Walk - Porthscatho & Gerrans Bay

3.9 miles (6.2 km)

Gerrans Treloan Lane car park - TR2 5EQ Gerrans Treloan Lane car park

Easy - Coastal path, footpaths from the beach and across a field, pavement, quiet lanes and tracks. The walk is mostly level, with no steep ascent or descent.

A gentle saunter between two sandy beaches, heading south from the delightful fishing village of Porthscatho and rerturning inland past the fourteenth-century manor of Rosteague, whose past owners ranged from one of Sir Walter Raleigh's captains to 'Mad Mary' Hartley. 

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.

Braganza B&B

Stunning views of the harbour and bay from our Regency home. The perfect base to explore locally. Ample parking, free wifi, style and elegance.

The Hut at Well Cottage

Cosy shepherd's hut for two with log burner, kitchenette and separate private shower room between Veryan and Portloe on the Roseland Peninsula.

Falmouth Lodge

Falmouth Lodge is a simple home with two rooms available for short stays. You are welcome to prepare your own breakfast in our kitchen

Jacobs Ladder Inn

We are a traditional inn located in Falmouth, Cornwall. We offer 6 rooms which are mainly ensuite, food, real ales and entertainment on certain nights.

Come-to-Good Farm

Luxury shepherd's hut, campsite and ensuite barn available to rent on our idyllic sheep farm in between Truro and Falmouth. Pub within walking distance.

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.

The Boathouse

Licenced cafe in the centre of Portscatho, serving locally sourced home cooked food.

Chain Locker

Simple food and cask ales in a convivial Victorian pub with seafaring history and harbourside seats.

Flapjackery Falmouth

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.

Nearwater Walking Holidays

Based on the coast in Cornwall, we use our intimate knowledge of the path to organise bespoke self-guided walking holidays.

National Maritime Museum Cornwall

Nestled by Falmouth’s deep-water harbour discover National Maritime Museum Cornwall. Across 15 galleries, explore the overwhelming influence of the sea on our history and culture.

Interactive Elevation

Route Description

  1. From the entrance to the car park at Gerrans turn right on the road, turning right again to walk down Gerrans Hill. At The Square turn right again, to drop down The Lugger.

Like Portloe, to the north of it, Porthscatho is a picturesque fishing village that has remained unspoilt. The whitewashed cottages are clustered together in the shelter of the steep-sided valley, and beyond the harbour the sand is golden and the water turquoise.

The large octagonal spire of the church at Gerrans, on the hillside above, has for centuries been used by sailors as a navigation aid. The church was built in the thirteenth century, but the tower and spire were added a couple of centuries later, when it was extended. In 1849 it was rebuilt, but the buttressed tower was left as it was. Long before the thirteenth century the village was known as 'Eglosgeren' ('St Geran's Church'), suggesting that there was a chapel of some kind here even before the one first recorded in 1201. There is a medieval cross in the churchyard. These were often used to indicate a holy site.

St Geran, or St Gerent or St Geraint, was said to be the grandson of the legendary King Mark of Cornwall, a Celtic chieftain of the Dumnonii tribe. Geraint was converted to Christianity by St Teilo, an Irish saint who travelled through Cornwall on his way to Brittany. Geraint was killed during the Battle of Catterick in 598 and was buried at nearby Carne Beacon (see the Nare Head Walk).

According to legend, 'King Geran of Dumnonia', or Geraint, lived at Dingerein Castle, a hillfort just a few miles north of Gerrans. (The Cornish word 'din' or 'dun' means 'castle'). Archaeologists believe that this bivallate (two-ditched) fort dates from somewhere between 800 BC and AD 400. The sixteenth-century antiquarian John Leland wrote that there was a fogou nearby. 'Fogou' comes from the Cornish word meaning 'cave', and these were underground chambers or vaults unique to Cornwall. The Picts also built similar structures at around the same time in Northern Scotland, known as 'souterrains'. The purpose of either is unknown, but it is thought that they may have been refuges, storage chambers or ritual shrines.

Just north of Porthscatho, on the beach at Porthcurnick, there are the remains of an ancient submerged forest. This was flooded as sea levels rose when the ice melted after the last Ice Age, some 10,000 years ago. At low tide in certain conditions it is possible to see the fossilised roots and stumps, and acorns and hazel nuts have been found in its clay surface. Fragments of Iron Age pottery have also been uncovered, dated at sometime around the second century BC.

Archaeologists have found evidence, throughout the Roseland peninsula, showing that the district was heavily populated in prehistoric times. The earliest remains date from Neolithic (late Stone Age) times, sometime between 4000 and 2500 BC, including some very worn pottery found near Gerrans. There are many barrows and cists from the later Bronze Age (2500 – 800 BC), and all around the area there are the remains of settlements from the Iron Age and the Romano-British period that followed it.

  1. Between the last two houses on The Lugger turn right to pick up the South West Coast Path as it heads south towards Towan Beach and St Anthony. Follow it along above the rocky shoreline for about a mile and a half, pulling out around Greeb Point, until you come to a footpath heading inland on the right at Towan Beach.
  2. Follow the footpath up to the road, turning right and then immediately right again, to follow the bridleway along the lane and through the field beyond to the house at the end. Carry on along the lane past Rosteague, continuing ahead when it turns into a road, to walk past the campsite at Treloan and back to Gerrans.

Rosteague Manor was first owned in 1363 by Ralph de Restak, but little else is known of early history until 1401, when John and Mary Petit were granted a licence to celebrate Mass in their private chapel. A century later it passed into the hands of the Mohun family of Dunster (see the Greenaleigh Farm Walk at Minehead). It became a fashionable place to visit during Elizabethan times, when owner Sir Reginald Mohun was one of Sir Walter Raleigh's naval captains.

Today the manor is best known for its French gardens, created in 1670 by the Kempe family, who owned it at the time. Eighteenth-century squire John Harris added a deer park and a dovecot in the woods in 1768. In the nineteenth century a thatched summerhouse was built in a corner of the gardens. Its floors were made of black and white pebbles and its walls decorated with cockle and mussel shells, and today it is a popular venue for weddings. 'Mad Mary' Hartley lived here with her son, and the house was neglected for some time before being fully restored by its subsequent owners.

There is said to be a smugglers' tunnel running from the house to the beach, and another one into the woods, and a hidden staircase has been discovered.

Public transport


The Western Greyhound 550 bus runs between Truro and St Mawes, stopping at Gerrans Church. For timetable information, zoom in on the interactive map and click on the bus stops, visit Traveline or phone 0871 200 22 33.

Parking

In the Gerrans car park at the start of the walk

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