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Whimsy comes in many forms and if you are lucky enough to encounter even one of them, your life will change forever. Jedi Queen is one of those whimsical creatures. She spends her entire life living on the edges. Growing up off the grid she lived the hippy life before it became main stream. After high school she left the farm for more concrete pastures and bucked her anarchist roots for post secondary values. A Master's degree in Clinical Social work and another in Art Therapy lead to private practice as an Existential Sherpa. To her parent's horror she married a doctor and settled into a life of suburban banality which lasted all of six months. Now days Jedi Queen and the Good Doctor divide time between their yorkie minions and ancient obese cat with epic overland adventuring. You can take the girl from the wild but you can't take the wild out of the girl!

Wednesday, 10 June 2026

 Day 25 - St. Ives to Pendeen:  24.10 km


This is NOT a Camino.

I need to stress that because anyone arriving on the South West Coast Path expecting a gentle spiritual ramble through postcard scenery is about to receive a very expensive lesson from gravity. If the Camino is a charming flirtation, the SWCP is a hard-drinking sailor who seduces you with ocean views before throwing you down a flight of cliffs and demanding to know if you've got any fight left in you. After today's stage, I can confidently say this feels  closer to a through-hike on the Appalachian Trail than a leisurely pilgrimage. The only real difference is that you don't have to carry a week's worth of food or sleep in a tent unless you're feeling particularly masochistic. Everything else is gloriously brutal.


Every day delivers relentless ascents and descents, often around 500 metres. The coastline folds and crumples like a giant green bedsheet tossed carelessly onto the edge of the Atlantic. Every headland promises a reward. Every reward reveals another bloody headland. And when things go sideways, your escape options can be limited. There are stretches where calling a taxi is about as realistic as summoning a dragon. As for buses, abandon hope. The bus network exists in a mystical state somewhere between folklore and quantum physics. It cannot be predicted. It cannot be understood. It occasionally materialises.


Now, some people will tell you that hardship builds character and brings a person closer to God. Maybe. But there is a distinction between overcoming adversity and repeatedly using your knees and Achilles tendons as sacrificial offerings to the Cornish landscape. After several weeks out here, I am beginning to suspect that God created ibuprofen because He knew exactly what this coastline was going to do to people. Which brings me to today's stage. The toughest one yet. A route so technically demanding it felt less like walking and more like entering into a series of increasingly hostile negotiations with rock, mud, weather, and my rapidly diminishing sense of optimism.


It's 20 km of boulder climbing.

No, really.

Imagine a drunken god emptied a wheelbarrow of granite into the Atlantic, then another god looked at the result and said, "Perfect. Let's make people walk  that."

This section looks like the aftermath of a savage bar fight between Titans and Kaiju. Giant slabs of stone are piled everywhere in a landscape so hostile you half expect to find the fossilized remains of whatever started the argument. Every boulder seems personally offended by your presence and determined to test the integrity of your knees. You need serious skills here. Not "I go for a nice Sunday ramble" skills. You need the flexibility of a ballet dancer, the grip strength of a rock climber, and the upper body of a gymnast. There are moments where you're hauling your carcass over granite blocks, hanging onto boulders with one hand while swinging a leg around obstacles in positions normally associated with advanced yoga.   Looking at this terrain, you start to suspect the miners weren't human at all but some lost species of mountain goat fueled by spite and tea.


I remembered this stage from ten years ago. It ended with us sitting beside a road, crying openly from exhaustion and relief.  A  gypsy caravan rescued us from further suffering. Today there is no rescue. No magical caravan. No kindly farmer. No tactical pub. There is essentially one escape point and reaching it still requires a nine or ten hour day of scrambling over enough rock to build a small nation.

My recommendation? Skip this stage entirely. Or stay an extra day in St Ives, walk part of it, admire the scenery, then turn around before the coastline starts writing cheques your ligaments can't cash. And for the love of all that is holy, do not do this in bad weather.  This route already treats your body like a cheap motel room. Giving it rain, wind, or blazing sun is like handing a psychopath a better set of tools.


