Walk - Looe Bay Holiday Park - Millendreath

3.2 miles (5.1 km)

Looe Bay Holiday Park Looe Bay Holiday Park

Moderate -

An easy stroll downhill along quiet country lanes with a short steep climb along the South West Coast Path above Millendreath Beach (but there are plenty of fine views over the sea when you stop to catch your breath!). After visiting the Monkey Sanctuary, return the same way, with an optional shortcut along a bridleway. Both return routes involve a short stretch of steep descent.

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.

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. .

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.

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.

Looe Country Park

A quiet site with great views offering a choice of hard standing or grass pitches, camping pods and static caravans. Hot showers and a small shop for essentials.

Mount Brioni Holiday Apartments

Situated on the South West Coast Path and two minutes from Seaton beach , Mount Brioni is a collection of 1 or 2 bedroom holiday apartments with incredible sea views.

East Trenean Farm Luxury Holiday Cottages

Four luxury holiday cottages sleeping 2-20, each with wonderful rural views, private hot tubs and gardens, storage for walkers equipment and EV charging.

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).

Cedar Lodge

Welcome to Cedar Lodge, near to Looe, a bright airy studio in the village of Hessenford and in easy reach of Seaton and Downderry beaches and the southwest coastal path.

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.

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

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.
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.

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

NOTE: A landslip in the woods below the Monkey Sanctuary, has resulted in the Coast Path being diverted onto the lane past the Monkey Sanctuary and section between points 3 and 4 is currently closed.

The Monkey Sanctuary is open during the season from Sunday to Thursday, 11 am - 4.30 pm (closed Fridays and Saturdays). Tel 0844 272 1271
If you do not wish to visit the Monkey Sanctuary, or it is closed, an optional diversion along the South West Coast Path towards Seaton instead will take you to an unusual Celtic Labyrinth, passing a wealth of wildlife along the way.

  1. From the entrance to Looe Bay Holiday Park turn left and walk down the road to the junction. Turning left onto the Millendreath road. Follow it downhill through the woodland to the beach at Millendreath.
  2. Turn left at the end of the road, following Bodigga Lane as it climbs steeply uphill. After the houses, carry on ahead along the South West Coast Path, pulling uphill to the campsite at Bay View Farm. Keep going ahead, along Looe Hill towards Seaton.

In medieval times Bodigga Lane was part of the main east west route through Cornwall.

  1. When the Coast Path turns right along a narrow path towards the coast, just after Bay View Farm, keep going ahead along Looe Hill, past three more private drives on the left.

The original medieval settlement of Bodigga, first recorded in 1076 and listed in the Domesday Book as 'Bodcodigu', is now Summercourt, on your left.
To visit the Celtic Labyrinth instead of the Monkey Sanctuary, turn right here to follow the South West Coast Path above the sea. The Labyrinth field is about ¾ mile along the path, and entry is free.
The terrain here is rugged, and the path is fairly rough in places. The Coast Path was diverted up Bodigga Lane to bypass the cliffs between here and Millendreath, because Bodigga Cliff is unstable and prone to landslips. This makes it a good habitat for a wide range of species, and if you walk along here in summer it is a riot of colour, with stands of foxgloves and brilliant blue viper's bugloss surrounded by the delicate pinks and yellows of red campion and rough hawkbit and the starry white stitchwort.
The profusion of wildflowers attracts butterflies. Colourful Peacocks, Red Admirals and Painted Ladies twirl flamboyantly among the muted shades of the Small Heaths and the pearl-bordered Fritillaries.
The Celtic Labyrinth is on your left on the hillside shortly before the path ahead plunges into the trees. There are a number of information panels mounted on the fence.
The Labyrinth is an ancient symbol, and the earliest examples, found in cave paintings in southern France and Spain, date back some 10,000 years ago to Palaeolithic times. Since then it has been created throughout the world in various forms carved into rock, cut out of turf, even woven into baskets. The most noted example is in a five-thousand-year-old passage grave, believed to be an ancient temple, at Newgrange near Dublin.
The seven trails are carved into the grass as walks which spiral in towards a seven-foot menhir, made of slate and quartz from the Carnglaze Caverns near Liskeard. (The Carnglaze Caverns, themselves, are well worth a visit with underground caverns and a subterranean lake deep beneath ancient woodland).
Traditionally, the walk into the centre of the Labyrinth is designed to gather information about a problem that is troubling you. There are a series of questions to ask yourself on the way in. Reaching the centre, you pause and relax, concentrating on the here and now. After a time you return through the loops to the world outside the Labyrinth. As you walk you make decisions, based on the answers to the questions you asked yourself on the way in.
Return to Bodigga Lane the same way, because there is no path into the Monkey Sanctuary from the Coast Path.

  1. To visit the Monkey Sanctuary without detouring to the Labyrinth, carry on past the path and walk to the top of the hill, where the venue is signposted on your right.

The Monkey Sanctuary is an active rescue centre and is home to over 25 monkeys. Some are capuchin monkeys, named after an Order of Franciscan monks who wear brown robes with large hoods; some are woolly monkeys from the South American rainforests; and others are tail-less barbary macaques from the Atlas mountains.
As most of these animals have had an unhappy start to life, some areas of the sanctuary are not accessible to the public, in order to allow them space for recovery and progress.
There are also wildlife gardens, surrounded by beech and sycamore trees facing south over the bay. They are mown at particular times of the year to encourage a wide variety of plants and animals.
In the pond an important feeding and breeding station for many species there are frogs, toads and newts. Great water diving beetles hunt newtlets in the water, and no fewer than 10 different kinds of dragonfly have been spotted hovering above it.
The edge of the woodland area is alive with birds and insects, attracted by the shelter afforded by the densely packed shrubs, small trees and native weeds. Inside the grounds, the formal Victorian Garden harks back to the days of the Empire when the Murray family introduced exotic plants like rhododendrons and azaleas to their country estate.
In the cellar beneath the house there is a bat roost, where rare lesser horseshoe bats are able to breed in the warmth provided by the oil boiler. An infra-red camera, funded by the Mammals Trust UK, enables visitors to watch the bats without disturbing them.
After your visit, retrace your steps down the hill towards Bay View Farm. Coming to Summercourt, opposite the path to the Labyrinth, turn right onto the bridleway between the buildings, bypassing Millendreath. Follow the bridleway steeply downhill to join May Lane again on its way up to St Martin-by-Looe.

  1. Turn right on the road and retrace your steps to Looe Bay Holiday Park.

Public transport

There are no nearby bus routes.

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