Day 36 - Mevagissey: rest day
Happy Sunday to you all.
Seeing as it was the biblical day of rest, we figured it might be wise to stop pretending we were indestructible. My right knee has spent the last few nights filing increasingly aggressive complaints with management, while Ken’s knee brace has absorbed enough sweat and grime to qualify as a biohazard. One of the great lessons of the South West Coast Path is that you need far more rest days than you think. Honestly, a one-day-on, one-day-off schedule sounds less like weakness and more like advanced strategic planning.
Mevagissey is an excellent place to surrender to idleness. Big enough to provide everything you need, small enough not to feel like you've been dropped back into civilisation with no warning. At weekends it fills with day-trippers hunting artisans coffee, harbour views and seafood that won't require a second mortgage. The village is blessed with a collection of junk shops that feel like the contents of several centuries emptied into a blender. One minute you're admiring a First World War helmet, the next you're staring at a tattooed portrait of an 1880s prostitute, some deeply questionable blackface memorabilia, and a cardboard box full of 1950s bras. That box has seen things. Entire romances, scandals and possibly a murder or two. The founder of Pears' Soap, Andrew Pears, was born here, proving that even a village famed for fishing could produce a man obsessed with cleanliness.
Local folklore claims that during the Napoleonic a warship was wrecked offshore. The sole survivor was a monkey clinging to a spar. Having never encountered such a beast, suspicious villagers concluded it must be a French spy and promptly hanged it on the beach. This story says far more about rural paranoia than international espionage. Still, dogs are welcome everywhere in Mevagissey, but I would strongly advise leaving your monkey at home. As everyone knows, monkeys work for the French Directorate-General for External Security. Then there is Hitler's Walk, a local park whose name has survived decades of debate. Some say it was named after a councillor whose enthusiasm for petty rules bordered on dictatorship. Others claim it came from Home Guard patrols scanning the coastline for German invasion forces during the Second World War. Either way, only in Britain could a pleasant seaside stroll carry the lingering aroma of wartime fascism, bureaucratic grumbling and rather decent coffee.
We were not here for the fascism or the racism. We were here for the Lost Gardens of Heligan. Heligan was once one of Cornwall's great country estates, owned by the Tremayne family since 1569. Before the First World War, twenty-two gardeners tended its formal gardens with almost monastic devotion. Then history arrived with muddy boots and a rifle. The young men marched off to war, and the gardens slowly slipped beneath a tangle of neglect, becoming one of Britain's most haunting lost landscapes. The numbers are enough to stop you in your tracks. Of the original twenty-two gardeners, only four returned. Two of those came home carrying wounds that would claim them within a few short years. Before leaving for the trenches, the men scratched their names into the wall of a lavatory known as the Thunderbox Room. It is perhaps the most British war memorial imaginable. Not a marble statue on horseback, but a collection of hopeful graffiti beside a toilet. Those names still survive, a reminder that the hands which once pruned roses and trained fruit trees were asked to hold rifles instead. Walking through Heligan, it is impossible not to think how fragile beauty really is. Gardens, like civilizations and pub romances, require constant attention or nature starts taking its deposit back. The estate lingered in obscurity for decades. There was a brief revival during the Second World War when the house became an officers' base. Sadly, the officers displayed considerably more enthusiasm for drinking and slagging off the Germans than for weeding flowerbeds. The roses were abandoned, the ale was not. Some traditions, it seems, are eternal.
The gardens are a magnificent place to slow down, unclench your jaw and remember that nature generally does a better job of interior decorating than humans. There is a suspension bridge that locals cheerfully compare to the Bridge over the River Kwai, a pleasant café, sculptures tucked among the greenery and enough bees to remind you who really runs the planet. It is also dog friendly. Monkeys, however, remain under suspicion. Before Heligan's resurrection in the 1990s, Ian of the Shepherd's Hut spent his spare time wandering the overgrown estate in search of mushrooms and the occasional wayward druid. These days he has asked guests to keep druidic activity to a sensible minimum. One wicker man reenactment a month was perfectly acceptable, but things apparently spiralled after Covid. The nightly human sacrifices have become something of a sticking point with the parish council. Complicating matters further, another shepherd's hut down the road has been aggressively pursuing the lucrative naked forest dancing under the full moon market. Ian has no desire to start a turf war with neighbouring pagans and risk having his strawberry patch cursed with aphids. Rural diplomacy is a delicate business. So if you plan on staying with Ian before or during your visit to Mevagissey, kindly leave the blood rites at home. Save them for the Wales Coast Path, where such things are handled with a little more professionalism.

























































