Walk - Hannafore Point

Walk information provided with help from Natural England. Map reproduced by permission of Ordnance Survey on behalf of HMSO. © Crown copyright and database right 2024. Ordnance Survey Licence number 100022021.

Route Description

Millpool Car Park, West Looe (PL13 2AF). Fee payable. All Blue Badge users must display a valid blue badge with Time Clock set at time of arrival. One Hour Free - Blue Badge holders paying a car park charge automatically gain entitlement to one extra hour of free parking in addition to the time allowed.

  1. Turn left out of the car park on the side road towards the bridge.
  2. Turn left again and then turn right behind the building to follow the path that goes under the bridge. The path comes out on the riverside.

There are plenty of seats at regular intervals all along this walk!

The South West Coast Path keeps to the riverside. Beware though- there are steps up ahead.

  1. An alternative route is to follow Hannafore Road passing the clock tower on your left.

As you climb Hannafore Road, the gradient is 1:15 but for no longer than 100 metres.

As you walk along beside the harbour, note the bronze statue of Nelson, a one-eyed bull seal who was a familiar sight around the harbour for 25 years before he died in 2003.

During the 19th century, local engineer and entrepreneur Joseph Thomas designed the banjo pier to prevent sand from silting up the river. His solution was so successful that the idea of a banjo pier was adopted elsewhere in the world.

Just offshore can be seen Looe Island, also known as St George's Island. There is a medieval chapel on the island, which was dedicated to St Michael, although this was later corrupted to St George. It was a popular place for pilgrimages; but so many people drowned trying to reach it that a new Benedictine chapel was built just across from it on the mainland, sometime around the 12th century.

  1. Continue past the Hannafore Beach kiosk until you reach the gate at the end of the road.

The surface is now grass worn in places near the gate to expose tree roots. However, the next 2 fields are easily passable. You don't have to stay on the path. A picnic table beckons those with food and drink to consume.

Go up a gradual incline to the next field. Again - check the best route up to and through the gate. The path heads on a level gradient through this next field.

We come to the last gate on our walk. From here the path becomes narrower with a stony surface leading to steps. This is Portnadler Bay.

  1. Time to turn back and return to Looe. Head back to the gate separating the first and second field and then onto Hannaford Road.
  2. An alternative route back can be had by turning right, after the gate, and heading down this incline.

The downhill gradient is about 1:15 and lasts for about 25 metres. Turn left at the foot of the slope and follow the path. At regular intervals there are pathways back up to Hannafore Road. Pass the Coastguard Lookout.

The rocky beach at Hannafore is a popular place for rockpooling. The rocky reef exposed at low tide consists of beds of flat slate scored through by deep gullies, providing a habitat for many different species. These include sponges, sea-squirts and sea anemones, as well as furrowed crabs, scorpion spider crabs and hairy crabs, and squat lobsters.

  1. The last slope leads back up to Hannafore Road.

You can continue to the end of this path and return to here to get to the road. The rocks in front of you are called The Blind.

Once back on Hannafore Road retrace your steps through West Looe and back to the car park.

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