About Me

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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!

Sunday, 31 May 2026

 Day 15 - Bude to Crackington Haven: 21.73 km

Some days on the South West Coast Path are just a grim, blue-collar slog where you clock the kilometers, swallow the pain, and learn to embrace the burn. Every single day is an absolute war on your lower body. Today felt like a mandatory two thousand squats, yet I am still waiting on the elite glutes I was promised. The only saving grace was the lack of rain, a rare mercy from the unpredictable Celtic gods who used to demand human sacrifice on these very cliffs. The weather cooperated just enough so those absolute bitches of vertical climbs and knee-shattering descents weren't tackled in a killer heatwave, but it was still humid as fuck. I smelled like a medieval sailor after a three-month voyage.


The morning kicked off with absolute, unadulterated chaos. Our host had decreed that every single walker report to the dining room at 8:00 AM sharp. It created a beautiful, claustrophobic cacophony of hungry hikers, with only the hostess’s long-suffering husband trapped in the kitchen trying to short-order cook individual meals for the mob. Sunrise guest house offers a wildly vast breakfast menu, an aggressive flex that adds a shit-ton of unnecessary labor to this woman’s morning. Then, the luggage transfer driver arrived at 8:15 AM like an invading force. This triggered an immediate, high-stakes shitstorm because the official fine print states bags aren't due until 9:00 AM, and this man was visibly disgusted that nobody was packed. Because I prefer peace over panic, my gear was already locked and loaded. Ken, however, chose the classic masculine route: a half-assed pack followed by a full-blown meltdown when the driver showed up early.

"I’ll just inhale this food and run upstairs!" he franticly muttered.

I looked at him like he was freebasing local moss. "Why don’t you take a breath, go upstairs, finish your packing, and then come down to eat like a civilized human?"

He stared back, utterly bewildered.

"Did you take your ADHD meds today?" I asked.

"Not yet," he muttered.

"Well, pop one now, because you are spiraling."

The man can literally run a high-stakes trauma surgery like a god, but navigating basic check-out logistics? Forget it. All that brilliant brainpower went into keeping bleeding, cardiac-arresting bodies alive. Real life is just too slow for him.


The B&B was packed with German women. Our hostess explained that The Salt Path—the literary bible of menopausal rebirth—had just dropped in Germany and Holland, unleashing a tidal wave of European women desperate to find their inner warrior on these cliffs. The hostess just shook her head. "They think it's like the movie," she sighed. "I have to remind them that this path is hard work." She isn't lying. The South West Coast Path is a physical beatdown. There are zero flat stages. Post-Brexit, post-COVID Britain has decimated the hospitality industry, leaving precious few places to sleep. Food options exist, but you cannot count on that mythical beachside cafĂ© at kilometer eleven to be open. If you want to carry your entire life on your back like a medieval pilgrim, prepare to pay the toll in pure agony. The guidebooks may say six hours, but those metrics are calculated for day-hikers carrying nothing but a water bottle and a sandwich.


Tonight, we crashed at Trewartha and Ty Chy, a mile outside Crackington Haven because nothing else exists. We arrived at a secluded house in the woods overrun by a dozen peacocks acting like a gang of iridescent, avian overlords. It felt like the opening scene of a vintage slasher film until our hostess materialized. She was a magnificent, full-figured Valkyrie Crone with manicured nails that matched the electric blue of her peacock brood. Inside, it was a beautiful collision of 1918 England and 1927 Weimar Republic. The furniture was all solid, hand-carved Bavarian timber built to withstand an air raid. The art belonged to an era before the world lost its collective mind. Our room looked like a 1920s Berlin hotel where broke, brilliant poets would crash out after a night of heavy drinking and questionable sexual choices. The armoire was a literal fortress; you could hide a small family inside it.


Dinner meant traveling to the only game in town: The Wainhouse Inn, two miles away. "I will drive you!" our Valkyrie proclaimed in a heavy, commanding German accent that was strangely erotic. "The roads are dangerous. When you are done, I return. Then, we feed the peacocks and Roger the badger." She whipped out a notepad. "What do you want for breakfast?" Before we could answer, she shut us down. "Tomorrow is a big walk. You must EAT." She aggressively chose our macros for us. The Sunday Roast at the Wainhouse was a glorious freak show of locals dining at a massive communal table. A robust, sweat-drenched chef dished out far more gravy-soaked meat than any human should ever consume in one sitting. It was beautiful, heavy, and deeply satisfying. I think I just died and went to heaven.



























Thursday, 28 May 2026

 Day 12 - Clovelly to Hartland Abby:  20.43 km


Today was a beautiful, bruising masterclass in what makes the South West Coast Path the ultimate, soul-cleansing masochism. We ate dirt through ancient forests, tracked through endless fields, and traced dizzying, poetic cliff edges before the grand finale: a sketchy, adrenaline-fueled scramble up a disintegrating shale cliff in a howling gale. It is pure, unfiltered chaos. This is exactly why we crawled back to this trail for a second helping. We are gluttons for it.