The scenery is so spectacular it feels almost unfair.

At times the granite formations look like ruined castles abandoned by giants. Wild ponies appear from nowhere, staring at you with quiet judgment usually reserved for disappointed grandmothers and customs agents. This stretch of coast feels prehistoric.  You're walking along the edge of a continent with nothing but ocean between you and North America. Ancient mariners believed sea monsters lurked beyond these horizons. After a day out here, I was fully prepared to believe them.

In fact, I would have welcomed a dragon.


Not one of those elegant fantasy dragons. I wanted a big, nasty, chain-smoking dockworker dragon with questionable hygiene and low standards. Something capable of carrying me to the finish line. Or eating me. Honestly, by kilometre eighteen, either option seemed reasonable. Death by dragon has a certain romance to it. Much better than being found face down between two boulders because your legs quit. If you're going out, go out in style. Become a cautionary tale. Get a plaque. The photos are not great because this is not terrain where you casually stop for artistic reflection. Every second is spent preventing gravity from having its way with you. The coast was gorgeous. My relationship with it, however, has become deeply toxic.


Tonight's dinner consists of Cup O Noodles and canned meatballs because another reality of this stage is food options are nonexistent. The local Spar appears to have been stocked by a committee whose primary concern was making sure nobody ever ran out of alcohol. The shelves groan under the weight of booze and mysterious snack foods. The dairy section has all the vitality of a Victorian sanatorium. One lonely aisle contains instant ramen, tins of beans, canned meatballs, and naan breads that look like it lost the will to live.

But they had Bugles.

So here I sit, eating processed corn snacks  after a day of being thoroughly manhandled by granite. The meal is objectively terrible. Yet at this moment it tastes like victory.  Which, come to think of it, is exactly what this trail tastes like too.





















 Day 23 - Portreath to St. Ives: 22.53 km

Day 24 - Rest Day


Dear God, is it possible to be more exhausted than we are now? I need a holiday from this holiday. The South West Coast Path has seduced us with its beauty, then mugged us in a dark alley and stolen whatever was left of our quadriceps. This has been the most intense and exhilarating long distance walk we've done, which probably explains why we came back after ten years. A third round seems unlikely. Not because we don't love it, but because it is hard as fuck, both physically and logistically.


That said, the Cornish coast is magnificent. There is a reason so many walkers choose to spend a week or ten days here. The scenery is pure theatre. Cliffs plunging into turquoise water and long stretches of hard packed beach where you can stride for kilometres feeling almost heroic. The practicalities are glorious too. Cafés appear every 6 to 8 km like benevolent saints bearing hot tea and functioning toilets. The climbs are still plentiful, but less savage than Devon's relentless campaign of vertical punishment. The paths are beautifully maintained and largely free of ankle-snapping stones. As a result, trail runners swarm the place. This brings us to the people. Dog walkers are the obvious highlight. Every wagging tail feels like a small blessing from the universe. The trail runners, meanwhile, keep materialising behind us shouting, "ON YOUR LEFT!"

To be fair, my irritation has less to do with the shouting and more to do with the fact that these bronzed woodland gazelles seem capable of bounding up hills that leave me negotiating peace treaties with my lungs. I don't resent them. I resent the evidence that such knee strength is possible.


Coming into St Ives was a bit of a shit show. The last time we did this walk, we stayed in Hayle, about 12 km outside town, then walked into St Ives the next day. This year I foolishly combined the stages. Learn from my mistakes. By the time you reach Hayle, you'll already feel like you've been tumble-dried by the Atlantic.

Because of Ken's knee, we'd planned to catch a bus. Buses around here operate according to principles known only to God, seagulls, and possibly retired Cornish witches. A bus scheduled for 4:15 may arrive at 4:45. It may arrive at 5:15. It may simply vanish into folklore. Routes shown on Google Maps often bear only a passing resemblance to what appears on the bus stop timetable, and taxis generally need booking 24 to 48 hours in advance. This is my way of saying: be prepared to improvise.  I completely understand why so many people now book self-guided package walks. The scenery is heavenly. The logistics are a full-contact sport.


