follow the track past Treago Mill and the car park to the bridleway heading towards the beach at Porth Joke.

The settlement of Treago was first recorded in 1214 as a manor held by the family of the same name, who in the fourteenth century built the south aisle of Crantock Church.  Treago Farm occupies the site of the old manor, although nothing remains of the original buildings.

  1. Turn right onto the bridleway and walk along the valley to the beach.

Known to the locals as 'Polly Joke', the beach was originally called Porth Lojowek, meaning 'plant-rich cove'. Conservation methods used by the National Trust around Kelsey Head ensure that no fewer than 154 different species of plant thrive here today, and it the summer it is a riot of colour.

Kelsey Head is a Site of Special Scientific Interest with a wide range of habitats, the most extensive being the sand dune system and the maritime grassland which has grown over wind-blown sand around the fringes of the headlands and on Cubert Common. Other important wildlife areas are the wet meadows alongside the stream as you walk to Porth Joke and the brackish marsh at Holywell Bay.

A number of rare plants grow around here, including sea holly in the sand dunes and Babington's leek in the area of marshland. The particularly unusual and beautiful silver-studded blue butterfly has also been seen at Kelsey Head, and the stripe-winged grasshopper spotted here is one of only three sightings in Devon and Cornwall in recent years.

The headland and the offshore islands are also noteworthy for the colonies of breeding seabirds including the guillemot, shag and razorbill.

  1. At the head of the beach turn left onto the South West Coast Path and follow it around Kelsey Head and on to Holywell Beach.

The small island just offshore as you round the headland is known as The Chick. Look out for grey seals here, especially at low tide. Sometimes dolphins can be seen too.

Evidence of human activity has been found around Kelsey Head dating back to Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) times, around 8000-4000 BC. This includes flint tools, as well as shells and bone in what is thought to have been a midden, suggesting that there was a settlement here. There are also tumuli, or burial barrows, dating from the Bronze Age, around 3000 BC, and archaeologists have found two cliff castles here.

Cliff castles date from the Iron Age, generally between AD 100 and 200, and are coastal enclosures making use of the natural defences of precipitous cliffs around a headland. The prehistoric inhabitants would fortify the landward side of the headland by means of ramparts and ditches. The low bank and shallow ditch across Kelsey Head can still be seen, although the area enclosed is much smaller than it would originally have been, since the north and west sides of what was probably a rectangular fort are assumed to have fallen into the sea. It is also thought that the building of the castle was unfinished, although it was possibly used later as a Roman signal station.

There are remnants of field systems on Kelsey Head also dating back to prehistoric times, but the boundaries which still enclose the three Kelseys today are likely to date from medieval days. There are similar 'cornditches' on Dartmoor, with a sheer stone wall on one side and a gently sloping bank on the other. On Dartmoor these were designed to keep the King's deer out of the fields, with the wall facing outwards to prevent their entering and the internal bank making it possible for them to escape if they did manage to get in.

Holywell Cave can be seen at low tide beneath the southern cliffs of Kelsey Head. Although it seems to be no more than a slit from the beach, on entering the cave it is possible to make out some slimy steps leading up a series of pools to a hole in the roof of the cave. Tinted red and blue, with the edges of the pools encrusted with calcareous deposits formed by water rich in minerals dripping from above, the cave was seized upon by Victorian Romantics as the holy well after which the bay was named. However, it is likely that it is an entirely natural feature, and the real well of Holywell is St Cubert's, midway between the village and the coast, in the Trevornick Valley and on land which is now part of the Holywell Bay Fun Park.

Thought to be fourteenth century, Cubert Well is reached via a high Gothic arch set into an ivy-clad perimeter wall. Inside, a series of stepping stones leads across marshland to a granite well house, built into a rocky and overgrown bank. Two sides of the well house are lined with stone seats and there are niches cut into the back well, probably for candles or statues. The well was discovered in a ruined state in 1916 and has been restored by the Newquay Old Cornwall Society.

  1. Stay with the Coast Path as it leaves the beach and travels through the sand dunes to Holywell.

Cornish crime writer W. J. Burley, who was born in Falmouth, lived in Holywell until his death in 2002. Best known for his detective novels featuring Charles Wycliffe, televised in the mid 1990s, Burley won a scholarship to study zoology at Oxford after the Second World War and was Head of Biology at Newquay Grammar School until he retired in 1974, by which time he was well established as a novelist.

  1. Approaching Holywell, take one of the paths leading to the left before the houses, bearing left to pass on the seaward side of the golf course, crossing the track at the far end to continue straight ahead, ignoring the path which branches off to the left and dropping gently downhill to the stream.
  2. Carry on ahead again to cross the track and continue along the footpath over Cubert Common as it goes over the brow of the hill and descends to the track used at the start of the walk.

Originally Eglos Cubert (St Cubert's Church) in Lanowyn (Owen's sacred place), Cubert was named after the Welsh missionary who arrived here with St Carantoc in the sixth century (see the Crantock and Pentire Point Walk). Eventually, having presumably converted the local pagans to Christianity, he latter travelled on to Brittany, but St Cubert returned to Wales and became abbot of his monastery.

On the far south edge of the common is a large round barrow with excellent sea views towards Castle an Dinas to the north east and St Agnes Beacon to the south west. Because of these, it is believed to have been a particularly important burial site in the Bronze Age.

  1. Turn right on the track to return to Treago Farm and the start of the walk.

Public transport

The Western Greyhound Bus 585 travels half-hourly from the Great Western Hotel in Newquay towards Truro, stopping at Winstowe Terrace Hail & Ride in Crantock, a short walk from Treago Farm. For details visit www.travelinesw.com or phone 0871 200 22 33

 

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