But first, let us talk about last night’s sanctuary, Harbour View Cottage. We shared the place with a Belgian couple and a solo German woman, all of us bound by the scorched trauma of the trail. The cottage is actually owned by a majestic, fluffy black cat who simply hires humans to fry the eggs and scrub the linens. The brutal reality of Clovelly is your options for a bed are basically nonexistent. Day-trippers clog the veins of this place, visiting the Charles Kingsley museum of toxic masculinity before vanishing. Let me give you some unfiltered real talk about the stretch from Westward Ho! to Bude: there is absolutely fuck all out here. No corner shops, no cheap thrills. Unless you want to sleep in a ditch, prepare to cough up 200 British pounds a night to the landed gentry who have hoarded this land since the Norman Conquest. You will pay 16 pounds for a mediocre pub meal, and you will not complain. It won’t wow you, but it will keep you alive. Shut up, pay the aristocratic tax, and drink in the decadent, jagged views.


Last night, staggering up the brutal Clovelly incline from the Red Lion Pub, I paused to photograph one of the neighborhood's feline overlords. The moment I set my pizza box down on the cobbles, this miniature apex predator claimed it with the audacity of a lion over a fresh gazelle kill. When I tried to negotiate, the little bastard chose violence, executing a series of full-talon strikes across my knuckles that left me bleeding and deeply humbled. It was an absolute hostage situation until a rogue pigeon landed nearby, breaking his psychotic focus. Let me be clear: if you are allergic to cats or lack submission to your feline masters, avoid Clovelly. Here, cats are deities. Donkeys are royalty. Humans are just transient wallets with opposable thumbs.


This coastline is beautiful, but it is deeply haunted. During the World Wars, Allied soldiers trained for the meat grinder on these unforgiving cliffs. Clearly, the learning curve was steep and bloody; the route is peppered with grim memorials for hospital ships and fighter planes that slammed into the jagged rocks below. An eerie, fully operational radar tower still looms above, watching the gray sea like a cold, paranoid relic. Today’s hiking conditions were a civilized 18 degrees and overcast,  until the sky darkened and the Atlantic wind threatened to snap us in half. Having packed zero layers like absolute amateurs, we were forced to double-time it to avoid hypothermia. Then, a legitimate miracle occurred. The elusive, mythical “Brigadoon Cafe”, a pop-up shack that rumor says only opens on a Thursday full moon when the wind hits exactly right, was actually open. Within minutes, twenty desperate hikers converged on the place, worshipping homemade millionaire shortbread bars. When a German hiker walked past holding his caramel-chocolate trophy, the crowd gasped as if he were cradling the original Magna Carta.


The final five kilometers trace the high cliffs overlooking the most treacherous, ship-eating coastline in England. Windswept and utterly devoid of human architecture, this landscape feels like a vast, untouched wonderland where you half expect a herd of woolly mammoths to lumber over the next ridge. You can feel the ancient, druidic energy vibrating through the soil. From the churning Atlantic below, the kelpies call your name, begging you to plunge into their cold, seductive arms. The descents are wicked and wild, followed by near-vertical climbs on ancient, crumbling shale that nobody in their right mind wants to navigate during a storm. The wind gives absolutely no quarter, and the sheep on the lower slopes watch the struggle with sadistic amusement, seemingly laying bets on who will tumble into the sea and who will reach the summit in triumph.


From that edge, we turned inland toward the Abbey. Hartland itself sits three kilometers off the path, a brutal detour unless you splurge on the Hartland Quay Hotel, which balances precariously on the cliffs like a drunkard facing the sea. Instead, we booked an Airbnb in the Abbey’s Hunting Lodge, positioned halfway between the trail and the town. The listing was hilariously uninspiring: Nigel the gardener and his army of eight wiener dogs, offering a spartan room with basic tea and toast. The instructions specified the key was hidden under a clay monkey and must be replaced immediately. We expected a damp hut inhabited by a hermit who talks to trees. Imagine our absolute shock to discover a massive, decadent estate filled with priceless antiques, a live parrot, a gentle bloodhound, and Nigel’s lover, Jonathan, rocking short shorts and waiting to greet us. Eddie, a former chauffeur, then whisked us into town for dinner at the Anchor Inn. The pub was a glorious sanctuary of magical misfits: a crew playing Dungeons and Dragons in the corner, a book club cackling by the fireplace, kids playing snooker, and a guy who looked suspiciously like Santa Claus in Harris tweed playing the flute. The barmaid, who looked descended from Boudicca herself, poured the most generous glass of wine I have ever witnessed in the United Kingdom, paired with the finest fish this side of the Atlantic. Eddie warned us we would never want to leave, despite our strict instructions for a nine o'clock pickup. He was entirely right. I could have stayed in that beautiful, boozy haven forever, frozen in time like Brigadoon.