On a side note, English people are wonderfully chatty right up until the precise moment they decide not to be. Then the shutters come down with all the warmth and subtlety of a medieval portcullis. Case in point. We stopped at a café yesterday for lunch. I'd needed a toilet since about 6 km earlier and was approaching a level of urgency normally associated with breached dams. It was either the café or another ten minutes to the public toilets.  There were only two people waiting. After several minutes of performing what can only be described as an interpretive dance dedicated to the bladder, I knocked and asked, "Is anyone in there? Are you okay? There's a queue."

"I'M BUSY!" came the reply.The woman in front spun around and barked, "WHAT IS YOUR PROBLEM?"The man behind her piled on. "YOU PEOPLE think the world revolves around you."Just like that, I became That Bitch.  Exiled, shamed and socially tarred and feathered. I immediately required another Hedgehog ice cream for emotional support.


As for St Ives, the place has always had a flair for storytelling. It began life as the 

village of Slepe before a ploughman supposedly unearthed a stone coffin containing the remains of St Ivo. Local clergy confidently identified the bones, which launched  a prosperous side hustle of people coming to be blessed by the bones of what was probably some dead Roman who was shanked by Celtic woman for being a dick. Another legend credits the town's name to Saint Ia, an Irish princess who crossed the sea on a single leaf after a heartfelt prayer. Personally, after weeks on the coast path, I find that no more implausible than Cornwall's bus schedules. Then there are the tales of nine Amazons, and not the warehouse variety. These warrior women supposedly landed here, danced naked on the Sabbath, and were eventually transformed into stone. Their petrified forms were blamed for shipwrecks along the coast. Cornwall is full of plaques commemorating vessels smashed against these shores, often accompanied by stories of fearless local women rowing into storms to rescue sailors who had absolutely no business being out there. So, according to local folklore, women cause the wrecks, women save the wrecked, and men mostly seem to be along for the ride. History may dispute that version of events, but it is certainly the more entertaining one.


I love St Ives. It possesses that rare and beautiful balance of refinement and grit. Just enough class to make me feel vaguely aristocratic while still allowing me to wander about looking like I've slept in a hedge. The waterfront is a glorious collision of elegant wine bars and tacky amusement arcades. You can sip a £14 glass of wine while listening to the electronic death cries of a coin-pusher machine. It is magnificent.The real power brokers of St Ives, however, are the seagulls. These are not birds. These are organised criminals with feathers.

For centuries St Ives made its living from fishing. Somewhere along the line the gulls realised it was much easier to extort tourists than catch their own lunch. Evolution at work. They now operate a sophisticated protection racket. The payment is usually fries, ice cream, Cornish pasties, or occasionally an entire sandwich.


The locals understand the rules. They consume takeaway under cover, or while maintaining a level of situational awareness normally associated with combat zones. Tourists, meanwhile, wander the harbour carrying open containers fish and chips with the innocent optimism of lambs entering a wolf convention. The gulls know exactly who is new in town. Japanese tourists barely step onto the waterfront before a squadron appears overhead conducting what can only be described as aerial surveillance. Then some guy decides to toss a handful of chips into the air for a TikTok video. This is the equivalent of throwing dollar bills into a prison riot. The gulls descend in a screeching cyclone of entitlement and fury. The locals react with equal outrage because they know that one idiot feeding the birds today means fifty emboldened feathered gangsters mugging pensioners tomorrow. Nobody escapes judgment. Not the tourists. Not the gulls. Not the aspiring influencer who thought unleashing airborne mayhem for fifteen seconds of internet fame was a solid life choice. In St Ives, the sea may be beautiful, the wine may be excellent, but the gulls remain the undisputed rulers of the harbour. Everyone else is just paying tribute.